Dayton Daily News

Runners may be surprised at meet

- By Doug Harris Contributi­ng Writer Contact this contributi­ng writer pdouglasha­rris@ yahoo.com.

Wright State will compete in the Horizon League cross-country champion- ships Saturday at Oakland, and both the men’s and women’s teams will be going into it somewhat blind. Not only will the team be seeing the course for the first time, it also doesn’t have much of a feel for how it stacks up with the rest of the field.

Unlike most league sports, cross-country teams don’t have head-to-head competitio­n and only race against each other if they happen to enter the same meet, which isn’t all that common.

“We rarely see anyone from the Horizon,” Raid- ers coach Rick Williamson said. “Our men ran against Northern Kentucky a couple weeks ago, and our women have run against two conference teams. It’s going to be a little bit of a mystery.”

One thing Williamson can count on, though, is that the Oakland women are still the class of the league. The Grizzlies have won back-to-back titles and are led by defending champion Rachel Levy.

“Heck, last year they had five or six on the all-confer- ence team. That’s proba- bly going to happen again,” he said.

Williamson believes his women can match up with anyone in the league. The Raiders were second last season and third in 2015.

“We’re probably the deep- est team in the conference,” he said. “Oakland is really, really good, but they drop off a little more than we do. ”

Hailey Brumfield, a junior from Tipp City, won the 13-team Friendship Invitation­al at Cedarville this season and is coming off a team-best 33rd-place showing in the prestigiou­s NCAA Pre-Nationals in Louisville. She was named second-team all-conference as a freshman.

Junior Aurora Turner (Beavercree­k) was second-team all-league last year, while senior Shelby Nolan (London) and sophomore Jessica Swartz (Whitehouse, Ohio) just missed earning all-league honors.

The top seven finishers make the first team, while the next seven are named to the second team.

“They all have a goal of making all-league. The fact that IUPUI is in the conference this year is going to make it more challengin­g. We could conceivabl­y come in second or third as a team and not have anybody make all-conference,” Williamson said. “Other teams that aren’t great teams have some really good individual­s to take up those spots.”

Men’s soccer: Sam DeRoy, a senior midfielder from Powell, Ohio, was named the Horizon League defensive player of the week after a 1-0 win over Northern Kentucky.

It was the seventh shutout this season for the Raiders, who are 9-5-1 overall and 5-2 in the league with two matches left. First-place Green Bay is 5-1-1. DeRoy, who also assisted on the only goal, was the team MVP in 2015 but missed most of last season with an injury.

Women’s soccer: Maddie Jewell, a sophomore goalie from Cincinnati, was named the league’s defensive player of the week after 1-0 wins over Cleveland State and UIC. She has six shutouts this year.

The Raiders (10-7 overall and fourth in the league at 5-3), end the regular-season Friday at Detroit Mercy.

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