49th Annual
Mt. SAC Relays


Friday-Sunday, April 13-15, 2007
At Mt. San Antonio College, Walnut


49th Annual Mt. SAC Relays

Friday-Sunday, April 13-15, 2007
At Mt. San Antonio College, Walnut

Vault record gone with the wind!
Mid-afternoon gusts power athletes to bevy of fine performances

  
Photos by Rich Gonzalez
Castilleja HS senior Tori Anthony rode an advantageous tailwind all the way into the record books
yet again, this time elevating for an outdoor state record 13-foot, 10-inch clearance to headline high
school action at the 49th annual Mt. SAC Relays on Saturday. The mark broke Kira Costa's state
record 13-08.50 and also moved her into #2 on the all-time national outdoor list behind Tiffany
Maskulinski's 14-00. Anthony holds the nat'l indoor mark at 14-02.50, achieved over the wintertime.
In photo at right, Anthony attempts 14-01.00, but her upper torso manages to dislodge the crossbar.


       
Photo album by Kirby Lee!

By Rich Gonzalez
Editor, DyeStatCal.com
     WALNUT --
America's best female vaulter doesn't need much help these days. But when a brisk tailwind swept through Hilmer Lodge Stadium on Saturday afternoon, Tori Anthony was quick to accept Mother Nature's gesture.
     Anthony, the Castilleja High senior who earlier this year set the national indoor girls pole vault record of 14-02.50, rode nice gusts down the runway en route to smashing the California state outdoor record to highlight action in the preps portion of the 49th annual Mt. SAC Relays.
     The two-day meet's other nation-leading mark was achieved on Friday night in the boys 4x1600-meter relay when Carlmont of Belmont (Central Coast Section, CA) bolted away from the pack to win in 17:39.31.
     There were seven state-leading performances (including two occurring in "Open" hammer competitions) among a whopping 668 DyeStatCal Elite marks achieved. All told, more than 300 high schools attended this year's Mt. SAC Relays -- the third-largest prep meet in the nation -- including participants from such states as Nevada, Arizona and Maryland along with small representations from three foreign nations.


Castilleja's Tori Anthony set a state outdoor record in girls PV

     Anthony handily scaled over 13 feet, 10 inches to better the previous state outdoor standard by an inch and a half, having plenty of room to spare as her arms flailed skyward on her descent, turning into fists of celebration as she crashed into the pit and then stood while the crowd cheered raucously. She then took dead aim at the national outdoor mark and just missed earning that distinction with a superb effort on her third attempt at 14-01, seeing the bar dislodged by her upper torso only after her lower body had successfully slinked over the crossbar.
      There was methodology to her height selections once runner-up Allison Stokke of Newport Harbor completed her own successful day (13-01.50) as Anthony had the bar raised to just above the meet record, then above the state record, then above the national outdoor record. Winds were her greatest ally as the orange-colored flag situated adjacent to the runway was flailing straight forward for much of the end of the competition.
     There were a pair of national grade records also established, but well out of view of most spectators. The Open hammer competition (the event is illegal in California at the high school level, thus no such sanctioned competition exists in high school meets here) yielded historic marks for Twentynine Palms HS freshman Casey Kraychir and Chaminade HS sophomore Conor McCullough.
     Kraychir set the national 9th-grade girls record and an all-time California best with a monstrous 170-02 toss that added more than 10 feet to the old national grade standard. Her best effort also was the #2 mark in the nation this spring and placed her sixth in this meet's open competition, comprised mainly of post-collegians.   
     Although Anthony's theatrics topped the action at the big Southern California meet, favorable northerly winds in mid-afternoon resulted in excellent conditions for a number of competitors, specifically the sprinters and discus throwers, as top performances spilled across the facility all day long.
     Long Beach Wilson's Shelise Williams, recently plagued by an injury that somewhat slowed the latest standout for the powerhouse program in recent outings, declared herself healthy, ready and swift with a big personal best wind-legal 23.73 clocking that topped the state 200m list and ranks third nationally this spring.
     Williams also won the 100m earlier in the afternoon in a superb 11.66 wind-legal effort (+1.5 meters-per-second) which many onlookers in the press box humorously mystified. The flags stationed along the corners of the backstretch were rustling during the race, but on the homestretch they were visbily less active; it was one of those quirks that Mother Nature gave us on this day that really seemed to pay off for the athletes. Ridgeview of Bakersfield's Dominique Lauderdale, Williams' winteritme club teammate, was second in the race in 11.84.
      In the boys' sprints, Woodland Hills Taft's Jeshua Anderson throttled into overdrive in the 400m dash, winning convincingly although the much anticipated showdown with Long Beach Poly's Bryshon Nellum never materialized.
      Nellum, the national leader at 400m (46.02 last weekend), was supposed to meet Anderson -- the national leader in the 300m intermediate hurdles -- for the first time ever in a one-lap duel, but Nellum was announced as a late scratch after opting to take the SAT test instead.
      Additionally, it was reported that Poly coach Don Norford had Nellum, who figures to run in club action deep into this summer, recover fully from a grueling schedule the previous weekend, when he ran in the team's national record 4x200 effort along with relay carries on the 4x100 and 4x400 and his big win in the open 400 at the Arcadia Invitational.
      Anderson opened up considerable daylight against the field just 250 meters into the dash, eventually coasting to a fine 47.26 win despite moderate winds blowing during the race. Poly's Joey Hughes finished second in 48.79. This was the second time in three weeks that Anderson made a late adjustment to his race-day schedule. At the Pasadena Games, Anderson planned to run the open 400m, but changed his mind and opted to run the intermediate hurdles once learnnig that Diamond Ranch super hurdler Terry Prentice was in the field. By then, all lanes were full and Anderson only got in (to Lane 1) when someone scratched. Here, Anderson was able to earn his way into the intermediates as an alternate, filing in at Lane 8 for a late scratch and winning in 36.03, a very impressive time considered his one-lap triumph came less than an hour earlier. Canyon of Canyon Country's Trevor Habberstad matched his lifetime-best (37.99) to place second after earning an all-conditions personal best (14.02, wind aided) in the high hurdles earlier in the meet.
      Powerful gusts of wind were at the backs of the short sprinters, who rode the aid to very fast -- although heavily wind-aided -- efforts. Salesian of Richmond's Jahvid Best was first across the finish in the 100, tripping the beams in an eye-popping 10.37 as a firm 4.0 mps force propelled him down the straightaway. Los Angeles Cathedral's Randall Carroll, who was an 11th-hour scratch from the Arcadia meet for disciplinary reasons, had his ducks in a row this weekend and flew after Best to claim second in 10.49, just ahead of Rancho Cucamonga's Charles Saseun (10.51).
      Best and Carroll kept the same order in the featured heat of the deuce dash as well, with Best besting his newfound rival 21.41 to 21.51 in legal (+0.9 mps) conditions. The short relay saw Saseun-anchored Rancho Cucamonga roll to a 41.80 win, but it should be noted that second-place finisher Rio Mesa (41.96) showed promising upside. The Spartans had a freshman filing in for one injured key team member and two of their three exchanges were less than crisp. Putting it all together with a healthy lineup, Rio Mesa could emerge as a state medals contender come June.
       In a race featuring 4 of the 10 fastest teams in the state this year, Long Beach Poly (nation-leading 45.79 in winning at Arcadia last weekend) rode clean handoffs to a fine 46.53 4x100 win over fast-closing Long Beach Wilson (46.76). Poly order appeared to go Joseph-Woodford-Reid-Thompson, with Wilson's Shelise Williams motoring down the home straight to erase much of the last-lef deficit and make it interesting approaching the finish stripe!
       The long sprint relays were not quite as electric as could have been, with WH Taft winning the boys 4x400 contest (3:17.75) over a Nellum-less Poly crew (3:18.49) and the top three featured teams in the girls 4x400 not appearing in the results. Favored Eleanor Roosevelt HS of Maryland -- the East Coast megapower that won a thrilling duel over LB Poly to close out the Arcadia meet 7 days prior -- had two top girls develop tender hamstrings by the end of the 14-hour session of the meet, prompting Coach Desmond Dunham to hold the duo out and shift his invitational-heat entry into a second entry in the seeded heat. Poly was disqualified for having one of its team members report to the race with beads in her hair while Long Beach Wilson also fell to misfortune by false-starting out of the blocks. Despite having a mixed squad, Eleanor Roosevelt still posted the fastest 4x400 time of the meet from the seeded heat, clocking 3:54.13.
      Eleanor Roosevelt capped its 11-day West Coast trip with a pair of relay wins, including a concentrated effort in the distance medley relay, nailing the win with an 11:58.81 performance. Coach Dunham indicated he used primarily split squads on the relays this weekend in order to allow more kids to participate.
      Winds foiled the cadence of top high hurdlers, where a 3.1 mps current pushed the hurdling field up on their barriers. Two hurdlers noted the nuisance afterward, with Diamond Ranch's Terry Prentice running the exact same 13.77 time as he did last weekend when there was absolutely no wind present. More than half the field ran less than a tenth of a second faster than their seasonal wind legal PR and were left to wonder just how swift they could have run if just aided by a gentler breeze. Prentice, an uber athlete with tremendous versatility, also won the long jump with a best effort of 23-07.50.
       Silverado's (Las Vegas, NV) Sean Zurko ran down both mid-race leader Ryan Martin of Santa Margarita and down-the-stretch leader Ryan Gamboa of Upland to win the boys 800m in 1:54.33. Gamboa, who missed much of the first part of the season to attend to a fractured ankle sustained in soccer action, briefly took the lead entering the final straight but was overtain by Zurko with about 60 meters to go. Gamboa took second, with Martin settling for third. Alhambra's Eric Arteaga led at the 200 in 26.2, with Martin taking over from there to lead at 400m (55.3) and 600m (1:24.9). Cory Primm was a scratch from the event, deciding to focus for the 1600m later in the day.


Brad Surh rallies to edge Cory Primm in 1600m in meet record 4:11.84.

      Carlmont's Brad Surh perfectly timed his closing move to edge Westlake's Primm right before the finish and win the 1600m in 4:11.84. It was quite windy and Cory did "the work" with splits of 31.1/64.3/1:35.5/2:07.2/3:11.9/3:43.1 and 3:58.7 for 1500m. Suhr closed to within less than two strides with about 250 to go. Primm indicated he was concerned with running a fast time (rather than going for the win) and said he felt he needed to make a decisive pace-setting move once the race opened with a slow first lap. Surh's performance was a solid breakthrough for the Central Coast Section standout, tabbing him as a quick-rising threat for the state four-lap title come June.
       The emergence of the "Carlmont Crew" was the big story of the weekend in distance action, with Coach Jeff Gilkey's horde of multi-lappers scoring double wins in the boys relays, including the aforementioned nation-leading 17:39.31 in the 4x1600 (keyed by Greg Surh's 4:15.2 split on the third leg) on Friday and then an exciting 10:27.93 win in Saturday night's distance medley relay as two other squads ducked in before the clocked hit 10:30.
       Gilkey, who competed here in the San Gabriel Valley during Arroyo High's distance heydays in the 1980s, was a popular attendee in hearing his name over the PA system throughout the meet, but he kiddingly wanted no public credit during the DMR as Surh's anchor leg (1600) started with a sizzling (and too fast!) 60-second opening lap... followed by a 71.... eventually struggling to a 4:28 split ("I hope they don't say my name now!", Gilkey joked).
       Carlmont also boasted a winner on the girls' side as Justine Fedronic, the Arcadia Invitational 800m champion, kicked off a slow opening pace to win the 1600m in 4:51.40.
       In the girls 800m, the lead pack came across the 400m at 64.5, with it was Marlborough's Kate Grace that seized the lead for good partway through the first turn of the bell lap, gapping the field by about 6 meters before several began to rally. Grace won in 2:10.18, a seasonal best for her and the #5 outdoor time in the nation this year.


Palm Desert's Joe Canavan continued his dominance of Southern Section competition.

       Agoura's Derek Johnson and Palm Desert's Joe Canavan traded turns on the highlight reel in the throws, with the former winning big in the discus competition and the latter excelling yet again in the shot put.
       Johnson, who unleashed a nation-leading 205-05 fling of the platter in a mid-week gathering at the Antelope Valley Throws Fest, went 197-02 here -- his third consecutive meet with a legal mark of 190-plus! Johnson needed that effort to top early-season state leader Dayshan Ragans of Foothill in Bakersfield. Ragans was the only othe 180-footer here, going 185-06.

      Canavan continued his mastery against his regional rivals, uncorking the 12-pound iron ball to a 63-05.50 measurement that stretched his victory margin to mroe than five feet. Canavan, a talented lineman on football who opted to skip his senior season on the gridiron to focus on the throws, has the best mark (66-00) in the Southern Section this spring, more than eight feet better than his nearest pursuer.
      The absence of recordsetting distance runner Jordan Hasay of Mission Prep was a notable and unfortunate side note to the meet, as many were looking forward to watching the popular sophomore take on elite in "Open" competition on Sunday, as was announced the weekend prior. However, it was later revealed that her participation in such an event would violate a CIF rule under the meet's sanction. The week before, the CIF-SS office had indicated she would be allowed to compete but then rescinded its position.


FRIDAY INVITATIONAL HEAT SUMMARIES (ONLY TWO EVENTS CONTESTED)

GIRLS INVITATIONAL 3200M
       
The two biggest names in the field figured to be Glendora's Christy Adamyk and La Mirada's Stephanie Felix and they certainly proved to be -- but both were heading in opposite diurections by the time the outcome was determined.
        Adamyk set a torrid pace early on, opening up with a 70.1 (by comparison, the invitational boys 3200m kicked off with a 67.2 opener). Usually a hard starter, the aggressive Duke-bound talent quickly fell off pace, going 80.2 (2:30.3), 84.0 (3:54.3) and 87.2 (5:21.5, or a 10:43.0 clip at the halfway point) over the next three laps. Soon after, La Mirada's Felix took over assuming the lead and then drawing local rival Vanessa Hancock of Brea Olinda also into the fray. Felix held on for the win, with Hanock keeping her honest as they finished in 10:52.39 and 10:53.50, respectively. Fountain Valley's Lizzy Coe had the strongest last half-lap kick among the chase pack, eventually creating a gap in taking third in 10;56.51 as seven girls dipped under 11 minutes for the 3200!


Photo by Kirby Lee
Stephanie Felix

1 Felix, Stephanie  La Mirada   10:52.39
2 Hancock, Vanessa   Brea Olinda 10:53.50
3 Coe, Lizzy    Fountain Valley 10:56.51
4 Huff, Hannah   Paso Robles   10:57.38
5 Rhoades, Mary   Carlmont  10:58.01
6 Nunez, Jessica    South Hills   10:58.11
7 Mead, Melissa   Newport Harbor  10:59.46
8 Gonzales, Grace   Ayala   11:00.09
9 Lightfoot, Courtney  Oak Park  11:01.83
10 Ratkowiak, Katrina  Yucca Valley  11:12.24
11 Allen, Chloe   Clovis West  11:14.53
12 Adamyk, Christy   Glendora  11:17.28
13 Morgan, Megan  Torrey Pines  11:17.43
14 Brinkenhoff, Becky   Ventura  11:21.32
15 Cridbring, Alicyia   College Park  11:32.82
16 Alexander, Desiree   Newport Harbor  11:35.07
17 McNichols, Fevan  Ayala  11:36.50
18 Garcia, Maddison  Crested Butte, CO  11:36.88
19 Prim, Ana  Torrey Pines  11:40.67
20 Slykhous, Nichole   Corona del Mar 11:50.84
21 Cahn, Briana   Ayala  12:18.34

BOYS INVITATIONAL 3200M
       Foothill High of Bakersfield's Chris Schwartz took control at about 550 meters and assumed the lead from there, being seriously challenged by only one rival en route to near-even splits and a lifetime-best 9:13.68 for 3200 meters!
       Schwartz, one of the top frosh in the state a year ago, was among a large field that chased after opening-lap leader Jun Reichl of Royal (67.2), with the Central Section standout Schwartz then showing fine courage in taking over the lead early on. Schwartz brought the field across ech lap from there, with his splits timed at 2:16.7 (69.2), 3:26.1 (69.4), 4:36.5 (70.4), 5:45.7 (69.2), 6:54.9 (69.2), 8:06.2 (71.3), 8:40.5 for 3k and a winning 9:13.68 (67.5 last lap) for 3200m.
       Schwartz beat a fine field, with Crested Butte Academy of Colorado senior Adam Lenz being his main nemesis much of the way. Lenz, however, seemed to fade slightly over the final lap and eventually placed
       This was a fine rebound effort for Schwartz, who missed his scheduled seeded 2-mile race at the Arcadia Invitational last weekend and then had his coach opt to place him in the much-faster invitational heat an hour later. The reason he missed the seeded heat was because he apparently was out of uniform and an official informed him he had to have a legal uniform on. By the time he returned to the clerk's tent wearing a school uniform, his race was gone. Instead, Schwartz found himself then facing a field of runners that all averaged nearly 20 seconds faster than him. Unfazed, Schwartz took the lead somewhere near the 1k mark at Arcadia, but faded badly down the stretch to place 22nd (out of 25 runners) in 9:32.75 for the full two miles.
       Schwartz's 9:13.68 here is the sophomore state leader for 2007! Alex Routh, the fine junior from Royal who improved dramatically to help key the Highlanders' success down the stretch during last fall's cross-country season, unleashed a very strong kick over the last 125 meters to pass two rivals and place second in 9;21.24. Matt Duffy of St . Mary's College in Northern California took third in 9:23.12 and Colorado's Lenz -- who was within two strides of Schwartz early in the latter half of the race, lost some steam down the stretch to take fourth in 9:24.03.

Mt. San Antonio Community College
MT. SAC RELAYS
"Where the World's Best Athletes Compete"
Hilmer Lodge Stadium-Walnut, California - 4/7/2007 to 4/15/2007


Photo by Kirby Lee
Chris Schwartz

Event 221 Boys 3200 Meter Run Invitational HS
=======================================================================
Name Year Team Finals Points
=======================================================================
Finals
1 Schwartz, Chris Foothill/Bak 9:13.68
2 Routh, Alex Royal 9:21.24
3 Duffy, Matt St. Mary's College 9:23.12
4 Lenz, Adam Crested Butte 9:24.03
5 McCutchen, David Murietta Valley 9:26.16
6 Pastoor, Connor Murietta Valley 9:28.94
7 Divizia, Joey Glendora 9:31.15
8 Hausmaninger, Marc El Toro 9:33.22
9 Van Halen, Aric Oakwood (Nh) 9:34.44
10 Baird, Chris Agoura 9:34.62
11 Zitek, Andrew Ventura 9:36.47
12 Finnigan, Thomas Glendora 9:37.46
13 Guzman, Jon Upland 9:38.08
14 Barnes, Michael Ventura 9:38.63
15 Ray, Andrew Buhach Colony 9:38.94
16 Reichl, Jun Royal 9:39.80
17 Guevara, Luis El Rancho 9:40.46
18 Andrews, Hudson Royal 9:41.38
19 Masci, Anthony El Toro 9:43.05
20 Beach, Nate Acalanes 9:45.27
21 Doolittle, Spencer Ayala 9:48.13
22 Crum, Steven Santiago/Cor 9:51.36
23 Vega, Hector Norwalk 9:56.00
24 Fernandez, Max Edison 9:59.34
25 Healy, Hayden Notre Dame/SO 10:04.54
26 Wysocki, Michael Great Oak 10:09.61
27 Cracknell, Rob Oak Bay Secondary 10:26.24

 

GIRLS INVITATIONAL 4 x1600
        A very fine clash of squads from all over the map saw East Coast-based Eleanor Roosevelt HS of Maryland overtake Ruyton Girls School of Australia on the final leg, with ERHS prevailing in a very fine 20:41.41 for the 4x1600, with Ruyton second in 20:43.90 and Carondelet of Concord (Nothern California) third in 20:48.45. Eleanor Roosevelt overtook early leaders Carondelet and Ruyton and the second leg and held on from there. Roosevelt and Carondelet recorded the #2 and #3 times in the nation this year, trailing only Crescenta Valley's winning 20:47.10 for the full 4xmile in winning at Arcadia the week before.

Event 230 Girls 4x1600 Meter Relay Invitational HS
=======================================================================
Team Finals Points
=======================================================================
Finals
1 Eleanor Roosevelt/MD 20:41.41
1) Rivers, Teshika 2) Walker, Marika
3) Arrington, Tyreka 4) Lockhart, Dominique
2 Ruyton Girls' School 20:43.90
1) Chalmers, Georgia 2) Norris, Emily
3) Hudson, Camille 4) Aitken, Holly
3 Carondelet 20:48.45
1) Cerney, Heather 2) Houser, Kellie
3) Aliotti, Sara 4) Hood, Nicole
4 Lutheran/Orange 21:06.18
1) Andrew, Kirsta 2) Dutch, Taylor
3) Kerner, Jane 4) Foster, Staci
5 Great Oak 21:20.02
1) Barnard, Jessica 2) Malloy, Kaity
3) Gallaher, Abbey 4) Campfield, Lauren
6 Ruyton Girls' School 'B' x21:22.87
1) Grimwade, Phoebe 2) Cleeve-Gerkens, Madeleine
3) Clements, Sarah 4) Burns, Perri
7 Fountain Valley 21:52.76
1) McDuffy, Maggie 2) Wells, Laura
3) Giove, Nicole 4) Coe, Lizzy
8 Upland 21:55.88
1) Acevedo, Valerie 2) Sharif, Marissa
3) Harding, Rachael 4) Cisneros, Karina
9 El Toro 22:07.79
1) Chadwick, Jessica 2) Espinosa, Ariana
3) Nicoll, Jenna 4) Velasquez, Gianna
10 Los Osos 22:10.58
1) Bentley, Brianna 2) Edwards, Anna
3) Watford, Anya 4) Oyler, Stephanie
11 El Modena 22:23.79
1) Erika, Perez 2) Hisgen, Heather
3) Haithcoat, Emily 4) Gage, Morgan
12 College Park 22:30.29
1) Crawford, Lauren 2) Finley, Alyson
3) Dallara, Kelsey 4) Bowen, Kim
13 Cypress 22:35.80
1) 2) Hilgen, Lacee
3) Conley, Janell 4) Conley, Heather
14 Edison 22:43.29
1) Hayes, Hillary 2) Kostrikin, Courtney
3) Owen, Cassandra 4) Murray, Shannon
15 Oak Park 22:49.20
1) Courtney, Kim 2) Jackson, Kirsten
3) Miller, Kari 4) Prescher, Meira
16 Ayala 23:07.10
1) Cahn, Briana 2) Gonzales, Grace
3) Soria, Elizabeth 4) McNichols, Fevan

 

BOYS INVITATIONAL 4x1600
        Carlmont of Belmont (Central Coast Section) threw down the heat! The fine crew which has already posted excellent times over the DMR and 4x800-meter relay distances this spring, motored away from Silverado (Las Vegas, NV) and Southland power Arcadia to win the four-person, 16-lap affair in 17:39.31, a nation-leading time for the crew. Nick Palladino had the Carlmont crew out quickly, with teammate Brad Suhr then keying the wining effort with a 4:15.2 split in the third leg, catapulting Carlmont into a comfortable lead. Silverado closed very well on the last half lap but just ran out of real estate to settle for second in 17:39.81. Arcadia held on for third in an apparent school record 17:49.08! Carlmont, which has been traveling to big meets all season, will  be "shutting down" after this weekend in preparation for the CCS and state meet stretch drive before traveling to North Carolina in mid-June for the Nike Outdoor Nationals!

 

Event 231 Boys 4x1600 Meter Relay Invitational HS
=======================================================================
Team Finals Points
=======================================================================
Finals
1 Carlmont 17:39.31
1) Palladino, Nick 2) Moghadam, Omeed
3) Logie, Austin 4) Surh, Brad
2 Silverado (Nv) 17:39.81
3 Arcadia 17:49.08
1) Chen, Ryan 2) Ernst, Ryan
3) Poizot, Renaud 4) Pilavjian, Andrew
4 Santa Margarita 17:57.48
5 University City 'U' x17:58.77
6 Oak Park 18:06.00
1) Bettisworth, Doug 2) Goldstein, James
3) Gourdeau, Garrison 4) Hennessey, Evan
7 Upland 18:07.38
1) Davila, Albert 2) Guzman, Jon
3) Fernandes, Travis 4) Gamboa, Ryan
8 Brea Olinda 18:09.75
1) Moncada, Jose 2) Chung, Jonathan
3) Roush, Jared 4) Yanoschik, Erich
9 Chino Hills 18:11.78
1) Mackey, Jeff 2) Cooper, Daniel
3) Shimada, Tim 4) Carrera, Christian
10 El Toro 18:13.29
1) Haji, Abdow 2) Laurino, Sean
3) Miller, Kip 4) Villalva, Toby
11 Torrey Pines 18:16.30
1) Jack, Dillon 2) Lloyd-Smith, Gregor
3) Wen, Michael 4) Paris, Zach
12 San Pasqual 18:25.60
13 Barstow 18:27.46
14 Lakewood 18:27.55
1) Goche, Abraham 2) Pleitez, Chris
3) Martinez, Gilberto 4) Ross, David
15 Saugus 18:37.42
1) Lang, Andrew 2) Frick, Baxter
3) Bosnoyan, Matt 4) Swinehart, Bret
16 Rancho Cucamonga 18:39.49
1) Bueno, Manuel 2) Ruelas, Joseph
3) Castro, David 4) Torres, Robert
17 Great Oak 18:48.54
1) Miller, Max 2) Griffin, Will
3) Harding, Christian 4) Covington, Bryan
18 Ayala 18:52.52
1) Doolittle, Spencer 2) Floris, Henri
3) Shaw, Jeff 4) Tanner, Robert
19 Long Beach Wilson 18:52.95
1) Cairo, Tony 2) Rodriguez, Edwin
3) Tefera, Daniel 4) Curran, Doug
20 Colony 18:55.91
1) Alcon, David 2) Zavala, Andy
3) Stocksdale, Devin 4) Lara, Armondo
21 Los Osos 19:07.61
1) Valencia, Brett 2) Vidaurrazaga, Erick
3) Cottam, Tommy 4) Taylor, Rene
22 Ontario 19:17.38
23 Hoover/Glendale 20:15.16
1) Tabora, Harold 2) Guloyan, Micheal
3) Tippens, Daryl 4) Trejo, Brian




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