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May 28, 2011 | High School Huddle
 

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Saturday, May 28, 2011

Clueless and fast a winning combination for Alter’s Albers

The following are highlights provided by Dave Long from the Division II track and field regional at Welcome Stadium on Saturday. The top four placers qualify to next week’s state meet at Columbus:

• Alter junior Olivia Albers won the girls 1,600 meters (5:13.89) with little knowledge of the other 15 runners in the field.

“I don’t really want to know anyone else’s time,” she said. “I just want to concentrate on running my own race and react to what’s happening on the track. I know some girls go online and look at the other runners around the state.

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Olivia Albers has been a key middle-distance runner at Alter for several seasons. Staff photo by Barbara J. Perenic

“I don’t do that. I stay off the track websites and tell my friends and parents not to talk to me about other runners.”

Albers was in a pack until the final lap when she broke away from second-place Emily Stites of Cincinnati Wyoming (5:13.68) and Sophie Chatas of the Columbus School for Girls (5:13.72).

Alter (36.25) was third in the team race behind Columbus Hartley and Chaminade Julienne.

• Eaton freshman Michelle McKinney was a surprise winner in the 800 (2:18.13).

She had been running the 100, 200 and 400 most of the season. Eaton coach Randy McKinney, her uncle, decided four weeks ago to move her up to the 800.

“She has good speed, but not good enough to get to state in any of those races,” he said. “So I asked her if she wanted to move up to 800 and she said OK. (Saturday) was only her fourth 800 of the season.”

McKinney was fourth coming into the home stretch and passed second-place finisher Rebecca Esselstein of Alter (2:18.89) with 10 yards to go.

“All that speed work I did all year in the dashes paid off,” she said. Her father, Rick, made it to state three times in the 800, but never as a regional champion.

She has been coming to district and regional track meets “since maybe I was in the fourth or fifth grade. I’d always kind of gaze at the girls on the winner’s stand and wonder what it would be like to stand up there. Now I got to do it. It’s a pretty cool feeling.”

This was the fourth consecutive year Esselstein has qualified to state in the 800.

• Stivers and Columbus Hartley put on the best relay race of the day in the 1,600. Sophomore Rolisha Slade led most of the final leg, but couldn’t hold off Hartley’s Alisha Cavin (who won the 400), who caught her five yards from the finish line.

Hartley ran 3:54.53 while the Stivers’ team of Slade, freshman Candace Pettiford, sophomore Darrea Ragland and senior Jasmine Lee ran 3:54.78. Oakwood was third (3:58.49) and Alter fourth (4:00.20).

Stivers’ same foursome qualified to state in 800 relay (third in 1:43.43). Lee was also fourth in the long jump (17-4.50).

• Ja’Naye Scott of Thurgood Marshall ended two years of frustration by finishing second in the closely contested girls long jump.

DaVanae Mitchell of CJ was the winner (17-9.75). Scott was second (17-9.50), Camille Dickens of CJ third (17-7) and Jasmine Lee of Stivers fourth (17-4.50).

Scott won the City League long jump title all four years and qualified to state as a freshman. She won the Dayton D-I district as a sophomore but was sixth at the regional. Last year she was third in the D-II district but ninth in the regional.

This year she won the Dayton D-II district with a record jump of 18-3.50.

“After district I didn’t want to come to regional and blow it again,” she said. “I was jumping very consistently (Saturday) so I thought I had a good shot at going to state unless a couple of people got off some big jumps.

“I thought I had beaten DaVanae, but she got me by this much. Now I have a chance to go back to state and do better than I did my freshman year.”

As a freshman Scott scratched on all three of her preliminary jumps and came in last in the field of 16.

• Dunbar boys coach Sidney Booker had reason to be doubly proud Saturday. Not only did his team win the regional, but first-year Dunbar girls coach America Henson, his daughter, had a winning relay.

The 400 relay of Ryan Russell, Chantell Kee, Lasha’ Packnett and Mehgan Cherry came in first in 49.26 seconds. Cherry also qualified to state finishing second in the 200 meters (25.78).

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Lakota East tops Vandalia Butler in D-I baseball regional final

The Vandalia Butler High School baseball team lost a Division I baseball regional final to Lakota East 7-0 on Saturday, Cox Media Group Ohio reporter Jay Morrison reported on his Twitter account.

The second-ranked Aviators earned an emotional 6-5 victory against top-ranked Moeller on Friday by scoring two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning.

Lakota East then went scoreless against Northmont for 11.5 innings in the second game of the Friday doubleheader before scoring in the bottom of the 12th. The Thunderhawks then returned for Saturday’s noon game and earned their first trip to the state tournament.

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Centerville finds a way to beat lane 8

DAYTON - There’s nothing more lonely than being stuck out in the dreaded lane eight of an eight-lane track.

There are no runners to gauge your position by - unless they’ve blown by. Worse, you’re one misstep from joining onlookers and other non-attentive runners and spectators on the track’s edge.

It’s rare that someone - or a relay - wins from lane eight. The reason you’re there in the first place is because most of the field has a better prelim time.

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Ifeadi Odenigbo (left) - shown running last year - anchored the Elks’ winning 800-meter relay at the D-I regional. DDN photo by Jim Witmer

That’s where Centerville’s 800-meter relay found itself during Friday’s Division I regional track and field meet at Welcome Stadium. But instead of buckling, the Elks hit a gear that previously had only been missing. Centerville led from start to finish to win (1:28.78).

The unexpected 10 points were the difference in the Elks winning their first D-I regional boys title in program history.

“I took that baton and I was just by myself in lane eight and I just ran,” said junior anchor Ifeadi Odenigbo.

“We were just hoping to get fourth and get to state.”

Odenigbo was on the relay only because senior Tristin Boykin had volunteered to relinquish his spot during a team meeting only hours before. Both are football standouts - Boykin, an RB, is headed to Kent State; Odenigbo, an obviously mobile DE, hasn’t committed, although OSU is among his offers. And both are tight friends.

“I just did what was best for my team,” Boykin said.

“I felt that Ifeadi was originally faster than me in all of his open 200s. He was the best fit for this and it ended up being really rewarding. I felt overall very excited about it. This had to be a turning point. We felt that it was our meet to lose.”

Initially fueled by a combined 33 points from Michael Bennett’s shot put and discus wins and Benny McGowan’s second in the shot and fourth in the discus, Centerville was in good shape to contend for the team title.

The hurdles were just as productive: Michael Melchor was second in the 110 highs (14.74) - he also was fifth in the long jump - and Jon Overstreet was third in the 300 hurdles (39.57).

But the relay put the Elks over the top, good for a 70-65 edging of Cincinnati LaSalle for the boys team title.

“That was huge; just dynamite,” said Elks coach Matt Somerlot.

“It was gut-wrenching to take a kid out and put someone else in and the kids handled it like they’ve done all year. That part is really cool, because that’s what we’ve talked about.”

Permalink | Comments (0) | Post your comment | Categories: Regional track & field

 
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