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Barr takes conference title as
Scots men place second
Release Date: November 2, 2004
MONMOUTH,
Ill. — Zach Barr’s to-do list just got a little bit shorter.
The junior running star for Monmouth College has lots of things he
wants to accomplish while competing in cross country and track for
the Fighting Scots, and his feet led to a big feat Saturday – first
place at the Midwest Conference Championships in Sherwood, Wis.
Barr’s winning effort helped Monmouth make a huge jump from a year
ago, when the team placed eighth. A healthier, much-deeper Scots
team placed second this year, in the process netting MC’s Roger
Haynes Co-Coach of the Year honors.
“The race evolved the way we thought it would,” said Haynes,
referring to his targeting of Barr and four other runners as the
pre-race favorites. “The top five hung together for the first
three-and-a-half or four miles, and then Zach started knocking them
off one at a time until the finish.”
Barr crossed the finish line in 25:58 to win the race by seven
seconds. He became the third men’s runner from Monmouth to win an
MWC title and the first since Jamie Verstraete in 1996.
“They let the race play into his hands,” added Haynes. “Instead of
someone going out fast, they were content to let Zach have the lead
early on. Once he was ahead, we felt confident with his ability to
finish strong in the last mile. This should be a nice stepping stone
for him to do well in the (Nov. 13) regional and at nationals.”
Barr wasn’t the only Monmouth runner to excel Saturday, as Anthony
Welty, Kel Bond and Scott Heair all earned all-conference honors.
Welty was particularly impressive, entering the race ranked 15th and
moving up to an eighth-place finish in 27:03. Bond was 10 seconds
back in 11th place.
“Anthony ran extremely well and beat a number of kids he hadn’t
beaten this season,” said Haynes.
Heair completed the 8K course in 16th place (27:38), and Monmouth’s
other scorer was Aaron Etienne (23rd, 28:17), who missed
all-conference honors by 11 seconds.
That the Scots possess a much deeper team this season can be shown
by the performance of the team’s No. 12 performer, Matt Henning,
whose time of 30:16 would have scored for two teams.
Rounding out Monmouth’s men’s runners were Adam Rodriguez (28:49),
Seth Leitner (29:06), Matt Moehn (29:26), Sean Fitzgerald (29:28)
and Ken Stachorek (29:51).
The most improved time for Monmouth’s men since they raced at the
course in Sherwood in September came from Rodriguez, who trimmed
2:01 off his previous effort. Other big improvements came from Moehn
(1:49) and Henning (1:01). Even Barr is getting significantly
better, as he covered the course 33 seconds faster.
The same injury situation that hurt the men’s team last year was
present for the women at the MWC Championships, as the team competed
without two of its stronger runners, Aleksandra Forsman and Sara
Ingersoll. But Tiffanie York had a strong race, earning All-MWC
honors by placing fifth in the 5K race in 19:59.
“She was almost two minutes faster than the last time we ran this
course,” praised Haynes. “She ran exceptionally well and with a lot
of confidence.”
When asked if York, like Barr, aspires to a conference title of her
own, Haynes said yes, and noted that York’s top competition for that
honor will be around for a while, as the top six finishers were all
freshmen. York was just a second out of fourth place and less than
20 seconds away from runner-up.
Rounding out Monmouth’s scorers were Joni Nelson (41st, 22:00 – an
improvement of 54 seconds from September), Erin Mann (50th, 22:47),
Audrey Bellefeuille (52nd, 22:54) and Laura Turk (55th, 23:03). Also
competing were Ashley Gaul (23:25), Carissa Young (24:13) and Kelly
Caruso (26:34).
“I was really impressed with how they were willing to run,” said
Haynes of Bellefeuille and Turk, who competed for the first time
this season after participating in women’s soccer. “They made a huge
difference in how we scored.”
Monmouth placed eighth in the women’s competition, which was won by
Grinnell. The Pioneers also claimed the men’s title, but Haynes
feels the day could be coming sooner than later when Monmouth’s men
can unseat the defending champs. Three of Grinnell’s five scorers
competed in their last MWC meet, while Monmouth loses no runners for
next season.
Men's Cross Country
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Country
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