Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week: Becky Cummins
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Steve Virgen
There once was this chubby girl who watched her older sisters run
for the Corona del Mar High cross country team. She dreamed to be a Sea
King, to run like Christy, and then later, Jenny.
Today, little Becky Cummins, who described herself as a “chubby kid”
who wanted to run for CdM, is making her dreams come true. Her ascension
to one of the CIF Southern Section Division III’s elite runners has come
from that motivation that started at a young age. It didn’t hurt that
Christy and Jenny completed quite successful careers while at CdM. That,
too, inspired Becky Cummins.
“I guess you could say I’m a little overly competitive when it comes
to the sisters, but hey oh well,” said the Daily Pilot Athlete of the
Week. “Both of my sisters have been Athlete of the Week. That’s kind of
strange, but in a good way. It’s another thing I’ve always wanted to use
to measure up to them, that I wanted to be one of the best.”
So far the CdM junior is making her claim as the best of the Cummins
sisters. She proved that with her runner-up showing in the Division III
race of the CIF Finals Nov. 17 at Mt. San Antonio College. Cummins began
the race aggressively, relaxed on the uphill runs and made up for that
with a strong kick on the downhill. After the last hill, Cummins made her
move and finished in 18:24.6 to help the Sea Kings finish second in
Division III.
“My whole life I have been measured by my sisters and I’m known as the
youngest Cummins girl,” she said and then added with mild sarcasm: “I
wouldn’t call it pressure. It’s not a big deal. There is a certain degree
of support from my family for me to be the best I can be, to put it
mildly.”
Cummins’ desire to outdo her sisters also resulted in a personal-best
time in the Pacific Coast League finals, a 17:34, which also helped the
Sea Kings win the title Nov. 2 at Irvine Regional Park.
Before the meet, she took a marker and wrote on her shoes Jenny’s best
time on the course (17:41).
“Jenny came home (from Yale) last weekend and saw that,” Cummins said.
“She laughed and thought I was weird.”
“This year, was the first year I’ve been on the team alone, my sister
(Jenny) hasn’t been on the team,” she continued. “I’m the older kid now,
and people are looking up to me. I’m an upperclassmen and I need to be
responsible.”
Over the summer, Cummins developed her running skills and improved her
stamina with cross training, including swimming and weightlifting. She
also focused on becoming one of the leaders for the young Sea Kings. She
is the only junior on the team, which means she will likely be the only
senior on the squad next year, when Corona’s current No. 1, Julie Allen,
will be gone.
“Becky has been working harder to get to No. 1 and in the process this
is what the result is,” Sumner said of Cummins’ remarkable improvement.
“The younger girls (on CdM) are thinking, she is not beating Julie Allen
but she is beating all the other people, and the kids notice it. That
shows the work she has done has paid off. She would finish No. 12 (in
most races) last year.”
Cummins will look to continue to display her improvement as the Sea
Kings compete in the State Finals today at Woodward Park in Fresno.
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