Orange County Championships: Allen completes three-peat
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Steve Virgen
IRVINE - Less than three minutes after winning her third straight
Orange County Cross Country Championships title, Corona del Mar High’s
Julie Allen performed more heroics Saturday at Irvine Regional Park.
The CdM senior, rather than pump her fist in glory or issue statements
to the press, sprinted toward Ahlia Kattan, a teammate in need. Kattan,
who winced as she gasped for each breath while crossing the finish line,
dramatically collapsed when coming in 51st (19:49). Allen, who cut nine
seconds off her winning time last year and won this year’s title in
17:13, helped Kattan to a resting place and offered to piggyback her to a
trainer’s table.
“She’s a team player,” CdM Coach Bill Sumner said of Allen. “There’s
always some girls who are prima donnas ... she’s not that.”
Minutes before tending to Kattan, Allen, who has won the Laguna Hills
and Stanford Invitationals this season, drew command of the Division I
race from the outset. Before the one-mile mark she built a 12-second lead
ahead of her former teammate Bethany Nickless of Fountain Valley and
Edison’s Maryann Pynchon, whom both traded second and third twice during
the race.
Allen, who admitted she had no doubt of winning the race, maintained
her lead throughout and finished 18 seconds ahead of Nickless.
The Sea Kings, who have won the Orange County Championships the past
two years, came in fifth (167 points), three points shy of fourth-place
Foothill, while Esperanza (75) grabbed the title, placing five girls in
the top 25 out of 102 runners.
“Winning and losing, that does enter your mind,” Allen said. “But this
year it’s been interesting because I’ve had great training. My thought
has been to the point that it doesn’t get down to a personal level. But
in doing that, I don’t have any fear of anyone. I have respect, but not
fear.”
Allen also said she used the Orange County Championships as training.
She expected to be out in front and she wanted to thrive in that
situation.
“There are some great Orange County runners,” Sumner said. ‘But right
now she doesn’t look at the county, she looks at the state. She looks at
the nation. This race is for her to practice her own skills. For her to
get out a little harder and dictate what happens.”
Allen, who transferred from Fountain Valley in the spring, definitely
dictated the pace. She built a lead and ran out in front, alone. But she
doesn’t hide from competition.
“If anyone wants to come (up and) run with me, that’s great,” said
Allen, who has not decided on a college next year, yet she said she
enjoyed visiting Stanford, while at the school’s meet. “I feel like (a
runner next to me) will only push me forward. That’s what competition is
all about. It’s not a fear of losing, it’s excitement. Whether I’m
running by myself, whether I’m running behind someone else, I’m going to
try to, with each step, take it to a higher level. Each race I’m taking
it to the higher level.”
Coach Sumner said he was quite pleased with the efforts of his young
team. He was actually excited, but the celebration was short-lived when
he realized his team missed fourth-place by three points.
He was impressed with two freshmen, Kattan and Melissa Swigert, and
said they were the difference in providing the Sea Kings with a
respectable finish. Swigert, who came in 46th, completed the three-mile
course in 19:44, just three seconds ahead of teammate Katherine Morse.
CdM also finished in the top five because of the blue-collar-type
strides of senior Becky Cummins who came in 22nd (18:56).
In Division II, the young runners of Newport Harbor came in sixth.
Lauren Paul was the Sailors’ No. 1 runner. The sophomore finished 13th
(19:32), while fellow sophomore, Lisa Evans, came in 24th (19:51).
“We’re still a couple of weeks away,” Newport Coach Eric Tweit said.
“But this was a good, solid race for us. Andi Sarris (48th in 20:49) ran
her fastest time ever.
Costa Mesa’s Christine Bjelland experienced a tight race with a close
finish and came in third in Division III, as the Mustangs wound up eighth
out of 18 schools. Mesa Coach Tom Hancock, who filled in for Eric Davies
(absent because of prior commitments), said Bjelland has still yet to
show her full talent. Her finish in 20:03 was not her personal best and
it was one second behind Loara’s Jenna Wheeler.
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