Cross country: Eagles spread wings at CIF prelims
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Tony Altobelli
WALNUT - The locals were coming in by the truckload Saturday at the
CIF Southern Section Division IV boys cross country preliminaries at Mt.
San Antonio College.
Estancia High’s running machine continued to pound through the
opposition, taking six of the top 18 spots in its heat.
Leading the senior-less brigade for the Eagles was junior Luis
Segoviano, who came in fifth place with a 16:03.3. Right behind Segoviano
was junior Mike Casillas with a 16:07.4 and Humberto Rojas with a
16:08.7.
Most, if not all the times put together by the Eagles were better than
their last race on the same course, which was the Mt. SAC Invitational a
month ago.
“I think the boys were reaching back for more than last time,” Eagles
Coach Charlie Appell said. “Overall, I’m very happy with the way today
panned out. Next week should be very exciting.”
Following the Eagles’ 5-6-7 group was a 16-17-19 package that included
juniors Gerardo Orozco (16:46.9) and Erik Lopez (17:02.9) as well as
Aaron Van Geem (17:08.0).
The Corona del Mar squad also qualified for Saturday’s CIF finals by
placing fourth in the heat with 103 points.
Like the Eagles, the Sea Kings’ times also improved from last month’s
Mt. SAC Invitational, but Coach Bill Sumner still sees some work to be
done.
“Our middle of the pack isn’t in the middle at the moment,” he said.
“Some of our older runners need to take care of what they have to do in
order for our team to be successful. Fortunately, we have some freshmen
that have stepped it up for us.”
One of those aforementioned freshmen is Danny Quinlan, whose 17:43
placed him 37th, faster than any other freshman competing in the heat.
So just why did Saturday’s time far surpass his showing on the same
course a month ago? “The last race, my shoe got untied and I was afraid
it was going to fall off,” he admitted. “The coach said to stay with the
pack and to keep our two fast runners in our sights. I did the best I
could and it worked out well.”
In Quinlan’s sights were the Sea Kings’ dynamic duo of Travis
Beardslee and Josh Yelsey.
Beardslee finished third with a 15:40.3, while Yelsey followed the
Estancia trio for eighth place (16:11.8).
Costa Mesa’s Irwin Salas, the lone Mustang racing on Saturday,
finished 18th in his Division III heat with a 16:41.1 and did not advance
to the finals.
Locals aside, in the same heat, Big Bear High phenom Ryan Hall
scorched the trail with a time of 14:35.3, just three seconds off the
course record and 54 seconds ahead of his next competitor, teammate Art
Avita (15:29.8).
“People want to say the competition isn’t as strong in Division IV,”
Sumner said. “I tell them, ‘Come on down to Division IV. We’d love to
race you.’ ”
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