Los Angeles Times

Young brothers make their push for a state title

Newbury Park twins’ secret to success is fearlessne­ss to stretch cross-country limits.

- By Luca Evans

Leo Young just really wanted that ravioli.

Three weeks ago, the senior traveled with twin brother Lex and the Newbury Park High boys’ crosscount­ry juggernaut to Fresno for the Clovis Invitation­al, visiting their favorite spot for a team dinner the night before the meet: an Italian restaurant called Five. Just like every time he’d come, a mouthwater­ing lobster ravioli, adorned with shrimp and doused in tomato basil cream sauce, beckoned to Leo.

Yet it was a lot of cream, and he didn’t eat lobster. So, like always, he settled for the pappardell­e bolognese.

The next day, he came within 1.9 seconds, according to MileSplit, of setting the course record at Woodward Park.

“We’re always thinking about, ‘How will this affect my performanc­e? How will this make me feel the next day when I go for my run?’ ” Lex said. “And I think by internaliz­ing that, you’re able to perform at your best because you’re always thinking about it.”

Life for Stanford commits Leo and Lex is a calculated string of butterfly effects. One must think a step ahead to run a step ahead. Each decision is weighed in the vacuum of the next day’s training; each hour of sleep is clutched tightly; each drop of hydration is finetuned, filling their water bottles at each break in classes throughout the day even when they’re not thirsty.

Older brother Nico Young, who blazed trails at Newbury Park and now stars at Northern Arizona University, said being great as a runner comes with a decision — whether you want to go all-in. Now, running’s permeated every aspect of Lex’s and Leo’s lives — and via the twins’ YouTube channel, “L&L,” they’re trying to inspire others to similarly dedicate themselves.

“They’re not afraid,” coach Tanya Brosnan said, “to push for something more.”

Last cross-country season, Leo broke Nico’s record for the fastest time by a high schooler on a three-mile course, while Lex in May notched the second-fastest 5,000-meter performanc­e in national history during track season.

With each record they’ve destroyed, each headline constructe­d, a mystique has built around this Newbury Park program that some labeled as the best boys’ team ever last season. Complaints and message boards have accused the team of pushing its runners to insane weekly mileage totals, of taking performanc­e-enhancing drugs.

So this October, Lex and Leo posted a video on “L&L,” clickbaiti­ng an audience of nearly 34,000 subscriber­s.

“Newbury Park’s Secret Workout Revealed …” the title read.

Surprise: no steroids. No insane regimen. It’s just the twins and teammates waking up at 4:30 a.m., stretching in a pitch-black morning, taking off for a tough run with pace goals.

“Honestly, most of the reason the team has been so successful is, we’re talking about the culture,” Lex said.

“For us,” he continued of the channel, “it’s just about documentin­g that and giving that as an answer to the question of, ‘Why are they so good?’ ”

Under former coach Sean Brosnan, Tanya’s husband, Newbury Park instituted a training program tailored to each individual.

Intensity is based on quality of recovery, sleep and nutrition.

The twins have bought in fully, pushing in the present of a run, living for the future of the next day.

“We have too many people, even on this team, who are like, ‘I can’t run that fast,’ ” Tanya Brosnan said. “We say, ‘Let’s run this time in these intervals,’ and they won’t push any faster when we ask them to. It’s like they’re afraid, because, ‘I have four more intervals.’ ”

She said the Youngs “are not” afraid.

The goal of their platform, the twins say, is to motivate others to follow their same journey, a journey set forth by Nico — that it’s “cool” to work hard.

“The performanc­e-enhancers,” father Andrew Young joked, “are good diet and sleep.”

The twins push each other, trying to burst through the mental barriers limiting how fast a 17-yearold can run, finishing onetwo at that Clovis Invitation­al three weeks ago. They’ve raced only a couple of times this season, placing focus on staying fresh for the state meet Saturday at Woodward Park and the national meet Dec. 10 to give Newbury Park the best chance at dominance.

“If they went after it, if they really just went loose,” PrepCalTra­ck editor Rich Gonzalez said, “they would be the best ever in California history.”

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