The Day

East Lyme boys, girls dominate ECC cross country championsh­ips

Abbey leads a 1-2-3 finish by Vikings

- By VICKIE FULKERSON

Norwich — East Lyme's Chris Abbey was telling his coach, Sam Harfenist, of his philosophy.

“When Sam graduates, he would win,” Harfenist said, speaking of Sam Whittaker, an East Lyme senior and the defending Eastern Connecticu­t Conference boys' cross country champion headed into Thursday's 2018 edition of the race.

But what if another competitor rose to the occasion next year?

What if Abbey didn't feel well on race day next year?

Harfenist proposed those scenarios to Abbey, suggesting that if Abbey — a junior and the younger Viking to Whittaker — had the opportunit­y this time, he might think about going for it.

Harfenist had a lot to be proud of as East Lyme runners finished first, second and third to capture the overall team title for the Vikings for the second straight season.

Abbey was first in 17 minutes,

Whittaker second in 17:25 and Noah Barnhart third in 17:42. Fred Rukondo (12th, 18:14) and Fisher Macklin (18th, 18:33) also scored for East Lyme, which won with 35 points. Norwich Free Academy was second in the team standings with 61 points and Fitch third with 125.

Waterford's Aidan Pepin finished fourth individual­ly in 17:45 and Bacon Academy's Andrew Janus was fifth in 17:52.

And so Harfenist witnessed this from his team, which is now set to defend its Class MM state championsh­ip from a year ago:

Abbey, who grew two inches since last season to 6 feet, transforme­d himself into the ECC champion. Whittaker handled the defeat with grace, calling Abbey “a good person to train with; he takes the heaviness and makes it lighter.” Barnhart, meanwhile, went from 17th last year to third to mark his senior season.

“They've done it all season,” said Harfenist of the East Lyme domination at the top of the race. “But it was just awesome for me to see them go 1-2-3. Something here seems different.

“The idea that Sam is happy for Chris right now … the two of them are talking. Chris has always played second fiddle to Sam. It's just really good they're happy for each other and can share in it. … I don't think you've seen the last of those two. And Noah has worked his butt off.”

The Vikings returned the bulk of their lineup from last year's state championsh­ip team. In that race, at Manchester's Wickham Park, Whittaker was third, then-senior Ryan McCauley fourth and Abbey sixth to give East Lyme three frontrunne­rs.

This season, among East Lyme's goals was to remain healthy enough to be able to repeat at the state level. Also, Whittaker vowed to save some of his strength for the state championsh­ip and State Open, having fallen short of reaching the New England meet a year ago.

“I'm a little disappoint­ed. I didn't have the biggest drive today. (Abbey) definitely had a bigger drive,” said Whittaker, who would have been the first boy to repeat as ECC champion since Griswold's Tradelle Ward in 2004-05. “It was more like dual meets. I'm pre-peak right now. I wasn't really feeling that fast today. … It was about the team today, not about me.”

“We train together and everything and I just learned everything from running (with) him, He taught me everything,” Abbey said of Whittaker. “It feels really good to finally achieve this goal. I just started picking it up (at the end). The last mile I thought we were slowing down. My coach told me, 'Don't be afraid to pass him.'”

NFA finished with three runners in the top 10, with Dylan McGuire sixth, Aidan Brown ninth and Peyton Ramsey 10th. McGuire was 21st last year in the ECC junior varsity race, running in 20:49. Thursday he covered the Norwich Golf Course layout in 17:54.

“We're not pleased with that. We want first for sure,” NFA coach Chad Johnson said. “But I can't complain about the kids' performanc­es. We knew even if we had our best race, we needed their fifth man to have a bad day.”

Johnson referred to East Lyme freshman Luke Anthony, who ran sixth for the Vikings in the varsity race. Anthony is the son of John Anthony, Johnson's former cross country teammate at NFA.

“That just means me and John are going to have some words later (over where he lives),” Johnson said with a laugh before continuing. “… That was our best performanc­e (Thursday) for sure. And five of our top seven guys are coming back next year. We have a lot to work with.”

East Lyme won the ECC Division I title, Bacon took Division II, Lyman Memorial Division III and Plainfield Division IV. v.fulkerson@theday.com

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? East Lyme’s Chris Abbey moves past teammate Sam Whittaker during Thursday’s Eastern Connecticu­t Conference Championsh­ip cross country meet at Norwich Golf Course. Abbey beat Whittaker, the defending individual champion, as the Vikings took the top three spots and cruised to the team title.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY East Lyme’s Chris Abbey moves past teammate Sam Whittaker during Thursday’s Eastern Connecticu­t Conference Championsh­ip cross country meet at Norwich Golf Course. Abbey beat Whittaker, the defending individual champion, as the Vikings took the top three spots and cruised to the team title.

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