The Signal

A YEAR-ROUND SPORT

Prep cross-country: Golden Valley and Saugus cross-country teams build chemistry during summer

- By Diego Marquez Signal Staff Writer

Training at altitudes higher than 6,000 feet above sea level has many advantages for all types of athletes. Running at such a high elevation decreases the amount of oxygen getting to the muscles and in turn, allows the body to produce extra red blood cells.

Taking advantage of the free time, Golden Valley and Saugus cross-country teams are both headed to higher ground this summer in preparatio­n for the upcoming cross-country season.

The Grizzlies headed north to Mammoth while the Centurions headed east to Big Bear in the hopes of creating team chemistry and train in elevation, among other things.

“We are coming out of the dead period, training hard and getting to know one another as a team,” said Golden Valley coach Wes Hinson. “It’s a pretty new dynamic because we lost a lot of key people and it’s a pretty young team. They are just learning to take those leadership roles and learning to bond as a team.”

“Summer training is the most important time of the season for us…” said Saugus coach Kevin Berns via text message. “Without a base, it’s hard to build the other phases of training. It’s like scaffoldin­g or building a house. You can’t build a house without the foundation.”

The Grizzlies, who have been doing this trip for about a decade, arrived on Sunday and leave on Saturday. They have been sleeping in tents under the night sky with the hopes of bringing a fairly new team comprised of mainly sophomores and juniors closer together.

The Centurions got to Big Bear on Monday and also depart on Saturday. They’ve dealt with some inclement weather as they participat­e in group building and training exercises.

“Like every team, spending a week together and focusing solely on training brings us closer together and makes our ultimate goal that much more special,”

Berns said. “We build a strong bond with one another.”

Both teams have enjoyed their downtime or “family time”, as Berns referred to it, when they are not training. That down time includes hiking, kayaking, bowling and watching movies.

The Grizzlies like to play card games together, and Hinson mentioned that a card game or two even got a little heated.

“We have some serious card games going on, it gets a little competitiv­e,” Hinson said. “We do things a little different, we camp and by camping we can set up the tables and they will play different card games, talk and bond that way.”

With the start of the year school year about a month away, both teams are taking full advantage of their opportunit­ies to get their bodies, minds and lungs tuned up and in gear for the upcoming cross-country season.

“If you take a break, you’re just losing that developmen­t that you had,” Hinson said. “You may be in shape, but it’s the progressio­n year-after-year of developing aerobicall­y, that the foundation carries on. You can really see that transition especially in the guys that have been with the team since freshman year. If you are not committed to it year-round, you are just not making those jumps from year to year. You are just setting yourself up.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo courtesy Wes Hinson ?? The Golden Valley boys and girls cross-country teams spent a week training and getting their bodies ready for the upcoming season at Mammoth Mountain.
Photo courtesy Wes Hinson The Golden Valley boys and girls cross-country teams spent a week training and getting their bodies ready for the upcoming season at Mammoth Mountain.
 ?? Photo courtesy Wes Hinson ?? The Golden Valley boys and girls cross-country teams have taken part in numerous team building and training excercises. Hiking to Crystal Lake, right, was just one of the many highlights of the team trip.
Photo courtesy Wes Hinson The Golden Valley boys and girls cross-country teams have taken part in numerous team building and training excercises. Hiking to Crystal Lake, right, was just one of the many highlights of the team trip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States