Monday, May 30, 2022

Commencement 2020 (finally!)

When Marist President Kevin Weinman introduced the Class of 2020 … “finally!” on Saturday morning, in commencement exercises in the McCann Center, it closed a very long and painful loop for a group of young women and men who had the rug pulled out from the final months of their college careers. President Emeritus Dennis J. Murray (who received a well-deserved honorary degree, an idea from the Class of 2020 itself!) referred to the class as “resilient” and spoke in heartfelt terms about how much this day meant to him and to the college. Because of crazy spring weather – thunderstorms and heavy rain – the ceremony had to be moved inside, to the McCann Arena. It worked out quite well! For those members of the Class of 2020 who returned – perhaps about half of them? – this was well worth the wait on a poignant late morning/early afternoon. Several Forever Foxes made their returns to McCann, and we were able to connect with them after the ceremonies. This class deserved a proper sendoff. Two years later, they got it. Neat.  





Thoughts on retirement

My father was generally not one to ask for advice – certainly not of ME, the youngest of four children in a very busy and noisy and active household in which he was clearly the One In Charge. Rather, he was the one dispensing (almost always unsolicited) advice, or more accurately, indisputable edicts about what to do and when and where to do it. Ours was an old-fashioned (some would call “traditional”) set-up. He was the breadwinner and the leader of the household. Did I mention? It was a busy and crowded household. Along with my mother and three siblings, it also included various ancient Italian relatives, none of whom spoke English nor had anywhere else to live but the downstairs of our suburban New Jersey house. They, too, were under his iron-fisted rule. Now, I’m not trying to make out my dad as a mean-spirited ogre. He wasn’t. He was just IN CHARGE. Long cigar in his mouth, which naturally turned his face into a scowl, he was the one telling us what to do and not the other way around. And again, never, ever one to ask for advice.
 
Which is why, nearly 30 years later, I still remember the conversation we had in our kitchen one day, when I was home in Jersey for the weekend from Poughkeepsie. “Hey Pee-dah,” he growled in the Bronx accent never dissipated through the years. “Tell me about golf. I need to learn how to golf.” If it weren’t my father, the authority figure who commanded respect, I would have burst out in laughter -- and I nearly did! Golf? You! Pfffft. And asking ME about golf? Me! Pfffft. I don’t recall my father as being the most athletic dad in the world. Oh sure, he boasted about playing sandlot ball in Queens with a guy he used to call “Eddie” – the rest of the world would come to know him as “Whitey Ford.” And he wielded a mean hammer around the house, with a fierce woodworking hobby. So yeah, he was an “athlete” in his younger days (I mean, weren’t we all?) and he was active well into adulthood (he was no couch potato). But golf? Him! Not the most patient man, let’s just put it that way. If he ever golfed (and, he never did), I could envision him, after many bad shots, hurling his putter into some pond, with the club pirouetting through the air like an errant twirling baton, trailed by a stream of epithets in its wake. Yeah anyway. So why was my father asking me about golf? Well, he was nearing the end of his long career as a mechanical engineer, all with the same company. You wanna talk old-school, traditional? Save for a two-year military commitment, my father worked for the same company from the age of 18 until the standard retirement age of 65. He got the retirement party, the cake, the gold watch, the pat on the back – a cliché back then but more of a curious relic in this modern era of work (that’s another story). But, like many others of his generation and his ilk, retirement did not come with a handbook or a playbook. All his life, he didn’t have to think much about how he spent his days. Work all day, maybe a little overtime a few nights a week, fend for that big family upstairs and those creaking dinosaurs who spoke only Italian in the basement. A few trips to the lumberyard, tinkering in the woodshop in between, cigar ever dangling from his lips. Years go by pretty quickly that way.
 
But then, the nest empties. The relics in the basement inevitably die off. The kids grow up and move out and start their own families. The need for overtime ends. The 9-to-5 routine, eventually, ends. And then what? Golf? This was the existential crisis my father was no doubt facing, back in the early 1990s, when he asked me about golf. Me! About golf! Other than being a sportswriter and knowing the correct spelling of Jack Nicklaus, I knew precious little about golf. But I did know a lot about my father and I didn’t think it would be a good mix. Gently, I think, I told him so. He nodded, grudgingly giving me my due and tacitly admitting that his punk-ass youngest kid maybe knew what he was talking about, for a change. At that very moment, retirement was a befuddling – maybe even scary – proposition for the old man. The first year or two, if I recall, I think he struggled with finding a routine. But find a routine he did. His days filled up. My parents even did some traveling – not far, usually up this way to what used to be called the “Borscht belt” in the Catskills – before their health inevitably went into decline. Also, the house filled up again, usually on weekends, with grandkids. The woodworking continued for a while, again until the ravages of age and time diminished that too.
 
We live in a different time now. Retirement is not as clear-cut. It’s a little more of a fuzzy concept for most of us. Very few men and women work for the same company for 40-plus years, get the cake and the gold watch and (most importantly) the pension in perpetuity. In a few months, I turn 58 and will be embarking on my 32nd year as track/XC coach at Marist. For those keeping score at home? Fifty-eight is not young, and 32 is a long time to be doing the same thing. I’m not expecting a gold watch; heck, I’m not even sure I’ll get to script my exit! But it sure was nice, a few weeks’ back at the conclusion of the MAAC outdoor championships, to be “celebrated” -- in retirement-party fashion – for my 30-plus years of coaching. The parents/friends who surreptitiously organized it had been planning something to honor my 30th year, but alas that was scuttled in the middle of the pandemic mess. Somewhere in there, sitting at home walking the dogs, wallowing in self-pity and writing more blog posts than coaching practices, I started and finished my 30th year of coaching. But there was no appropriate time or place to celebrate that milestone. And so, there was the very gratifying – if somewhat confusing – “celebration” at the end of my 31st year. Again, it was really cool. I was definitely surprised. There were heartfelt gifts and many kind words – including from my own boss, Athletic Director Tim Murray. Yes, it sure had the feel of a retirement party. To reiterate, I don’t know how and when this long and blessed run of coaching will come to an end. But I will say THIS: At the time of the celebration, and now, retirement was not at the forefront of my mind. At that time, the next meet (IC4As/ECACs) was on my mind; wrapping up this recruiting cycle and starting the next recruiting cycle was on my mind; the 2022-2023 season, one in which our athletes can set more records, was on my mind. But, facts are facts, and I’m a lot closer to the end of my career than to the beginning of it. Some thoughts of “retirement” certainly do creep in – especially when I’m kindly reminded of (and honored for) my longevity. The end is near. And when it comes, will I pose some version of the “golf” question to my children, like my dad did to me? Heck, they already laugh out loud at what I say and what I do and what I wear – so I think I’ll pass on that. Hopefully, if and when the time comes, like my parents I’ll be blessed with 20-plus years more of life on this planet. And if that’s the case? It’ll be up to us to figure out how and where to spend the wonderful gift of time in those final years.

Monday, May 23, 2022

Commencement activities


Last weekend, Marist celebrated and honored the Class of 2022, a group that has been through a lot but has emerged -- like all other previous graduating classes -- as a group to be proud of. On Friday, the baccalaureate and honors ceremonies were held in the McCann Center, and two of our athletes (Kutchie and Alexa Spain) were honored for their outstanding balance of academics and athletics. Kutchie was even interviewed for the accompanying video! Saturday's commencement was held on a blazing hot day -- ironic, since two weeks prior to that (at MAACs) we were huddled in winter clothing on the cold and rainy day. This coming Saturday, the Class of 2020 will finally get its day in the sun with a commencement ceremony that never happened back in those early days of the pandemic. We are hoping to be back in action so we can go to THAT ceremony. 

Sunday, May 15, 2022

IC4A Championships, Day 2 results: 4x800 relay record!

The 2022 track season wrapped up with a bang – one more school record (4x800 relay) and one more medal performance (Glen in the 100 dash) – at IC4As. The relay was Sunday’s highlight. The sun burned through and it was downright hot out there. I sensed our guys were pretty weary from the unusual (for us) warmth but when the gun went off they brought their usual fire. Pech led off with a gutsy 1:54.78, handing off in heavy traffic to TP, who had an off leg (for him) with a 1:54.73. Sween punched the clock with his usually strong 1:54.74, and then it came down to Pax, who battled mano a mano with Manhattan’s anchor leg, running as hard as he could for a 1:52.68 split and a narrow school record of 7:37.26, edging the previous mark from 2017 by just 0.11. Unfortunately, our 4x400 relay didn’t finish due to a hamstring injury on the third leg by Roshan; also, Glen did not race in the 200 because of a tight hamstring. As with most meets, you take the good with the not-to-good. For the balance of the 2022 track seasons – indoors and outdoors – the good has far outweighed the not-so-good, and this weekend was no exception with two school records in relays, an individual bronze medalist and the second- and third-fastest times in school history in a single event. Highly neat. We’re already looking forward to next winter!
 
IC4A Championships
Sunday, May 14, 2022
College of William and Mary
Zable Stadium, Williamsburg, VA
100-meter dash, finals
3-Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne 10.63 *IC4A All-East
200-meter dash, finals
17. Jeremy Mooney 21.88
27. Jared Tomasetti 22.67
3,200-meter relay
8-Marist (Aidan Pech 1:54.78, Tyler Perry 1:54.73, Aidan Sweeney 1:54.74, Chris Paxis 1:52.68) 7:37.26 *IC4A All-East **school record, old record 7:37.37 by Brian Henderson, Drew Burns, Steven Morrison, Stefan Morton, 2017
Team standings
1-Army West Point 81, 2-UAlbany 73, 3-George Mason 54.33, 4-Northeastern 52, 5. FDU 44, 6-St. Joseph’s PA 40, 7. Mount St. Mary’s 35, 8-Saint Francis 33.33, 9-Stony Brook 30, 10-LIU 29, 11-Manhattan 28, 12-Duquesne 26, 13-Fordham 23, 14-Rider 20, 15-NJIT 17.33, 16-Lafayette 17, 17-Binghamton 16, 18-Marist and St. Peter’s 15, 20-Siena and UMass Lowell 14, 22-St. Francis NY 13, 23-Boston University, Harvard and Lehigh 12, 26-Bucknell 10, 27-Navy and VMI 8, 29-Central Connecticut 7, 30-Lincoln PA and William and Mary 6, 32-American and Colgate 5, 34-Canisius, Hampton, UMBC 4

Saturday, May 14, 2022

IC4A Championships: Day 1 results

A strong first day for the men, with the aforementioned 4x100 relay record, along with two stellar 1,500s (Pax with the second-fastest time in school history; TP with the third-fastest time in school history) and three more sub-11:00 marks in the 100, with Glen making Sunday’s finals. Also Sunday, three men in the 200 (Glen, Jeremy, Jared) as well as the 4x800 and 4x400 relays.
 
IC4A Championships
Saturday, May 14, 2022
College of William and Mary
Zable Stadium, Williamsburg, VA
100-meter dash, trials
3-Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne 10.51 *qualified for final
17. Reed Dexter 10.82
18. Jeremy Mooney 10.85
31. Jared Tomasetti 11.32
1,500-meter run
16. Christopher Paxis 3:51.46 *second-fastest time in school history
45.80, 1:49.24 (63.45), 2:53.31 (64.08), 3:51.46 (58.15)
26. Tyler Perry 3:53.43 *third fastest time in school history
45.70, 1:49.49 (63.79), 2:52.81 (63.33), 3:53.43 (60.62)
10,000-meter run
14. Gabriel Rodriguez 32:08.06
17. John Ignacz 32:44.30
400-meter relay
2-Marist (Roman Katona, Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne, Reed Dexter, Jeremy Mooney) 41.02 *school record, old record 41.32, last week

ECAC Championships: Final results

The women’s track season came to a close, with graduate student Hayley Collins earning All-East honors with a gutsy fifth-place performance in the 10,000-meter run. Hayley’s breathing is still being impacted by her recent case of Covid (diagnosed right before she was supposed to have raced at Penn Relays) and she battled tough throughout tonight’s race. Earlier in the day, freshman Adele Alexander ran gamely in her section of the 1,500, ending a solid freshman year for her.
 
ECAC Championships
Saturday, May 14, 2022
College of William and Mary
Zable Stadium, Williamsburg, VA
1,500-meter run
28. Adele Alexander 4:47.00
55.82, 2:12.80 (76.99), 3:28.93 (76.13), 4:47.00 (78.07)
10,000-meter run
5. Hayley Collins 36:26.16 *ECAC All-East
1600m splits: 5:37.65, 11:21.22, 17:13.68, 23:08.38, 29:02.02, 34:59.14

IC4As: Relay record!

 

The 4x100 relay team of Roman Katona, Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne, Reed Dexter and Jeremy Mooney lowered their school record to 41.02 seconds and got second place -- 2ND PLACE! -- at IC4As this afternoon against some great competition. Strong start to the day. Full details from all results later tonight ...



IC4A/ECAC: Lunch en route


We were honored and grateful to have freshman Reed Dexter's family host us for lunch en route to Williamsburg on Friday afternoon. It's a long bus ride down here and it was great to break it up with some good home cookin' -- the pulled pork was a personal favorite! -- in Reed's hometown of Springfield, VA (Fairfax County).  

Thursday, May 12, 2022

IC4A/ECAC entries

As the end of the spring 2022 semester nears (this is the penultimate day of Finals Week), we prepare for our final championship meet of the season -- IC4A/ECAC -- all the way down at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, VA. We have a strong contingent of athletes entered (see list below) in individual and relay events. Roman and Easton were entered in the open 400, but we scratched them from that event in favor of focusing fully on the 4x400 relay. Thunderstorms are in the forecast and we are hoping that they will elude the meet days and hours down there. We look forward to way too many trips to the Wawa on Richmond Road, across the street from Zable Stadium, for way too many cups of coffee. One more early bus departure tomorrow and one more late bus arrival on Sunday night. Wouldn't want it any other way. 

IC4A/ECAC entries
Saturday and Sunday, May 14-15
College of William and Mary
Williamsburg, VA
IC4A entries (men)
100-meter dash: Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne, Jeremy Mooney, Reed Dexter, Jared Tomasetti
200-meter dash: Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne, Jeremy Mooney, Jared Tomasetti
1,500-meter run: Christopher Paxis, Tyler Perry
10,000-meter run: Gabriel Rodriguez, John Ignacz
4x100 relay: Marist team (Roman Katona, Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne, Reed Dexter, Jeremy Mooney)
4x400 relay: Marist team (Roman Katona, Easton Eberwein, Roshan Kalikasingh, Ryan Bahnsen)
4x800 relay: Marist team (Aidan Pech, Tyler Perry, Aidan Sweeney, Christopher Paxis)
ECAC entries (women)
1,500-meter run: Hannah Belleville, Adele Alexander
10,000-meter run: Hayley Collins


Tuesday, May 10, 2022

MAAC Championships: A few more thoughts

 Thanks to my good friend, Marist Sports Information Director Mike Ferraro, for pointing out that our men's point total at MAACs was the best in 12 years, since the 2010 championships (where the men scored 65 points and also finished in fifth place ... but that was out of five teams!). Our sprints carried us in the points. Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne garners a lot of the attention, and rightfully so! Glen won the 100, 200 and was part of the 4x100 that got second in a school record; he was recognized as the MAAC Most Outstanding Performer (Track) as well as MAAC Rookie of the Year (Track) -- yes, he is a freshman eligibility! But remember. That 4x100 consisted of three other top-level sprinters! And our roster for the upcoming IC4A Championships is loaded with sprint athletes. Loaded. It's a new era and we're proud of it, for sure. 

Also, a short note on the post-meet gathering we had at Rider, celebrating the old coach (me) for 30-plus years of service (for those keeping score at home, this completes Year 31 for me). It was organized by parents and Marist administrators, and it was very much appreciated. I'm grateful for the attention and the love, it is humbling and honestly a bit confusing to me at first. The genesis of the idea was to celebrate the 30-year milestone, but obviously we couldn't do that last year. It had the feel of a retirement ceremony; in fact, some of my peers thought I was, in fact, retiring! Newsflash: I'm not. Not yet, at least. I'm definitely at the "year-to-year" phase of my career. But for now, I'm fired up for this coming week and the coming weeks and months leading up to the 2022-2023 cycle. Thanks again for all the love and support. 

Sunday, May 8, 2022

MAAC Championships: Men's results

An outstanding and productive conclusion to the MAAC Championships for the men. Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne won two individual events, the 4x100 relay placed second in a school-record time and the 4x800 relay got an IC4A qualifying mark. Freshman pole vaulter Noah Brown medaled. And the team scored 58 points. An overall very solid day. More thoughts tomorrow. OK!

MAAC Outdoor Championships
Rider University
Saturday-Sunday, May 7-8, 2022
Men
100-meter dash (finals)
1-Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne 10.44
5-Jeremy Mooney 10.90
100-meter dash (trials)
3-Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne 10.58
7-Jeremy Mooney 10.57
9-Reed Dexter 10.61 *IC4A qualifier
200-meter dash (finals)
1-Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne 21.05 *MAAC record!
200-meter dash (trials)
4-Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne 22.26
11-Jeremy Mooney 22.49
17-Jared Tomasetti 22.90
20-Dwayne Menders 23.53
24-Jon Green 24.27
400-meter dash (finals)
6-Roman Katona 50.61
400-meter dash (trials)
5-Roman Katona 49.45 (qualified for final)
9-Easton Eberwein 50.41
21-Ryan Bahnsen 52.33
24-Pat Beglane 54.64
1,500-meter run (trials)
13-Aidan Pech 4:03.30
16-James Moehringer 4:07.68
17-Tyler Perry 4:09.87
23-Brendan Dearie 4:14.41
35-Steven Viera 4:27.53
5,000-meter run
19. Dylan Perkinson 15:33.99
22. John Ignacz 15:46.32
24. Patrick Kutch 15:48.91
26. Jon Kittredge 16:28.47
10,000-meter run
14-Gabriel Rodriguez 31:31.93
19-John Ignacz 31:59.86
24-Jeremy Mbogo 32:58.96
3,000-meter steeplechase
5-Daniel Czop 9:39.56
8-Patrick Kutch 9:45.09
400-meter relay
2-Marist (Roman Katona, Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne, Reed Dexter, Jeremy Mooney) 41.32
1,600-meter relay
5-Marist (Reed Dexter 50.98, Ryan Bahnsen 50.49, Roshan Kalikasingh 50.79, Easton Eberwein 50.00) 3:22.66
3,200-meter relay
2-Marist (Aidan Pech 1:57.2, Tyler Perry 1:53.2, Aidan Sweeney 1:55.1, Christopher Paxis 1:54.2) 7:40.11 *IC4A qualifier
Pole vault
3-Noah Brown 4.05m (13 feet, 3.5 inches)
Javelin
9-Liam Haggerty 37.70 meters (123 feet, 8 inches)
Men’s team standings
1-Monmouth 263, 2-Rider 206, 3-Iona 94, 4-Manhattan 79, 5-Marist 58, 6-Siena 48, 7-St. Peter’s 45, 8-Canisius 23

MAAC Championships: Women's results

MAAC Outdoor Championships
Rider University
Saturday-Sunday, May 7-8, 2022
Women’s results
100-meter dash (trials)
16-Gianna Ferrara 13.46
18-Sydney Villani 13.86
200-meter dash (trials)
12-Camille McHenry 26.07
19-Nina Florio 27.86
24-Alicia Chute 28.24
27-Gianna Ferrara 28.65
400-meter dash (trials)
15. Alicia Chute 1:04.14
19. Natalie Tidler 1:05.64
22. Gabrielle Brosnan 1:07.22
800-meter run (trials)
16-Hannah Belleville 2:24.12
19-Raven Stanet 2:26.49
22-Anaiya Bobo 2:28.49
27-Gina Ruotolo 2:33.37
32-Juliana Geniti 2:43.07
36-Alexa Mocko 2:49.85
1,500-meter run (final)
11-Hannah Belleville 4:53.87
1,500-meter run (trials)
12-Hannah Belleville 4:52.49 *qualified for final
14-Adele Alexander 4:53.00
23-Kaitlyn Hastings 5:07.80
27-Caitlin McCann 5:16.76
5,000-meter run
6. Hayley Collins 17:17.32
12. Tori Mariano 17:56.11
21. Talia Cutrone 18:55.06
10,000-meter run
5-Hayley Collins 36:38.66
12-Sara Leavens 40:23.83
3,000-meter steeplechase
10-Kathryn Tenney 11:57.86
100-meter hurdles (trials)
12-Sydney Villani 16.26
15-Talia Augusto 19.37
400-meter relay
5. Marist (Sydney Villani, Gianna Ferrara, Isabella Azar-Brandes, Camille McHenry) 52.56
1,600-meter relay
5. Marist (Natalie Tidler 63.6, Camille McHenry 61.1, Isabella Azar-Brandes 63.7, Kayla Sexton 65.3) 4:13.94
3,200-meter relay
8. Marist (Hannah Belleville 2:24.6, Caitlin McCann 2:31.5, Anaiya Bobo 2:29.1, Raven Stanet 2:28.4) 9:53.72
Pole vault
8-Jessica Ippolito 2.95 meters (9 feet, 8 inches)
Triple jump
10. Kiana Pathirana 10.52 meters (34 feet, 6.25 inches)
High jump
11-Grace O’Neill 1.42 meters (4 feet, 7.75 inches)
Long jump
20-Alexa Spain 4.47 meters (14 feet, 8 inches)
23-Alyssa Ridgway 4.32 meters (14 feet, 2.25 inches)
Javelin
10-Briana Koutros 29.53 meters (96 feet, 10 inches
Women’s team standings
1-Monmouth 250, 2-Rider 202.5, 3-Quinnipiac 163, 4-Manhattan 55, 5-Siena 43, 6-St. Peter’s 35.5, 7-Iona 33, 8-Canisius 20, 9-Marist 17

Saturday, May 7, 2022

MAAC Championships, Day 1: Men's results

MAAC Outdoor Championships
Rider University
Saturday, May 7, 2022
Day 1 results
Men
100-meter dash (trials)
3-Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne 10.58
7-Jeremy Mooney 10.57
9-Reed Dexter 10.61 *IC4A qualifier
200-meter dash (trials)
4-Glenmour Leonard-Osbourne 22.26
11-Jeremy Mooney 22.49
17-Jared Tomasetti 22.90
20-Dwayne Menders 23.53
24-Jon Green 24.27
400-meter dash (trials)
5-Roman Katona 49.45 (qualified for final)
9-Easton Eberwein 50.41
21-Ryan Bahnsen 52.33
24-Pat Beglane 54.64
1,500-meter run (trials)
13-Aidan Pech 4:03.30
16-James Moehringer 4:07.68
17-Tyler Perry 4:09.87
23-Brendan Dearie 4:14.41
35-Steven Viera 4:27.53
10,000-meter run
14-Gabriel Rodriguez 31:31.93
19-John Ignacz 31:59.86
24-Jeremy Mbogo 32:58.96
3,000-meter steeplechase
5-Daniel Czop 9:39.56
8-Patrick Kutch 9:45.09
Javelin
9-Liam Haggerty 37.70 meters (123 feet, 8 inches)

MAAC Championships, Day 1: Women's results

MAAC Outdoor Championships
Rider University
Saturday, May 7, 2022
Day 1 results
Women
100-meter dash (trials)
16-Gianna Ferrara 13.46
18-Sydney Villani 13.86
200-meter dash (trials)
12-Camille McHenry 26.07
19-Nina Florio 27.86
24-Alicia Chute 28.24
27-Gianna Ferrara 28.65
400-meter dash (trials)
15. Alicia Chute 1:04.14
19. Natalie Tidler 1:05.64
22. Gabrielle Brosnan 1:07.22
800-meter run (trials)
16-Hannah Belleville 2:24.12
19-Raven Stanet 2:26.49
22-Anaiya Bobo 2:28.49
27-Gina Ruotolo 2:33.37
32-Juliana Geniti 2:43.07
36-Alexa Mocko 2:49.85
1,500-meter run (trials)
12-Hannah Belleville 4:52.49 *qualified for final
14-Adele Alexander 4:53.00
23-Kaitlyn Hastings 5:07.80
27-Caitlin McCann 5:16.76
10,000-meter run
5-Hayley Collins 36:38.66
12-Sara Leavens 40:23.83
3,000-meter steeplechase
10-Kathryn Tenney 11:57.86
100-meter hurdles (trials)
12-Sydney Villani 16.26
15-Talia Augusto 19.37
Long jump
20-Alexa Spain 4.47 meters (14 feet, 8 inches)
23-Alyssa Ridgway 4.32 meters (14 feet, 2.25 inches)
Javelin
10-Briana Koutros 29.53 meters (96 feet, 10 inches)

MAAC Championships, Day 1: Wind/rain 2, Pete's umbrellas 0!

Yowza! What a DAY at Rider University. In terms of weather? It pretty much ... sucked! We had the gamut of horrendous early-season track weather -- chilly winds, chilly rain, mud, puddles ... hey, even one of the Monmouth buses got STUCK in the mud! That made for good entertainment (it did finally get extricated). Mostly? It sucked! Oh wait. I already said that. And, oh yeah: It's NOT early-season track anymore. It's late-season track! Geez. Despite this? There were numerous really excellent performances across the board in the ever-competitive MAAC. Tomorrow's weather looks a little bit better ... but not by much! It won't rain as much. But it will be windy and cold. In my quest to be ever prepared for the conditions, I brought two umbrellas. Both of them were destroyed in the wind. Yikes. Onto Sunday!

Friday, May 6, 2022

MAAC Championships: Schedule/order of events

Note: Some field event dates and times may be shifted due to potentially inclement weather. 

Saturday, May 7
Order of events
Field events
12 noon: Hammer throw (women)
1p: Long jump (women), pole vault (men)
2p: Hammer throw (men)
3p: Pole vault (women)
3:30p: Javelin (women)
4p: Long jump (men)
5:30p: Javelin (men)
Running events
1:20p: 1,500-meter trials (women)
1:45p: 1,500-meter trials (men)
2:10p: 100-meter hurdle trials (women)
2:25p: 110-meter hurdle trials (men)
2:35p: 400-meter trials (women)
2:50p: 400-meter trials (men)
3:10p: 100-meter trials (women)
3:25p: 100-meter trials (men)
3:40p: 800-meter trials (women)
4:00p: 800-meter trials (men)
4:25p: 400-meter hurdle trials (women)
4:35p: 400-meter hurdle trials (men)
4:50p: 200-meter trials (women)
5:05p: 200-meter trials (men)
5:20p: 3,000-meter steeplechase (women)
5:40p: 3,000-meter steeplechase (men)
5:55p: 10,000-meter run (women)
6:35p: 10,000-meter run (men)
 
Sunday, May 8
Field events
10a: Triple jump (men), shot put (men)
11a: Discus (women)
12 noon: Triple jump (women), high jump (men)
1p: Discus (men)
2p: Shot put (women), high jump (women)
Running events
12 noon: 4x100 relay (women)
12:05p: 4x100 relay (men)
12:10p: 1,500-meter run (women)
12:17p: 1,500-meter run (men)
12:30p: 100-meter hurdles (women)
12:40p: 110-meter hurdles (men)
12:55p: 400-meter dash (women)
1p: 400-meter dash (men)
1:15p: 100-meter dash (women)
1:20p: 100-meter dash (men)
1:30p: 800-meter run (women)
1:35p: 800-meter run (men)
1:50p: 400-meter hurdles (women)
2p: 400-meter hurdles (men)
2:10p: 200-meter dash (women)
2:15p: 200-meter dash (men)
2:25p: 5,000-meter run (women)
2:50p: 5,000-meter run (men)
3:10p: 4x800 relay (women)
3:25p: 4x800 relay (men)
3:40p: 4x400 relay (women)
3:55p: 4x400 relay (men)

Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Visits from the legendary Rich Stevens

 

What an amazing and pleasant surprise to see our old friend and Marist XC legend Rich Stevens, in town from San Diego for a few days. First, he stopped by the McCann Center on Monday and then he was back at the Vassar track on Wednesday to watch practice and meet the team and tell old stories about his glory days of coaching the team from 1972-1980 (and then again from 1987-1990). Rich will be the first to admit that his 8-year run in the 1970s was what he'll always remember and of which he has the most pride. Those teams were GREAT. Rich was an outstanding coach and he remains loyal to our school and our program. Fun fact: He coached and/or recruited Gary Wiesinger (father of Ian) and Tim Dearie (father of Brendan). Small world!


Theme day at the track

 


On a chilly and rainy midday, we had one of our last full track workout days at Vassar College on Wednesday. Unbeknownst to me, the guys decided to dust off their high school singlets (for those who could find them) and do their workouts/runs in them. Up top, we posed with our graduating team members (Barbooks, Moe, Kutchy, Sween, Begs). It's always fun to Play Track with these guys.

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

The truth and Ty Cobb

The conversation started something like this, with me talking as men assembled for the beginning of yet another track practice last week. “Hey guys! I’m reading this really interesting book, a biography of Ty Cobb!” Usually, such proclamations are met with muffled indifference. Or worse, complete silence, with heads buried in their respective phones -- looking up race results or watching workout videos or otherwise maintaining steadfast disinterest in my interest. Hey, I don’t take it personally. My “entertainment” choices range from (mostly boring) audiobooks to (mostly boring) podcasts – alert readers of this blog already know that! But this time? Someone actually commented – a senior member of the team who, from what I recall, is not even much of a baseball fan. Said he: “Ooooh. Coach. Ty Cobb? Racist! Really bad guy. Killed people. Racist, right?” He made a point to stress the “racist” part. I smiled and said no … and that’s what I loved so much about “A Terrible Beauty,” the incredibly well-written and well-reported biography by Charles Leerhsen. This book, which is only a few years old, debunks many of the Ty Cobb myths. In the process, Leerhsen completely trashes previous Ty Cobb biographers and historians – specifically Al Stump, the biographer most responsible for painting this mostly inaccurate picture of perhaps the greatest baseball player of all time.

Now look: Leerhsen doesn’t transform the evil legend of Ty Cobb into a saintly figure – a la, his contemporary from the Dead Ball era, the great Christy Mathewson, Matty, who was dubbed (among many other glowing nicknames) the Christian Gentleman. No. Not at all. After reading this book, and enjoying every minute of it (books about the Dead Ball era of early 20th century baseball are a great favorite of mine), I took away that Cobb had a rather expansive mean streak. Cobb was quick tempered. Cobb was rude. Cobb got into a lot of fights – side note, so did most competitive men back in those days. Cobb played the game hard, played it aggressively, and rubbed a lot of people the wrong way (on and off the field). But was Cobb a racist? By his words and his deeds and his surprisingly enlightened southern lineage, there is no trace of that. Did Cobb kill people in fits of rage? Uh, no. There is absolutely zero evidence of that, anywhere. Did Cobb intentionally spike players on the base paths and around the bases? Intentionally? No. Did he sharpen his spikes to intentionally hurt people? No. Cobb was kind to autograph seekers, especially children. Cobb wrote long and thoughtful letters to all fans who corresponded with him. Cobb was revered by most fans much of the time, even by umpires with whom he bitterly feuded. Cobb was a doting father, and he was also tough on his children, and in his later days, he drank too much and had strained relations with his family. In other words? Cobb was a complicated man. He was human. Just like the rest of us. He also happened to be among the greatest players who ever lived, and was the first man elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, a point of pride for him right up until his death.

Cobb’s was a unique, highly entertaining life – filled with myriad ups and downs. Leerhsen weaves the narrative so well that you just want to keep going and going to find out what happened – even though, if you are a baseball fan, you kind of know what happened! But there were many twists and turns of which I was not aware. For example: I had no idea that Cobb, a career-long Detroit Tigers player, finished his career with two years on the Philadelphia Athletics, playing for the legendary manager Connie Mack. The book reads like many, many great baseball biographies, with one notable exception. Toward the end of the book, Leerhsen summarizes his extensive research by laying waste to the despicable hatchet job by Al Stump, which is largely responsible for Cobb’s still famously tarnished (if mostly false) reputation. It’s an oft-cited cliché to say, “well, so-and-so should be in the Hall of Fame, if a mean racist like Ty Cobb is in there.'' Again, Cobb was nowhere near as evil as he has been portrayed and his legacy is forever tarnished as a result. Leerhsen tries to address this toward the latter stages of the book.

Here’s some of what Leerhsen wrote about Stump’s fictitious portrayals of Ty Cobb:  Most of what he wrote wasn’t the truth. The degree to which his writing had been accepted … had nothing to do with its dependability. He got both the finer details and the broader strokes wrong, and largely on purpose for the sake of a dramatic, and thus more marketable, story.

And then, Leerhsen said this, which to me is downright poetic genius: The experience taught me a lesson about how assumptions can shape our thinking, and hence our lives. Just because you’ve heard something a thousand times doesn’t mean it’s true. … When the culture has the mind to convict someone, facts are like gnats; annoyances to be swatted away.

Oh gosh. Doesn’t this sound familiar? The book was published in 2015, just around the time when terms like “Fake News” and the incessant echo chambers of our media outlets really ramped up. “Versions of the truth” are generally in the eyes of the beholder, reader, listener or viewer. “Confirmation bias” is rampant. Ty Cobb is a racist! Ty Cobb killed people! If you are interested in a more nuanced version of the truth – as in, the actual, fact-based truth about the complicated legacy of Ty Cobb, read Leerhsen’s book. We’d all do well to apply the lessons of Leerhsen’s reporting and perspective to other areas of public discourse.

Sunday, May 1, 2022

Yale Springtime Invitational: Men's results

Several highlights in our final tuneup before next week's MAAC Championships: 

--Jeremy Mooney with a pair of personal-best times in the sprints
--Reed Dexter with a personal-best in the 100 dash
--Our intrepid 4x800 guys (Pax, TP, Pech, Sween), taking a break from the 1,500 to all notch PRs in the 800
--Javelin thrower Liam Haggerty with yet another personal-best toss. 

Yale Springtime Invitational
Sunday, May 1, 2022
Men’s results
100-meter dash
1-Jeremy Mooney 10.70 *IC4A qualifier
7-Reed Dexter 11.23
200-meter dash
3-Jeremy Mooney 21.62 *IC4A qualifier
13-Dwayne Menders 23.62
16-Jon Green 24.27
400-meter dash
2-Easton Eberwein 50.68
800-meter run
3-Christopher Paxis 1:54.00
4-Tyler Perry 1:55.38
5-Aidan Pech 1:56.49
6-Aidan Sweeney 1:56.55
7-James Moehringer 1:58.30
11-Matthew Barbookles 2:03.32
1,500-meter run
6-Daniel Czop 4:10.58
8-Jon Kittredge 4:16.78
9-Neel Viswanathan 4:21.28
10-Dylan Perkinson 4:29.03
5,000-meter run
5-Jeremy Mbogo 16:03.94
6-Steven Viera 16:09.85
3,000-meter steeplechase
2-Brendan Dearie 10:03.92
1,600-meter relay
1-Marist (Tyler Perry 52.38, Aidan Sweeney 52.08, Reed Dexter 52.47, Easton Eberwein 50.75) 3:28.87
Javelin
2-Liam Haggerty 43.31 meters (142 feet, 1 inch)
Pole vault
1-Noah Brown 3.80 meters (12 feet, 5.5 inches)

Yale Springtime Invitational: Women's results

Yale Springtime Invitational
Sunday, May 1, 2022
Women’s results
100-meter dash
10-Sydney Villani 13.16
400-meter dash
4-Anaiya Bobo 1:04.96
800-meter run
10-Hannah Belleville 2:23.68
12-Gina Ruotolo 2:29.17
17-Juliana Geniti 2:43.50
1,500-meter run
10-Kathryn Tenney 5:03.15
3,000-meter run
10-Talia Cutrone 10:51.79
100-meter hurdles
3-Sydney Villani 15.87
1,600-meter run
2-Marist (Anaiya Bobo 64.31, Hannah Belleville 63.55, Gina Ruotolo 65.87, Alexa Mocko 65.52) 4:19.67
Long jump
7-Alexa Spain 4.72 meters (15 feet, 6 inches)
8-Alyssa Ridgway 4.40 meters (14 feet, 5.25 inches)
9-Maria Rivell 4.26 meters (13 feet, 11.75 inches)
High jump
2-Grace O’Neill 1.55 meters (5 feet, 1 inch)
8-Anne Bekasi 1.40 meters (4 feet, 7 inches)
Pole vault
2-Jessica Ippolitto 3.10 meters (10 feet, 2 inches)