Friday, February 21, 2020

2012 Season: Top 25 Rankings


Without a doubt 2012 ended up being one of the deepest ranking years that we had in the decade and it made things very tricky for me when trying to sort out the list. Let me hit a few honorable mentions real quick:

Sam Ritz, So Germantown Academy (Independent) – Ritz was second at Independent States in a really quick mark of 16:04, behind only national qualifier Sami Aziz. He also placed 5th at Paul Short. However, you can make an argument Ritz wasn’t even the best guy in his own family as his brother Ben was Inter-Ac champ and 2nd at Paul Short to only Galassi, but unfortunately Independent States wasn’t his best day.

Mac Emery, Sr Council Rock North (1 AAA) – Emery was fantastic in the early season with wins at Abington, Council Rock and Steel City plus he was top 10 in a deep District 1. Over the course of the year he beat Ross Wilson, Connor Harriman, Sam Webb, Chris Kazanjian, Reiny Barchet and James Zingarini all of whom ended up on the medal stand at states in AAA. But Mac didn’t and so he just barely was edged out in a super deep year.

25. Aaron Valoroso, Sr Towanda (4 AA): 4th/1st
A year after he placed 7th in AA, Valoroso was 4th at the state championship behind three guys who ended up in my top 7 of the end of year rankings. He was also the runaway district champion in a strong small school division, District 4. However, a few factors worked against Valoroso as he was gunning for a spot on this list. For starters, the expansion to three classifications put an asterisk next to his state performance as the A division had the likes of not only Rico Galassi and Luke Jones, but also the Northeast Bradford duo who could have swiped Aaron’s district title. It also hurt the AA state meet ended up going out at a significantly slower pace than the other two races as the guys were moving quite comfortably through two miles before things exploded over the last mile.


24. Colin Abert, So Easton (11 AAA): 12th/1st
23. Kevin James, So O’Hara (12 AAA): 22nd/2nd

22. Conner Quinn, Sr Horsham (1 AAA): 13th/6th
It’s crazy to think that in many ways Conner Quinn was just as good (if not better) in 2012 as he was in 2011 when he became the state champion. He ran faster marks at both of his championship races at Lehigh and had a better finish at the Footlocker Northeast regional. Considering the pressure he was under after his surprise finish in 2011, Quinn really held his own quite strongly and would be much higher than 22nd a lot of years.

21. Tom Coyle, Sr LaSalle (12 AAA): 11th/1st
As I’ve already written about, the 2012 LaSalle team is one of the wildest rides we will ever see in PA Cross Country. The fact that were able to survive a tumultuous start to the season and then turn around and finish 5th in the state is nothing short of spectacular. Coyle in many ways personified this swing as he went from a district 4th at PCLs to District champ (sub 16 at Belmont again) and 11th at the state meet in a faster time than the prior season.

20. Ernie Pitone, Sr O’Hara (12 AAA): 9th/6th
Ernie Pitone was very good for much of the 2012 season, but I don’t think anyone can say they saw his state championship race coming. Pitone had been a dog fight with many of his O’Hara teammates most of the season and had not finished as their #1 runner at any point in his career until the state championships when he brought home 9th overall. If the tiebreaker was flipped, Pitone would have been the hero of that state championship, but unfortunately his clutch performance is lost to history. By the way, his nationals performance was arguably just as good and just as critical as O’Hara finished in 5th in the nation without a guy under 18 minutes.

19. Ean DiSilvio, Sr Allerdice (7 AAA): 25th/3rd
District 8 won’t be getting their own “through the decade post”, but I can tell you right now DiSilvio was the best guy they had this decade (all respect to Amadou Diallo who was a beast as well). DiSilvio was a two time state medalist and, although he was likely hoping for more than 25th during his senior state meet, put together an awesome 2012 season. He was third at the WPIAL championships behind Brent Kennedy and Ethan Martin (top 5 in the state) and posted top 5 finishes at McDowell, Red White and Blue, Boardman and Foundation.

18. Curt Jewett, Sr Northeast Bradford (4 A): 4th/1st
17. Sam Williams, Sr Northeast Bradford (4 A): 3rd/2nd
The Northeast Bradford duo finished side by side once again with Jewett taking the district title and Williams the better state medal. Williams was also the Foundation and PTXC winner while Jewett won at NTL Coaches. But the real story for these two guys was not their individual accomplishments, but the fact that they ended their careers with redemption in the team competition. Two years after a heartbreaking disqualification, they led NEB to a blowout in the first ever A state championship.

16. Connor Harriman, Sr Pennsbury (1 AAA): 8th/7th
You know the 2012 rankings are crazy when someone like Connor Harriman is coming it at the 16th spot. The Pennsbury senior placed in the top 10 at AAA states for a second straight year in 2012, but that probably wasn’t his most memorable appearance on the Hershey hills. At the Foundation Invite, Harriman produced one of the first “kick of the week” moments I can remember hearing about when he hawked down DiSilvio for the individual title. A storyline that probably deserved more play in the 2012 season was Harirman’s Pennsbury squad which, for much of the early part of the season, was the darlings of the etrain rankings and a Cinderella team that was taking it to the big favorites from CR North. Unfortunately, Harriman would not be on the roster when the fruits of his labor began to blossom at Pennsbury when they qualified for the state meet a year later and won the 4x8 at states two years later, but I am sure he was proudly watching.

15. Dan Savage, Sr O’Hara (12 AAA): 10th/4th
It must have been an odd transition for O’Hara’s senior leader in 2012. After being the clear front runner on the roster in 2011, Savage suddenly found himself competing for the top spot on the team not only with classmate Ernie Pitone, but also the talented young sophomore Kevin James. Savage actually opened the season as the team’s #3 at Briarwood and the #2 at Foundation before finding his rhythm at Great American where he finished as PA’s top runner (ahead of Brendan Shearn). His postseason included DELCO and PCL championships and top honors within the O’Hara locker room at Regionals and Nationals. He was 10th at states, but ran a faster time than he did when he finished 4th a year earlier. And its worth noting the guy was literally two inches away from being the senior leader on a team that was back-to-back state champs and 5th in the nation.

14. Reiny Barchet, Jr Henderson (1 AAA): 19th/3rd
The simple fact of the matter is that Reiny is not just a massive talent, but a gutsy runner. His highs in 2012 were really high. He beat Tony Russell twice during the invite season (at Ches-monts and Carlisle) and then finished in 21st in the Nation at the Nike Cross Nationals for the top spot in all of PA and All American honors. He was sub 13 at Manhattan, sub 15:25 at Lehigh and sub 16 at Bowdoin Park for 2nd in the Northeast Regional. States wasn’t his best day, but he still fought valiantly in his final sprint and held off a couple guys that would have swung the title the other way if he got passed.

13. Jack Macauley, Sr North Penn (1 AAA): 6th/5th
The highlight of Macauley’s career is probably the upset team victory from his junior season, but from an individual standpoint he hit an entirely new level during his senior year. He won at Salesianum in one of the best times PA has ever seen and ended the Hershey meet with a 16:02. He spent the season jockeying around with the loaded pack in D1.

12. Ross Wilson, Jr CR North (1 AAA): 7th/2nd

11. Ethan Martin, Jr Fox Chapel (7 AAA): 5th/2nd
Ethan Martin and his WPIAL teammate Brent Kennedy put together monster seasons for juniors and, besides an all-time great in Tony Russell, grabbed the top spots on this list for the class of 2014. Martin spent much of the fall in Brent Kennedy’s shadow so even when he was turning in breakout races (like at RWB where he beat Jaskowak) he was still something of an afterthought. A year later, his twin brother Colin’s rise to stardom (Colin ended up WPIAL champ and sub 9 in the 3200) made Ethan even more out of center. But his 5th at states (behind 4 guys who would all go on to qualify for a national championship) and 2nd at WPIALs were both phenomenal and of course Martin took 2nd the next indoors in the 3k before outdueling Ross Wilson, Vinny Todaro and others en route to the state title in the outdoor 3200. Kid is an all-time great.

10. Luke Jones, Sr Elk Lake (2 A): 2nd/1st
Not sure how much there is left to say about Luke Jones at this point. The kid is just a championship performer. He won three straight District titles (two of them over Rico Galassi) and led his team to a state gold (2010) and state silver (2012) in two tight races. The guy always seemed to be at his best when the pressure was at its most intense as he finished 2nd at states two years in a row, both times exceeding most people’s expectations. He doubled down on that Hershey success (he ran 16 flat) with the 6th best PA performance at the Footlocker Northeast Regional.

9. Sami Aziz, Sr Germantown Friends (Independent): 1st
The signature moment of Sami Aziz’s Cross Country career was ironically a performance on the track. At the Henderson 3200 tune-up meet, Aziz crashed the party that was set up for the Henderson v. O’Hara match-up and outkicked Tony Russell for the victory. The result came sandwiched between two fantastic actual XC races where Aziz first won the Independent League title in 15:51 and then qualified for the Nike Nationals in Oregon by placing in the top 10 at the Regional Meet.

8. Rico Galassi, Sr Holy Cross (1 AAA): 1st/2nd
One of the biggest disappointments about the switch to three classifications was the split of the top of the AA class. Having Galassi, who ran an incredibly bold and aggressive state championship race, mixed in with the likes of Todaro, Shearn and Jaskkowak (all of which ran much more conservatively in the early going) would have made for quite the clash of abilities. Would Galassi have been able to win the state championship in AA like he did in A? We never will know. But we did get to see Galassi go head to head with the majority of the big names at the Footlocker Northeast Regional where he placed 16th overall and was the #5 runner on a loaded Pennsylvania Regional team. Galassi’s 2012 accomplishments also included invite victories at Paul Short, Cliff Robbins and Lackawanna.

7. Max Norris, Sr Harriton (1 AAA): 4th/4th
Look, I’ll always have a soft spot for Max Norris because he gave me a shout out in Penntrack journal and quite frankly I’m not sure that’s ever happened at any other point this decade. But ignoring that fact, Norris’s 2012 XC season was really quite special. Norris had been a strong XC runner each of the previous two seasons, but hadn’t been able to make that leap into the state medals. After an injury set him back, it looked like 2012 wouldn’t be much different. But once he actually got back on the course, it was a different story. Norris won the Central League title, took 4th in District 1 and then took 4th at the state meet.

Yet things went up another level for Norris after Hershey. This is when Max Norris became a super star. Training through to the Footlocker Regional, Norris finished as PA’s #2 runner at Van Cortlandt and punched a ticket to San Diego. At Footlocker, he upped his game again by placing 17th overall for the #1 spot in PA. Only 5 guys placed higher at Footlocker over the course of the entire decade (and 3 of those guys are in the discussion for greatest ever).

6. Dan Jaskowak, Sr Grove City (10 AA): 3rd/1st
The classification change really shook up a lot of individual battles, including the rematch many were hoping for with Jaskowak taking on Quinn. Coming off an absolutely prolific track season, Jaskowak seemed like the favorite regardless of his classification, but that’s not the way he came out of the gate. After being upset at Red, White and Blue by Brent Kennedy and getting beat out for the fastest PA time at Boardman by Austin Pondel, Jaskowak prepared for his rematches. His 2012 season started to heat up with a victory at the Foundation Invite over defending AA state champ Brendan Shearn. Then he entered into a truly incredible two meet stretch. First, he toppled Brent Kennedy by a nose at the TSTCA championships in a legendary Coopers time of 15:36. Then, in incredibly sloppy conditions at Buhl Park, Jaskowak went head to head with Austin Pondel and again, by a slim margin, came out victorious. Their times of 16:23 were 45 seconds faster than anyone else in the entire three classification meet. There’s no way to prove it, but I wonder if something got taken out of Jaskowak’s legs at the wacky D10 meet because ultimately, when it came time for the sprint-kick finish in Hershey, he didn’t have the wheels to go with Shearn and Todaro and he came home in 3rd place. Still, his three marquee wins against Shearn, Kennedy and Pondel is really special and hard to match for anyone outside this top 5.

5. Austin Pondel, Sr Correy (10 AAA): 3rd/1st
The meteoric rise of Austin Pondel somehow ends up outside the top 5 storylines of the 2012 season just because the 2012 season was absolutely bananas. Look, Pondel was a great XC runner in 2011. He grabbed a state medal and he placed really well at the Northeast Regional. But he didn’t show much flash on the track and he was housed in a district that didn’t get a lot of love (outside of Jaskowak). So what did Pondel do to make the state wake up? Well, he started smashing records. He went to McDowell and dropped a blistering 15:37. He went to Boardman and ran 15:45. He went to Sharpsville and ran 15:33! For added fun he ran 15:47 at Cochranton. Four races. Massive margins of victory. Sub 16s. The guy had an absolutely monster September.

So now people were aware of Pondel and the question became: what classification did Correy belong to? Ultimately, his team was slotted for AA, but apparently the Correy coaches didn’t want to be classified outside of the biggest and best competition in AAA (plus, it doesn’t hurt to avoid Grove City) so Correy ended up pushing and getting approval to be in AAA. Could Pondel win the state championship in a seemingly open field?

After another sub 16 at Region 4 (15:37) and the legendary 16:23 in the mud at Buhl Park (they wanted to cancel the race and have the kids run on the road and he and Jaskowak ran 16:23 instead, I mean that’s just incredible), Pondel had firmly inserted himself into the discussion. Some were worried about his lack of big race competition. I personally remember being very concerned that the conditions at District 10 were going to leave his legs super flat for states. Regardless, I’m not sure anyone was beating Tony Russell on State Saturday as the junior was just on another level, but Pondel really held his own and proved he belonged in the title discussion with his third place finish in a blistering 15:56. As an added bonus, Pondel qualified for the Footlocker National Championships at Van Cortlandt to end November with, yes, another sub 16 (15:51).

4. Brent Kennedy, Jr Kiski (7 AAA): 2nd/1st
Heading into the state championship meet, I thought Brent Kennedy had a better chance at state gold than Tony Russell. Although he was also a junior, the Kiski harrier had been 7th the prior year as a sophomore and had just sub 15:40 at both Carlisle and Coopers in a pair of runner-up finishes against the best guys in AA before running away with the WPIAL title. Plus, Kennedy had battled with Russell on the track in the 1600, both guys upstart talents in the middle distances and Kennedy had proven to be just a bit better. Was this his moment to show the east coast what was up? Ultimately, Kennedy came pretty darn close with his 15:52 to Russell’s 15:45 and settled for the silver. Then Kennedy joined rare company by qualifying for the Footlocker Finals as a junior.

Kennedy was an unreal talent, but unfortunately, we didn’t get the chance to see him and Russell rematch for the state title in 2013 as an injury knocked Brent out for the year. But still Kennedy managed to put together one of the best careers of the decade in three years when most guys couldn’t do the same thing in four.

3. Brendan Shearn, Sr North Schuylkill (11 AA): 2nd/1st
It’s really hard being a defending state champion. After Shearn’s junior season finished, he had already grabbed two state golds (one for XC, one outdoors in the 3200) and now he was the big name in AA with a large target right on his back for the new entries into the classification to shoot at. At his opening meet at PTXC, Shearn ended up just 7th overall and was buried behind multiple small school athletes. But Shearn found his footing, first with a win at Briarwood over Tony Russell and then with an all-time great performance at the Schuylkill League Championships. However, after a slower early pace, Shearn didn’t have enough of a surge on the last mile to put Vinny Todaro away and the Big Spring senior sprung the upset.

All that said, Shearn’s senior season was clearly geared toward a deep run into the end of November and hopefully December. When he showed up to the Footlocker Regional meet, he proved that with a 4th place overall finish in 15:46, good for tops in PA ahead of the 2nd through 4th finishers at AAA states and the top two guys in A. At Footlocker Nationals, Shearn ran a quick 15:44 and ended up 21st in the nation. That was #2 in PA. Ultimately, I believe Shearn was named the Gatorade Runner of the Year for the State of Pennsylvania.

2. Vinny Todaro, Sr Big Spring (3 AAA): 1st/1st
The 2012 season from Vinny Todaro is one of the all-time great seasons lost to history. Todaro put together the rarely season undefeated season including a win at the state championships against arguably the best two seniors in the state in Brendan Shearn and Dan Jaskowak. Todaro also compiled head to head wins against Brent Kennedy and Tony Russell while throwing down one of the fastest times in Carlisle history. His 16:00 final time from states may not look like much, but that was off a 10:16 3200 split, making Todaro’s last mile one of the quickest ever in Hershey history.

Where did this magical season come from you might ask? Well, Todaro had finished 26th and 9th in his last two state finals, both times being one spot away from medaling. Those disappointments drove him to become the runner he was: a state champion in XC and my #2 runner in the state in 2012.

1. Tony Russell, Jr Henderson (1 AAA): 1st/1st
Russell had a pretty dominant stretch run to his 2012 season that included wins at Districts, States (in a new meeting record) and the Nike Northeast Regional. Add in his all-time performances at Manhattan and Belmont and you’ve locked up the title. Plus, it doesn’t hurt his ranking that Russell was the #1 guy on the state championship team.

By the way, I talked a lot about Todaro’s final mile and how quick he ran it. Well, Russell went out faster through 2 miles and still closed the last 1.1 in 15:38! It’s the second fastest last 1.1 in course history behind only Jake Brophy’s superhuman 2014 race.

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

West Chester East vs. Everybody


West Chester Henderson may have been the state champions in 2012, but it was another West Chester team that ended up becoming the most underrated team on the etrain blog. At the end of the 2011 Cross Country season, West Chester East finished 8th in District 1 and missed out on a state qualifying spot. Although they were returning quite the war chest of Henderson, they were bringing back 5 of their top 7 including state qualifier Jesse Rogers and one of the district’s freshmen in Eric Diestelow.

But East was overshadowed within their own conference. Not only did West Chester Henderson shine as perennial title contenders, but the boys from Great Valley who had been second at the 2011 district championships, were also bringing back 5 of their top 7 including three guys who had finished in the top 40 at Lehigh’s championship. Great Valley had state experience, strong recent success and a preseason stamp of approval in the rankings. West Chester East would have to be party crashers.

West Chester East’s first chance to do just that came in their opening invitational at Abington. Here, East was racing against two teams largely considered to be the best threats to Henderson in CR North and Great Valley. In the match-up, East promptly showed their worth. Posting strong depth (5 in the top 15), East edged out CR North. The big game changer was Chris Cummings who led the way in 5th place overall. The junior hadn’t raced at districts the prior fall, but had been a member of the team’s varsity squad during his freshman season. The performance was good enough to get East the #10.5 spot in the etrain rankings, a non-committal vote of confidence from the site head.

East’s performance proved to be no fluke over the next two weekends. East swept the top 4 spots at the Chris Fretz invitational before scoring just 28 points in the large school section of the Bull Dog Invitational. East’s top 4 was only broken up by Downingtown West athletes (Joey Steadman took 2nd overall) and, even without #5 Sean Dougherty, the East boys rolled through the competition.  Ultimately, there success was beginning to turn heads. They came it at #7 in the etrain team rankings, the #3 team in D1 behind only Henderson and surprise early-season squad Pennsbury.

With a target now firmly on their back, West Chester East entered the prestigious Paul Short Invitational hoping to post a strong victory. The battle would feature league rivals Great Valley, perennial D3 power Cumberland Valley, an upstart Hershey team and the AA state favorites from Pottsgrove. Although many thought East’s streak of victories might come to an end, the squad ran flawlessly with 5 top 50 scorers. The talented sophomore Diestelow led the way at 16:23 with Cummings also coming home in the top 20. It was Trey Crump who stepped up in a big way to take 43rd and finish as the team’s #4. With no Dougherty in the line-up, it looked like there could be a gaping hole in the team’s varsity, but they rose to the challenge and outlasted the highly touted D3 packs and easily topped Great Valley as well.

However, after the meet, the comment section of the blog was quick to write off East’s victory. Some said they didn’t beat any true top tier teams. Others noted that, had CV’s Alex Coburn not suffered from dehydration, Cumberland Valley would have left the meet with the championship trophy instead. Still, East’s victory was enough to rise them another couple spots into #5 in the etrain team rankings.

As East went into Ches-mont’s it was revealed that Dougherty had a stress fracture and the team’s key early season cog was done for the year. Trey Crump’s breakthrough at Paul Short would need to become a habit as depth and overall health became an increasing concern entering championship season. In fact, it was so concerning that East actually slipped two spots in etrain’s rankings without even running a single race.

The drama heightened even further as the supports for Great Valley and Downingtown West increased in volume. Sure, Henderson was going to run away with the Ches-mont title, but the battle for second was turning the league championships into a marquee invite. The pressure was not just for the silvers at Ches-mont, but the knowledge that there might only be one non-Henderson state spot up for grabs at the District championships the next weekend.

On race day, as expected, things were unbelievably tight. Downingtown West got a massive lift from their front runners as Joey Steadman and Kenny Leidal took 3rd and 4th overall behind only the super-duo of Russell and Barchet at Henderson. Matt Willig of Great Valley was 5th and then Diestelow came home in 6th, putting East in a front-running hole early. But that whole would be short lived. Stephen Dages for East saw that Cummings wasn’t having his best day and came through with a clutch 8th place overall finish. He crossed the line as the team’s #2 runner in a surprise turn. When Cummings came home a spot later, that gave East the best #3 in the meet (including Henderson).

But there was an agonizing wait for West Chester East. Three Great Valley runners and two more DT West athletes crossed the finish line during the 44 second gap between East’s #3 and their #4 runner Trey Crump. Then Great Valley’s #5 Dan Dudt slipped inside the chute one second ahead of West Chester East’s #5 Jesse Rogers. In an incredibly slow race, would that be the difference?

After what was likely an agonizing wait, the final standings were revealed. Great Valley had put together a terrific performance and they finished with 77 points. However, West Chester East had edged them out by a nose, scoring 75 points. Dages proved to be the hero with his 8th place finish. DT West was also in the mix with 80 points. They were just 5 points out of second and, if their #5 continued to make strides, could jump both teams at Lehigh.

In perhaps an equally important meet for the Ches-mont teams, CR North and Pennsbury faced off at the SOL National meet at Lehigh. Pennsbury had bested North in the early season and was a top 5 team in the etrain rankings for much of the season, most notably posting a 3rd place finish at Foundation over Mount Lebanon and Lower Dauphin. But CR North had a proven track record of success and a reputation for peaking at the right time. After a lackluster start to the year, they were beginning to come on strong right when it mattered most. At leagues, it was North who became champion with just 28 points against 44 for Pennsbury.

With CR North’s emergence into their old self, it looked like a 6 team battle for 5 state championship spots. Henderson would surely claim the district title and then CR North, West Chester East, Pennsbury, Great Valley and DT West would slug it out for the remaining tickets. CR North’s peaking at the right time inspired etrain to expect similar results out of Great Valley at the district meet. West Chester East was predicted at #4 with Pennsbury at #5 and DT West the odd team out.

As usual, the Ches-mont proved to be a special group of runners. Henderson won the meet with 67 points and CR North came through for silver. However, the remaining 3 state qualifying spots all ended up belonging to Ches-mont programs. West Chester East led the way yet again as they continued to defy the haters with a 3rd place overall run. They dipped under 200 points despite no finishers higher than 20th. Eric Diestelow and Chris Cummings both snuck under 16 minutes with Jesse Rogers, the team’s lone state qualifier in 2011, had a phenomenal race to take 44th overall as the team’s #3. Also rising to the occasion was #6 runner Alex Hughes. Depth had been a concern, but the speedster raced phenomenally at Lehigh and finished 77th overall just 6 seconds behind the school’s #5 runner.

Great Valley (218) and DT West (253) both found a way to get past Pennsbury. Great Valley had solid depth with a 47 second spread, led by Matt Willig at 15:59. Billy Wolffe had a nice day as the team’s #3 runner with a 16:14 performance. Meanwhile, DT West got a massive lift at the #5 spot. This was the team’s weakness on paper, but sophomore Will Pelcin dropped a phenomenal 16:53 to race right on the coat tails of Keegan Flagg. That performance proved to be the difference maker as Pennsbury finished 20 points back. Pennsbury sophomore Alek Sauer (easily one of the best ten 800 guys this decade) had an unfortunately timed off day and finished outside the scoring 5 for this team.

So the Ches-mont was sending 4 teams to the state championships. While most schools would be taking a victory lap, the league got ready to double down on their success. They would get a chance to see the top ranked teams from the WPIAL and District 3 and they dreamed of much more than sneaking into the top 12 overall. And there was extra motivation when etrain released his state predictions …

West Chester East got slotted in the 10th spot in the predictions one spot behind Great Valley. East had beaten Great Valley every team they faced them include at the Ches-mont Championships and the District Championships. Not to mention that East had already taken down Cumberland Valley at Paul Short who was ranked in the 5th position as well as Hershey (8th).

Etrain’s prediction proved to be a galvanizing one in the comments as many East supporters were quick to point out they were underestimated and would rise to the challenge as they had all season to date. Ches-mont mates DT West were not picked to place in the top 12 and of course the now infamous etrain pick was for O’Hara to knock off Henderson at the top of the standings.

Ultimately, regardless of the predictions, the haters, the doubters or the anonymous commenters, the state championship would be decided by the runners on the course. After concerns about the Hershey Parkview layout being trashed by rain, it turned out the conditions were actually perfect for an XC championship meet. Even by the 6th race of the day, things were looking set up for fast times.

However, the Ches-mont schools did not attack the course with an aggressive start. West Chester East was actually just 12th in the team standings at the mile with their last two scorers in the 100s for overall placing. Great Valley’s pack had gotten off to a better start, sitting in 9th, but it was actually DT West that stormed the castle gates with a hot start from Keegan Flagg and Ryan Mucha (40th and 63rd in team scoring). West was tied for 7th in the standings and only 10 points away from 6th.

A mile later, West Chester East had found their rhythm. Although the team was relatively new to the Hershey hills, they showed that they could attack the course at its most difficult stretch. Dages was looking closer to his Ches-mont form and Rogers was using his experience well. Meanwhile, Alex Hughes was continuing to be an x-factor. He was running as the team’s #5 runner and was actually ahead of the #5 guys for Great Valley and DT West. Those two teams were 6 and 2 points ahead of West Chester East at the two mile marker as the three schools held the 6th, 7th and 8th positions in the standings. Yet Cumberland Valley and Mt Lebanon were only 1 and 8 points behind, ready to try and knock East back to their predicted position at 10th.

The last mile of the state championships is always jam-packed with notable performances. Some guys are struggling for breath and going backwards, others are making championship saving surges toward the finish line. There are big kicks, dramatic falls and all sorts of chaos. For the three Ches-mont schools, the state picture would be very difficult to sort out. With the top 25 already in the clubhouse, none of these teams had any individual medalists. They would need to rely on depth to score highly in the state.

The first guy through to the finish was a bit of a surprise. Great Valley’s Matt Willig produced a clutch 29th overall finish which was good enough to put him 17th in the team standings. Just two seconds later was Joey Steadman in 18th. It seemed like the league rivals had managed to find each other even among the crowded field as Ken Leidal, Chris Cummings and Eric Diestelow all crossed in a row with team scoring positions 23 through 25. Two in the clubhouse for East. Two for West. One for Great Valley.

There was an agonizing 15 second wait before the next finishers came through. Billy Wolffe came to play with a 17:02 for Great Valley, but the key runner was Thomas Doran. The junior finished just 2 seconds off Wolffe and one spot back in the team standings. When Garrett Zatlin crossed shortly thereafter, Great Valley had 4 runners in the clubhouse before any of their rivals could count 3. They were now back in contention. With Daniel Dudt crossing at 17:33, it looked like Great Valley might have done enough to jump East for the first time.

West Chester East was edged out by 18 points against the Patriots. Great Valley finished 6th in the state standings and East exceeded expectations with their 7th place run. Stephen Dages, Jesse Rogers and Alex Hughes rounded out the top 5. Each runner finished ahead of Dudt, but ultimately they couldn’t quite narrow the gap that Doran and Zatlin created in the 3-4 spot. Still, East put all 7 scorers in the top 90 team scorers proving that they were both healthy and deep on the Hershey hills.

DT West managed to hang for the 9th place finish in the state. Leidal and Steadman led the way as they often had, but sophomore Tyler Alansky was a major part of their climb up the standings. The state rookie ran 17:36 and placed 73rd in the team standings to surprise in the #4 spot for West. Ryan Markle, a senior leader on the team, had one of his better days as well when he jumped up to the #5 spot. Downingtown managed to hold off Lower Dauphin by just 16 points to clinch 9th.

We’ve always known there is a strong culture of running in the Ches-mont League, but the 2012 season may have proven this better than any other year. There were 4 teams in the top 9 at the state meet all running within the same circles. They pushed each other, fueled a ton of state wide discussion and ultimately achieved far more than many would have thought possible.

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