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June 26-27, 1998 at Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville IL

USATF Junior Nationals

Day 1 Media Notes by USATF -
Angela Williams Wins 100 in New HS Record 11.11

The Weekly Notes appear on USA Track & Field's web site (http://www.usatf.org)
and are prepared by USATF's media information staff of Pete Cava, Tom Surber and
Glen McMicken, who can be reached at 317-261-0500. Special thanks to Hal Bateman
for his contributions. The Weekly Notes are produced using Xerox Document
processing equipment. Also assisting with this special edition of the Weekly Notes
were Carol Swenson and Dan O'Brien of USATF's press box crew.


             USA JUNIOR TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS

RALPH KORTE STADIUM - SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY-EDWARDSVILLE

                     EDWARDSVILLE, ILLINOIS

                     FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1998



     Angela Williams, the 5-2 bundle of speed from Southern California, 

saved her best performance for last.  Friday night at the USA Junior 

Track and Field Championships at Southern Illinois 

University-Edwardsville, the recent Chino (Calif.) High 

School graduate won the women's 100 meter title for a record third time 

and broke the national high school record.    

     Williams, who won here last year and earned her first title in 1996, 

defeated a solid field that included UCLA's Shakedia Jones, the NCAA 

runnerup earlier this month in Buffalo, N.Y. Williams and Jones were even until about 70 meters into the race, when 

Williams pulled away. She finished in 11.11, with Jones second in 11.18.

     Seeing the mark on the timing device, fans and officials turned 

anxiously to the scoreboard for wind information.  When a reading of 1.2 

meters per second appeared --- well below the allowable limit of 2 mps 

--- the crowd at SIUE's Ralph Korte Stadium erupted in applause.  As 

expected, Williams had finally broken the 22-year-old  national prep mark 

of 11.13 by Chandra Cheeseborough.   Cheeseborough, now the coach at her 

alma mater, Tennessee State University, set the mark in 1976 while 

competing for Ribault High School in Jacksonville, Fla.  

     Fighting back tears as she walked back across the infield from the 

finish line, Williams regained her composure in the athletes' tent.  

"This is the best!" she exclaimed.  "I've been chasing this record all 

year."  

     For Williams, the race was her last of the year on U.S. soil.  Along 

with each of the other top two placers in the meet, she qualified for the 

biennial World Junior Championships in the French Alpine city of Annecy, 

France, July 28-Aug. 2. 

     "I always wanted to make a World Championships team," said Williams, 

who won gold medals in the 100 and 4x100m relay at the 1997 Pan American 

Junior Championships in Havana, Cuba.  "Shakedia's presence made a big 

difference.  I know she's a great competitor.  That helped pull me 

through.  I knew I would have to run hard all the way."  

     Williams, who'll enter the University of Southern California this 

fall, admitted to being "nervous, very nervous" prior to the race.  Now 

she says she's still anxious.  "I have to call my mom," she told 

reporters.  "She said if I made the team, she was coming to France with 

me.  I'm really looking forward to France, but," she added, her joy 

momentarily wilting, "I don't know any French."

     Friday's victory made Williams the only three-time women's 100m 

champion in USA Junior Championships history.  Two other sprinters had 

also won a pair of 100m titles at this meet:  Brenda Morehead (whose meet 

record was shaded Friday by Williams) in 1974-75, and Marion Jones --- 

the star of last weekend's USA Championships in New Orleans --- in 1991-92.  

     Miesha Withers of St. Bernard High School in Playa del Rey, Calif., 

was third in 11.54, followed by Baylor's Ssereta Lafayette in 11.59.  

Fifth was Alexis Joyce of Denver, at 14 one of the youngest contestants 

in the championships.  

     Prep sprinters dominated the men's 100 meter final, with Tory 

Mitchell of Big Spring, (Texas) High School winning in 10.12.  Mitchell's 

time was aided by a 3.1 meters per second

wind.  Second was Dashaun McCullough, a junior from Serra High School in 

Gardena, Calif., in 10.22.   

     Amar Johnson, a senior Fort Worth Country Day School finished third 

in 10.25, followed by Casey Combest in 10.31 and Tre Gardner in 10.34.  

Combest just finished his junior year at Owensboro, Ky., High School and 

Gardner, a Baylor recruit, is a recent graduate of Coppell (Texas) High.  

     Two collegiate finalists, Abilene Christian's Reggie Hill and Andre 

Davis of Virginia Tech, brought up the rear.  Hill wound up sixth in 

10.46 and Davis was seventh in 10.49.  The eighth finalist, Adrian Zullo 

of St. Thomas Aquinas High in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was injured and 

unable to start.          

     "It was great to come in here and do the kind of thing I was trained 

to do," said the laconic Mitchell, this year's Texas 4A champion as a 

junior.  "To hear the announcement on the time was great, too."  

     Mitchell, however, isn't sure whether he'll make the trip to Annecy 

for next month's World Junior Championships.  "I don't know about 

France," he mused.  "I haven't made up my mind on that yet."      

     Second place finisher McCullough has thoroughbred bloodlines.  In 

1971 his dad, Carl --- sprinter/long jumper --- singlehandedly won the 

California state title for Sacramento High School.

               Griffin Repeats in Women's Hammer

     In one of the closest duels in the history of the USA Junior 

Championships, defending women's hammer throw champion Maureen Griffin of 

Pocatello, Idaho, High School squeaked past Alabama freshman Janna Wren.  

Although both women received credit for throws of 181-3, the official 

metric measurement had Griffin's mark at 55.25 to 55.24 for Wren --- a 

difference of about a quarter of an inch.  

     Griffin, a prohibitive favorite going into the championships, was 

well off her American junior record of 201-7.  The University of Arizona 

recruit showed the effects of a hectic schedule that had her competing in 

three major events in three different cities over an eight-day span. 

     "I'm feeling really tired," Griffin admitted after the competition.  

"I need to get some rest. I was kind of nervous, especially when it 

looked like I might not make it.  But I came through, and that's the main 

thing."   

     It was the second major triumph in a week for Griffin, who holds the 

American junior record at 201-7.  Last Saturday she won the hammer title 

at the National Scholastic meet in Raleigh, N.C., just 24 hours after 

finishing 9th at the USA Championships in New Orleans.   

     While Griffin languished, runnerup Wrenn celebrated.  "This was a 

big PR today," she told reporters, "so I'm happy.  I wish I could've 

thrown it just a little but farther for first place. 

But not that many throwers come that close to Maureen."

     Wrenn, who was competing in her first national meet, is in her first 

year as a hammer thrower.  "I threw the shot and discus in high school," 

she explained, "and when I walked on at Alabama, the coaches said  Here, 

try this.'"

     Oddly enough, this is the second straight year that the runnerup to 

Griffin was an athlete named Wrenn.  A year ago, second place in the 

hammer went to Glenda Wrenn --- no relation to Janna --- who competed for 

the U.S. Military Academy.

            Tight Field Events Highlight USA Juniors

     The hammer throw was one of several hotly-contested events on the 

first day of the championships.    

     Three men cleared 17-0 3/4 in the pole vault, but it was Virginia 

Tech's Brian Hunter who won on the countback.  Jacob Pauli of Northern 

Iowa settled for second with Jimmy Autenreith, winner of last weekend's 

National Scholastic title in Raleigh, N.C., finishing third. 

Neither Pauli nor Autenreith --- the Texas 5A champ from Houston's Spring 

Branch Memorial High School --- could match their season best of 17-3.  

     Texas high schooler Robyn Burkhardt scored an upset win in the 

women's high jump, besting Auburn's Nakeitra Jones, who earlier this 

month placed seventh at the NCAA Championships.  Both women cleared 5-11 

1/2 but Burkhardt --- a recent graduate of San Antonio's East Central 

High --- got the victory on a jump-off.  

     "I wasn't sure if I could win," admitted Burkhardt.  "It was such a 

great field.  When we both missed 5-11 1/2, I didn't realize we were 

going to a jump-off.  I've never jumped that many times in a competition." 

     In yet another tight duel, LSU's Myra Combs won the women's long 

jump with a mark of 20-8 to beat Keyon Soley of Uniondale High School in 

Uniondale, N.Y., by a mere three-quarters of an inch.  The UCLA-bound Soley, who finished 

second at both last year's junior nationals and the  97 Pan American 

Junior Championships, recorded a wind-aided mark of 20-7 1/4.   

     Combs, who ran a leg on LSU's second-place 4x100m relay team at the NCAA

Championships this month, said Friday's victory was "really nice,"  

especially since she claims to have struggled in her first collegiate 

outdoor season.  She blames "a combination of things . . . competing in 

different events, relays, travel."  

     The versatile Combs, who'll try to complete an unprecedented long 

jump/200m double Saturday, said she doesn't consider herself to be a 

jumper or a sprinter first.  "I just try to do my best in whatever event 

I'm in," she claimed.  "There's a real good 200 field, so that double is

going to be tough." 

     Combs may also have a tough time making the trip to the World Junior 

Championships.  "I hope to go to France," she said, "but it depends on my 

teachers.  I'm taking summer school to get ahead, and finals are at that 

time."   

     The men's long jump title went to University of Texas freshman 

Christopher Hercules, who nailed down the title on his final try with a 

wind-aided mark of 25-3 1/4.  Second was DePaul University's Christopher 

Stafford with a wind-blown 25-1 3/4.  "I haven't long jumped

since the Big 12 Conference Championships, so I was a little rusty," said 

Hercules.  "I'm just happy to finally break the 25-foot barrier, even 

though it was wind-aided.  That's a confidence booster."  

     Hercules, second in the triple jump last year, will try on Saturday 

to become the first man in the history of the USA Junior Championships to 

win both the long jump and triple jump titles. 

"Tomorrow I go in my main event, the triple jump," he said, "and I hope 

things go well there, too."          

          Borschowa Still Undefeated in Women's Discus

     Two high school throwers led the field in the women's discus as 

National Scholastic winner Mandy Borschowa of Mount Si High School in 

Snoqualmie, Wash., and Krista Keir of South High in Westerville, Ohio, 

finished 1-2.  

     "I felt I threw pretty well," said Washington State recuit 

Borschowa, whose winning throw of 178-2 kept her undefeated 1998 season 

intact.  "I was pretty close to a PR, so I'm proud of myself.  Now I hope 

to get a PR in France."  Keir, an Indiana U. recruit who placed second in

this event last year and went on to win a silver medal at the Pan Am 

Junior Championships, produced a 174-1.   

     A pair of college freshmen battled it out for the men's discus 

title.  Iowa's Jeremy Allen threw the platter 189-8 to edge UCLA resdhirt 

Scott Moser, who was second at 187-9.  "I just came in here trying to do 

the best I could," said Allen, who was competing in the Junior 

Championships for the first time.  

     "I was nervous in the beginning, because I've bever competed in this 

meet and the reward was so great --- going to France.  I've had a good 

freshman year, winning the Big 10 and placing at NCAAs.  I feel grateful 

and blessed."     

     Lisa Kutzing won the walk, then made a bee-line for the airport to 

get back for her graduation ceremonies at Vandermeulen High in Port 

Jefferson, N.Y.  Kutzing, a silver medalist at last year's Pan Am Junior 

Championships in Havana, won easily in 24:43.  

     "I guess I'm going to have to brush up on my French," she quipped.  

"I took Spanish in high school, so Cuba was excellent for me last year."  

Kutzing had to leave shortly after the conclusion of her event to get 

back in time for 6:30 p.m. graduation ceremonies.  Originally, 

commencement at Vandermeulen had been scheduled for 6 p.m., but school 

officials pushed the starting time back a half hour to give Kutzing some 

leeway.  

     Emma Carter of Overland Park, Kans., the runnerup in the walk at 

25:25, won't compete in Annecy --- at least not in an American team 

uniform.  Carter, 16, is a citizen of New Zealand.  Brook Szody of 

Shingletown, Calif., who was third in 26:44, will join  Kutzing on the 

U.S. junior squad.      

     The men's hammer throw title went to John Badovinac of the 

University of California.  Badovinac's best effort, 193-6, outdistanced 

runnerup Nick Welihozkiy by more than five feet.  Welihozkiy, from West 

Springfield, Va., High School, threw 188-3.  "I had an idea coming in

that I might throw well here," said Badovinac, "and I PRed by 6 feet.  So 

I guess I can't ask for more than that."       

     Christopher Brooks of the U. of Wisconsin-Parkside won the men's 10 

kilometer walk in 48:44, followed by Scott Crafton of Indianapolis in 50:35.

     Tara Rohatinky qualified for her second U.S. junior team of the 

year.  Rohatinsky, a member of the American under-20-year-old squad at 

the World Cross Country Championships in Marrakech, Morocco, last March, 

won the women's 5000m in 16:42.82.  Second was Sharlyn Maughan of Weber 

State in 16:54.17.

     Butler University freshman Justin Young, a former Illinois prep star 

from Peoria who spent the last few weeks training at altitude in 

Colorado, was a runaway winner in the men's 10,000m.  Young finished in 

30:35.15, with Chad Durham of Long Beach (Calif.) Polytechnic High School 

taking second in 31:05.81.     

 Defending Champs Bethel, Ryland Grab First-Day Leads in Multis

     In the two-day multi-event competition, Ashley Bethel held the lead 

after the first four events in the heptathlon and Daniel Ryland was in 

front at the decathlon's midway point.  

     Bethel, the defending champ from Mission Viejo, Calif., High School, 

posted marks of 13.79 in the 100m hurdles; 5-5 3/4 in the high jump, 32-9 

in the shot put and 25.77 in the 200m, good for 3171 points.  

     Second at the end of the first day is Loren Leaverton of 

Naaman-Forest High School in Garland, Texas --- last year's 3rd place --- 

with 3158.  Gigi Miller of Odessa (Texas) College is third at 3152 with 

Kendra Reimer in fourth place at 3114 Jodi Anderson fifth at 3111.  Reimer

and Anderson, teammates at New Braunfels (Texas) High School, were among 

last year's top finishers.  Reimer was fourth in  97 while Anderson took 

second.     

     Like Reimer, Ryland is hoping to repeat his 1997 triumph here on 

Sunday --- a feat no decathlete has accomplished in the USA Junior 

Championships, which date back to 1972.  The Arkansas State freshman 

leads Marcell Allmond of St. Paul High School in Santa Fe Springs, 

Calif., and South Carolina freshman Clemia Anderson.  Allmond, the  

National Scholastic indoor multi-event champion, competes for the 

Southern California Cheetahs and is coached by Olympic assistant Ernie 

Gregoire --- who also coaches Angela Williams.  

     Ryland had marks of 10.59 in the 100m, 21-11 3/4 in the long jump, 

39-4 1/2 in the shot put, 5-9 1/4 in the high jump and 48.24 in the 400 

for a first-day total of 3794.  Allmond compiled 3718 points to 3685 for 

Anderson.    

                  Friday's preliminary rounds 

     Women's 100m hurdles:  UCLA's Michelle Perry was the fastest 

qualifier with a time of 13.44 (wind:  2.0 meters per second).  Other 

qualifiers for Saturday's final are Kentucky's Lutisha Shittu;  Daveetta 

Shepherd of Barton County JC (Great Bend, Kans.);  LSU's April Sams;  

Danielle Carruthers of Tilghman HS, Paducah, Ky.;  Tiffany Davis  of The 

Colony HS, Carrollton, Texas;  South Carolina's Jacquelina Madison;  and 

Ohio State's Donica Merriman.     

     Men's 110m hurdles:  Todd Matthews of Notre Dame Academy in 

Lawrenceville, N.J., third at this meet last year and the runnerup at 

last weekend's National Scholatic meet in Raleigh, N.C., posted the 

fastest prelim time, a wind-aided 13.83 (2.2 mps).  Other qualifiers for

Saturday's final are Arend Watkins of Washington State;  Ron Bramlett of 

Antioch, Tenn.;  Ronald Andrews of Siena Heights College (Amherst, 

N.Y).;  Christopher Stokes of Virginia Tech;  Ricky Moody of Harrison HS, 

Colorado Springs;  Dontae Bugg of Heritage HS, Newport News, Va.;  and 

Sharif Paxton of Crenshaw HS, Los Angeles.

     Women's 1500m:  Keisha Banks of James Madison U. and Kansas State's 

Amanda Crouse were the heat winners, with Crouse's 4:33.31 the fastest 

time of the day.  Rounding out the field for Sunday's final are Bethany 

Brewster of Williams HS, Freeland, Mich.;  Katie Hotchkiss of Mission San 

Jose HS, Fremont, Calif.;  Sarah Burkett of James Madison;  Jolee

Gillespie of BYU;  Erin Sims of Pascagoula (Miss.) HS;  Christin Wurth of 

Bloomington (Ill.)

HS;  Colleen Winzeler of Overland Park, Kans.;  North Carolina's Beth 

George;  Washington's Kara Syrdal;  and Londa Bevins of Mesquite, Texas.

     Men's 1500m:  Joe Stegall of Georgia Tech and Gabriel Jennings of 

Wisconsin were the heat winners, and Stegall --- pressed by BYU's Steve 

Barrus and Andy Powell of Oliver Ames HS in North Easton, Mass. --- had 

the fastest prelim time, 3:53.25.  Jennings coasted home in 3:53.94.  The 

other qualifiers for Sunday's final are Michael Altieri of  Sacramento's 

Jesuit HS;  Patrick Anglin of Princeton;  Auburn's Brad Hansen;  Justin 

Insco of U. of Mobile;  James Wilkins of Orange HS, Hillsborough, N.C.;  

Cheyne Jones of Imperial Beach, Calif.;  Mike Mueller of Loyola-Chicago;  

and Furman's Yuri Vander Heijden.

     Women's 400m:  Nakia Jones of Chino Hills, Calif., competing for the 

Southern California Cheetahs, was the quickest qualifier at 53.26.  Also 

making it to Sunday's final are Arlaina Davis of Arizona State;  Kori 

Hamilton of Alta Loma, Calif.;  Mikele Barber of Montclair (N.J.) HS;  

Tia Trent of Columbus, Ohio;  Alicia Crowd of Syracuse U.;  Demetria

Washington of Sanford HS, Fayetteville, N.C.;  and Faith Rein of 

Centreville (Va.) HS.        

     Men's 400m:  Arizona State's Tony Berrian turned in the quickest 

heat time, 46.41.  Also qualifying were Andrew Pierce of Ohio State;  

Obea Moore of the Los Angeles Jets Track Club --- who scored a 200/400 

double at the 1996 Junior Nationals and has since battled a variety

of physical ailments --- Jason Jackson of Grand Prairie, Texas;  Tim 

Brown of Fresno City College;  Bryan Swarm of Denver's East HS;  Shomari 

McKenzie of Tampa's Hillsborough HS;  and Aaron Luster of Jacksonville, Fla.

     "I'm here to earn a trip to France," said Moore, who finished second 

in last year's 400m final but had to bow out of the Pan Am Junior 

Championships due to a leg injury.  "I was injured early in the year, and 

I've only had three weeks of training, so I don't have a real good base.  But

I'll be ready for the final." 

     Moore is the defending 400m champion at the World Junior Championships.  He won

two gold medals at the last WJr meet in Sydney, Australia, in 1996, in the 400 and the 4x400m

relay.

     Women's 100m prelims:  Shakedia Jones and Angela Williams of Chino 

HS ran the day's fastest qualifying times.  Jones advanced to Friday's 

semifinal round with a wind-aided 11.25 (4.0 mps) while Williams won her 

heat with a breezy 11.37 (2.2).

     Women's 100m semis:  Jones and Williams each took another step 

toward a showdown in the final.  Williams won the first heat in 11.29 

(2.8 mps) and Jones followed with a win in 11.26 (2.2 mps).  Also 

qualifying for the final was Alexis Joyce of  Denver, at 14 years of age one

of the youngest contestants at this year's Junior Championships.   

     Men's 100m prelims:  All times were wind-aided as Amar Johnson led 

the way into the final at 10.29.

     Women's 800m prelims:  Weber State's Stephanie Hansen had the best 

qualifying mark, 2:10.67.  Others advancing to Saturday's final are Dara 

Crocker and Natalie Deffenbaugh, teammates from Columbia HS in Maplewood, 

N.J.;  Cara Cline of Liberty (Mo.) HS;  Alice Schmidt of Elkhorn HS, 

Omaha, Neb.;  Lindsay Hyatt of Placer HS, Auburn, Calif.;  Courtney

Darter of Boerne (Texas) HS;  and Kristina Bratton of Bradenton (Fla.) 

Christian HS.  

     Men's 800m prelims:  The fastest qualifying time, 1:51.98, belonged 

to Stanford's Mark Hassell.  Others making Sunday's final were Hassell's 

Cardinal teammate Ryan Carroll;  Connecticut's Elliott Blount;  Joseph 

Reid of Virginia Commonwealth;   Stewart Kimball of Eureka (Mo.) HS;  

South Carolina's Lamonte Pennington;  National Scholastic champ Jon

Stevens of Mission San Jose HS, Fremont, Calif.; and defending champ and 

Pan Am Junior gold medalist Moses Washington of Carol City (Fla.) HS.

     Women's 400m hurdles prelims:  Jamillah Wade of Philadelphia's Penn 

HS authored the best prelim time, 59.91.  Other qualifiers are Nyjla 

Littlejohn of George Mason;  Tia Tabb of Menchville HS, Newport News, 

Va.;  Sheena Johnson, Gar-Field HS in Dale City, Va.;  Carrie McGraw, 

Mission San Jose HS, Fremont, Calif.;  Shontel Powell, Illinois;  

Purdue's Angela Craft;  and Angela Bruecker of Indiana State.

     Men's 400m hurdles prelims:  North Carolina's Terrance Wilson won 

the fast heat in 51.49 to qualify for Sunday's final along with David 

Warren of Long Beach CC;  William Threets, South HS, Grand Prairie, 

Texas;  Hassan Stamps of Power Springs, Calif.;  Kevin Carter of 

Bakersfield, Calif.;  Rickey Harris of Centerville HS, Clifton, Va.;  

Villanova's Michael Brown and Colorado's Reggie DePass.  

     Pre-meet favorite Bayano Kamani of Baylor failed to advance.  Kamani 

trotted across the finish line in 62.39 and was last in his heat.   

 

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