|
2008 Season Outlooks
Men's Outlook
Despite being
fairly young this season,
the Warriors return eight of
their top 10 runners from a
year ago, including seniors
Adrian Ramirez (Yakima, WA)
and Mickael Sopel (Toulouse,
France), who should lead the
team. Ramirez has improved
each year of his running and
was on the national team
last fall. Collins said that
experience and the fact that
he continues to get faster –
he set a personal best in
the 5,000m last spring –
indicate that he is ready to
do great things this year.
Sopel, who is
also on the tennis team,
came to the squad last year
as a last minute addition.
“He just missed out on being
one of the runners at the
national meet, but this year
he will come in having
trained over the summer with
the intent of running, so we
expect great things from
him,” Collins said.
The team has
only one junior in Eric
Tuwei (Kapsebet, Kenya), but
he is a good one. Last year
he PR’d by running in the
low 25’s for 8K, but a lower
leg injury slowed him later
in the season. Collins said
Tuwei has been running great
this summer, beating all of
his summer marks from a year
ago, so everyone should
watch out when he gets going
this fall.
Collins said
he has a good crew of
sophomores. Sean Huey
(Boise, ID) is the top
returner from the national
team last year, running in
the mid 25’s for 8,000m
during the season. “He
should be much improved this
year as we have been working
on his consistency in
racing, and his motivation
level is extremely high in
regards to what he wants to
accomplish this season,”
Collins said.
Chris
McConnell (Portland, OR)
will also be a huge factor
this year. Last year he
spent a lot of time
adjusting to the distance
and the training, but he has
been extremely committed to
his training this summer and
for the first time has been
healthy for a full year,
Collins said. “I believe he
is going to surprise a lot
of people this fall,”
Collins said.
Collins said
Jake Miller (Craig, CO)
should also be a big factor
this season. He spent all
season as one of the top
seven runners on the team
and worked very hard to be
there. His experience at the
national meet this past year
should help him get even
better.
“We have a
very talented group of
incoming freshmen that will
all push the returners and
make the entire team
better,” Collins said. Jon
Dalton (Deary, ID) is a
local runner who won
multiple state titles this
past year. Collins said
Dalton has a great work
ethic and great attitude and
will challenge for a top
spot on the team. Frank
Lagrimanta (Spirit Lake, ID)
is also a very accomplished
runner. “He graduated a year
ago, so it may take little
time to get him up to speed,
but he was one of the most
accomplished runners in the
state of Idaho, and we
believe he will continue
that success at the college
level,” Collins said.
Another
freshman that Collins
believes can contribute
immediately is Grant
Eldridge (Clackamas, OR).
Collins said he ran some
great high school races in
both cross country and track
and has great leg speed.
Eldridge and McConnell
trained together some during
the summer, so Collins feels
Eldridge should transition
into the team very easily.
“Additionally, a couple more
freshmen that we think are
going to catch some people
by surprise are Andy Keim
(Havre, MT) and Clayton
Kearl (Salt Lake City, UT),”
Collins said. “Andy just
missed out of qualifying for
state this past spring in
both the 1600 and 3200m
races, and he ran well last
fall in the Montana cross
country championships, all
at altitude. Clayton has
also had to deal with the
altitude coming from Salt
Lake City. Clayton was
having a great track season
before breaking a bone in
his foot late in the season.
This has slowed his training
over the summer, but as we
get into the year we should
see him moving up each
week.”
The Warriors
have three additional
runners from Idaho that
Collins thinks will be very
good college runners and
will take some by surprise
this fall. Jarret Wade
(Rexburg, ID) is used to
running at high altitudes
and Collins feels that
running, along with his
great attitude and
motivation to run great at
the college level, will lead
him to great things this
fall. Scott Sweet (Nampa,
ID) will also catch some
people unaware. “Scott is a
racer and loves to race,”
Collins said. “Once he gets
into this environment where
his training will step up a
notch because of his
teammates, we will see him
racing even better.” And, a
last minute addition to the
roster, Pedro Morales
(Hailey, ID) is also
expected to strengthen the
core of the team.
Collins said
despite the youth of the
team, he feels this is the
most talented men’s team he
has ever had as a group. “It
may take a little time for
the experience to kick in,
but we believe that before
the season is over we will
see this team running as a
great pack and accomplishing
great things,” Collins said.
Along with
the new faces, the Warriors
will compete in a new system
to qualify for nationals.
The NAIA has gone to a
conference structure in
determining national
qualifiers and the Frontier
Conference has been combined
with two other conferences
in the Midwest to determine
the groupings qualifier(s).
Collins says he isn’t sure
how this will all work out,
but adds the bottom line is
that the Warriors need to be
running well to qualify for
nationals.
LCSC will
play host to the conference
championships this year and
after having won both the
men’s and women’s titles a
year ago, Collins says it’s
likely the Warriors will
initially be the favorites
this year. However, all the
other schools in the
conference have
significantly improved their
teams, so it will be a great
challenge to repeat.
“We have a
great bunch of
student-athletes as well as
supporters from within the
community, the college and
families and we are very
excited to start the season
and see where it takes us,”
Collins says.
Women's Outlook
LCSC coach
Mike Collins says this
year’s team will be one of
the youngest he has ever had
in his 11 years with the
program. With only one
senior and three juniors,
LCSC will be relying heavily
on them to provide
leadership and guidance to
all of the younger runners
in the program.
Despite its
youth, this is a very
talented team with five
athletes having run under 19
minutes for 5,000 meters and
an additional seven that
have run in the mid 19’s.
“They have
been working very hard this
summer and despite a few
small injuries over that
time, this team should be
ready to vie for its eighth
consecutive trip to
nationals this fall,”
Collins says. “It may take a
few meets to get going, but
I truly expect them to be
running their best at the
end when it matters the
most. Hopefully we will have
run well enough before then
to be in a position to earn
a spot at the national
meet.”
LCSC’s top
returners include juniors
Kyli Astle (Shoshone, ID),
Lindsay Szybura (Orting, WA)
and Katja Loevslett (Stavenger,
Norway), all of whom have
run in the 18-minute range
for 5K. They, along with
senior Rosa Bautista
(Stanfield, OR), have the
talent and personalities to
be significant leaders and
examples to the team of what
it takes to be successful
and to improve, Collins
says.
“Kyli showed
a significant improvement
last year by setting a
personal best by over a
minute,” Collins says. “She
has been extremely focused
this summer and we look for
great things from her.
“Lindsay had
a little bit of an off-year
as a sophomore after a great
freshman season, but she
really turned it around this
last spring qualifying for
nationals in the
steeplechase (in track),”
Collins continued. “That
motivation and desire has
continued in the summer and
there is no doubt she will
be forging a path this
fall.”
Collins said
Loevslett dealt with a
nagging foot injury last
year that carried into the
spring as well. Despite this
she ran well and contributed
to the team’s success.
“However, we know that being
healthy will show her
running talent more this
year,” Collins said. “Rosa
also had a significant PR
last season running in the
low 19’s for the first time.
She has improved every year
that she has been here and I
am sure it will continue
into this, her final
campaign as a Warrior. She
is a great leader and helps
to make all of those around
her better.”
Collins said
additional returners this
season include Jessie
Gulsvig (Colorado Springs,
CO), who started off the
year hot, but injured a hip
about two-thirds of the way
through the year, which
significantly affected her
running. “She is a great
hill climber and now that
she is healthy again we
expect great things from
her,” Collins said.
Casey Hampton
(Bonners Ferry, ID) also
returns as a sophomore this
year. She is one of the cogs
in the team that keeps it
running smoothly, according
to Collins. “Although I know
she did not run as well as
she wanted a year ago, she
has been working hard to
make adjustments to her form
and she will be making great
strides this season.”
Madison
Randall (Eugene, OR)
redshirted last season after
coming down with
mononucleosis. “It took the
fall, winter and a good part
of the spring before she was
beginning to run like she is
capable of running,” Collins
said. “We are looking
forward to seeing what she
can do this fall.”
There are a
lot of new runners this
season as well. “It will
take me a while to get to
know them and determine
their strengths and
weaknesses, but there is no
doubt they will be a huge
factor in our success this
season,” Collins said.
Rachael Park
is a Lewiston native who
transferred back to LC last
winter. She had a good high
school career and Collins
said he is excited to see
what she can do as a college
runner. Another transfer is
Sheree Barbour (Tacoma, WA)
out of Highline Community
College. She has run some
very good cross country
times, despite limited
mileage. “We believe that as
we increase her mileage over
time, she will get even
better,” Collins said.
Incoming
freshmen include Tayler
Harrington (Medford, OR) and
Kelsey Klettke (Vancouver,
WA). Both have had some
injuries this past
spring/summer that have
slowed them a little, but
they are now on track and
Collins believe they are
going to contribute
considerably this season and
be a big part of the future
of the program.
Additionally,
Stephanie Shuel (Yakima, WA)
and Whitlee Young (Quincy,
WA) have already
accomplished a lot in their
high school careers and will
continue that success as
Warriors, Collins said. Also
freshmen Amanda Palmer
(Weiser, ID) and Kirsten
White (Salinas, CA) have had
great high school careers
and are used to success.
This experience and drive
will undoubtedly help them
continue that at LCSC,
Collins said.
Finally,
Francis Rojas (Lima, Peru)
will be joining the team.
“She has limited experience
in cross country as she has
been more of a 400, 800, and
1,500 track runner, but we
believe that as she adjusts
to the distance she will be
contributing to the success
of the team before the
season is over,” Collins
said.
“In general,
I think I have a great bunch
of gals on the team,”
Collins said. “This is not
just related to their
running abilities, but to
their contributions to the
college, academics and their
personalities in general.
Character is extremely
important to me and I
believe it is a significant
factor in overall team
success. This team
definitely is a group of
high quality and high
character young women, and
we are very excited to see
them excel this season
together.”
 |