M.E. Clayton, Millennium Hall of Fame
M.E. Clayton never met a jump or hurdle she couldn’t clear, but
these days the former Newport Harbor High track and field standout is
stretching it a bit.
Clayton, the 1997 Female Athlete of the Year at Newport Harbor, has
added the heptathlon to her athletic discipline at BYU.
“I enjoy all (seven) events, but the 800 is a killer,” said Clayton, a
junior for the Cougars. “I’ve never been a long-distance runner ... I’m
used to running 35 meters and jumping.”
In an era of great Newport Harbor female track and field athletes, few
could outleap Clayton, the school-record holder in the 100-meter hurdles
(15.3) and one of the finest triple jumpers and long jumpers in Harbor
history.
Clayton, who specializes in the long and triple jumps at BYU, started
the heptathlon last year.
“I had a desire to do something more, something different, and now I
really enjoy it,” Clayton said. “My freshman year in the triple jump and
long jump, the workouts became kind of monotonous. It was the same
workout every day.”
No more. Beginning in January when the indoor track season opens,
Clayton will be kept busy in the two-day heptathlon, which includes the
javelin, 200 meters, 100-meter hurdles, shot put, high jump, long jump
and 800.
“(The 800) is the most annoying, but a lot of times that determines
certain spots (in the final standings),” said Clayton, who selected BYU
over Duke, and was pleased with her first-year heptathlon results in
1999.
“After a lot of thinking and a lot of prayer, it came down to BYU,
because this is where I was supposed to be,” Clayton added. “I love it
here. I love the people, and I feel like I’m getting an incredible
education. I enjoy the atmosphere (in Provo, Utah). It’s different than
anything else I’ve ever experienced before.
“I live in paradise (Newport Beach), granted. But I really enjoy it up
here.”
Clayton’s personal best in the triple jump (39 feet 8 inches) is 2
feet 2 inches longer than her farthest in high school. She went 37-6 at
the CIF Masters Meet in her senior year. Her goal in 2000 is to crack the
41-foot barrier.
In the long jump, Clayton has leaped 18-11 and hopes to break 19 feet
on a regular basis.
A four-year varsity letter winner and three-time MVP of Newport
Harbor’s girls track team, Clayton captured three Sea View League
individual championships, as well as three runner-up finishes and one
third-place showing. At the CIF Southern Section Division II finals, she
was second in the triple jump twice (1996 and ‘97) and third in the long
jump in ’97.
“She’s one of the best track athletes we’ve ever had,” said Newport
Harbor Coach Eric Tweit, who has featured dozens of springtime stars in
the 1990s, including Lindsey Curtis, Michaela Ross, Gina Heads, Cara
Heads and Clayton’s older sister, Mandy, also a jumper.
Clayton, also a basketball standout and solid contributor in
volleyball, was influenced greatly by Nowell Kay, the Sailors’ longtime
jumps and hurdles coach.
“Some of my favorite times were during those big (postseason) meets,
and it was just me and Nowell,” Clayton said. “I’d have a way of
overthinking things and overstressing, and Nowell was always helping me
through it.”
Clayton, whose personality would carry her even beyond a PR in the
triple jump, qualified for the CIF Division II finals in three events
(triple jump, long jump and 100 hurdles) her senior year.
“I’ve been coaching for (14) years and she’s in the top three or four
athletes I’ve had, personality-wise and athletic-wise,” Kay said.
Clayton, who earned the school’s Female Athlete of the Year Award when
Danny Pulido won it for the Sailor boys, was also a two-time All-Sea View
League and All-Newport-Mesa District choice in basketball.
A 6-foot center, Clayton shared twin tower duty with 6-foot Breanna
Badorek on the 1996-97 girls hoops squad under Coach Bob Dukus, as the
Sailors finished second in the Sea View League behind powerhouse
Woodbridge.
Clayton, who carried a 3.76 grade-point average in the classroom,
averaged 12.4 points and 7.2 rebounds per game as Newport Harbor went
18-11 overall that winter, 7-3 in league and advanced to the CIF Division
II-A quarterfinals. Colleen Eadie and Desiree Talley were also senior
standouts on the team.
“I loved basketball,” Clayton said. “I’d been playing since the fourth
grade. (Former Newport Harbor and youth hoops coach) Shannon Jakosky was
my idol.
“I always enjoyed team sports, and I wish I would’ve done volleyball
for four years -- (Sailors Coach) Danny Glenn will love that.”
Volleyball was an afterthought for Clayton. Even today, during
backyard rallies at her parents’ house, her younger sisters, Elizabeth
and Laura, have an edge in setting and passing. Her younger brother,
Billy, is a senior athlete at Newport.
Clayton, who hopes her best athletic moment is in front of her, is a
member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the
millennium.
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