Cross country: CdM sweeps Laguna Beach
Tony Altobelli
NEWPORT BEACH - Corona del Mar High’s Liz Morse took the expression
“run through the finish line” a bit too far in Thursday’s Pacific Coast
League cross country race against Laguna Beach.
Not quite knowing exactly where the end of the race was, the Sea King
standout capped off her winning time of 17:51 with a 50-foot burst of
speed after the finish line.
Morse had a logical reason for this.
“I thought the finish line was at the end of the finishing channel,
not at the beginning,” Morse said, laughing. “I’ve run this course a
bunch of times and for some reason, I goofed.”
Sea King Coach Bill Sumner had a more colorful explanation.
“Liz is a lamebrain,” Sumner joked about his standout runner. “She
gets a 1,540 on her SAT and she can’t remember where the finish line is?
That’s why she did so well on the tests, because they teach it in pieces.
I guess I’ll teach her where the finish line is tomorrow.”
Flattery aside, Morse led from start to finish to lead CdM, ranked No.
1 in Orange County to a dominating win over Laguna Beach, 17-46 (lowest
score wins in cross country).
Following behind Morse was Jenny Cummins at 18:02 and Katie Quinlan at
18:05.
In fact, seven of the top eight times for the girls varsity race came
from Corona del Mar.
“We weren’t really running for times today,” Morse said. “We were
working on our first mile and starting hard from the beginning.”
With some runners totally focused on their race at hand, Sumner tries
to keep the big picture in perspective for his runners.
“Our goal for all the girls was to have a first mile under six
minutes,” Sumner said. “We need to be crystal clear on what we are
focused on as a team. Some people see this as one race. I see it as one
step toward our long-term goals, which is CIF and State.
On the boys side, Travis Beardslee (15:04) and Josh Yelsey (15:26)
each posted personal-best times for the Sea Kings in their 18-39 win.
Judd Heitbrink rounded out the top three at 16:05.
“Travis ran very well today,” Sumner said. “I think today was a
breakthrough day for him. Hopefully this will make a new path for him. It
was also nice to see Josh run his best-ever today.”
Thursday’s three-mile race was run at Bonita Creek Park, where some of
the athletes really enjoy running.
“It’s my favorite course, because there are hardly any hills out
there,” Cummins said.
Despite losing to Nordoff High by one point in last year’s State
Finals, the Sea Kings have themselves as top motivators.
“Nobody owns their spots on this team,” Sumner said. “After the fourth
or fifth spot, it’s pretty much up for grabs. We have guys and girls on
our teams that would be a top-three runner elsewhere, but won’t make the
top seven here, we’re that deep.”
What’s the best way to describe Sumner’s situation with his group?
“They’re just renting their spots and I’m the landlord. It’s a nice
problem to have and hopefully, I’ll have this same problem when the
finals come around.”
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