Revved up for more
- Share via
Bryce Alderton
Losing a runner the caliber of a Julie Allen might make some
coaches cringe.
Not Corona del Mar High girls cross country coach Bill Sumner, who
begins his 19th season at the helm of the Sea Kings, who will try for
their 17th consecutive appearance at the State Meet.
With the Sea Kings returning five of six runners from last
season’s fourth-place finish at the CIF Division III State Finals in
Fresno, Sumner has reason to believe his team is destined for
greatness again even with the departure of the Stanford-bound Allen.
But he doesn’t take anything for granted.
“We have flat out the whole team back minus Allen,” Sumner said.
“We have the top five runners with experience coming back into it,
but we don’t take anything for granted. I change every year to see
what will take this team to state.”
During Sumner’s tenure, CdM has won three state championships and
two CIF Division IV titles before CdM moved up to Division III.
Last season CdM finished second in CIF Division III. Allen took
second at State (18:24.6) with returning senior Becky Cummins running
to seventh (19:05) and sophomores Ahlia Kattan, who ran to a
24th-place finish (20:53) and Melissa Swigert (59th) with the same
time at state finals.
Cummins, along with Allen, earned All-CIF honors to help the Sea
Kings win the Pacific Coast League title. Allen set the course record
in the league championship (16:53).
The Sea Kings return five of six runners from last season’s team,
including senior Keelan Cuyler and juniors Taryn Kawata, Jennifer
Logan, Kindie Cramer and Sarah Claster, who “forces everyone around
her to do better,” according to Sumner.
“We have the top five with experience coming back,” Sumner said.
Freshman Annie St. Gimme should also figure prominently in the Sea
Kings’ quest for another state-meet appearance.
Success has come differently each year for Sumner depending on the
types of runners he has.
“We have to do it differently each year,” Sumner said. “Most
people stick to the old plan if its working, but we have a system
where we find out what works and work that in right away. We start
identifying things in August. Each year there’s a different set of
kids and a different system. That’s what makes us successful, being
prepared to change.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.