The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

PJP boys’ 2A team title heads PAC’s team success at districts

- By Jeff Stover jstover@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MercuryXSt­over on Twitter

SAUCON VALLEY » They put the “team” in a sport whose individual accomplish­ments garner more focus and accolades.

That situation was very much in vogue Friday at Lehigh University’s Goodman Stadium, the site of the District 1 Cross Country Championsh­ips. Along with the various achievemen­ts of boy and girl runners from Pioneer Athletic Conference schools, there were a goodly number of significan­t team showings.

Four teams — Owen J. Roberts, Pope John Paul II, and Spring-Ford on the boys’ side, OJR on the girls’ side — will be going en masse to Hershey for next weekend’s PIAA Championsh­ip Meet, by virtue of high qualifying finishes. Heading the list is PJP, which emerged as the district’s Class AA champion.

The Golden Panthers edged past Holy Ghost Prep for the title in their winning-teamtakes-all bracket, their 50 points heading the Firebirds by one. They had a trio of Top 10 finishers in Shane McKeon

McKeon (third), Michael Florig (fourth) and Jack Phillips (seventh), with Kaden Buchler (14th) in the Top 20 and Jack Brosius (22nd) not far out of that group.

“Props go to our coaches for getting us here,” Florig said. “The only reason we got here is they got us workouts.”

PJP’s senior twosome went a respective 17:08 and 17:22 behind Upper Perkiomen’s Cameron Junk, who was second to winner Shane Cohen of Lower Moreland in 16:43. Though the Panthers’ first four finishers had a 28-38 edge on HGP, the point spread tightened with the Firebirds going 11-12-13 in the final order.

But the finishes of Buchler and Brosius, both freshmen, ended up being enough to get PJP the team-champion trophy.

“It was a team effort,” Florig said. “We ran our own race.”

“Our freshmen stepped in,” McKeon added.

Junk emerged as the PAC’s highest-finishing individual. The UP senior, making his first appearance at districts since his sophomore season, ran at the front of the AA pack for the first two miles, at which time Cohen moved ahead and went on to score a one-second victory.

“The whole race, I was hoping to come through,” Junk said. “But at the two-mile mark, he (Cohen) started picking it up.”

Junk and Cohen, who ran respective times of 16:43 and 16:42, were the only AA runners to break the 17-minute mark. For Junk, it represents a first-time trip to states at the Parkview Course in Hershey.

“I did great there this year at an invitation­al,” Junk said. “I do pretty good on hills, but it definitely will be a challenge.”

In the AAA boys’ field, Liam Conway had two reasons to be elated. The Owen J. Roberts senior placed third in 15:25 — an improvemen­t of three spots and 15 seconds from his junior year — while leading his Wildcat teammates to a third-place team

finish that keeps them intact for states.

“I knew all season how capable we were of this,” Conway said. “In the back of our heads, this was a goal.”

The Roberts boys’ state qualificat­ion was bolstered by Andrew Malmstrom placing ninth in 15:48, and Kyle Malmstrom coming home 28th in 16:12. Their 193 teams points were topped only by champion Downingtow­n West (135) and runnerup Council Rock North (169).

“I finished the race, looked back and saw Andrew ninth,” Conway recalled. “I was excited about that. Kyle was fantastic, too. He was expected to finish around 50th, and he came in around 30th.”

The OJR girls’ second-place qualificat­ion for states was vindicatio­n for falling short of that achievemen­t last year. It provided a bit of historical highlight, marking the first time the boys and girls teams both were state qualifiers the same year.

“We talked about how well we’ve run in big meets,” head coach David Michael said. “The boys have made progress, but I didn’t think we’d be third. And the girls ... they gained 50 points running the last mile.

“For me and the kids, it’s a dream come

true. They worked hard and deserve it.”

While the Owen J. girls didn’t have any Top 20 finishers — Mary Bernotas was their leader, placing 24th in 19:13 — they had four Top 50 placers. Autumn Sands was 27th (19:16), Hannah Kopec 36th (19:31) and Alex Glasier 48th (19:45).

“It’s really cool being second,” Kopec said. “This is my first experience going to states. It will be great.”

“Especially since we didn’t make it in the Top Five last year,” Sands added. “We wanted to run as a team one more time.”

Another historic highlight in the girls AAA race belonged to Spring-Ford’s Gabriella Bamford. One week after winning the PAC event, Bamford made a third-place run at Lehigh to become the program’s highest district finisher.

“This is huge. Huge,” the Ram senior said of her 18:40 run, headed only by race-winner Ariana Gardizy of North Penn (18:09) and runner-up Brooke Hutton of Coatesvill­e (18:33). “Around the statue, and coming down the hill, I felt if I made my kick, hopefully I could make it a reality.”

“There’s a lot of history there,” head coach Brian Sullivan added. “She was so strong at PACs. Getting in districts, she was fourth before the loop at the halfway point. It was something special.”

On the boys’ side, Spring-Ford’s fourthplac­e showing was also good for team qualificat­ion at states. Jacob McKenna led the way with a 23rd place (16:08) run, with John Zawislak (36th, 16:17) and Milan Sharma (43rd, 16:24) contributi­ng to a 239-point effort.

“It was nice to get over the hump,” Sullivan said, noting the boys missed doing that the past two years. “We have a core of seniors who got close. Seeing them get through is special.”

In the girls’ AA race, Upper Perkiomen’s Serena Detweiler repeated as a district medalist with a seventh-place, 20:39 run. It was an improvemen­t of one spot over her sophomore-season outing, though her time wasn’t personally satisfying.

“It wasn’t one of my best,” she said. “My personal-best time is a 19:52. I tried to stay with the top pack, but I ended up being the bridge between the top and second packs.”

Detweiler will seek an improved showing at states this time around.

“Last year I was in the 200s with a time of 22 minutes,” she recalled. “This time, I want to try and get in the 100s with a better time.” NOTES » Phoenixvil­le sophomore Carlos Shultz ran a solid fifth in the boys AAA race, clocking a 15:37. Boyertown’s Dominic DeRafelo scored a 22nd in 16:07 while teammate Christian McComb was 27th in 16:11 . ... In the girls AAA race, Perk Valley senior Teagan Schein-Becker was 13th in 19:04 . ... Upper Perk’s Dylan Simms (17th, 18:14) and Pottstown’s Khalif Burgess (19th, 18:28) were other Top 20 finishers in the boys’ AA field . ... PJP’s Julia Costello went 17th in the girls’ AA event with a time of 21:20. UP’s LeeAnn Markwalter was two spots back of Costello with a time of 21:21 . ... The top 25 finishers in Class AAA received medals, with the Top 10 in AA also honored . ... The top 25 nonteam individual­s in AAA and top five in AA all qualify for the state meet.

 ?? JEFF STOVER DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? The Pope John Paul II boys’ cross country team won the Class 2A title at the District 1 Cross Country Championsh­ips Friday.
JEFF STOVER DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA The Pope John Paul II boys’ cross country team won the Class 2A title at the District 1 Cross Country Championsh­ips Friday.
 ??  ?? Owen J. Roberts’ Liam Conway, left, and Spring-Ford’s Gabriella Bamford, right, were the PAC’s top finishers in Class AAA at the District 1 Cross Country Championsh­ips Friday at Lehigh University. Conway and Bamford both placed third in their...
Owen J. Roberts’ Liam Conway, left, and Spring-Ford’s Gabriella Bamford, right, were the PAC’s top finishers in Class AAA at the District 1 Cross Country Championsh­ips Friday at Lehigh University. Conway and Bamford both placed third in their...
 ?? DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTOS ??
DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTOS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States