IC4A Championships,
Day 1
Saturday, March 2,
2013
Boston University
track
1,000-meter run
preliminaries
15. David Marthy 2:29.11
29.9, 58.2 (28.3), 1:27.8 (29.6), 1:58.1 (30.3), 2:29.11
(31.01)
Comments: David
was just a little off his school record of 2:28.31 set on this very track at
the Terrier meet back in January. The race started out slowly, and David once
again blitzed a strong midrace surge which left him a bit ragged at the end of
the race. It was a game effort that left David a bit disappointed at the end
result. We move on to outdoors now, with some training ideas and plans to
improve upon his meet performances.
5,000-meter run
finals
7. Will Griffin 14:23.14 **IC4A All East
34, 70 (36), 1:45 (35), 2:18 (33), 2:52 (34)
3:26 (34), 4:01 (35), 4:35 (34), 5:09 (34), 5:43 (34)
6:17 (34), 6:51.8 (34.8), 7:26.2 (34.4), 8:07.3 (35.1),
8:36.4 (35.1)
9:11.4 (35.0), 9:46.5 (35.1), 10:27.6 (35.1), 10:56.5
(34.9), 11:31.9 (35.4)
12:07.1 (35.2), 12:42.2 (35.1), 13:15.6 (33.4), 13:49.0
(33.4), 14:23.14 (34.14)
Kilometer splits:
2:52, 2:51, 2:53.4, 2:55.5, 2:51.2
Comments: Bravo
to our super senior (actually, graduate student) for a six-second PR and a
coveted scoring spot in his second consecutive IC4As (Will scored in the 10,000
outdoors last spring). This makes him the first distance runner to ever score
in both the indoor and outdoor IC4A meet, further solidifying his legacy and
standing in program lore. This was a tough, punishing race for Will – lots of
pushing and shoving in the first two kilometers. You’ll notice the splits went
from full-second lap splits to more detailed splits to the tenths. That was due
to a very nervous coach (me) who was worried that Will’s race was slipping
away. It was not. Rather, some very fast dudes threw in a midrace surge that
dropped Will’s pack. Will ran great, and closed strong in the final kilometer
to secure that scoring spot. And yes, it was a six-second PR. Very nice! Will
is scheduled to run in the 3,000-meter race on Sunday. He will do his best with
this very challenging double.
11. Arquimedes DelaCruz 14:29.82 (personal best, won his
section)
35, 70 (35), 1:44 (34), 2:19 (35), 2:53 (34)
3:28 (35), 4:02 (34), 4:36 (34), 5:10 (34), 5:46 (36)
6:21 (35), 6:27 (36), 7:31 (34), 8:08 (37), 8:43 (35)
9:18 (35), 9:53 (35), 10:29 (36), 11:05 (36), 11:41 (36)
12:16 (35), 12:52 (36), 13:26 (34), 14:00 (34), 14:29.82
(29.82)
Kilometer splits:
2:53, 2:53, 2:57, 2:58, 2:48
Comments: What a
great way for Quimes to end his indoor career! He won the section in a
flourish, slamming it home with an eye-popping 29-second last lap. That does
not often happen in a 5km race. You’ll notice that his third and fourth
kilometers were a bit on the slow side. He heard his old coach (me) yelling and
screaming that the pace was too slow, that he needed to move. He heard me, but
he did not react. He told me later he was holding back and gearing up for the
win. Prior to the event, Quimes told me his race strategy was simple: Just run
the race. If there is one thing our boy Q can do, it is handle mano a mano
competition – it harkens him back to his wrestling days. This was a four-second
PR for him, and should provide a nice springboard into the outdoor track season
for him.
Distance medley relay
20. Marist (Mark Vuono, Matt Panebianco, Isaiah Miller, Nick
Salek) 10:23.01
Mark Vuono, 1200:
30, 62 (32), 1:33 (31), 2:04 (31), 2:36 (32), 3:07.7 (31.7)
Matt Panebianco, 400:
24, 52.2
Isaiah Miller, 800:
27, 57 (30), 1:29 (32), 2:00.7 (31.7)
Nick Salek, 1600:
30, 62 (32), 1:35 (33), 2:08 (33), 2:42 (34), 3:16 (34), 3:49 (33), 4:21.9
(32.9)
Comments: This
was a solid effort for all involved. Mark had a strong and gutsy leadoff leg,
battling his competition and running tough from start to finish. Matt did what
he could; his body has been ravaged by flu-like symptoms for more than a week
now, and he hung on as gamely as he could. Isaiah was in no-man’s land, went
out hard and did what he could; same goes for Nick, who actually closed the gap
on the three teams in front of him for a time and really ran a strong leg
considering he was also in no-man’s land.
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