Locals advance to state meet
Chris Yemma
Annie St. Geme wasn’t even out for a CIF Southern Section Masters
Meet championship Friday at Cerritos College. Since the beginning of
the track and field season, she has had her eyes on just one race.
Now the time has finally arrived, as the Corona del Mar High
junior broke away during her last lap of the 1,600 meters to easily
win the event, marking her first Masters Meet title and her third
straight qualification to the state championships.
Still, as she has been saying all season long, it’s just a
precursor to the CIF State title.
“It’s just steps to state,” said St. Geme, who clocked in at 4
minutes, 52.81 seconds, nearly two seconds ahead of second-place
finisher Kauren Tarver (4:54.33) of Serrano. “[Coach Bill Sumner]
wanted me to move ahead in my last lap, so I kept telling myself to
save a little for the last lap.”
She did just that, sticking with the herd for the first three laps
and then making her move in the last 400.
St. Geme, along with teammate Sarah Cummings, led a pack of
Newport-Mesa athletes that qualified for the state championships
Friday and Saturday at Hughes Stadium in Sacramento. Other qualifiers
include Newport Harbor’s Bo Taylor and Whitney Blue; Sage Hill’s Zach
Chandy; and Costa Mesa’s Jasmin Day.
St. Geme, who finished sixth at state last season, qualified in
the third spot in the 800 Friday, but will drop the event to focus
solely on the 1,600. And now that she has conquered the Southern
Section, there is just the one level left.
“For Annie, the 1,600 [Friday] was about getting to next week --
it was practice for next week,” said Sumner, in his 21st year as
CdM’s coach. “That’s not her competition out there. No disrespect
because Tarver’s out there and some other people are out there.”
Cummings, a sophomore, qualified in the same race, finishing in a
lifetime-best 4:59.59 for seventh. This marks the second straight
year CdM will send two girls to state in the 1,600 -- last season it
was Hilary May accompanying St. Geme. May, the fastest freshman in
the state last year, has been ailed with the flu, Sumner said.
Costa Mesa’s Day also became a Masters champion, defending her
title in the high jump to qualify for state a second straight year.
Day, who entered with the top mark of 5 feet, 9 inches she cleared to
win a Division III title Saturday, cleared 5-6 Friday to tie with
Tustin’s Khristina Curtis. But Day had made the mark on her first
attempt while Curtis missed her first, giving the title to the
Mustangs’ junior.
Sage’s Chandy, entering as the Division IV 200 and 400 champion,
both with lifetime bests he marked Saturday, claimed second in the
400 Friday in 48.02 and fourth in the 200 (21.65), both good for
state-meet qualification.
“I’m just happy to go [to state] for my first time,” Chandy said.
“My first goal was to make it to state.”
Chandy’s top competition in the 400 will be against Long Beach
Poly’s Bryshon Nellum, who edged Chandy in 47.05 Friday, and Dorsey’s
David Gettis, the two-time defending state champion who recently
clocked the fastest prep time in the nation (46.08) at the CIF City
Section championships.
Newport teammates Blue and Taylor both finished third in their
respective events to qualify for state. Taylor, a junior, tossed a
lifetime best 59-5 1/2 in the shot put, topping his previous best of
58-1 1/4 by more than a foot. Blue, also a junior, ran 10:38.77 in
the 3,200.
Blue is coming off a second-place finish in Division II at the CIF
State cross country championships in the fall.
“I’m really pleased with myself,” Blue said. “It’s been a long two
seasons and I’m glad I could come out here and do that.”
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