The Mount Vernon Nazarene
University men’s and women’s cross country
teams continue to make strides forward as
both teams had a good showing at the
Southeastern Classic held at Vaughn’s Gap
Course in Percy Warner Park on Saturday.
“The
weather was beautiful, the competition was
great, and I was very pleased with the way
we ran in this meet,” said MVNU coach Chip
Wilson. “Our times do not reflect how hard
and how well we ran during this race. We
thought this could be a very fast course,
but the layout of the course was deceiving.
Times for all the teams were a little slower
than everyone thought they would be. We had
a great week of practice and it showed by
the way each individual ran.”
In the men’s race, Malone College, ranked
No. 1 in the latest NAIA poll, finished
first with 22 points to edge Union (Tenn.)
University (69 points) and Cedarville
University (110 points) and claim the team
title out of 22 teams. The Cougars finished
11th with 321 points to fall just behind
Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) College (295 points),
who received votes in the latest NAIA poll.
Individually, Henry Rop of Union won the
men’s eight-kilometer race in a time of
24:59.2 to edge Ryan Kienzle of Malone
(25:08.4). Sophomore Mark Porostosky
continued his successful season by finishing
24th out of 191 runners with a time of
27:21.8 to lead MVNU. Freshman Chaz Rice
(52nd, 28:30.1), freshman Zach Stiverson
(left) (94th, 29:49.9), sophomore
Zach Tuggle (99th, 29:54.4), senior Tim
Grubb (117th, 30:26.5), freshman David Clark
(144th, 31:43.6), and sophomore Dustin Wine
(158th, 32:37.5) rounded out the scoring for
the Cougars.
“Mark led the way with another good race,
and the rest of the team responded to his
leadership,” said Wilson. “We have been
working on closing the gap between our No. 1
and No. 5 runners, and each race we are
getting closer to where we want to be. Chaz,
David, and Zach (Stiverson) are really
growing into very good college runners. They
are learning as freshmen, and each race they
show signs of growth which is exactly what I
want to see. Zach (Tuggle), Tim, and Dustin
are also showing great leadership through
their running and their actions. I am
excited to see what happens at the
conference race in two weeks.”
In
the women’s race, fifth-ranked Cedarville
University (27 points) edged eighth-ranked
Malone (48 points) in the five-kilometer
race as those two teams easily out-distanced
the rest of the 22-team field. MVNU finished
21st with 562 points just behind the
University of Virginia-Wise (548 points) and
ahead of Pikeville (Ky.) College (615
points).
Individually, Lisa Davies of Shawnee
State University (18:31.3) edged Lydia Wong
of Cedarville (18:36.3) for the individual
title by five seconds to win the title.
Sophomore Tessa Swartzentruber led the Lady
Cougars by finishing 117th in 23:14.2.
Junior Mallorey Newland (122nd, 23:19.6),
senior Liz Keffer (134th, 23:59.7), senior
Katie Tracy (136th, 24:08.0), senior Bethany
Haught (163rd, 26:58.5), senior Kayla Parlin
(180th, 30:56.7), sophomore Brittany Click
(right) (181st, 32:12.9), and
sophomore Liz Bayless (183rd, 33:07.9)
rounded out the scoring for MVNU.
“Tessa and Mallorey continue to set the
pace for the women’s team, and they continue
to push each other through the race,” said
Wilson. “Like the men’s team, we have tried
to close the scoring gap between our No. 1
and No. 5 runners, and it appears as though
we are headed in the right direction. Liz (Keffer)
and Katie are two runners who have been
working their way up to the front of our
pack and they are running very strong.
Bethany has been very consistent as our No.
5 runner, and Kayla, Brittany, and Liz (Bayless)
are learning from each race and continuing
to improve each week.”
The two teams will return to action on
November 3 when they will both compete in
the American Mideast Conference/NAIA Region
IX Meet at Walsh University. This race will
determine the conference champions and
berths in the NAIA National Meet in Kenosha,
Wisconsin.
“I was very proud of the way both the men
and women ran at the Southeastern Classic,”
said Wilson. “We saw some excellent
competition and we stepped up to the
challenge. We have been working all season
for these last few races, and this race is
an encouragement heading into the AMC race
in two weeks.”