The Mount Vernon Nazarene
University men’s and women’s cross country
teams ran against some of the top teams in
the country on Saturday as the Cougars
finished 17th out of 22 teams and the Lady
Cougars were 19th out of 20 teams at the
NAIA Great Lakes Classic Invitational hosted
by Aquinas (Mich.) College at Riverside
Park.
In
the men’s race, NAIA No. 4 Indiana Institute
of Technology won the 22-team event with 58
points to out-distance NAIA No. 2 Azusa
Pacific (Calif.) University (92 points) and
host NAIA No. 6 Aquinas (95 points). NAIA
No. 3 Embry-Riddle Aeronautical (Fla.)
University was fourth with 148 points, while
NAIA No. 14 Olivet Nazarene (Ill.)
University rounded out the top five with 157
points. Overall, there were seven teams
ranked in the most recent NAIA poll and
three others who received votes. MVNU
finished with 492 points in 17th place.
Aron Rono, the defending NAIA national
champion, from Azusa Pacific won the
individual title as he covered the
eight-kilometer course in 24:34 to finish 32
seconds ahead of runner-up Abednego Magut
(25:06), another NAIA All-American from
Azusa Pacific. Junior Mark Porostosky was
31st to lead the Cougars as he finished in
26:01 to just miss his own school record by
one second that he had set in his previous
race at Wilmington College. Freshman Nate
Winters (27:34, 94th), sophomore Zach
Stiverson (28:12, 114th), freshman Blake
Heinlen (28:32, 121st), sophomore David
Clark (29:27, 132nd), freshman Jameson
Seymour (30:35, 141st), and junior Dustin
Wine (32:30, 148th) rounded out the scoring
for MVNU.
"Our men’s team posted some good times
today, and we competed at a high level,”
said MVNU coach Chip Wilson. "Our mile
splits have been very consistent and we are
now focusing more on our speed work to try
and decrease our overall times. These guys
have worked hard and have put themselves in
a great position to compete well at our
conference race in a few weeks.”
In the women’s race, NAIA No. 2
Cedarville University won the 20-team event
with 43 points to edge out NAIA No. 1 Azusa
Pacific (65 points) and NAIA No. 9 Indiana
Tech (95 points). NAIA No. 11 Indiana
Wesleyan University (140 points) and NAIA
No. 16 Embry-Riddle (183 points) rounded out
the top five in a race that featured eight
of the top 18 teams in the most recent NAIA
poll and three others that received votes.
The Lady Cougars finished with 603 points in
19th place.
Jacky Kipwambok, an NAIA All-American and
last years’ national runner-up from Azusa
Pacific, won the individual title as she
covered the five-kilometer course in 16:57
to finish 19 seconds ahead of runner-up
Alissa McKaig of Indiana Tech (17:16), who
won both the 5K and 10K individual national
titles in track last year. Freshman Caitlin
Campbell was the top finisher for MVNU as
she came in 109th in a time of 21:42.
Freshman Katelyn Felger (22:10, 116th),
freshman Heidi Raidel (22:19, 117th),
freshman Lauren Ford (above)
(23:37, 130th), sophomore Ashley Morse
(24:05, 131st), freshman Nikki Yates (24:47,
133rd), freshman DeAnna Hardeman (25:32,
135th), and junior Brittany Click (30:02)
rounded out the lineup for MVNU with Ford
and Yates both posting new personal bests.
"Coming off a strong performance at
Wilmington, our women’s team is remaining
very consistent,” said Wilson. "We are
backing down the mileage at this point, and
I think with fresh legs at the American
Mideast Conference race we will see some
much lower times posted by these girls. They
are such a great group of girls that want to
improve, and with that mentality, they
will.”
"This race was a great experience for
both of our young teams,” said Wilson. "This
is probably the best competition that we
have seen this season from top to bottom. We
saw several nationally-ranked teams and it
was exciting to be a part of something like
this. I wanted to give my runners an
opportunity to run against great programs
because that is what we are striving to
become.”
Both MVNU teams will now turn their focus
to the American Mideast Conference Meet that
will be hosted by Ursuline College on
November 8 with the women’s race starting at
10:00 a.m. and the men’s race to follow at
11:00 a.m.
"Looking ahead to the AMC race we need to
work on a few areas of the race, but at this
point it is mostly a mental game,” said
Wilson. "If these runners can challenge
themselves mentally, I think we have a great
chance of improving.”