|
Coming east for the NCAA Division II
cross country championships can be risky business. In
mid-November, the weather in northeastern Ohio can be as finicky
as Morris the Cat.
Friday, wind, snow and rain came to Ashland,
OH, the site of the 2002 NCAA Division II mens and womens
cross country championships. On Saturday (Nov. 23), Mother Nature
held off on the snow, but the cold and wind and a soggy track were
all present.
Coming east didnt cause any loss of
direction for the cross country teams from Western State. Unlike
the exhortation to, Go West, young man, Western State
went East and found gold. The Western men won their fourth
consecutive national crown and the Western State women won the
Division II national championship for the third consecutive
season.
The Western men finished with 35 points.
Abilene Christian had 81 points to finish as the runnerup for the
third consecutive season and Adams State claimed third place with
131 points. Fourth place went to South Dakota State with 143
points.
We hope to peak at the right
time of the year and be healthy at the right time of the year,
said Western State head coach Duane Vandenbusche. We feel
very fortunate, very honored, to win.
The Western women won the national crown with
43 points. Adams State had 46 points to earn runnerup honors for
the second straight year. Grand Valley State was third with 97
points and Northern Michigan was fourth with 129 points. Western
State and Adams State are two Colorado schools separated by 110
miles. Grand Valley State and Northern Michigan are from the Great
Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (GLIAC).
They (Adams State) had beaten us
four times this year, twice when it really counted the
conference meet and the regional meet, reported
Vandenbusche. We had to run well and be a little lucky. I
think we had a little luck today.
Vandenbusche even considered the weather a sign
that fate might be on his side.
I told our team last night, the
team that handled the elements the best would win, said the
Western State coach, who said its not out of the ordinary
for his team to train in cold, snowy conditions.
In the mens race, which covered 10,000
meters, fans saw a high-pitched fight for first place between
Abilene Christians Alfred Rugema, the 2000 individual champ
and Nick Cordes of host Ashland. The two seniors waged a gallant
battle over the final two miles. Rugema had a short lead when
Cordes went past him at four and a half miles. Then Rugema rallied
and the two ran shoulder to shoulder over the Brookside Golf
Course terrain. Finally, down the stretch, it was Rugema who
prevailed. His winning time was 30:43.7. Cordes came home in
30:46.5 and Zeph Joseph of North Florida was third in 30:51.0.
It was cold, admitted
Rugema. This was the first time for me to run in these kind
of conditions. It was hard, the first mile my feet were frozen. It
took me maybe, three or four miles (to get warm). When he (Cordes)
passed me, I thought it was the guy from Western. When he passed
me I said, Whoa, this is a different guy. He ran an
awesome race. With two miles to go, I started to go.
Rugema is a fast champion, a
great runner and everyone saw that today, said Cordes. The
last mile and a half I pushed hard. I thought he was trying to get
rid of me right away. I think it was more a case of me coming on
rather than him easing up.
Cordes will run track and field in the spring,
but this was Rugemas final race as a collegiate runner.
That, and running in less than ideal conditions, gave him extra
sources of motivation.
It means a lot to me to win it
in these kind of conditions, said Rugema. To win it in
these kind of conditions, it was a sweet win because of the
adverse conditions. Additionally, this is my last NCAA race.
Cordes was pushed on by a vocal home crowd.
Everyone saw that I gave my best
shot, said the AU senior. The home crowd here was
awesome. The way everyone came out and got the course ready, it
was awesome.
Western State secured first place by putting
four finishers in the races Top 10. That list numbered
William Banks (fourth, 31:04.1), Rubin McRae (sixth, 31:14.7),
Josh Eberly (eighth, 31:30.5) and Chris Siemers (10th, 31:33.3).
The womens race, which covered 6,000
meters, didnt have the individual drama featured in the mens
race. Senior Amber Klein of Adams State was the individual
championship in 20:54.5 and her teammate, senior Zoila Gomez was
the runnerup in 21:09.2.
I felt good, very strong,
said Klein. When we got through the first 1000 meters we
were rolling, just like in practice. Weve run harder in
practice than this race. Sometimes before a race Im nervous,
but today it was a quick start and I didnt have time to be
nervous. I didnt have time to think.
Gomez said she wasnt trying to push Klein
toward the finish line. Instead, she was thinking of teammate
Tonya Bosen, who missed the race with a foot injury.
I was thinking of my team, my
teammates, said Gomez. You cant think about
anything else. Thats what cross country is all about. Were
all sisters.
Adams State had three finishers in the Top 10
and Western State had four make the Top 10. In addition to Klein
and Gomez, senior Kim Lorimer was ninth (22:07.0). For Western
State, junior Rebekah Mackie was third (21:28.6), sophomore Alisha
Williams was fourth (21:37.9), senior Hannah Lawrence was fifth
(21:40.1) and senior Lisa Blomme was eighth (22:03.5).
Ashland University junior Tara Griffin was 28th
(22:48.0). She was the lone AU woman running in the race.
|