Boys Track Schedule
(home meets bold) |
|
2-16 |
St. Charles Dual |
|
2-24 |
Bolingbrook Dual |
|
3-3 |
York Invite
Maine East Invite |
|
3-9 |
Proviso Quad |
|
3-10 |
F/S MSL Conference |
|
3-16 |
Varsity MSL Invite |
|
3-20 |
Glenbrook South Triangular |
|
3-23 |
Proviso Invite |
|
3-31 |
Top Times Invite |
|
4-3 |
Schaumburg, Barrington Triangular |
|
4-10 |
Hersey, Hoffman Estates Triangular |
|
4-11 |
Barrington Freshman Invite |
|
4-14 |
Five Team Invite @ Fremd |
|
4-17 |
Elk Grove, Conant Triangular |
|
4-18 |
Libertyville F/S Relays |
|
4-20 |
Wheaton South ABC Meet |
|
4-23 |
MSL West Division Championship |
|
4-28 |
75th Annual Palatine Relays |
|
5-1 |
Hersey F/S Invite |
|
5-5 |
Lisle Invite |
|
5-10 |
F/S MSL Meet @ Buffalo Grove |
|
5-11 |
Varsity MSL Meet @ Schaumburg |
|
5-15 |
Naperville Central F/S ABC Meet |
|
5-18 |
IHSA Sectional |
5-25
5-26 |
IHSA State @ Eastern Illinois University |
|
Recent News and Updates - E-mail
cquick@d211.org
Sunday, April 15, 2007 - Five Team Meet
Results
I know it has been awhile since I gave a
substantive update. We have had a lot of meets here early in the
outdoor season, and we have another three this week. All of a sudden
the season is in a quick downward slide to the finish. A week from
Monday is the MSL West Division meet at Palatine, and a week from this
coming Saturday is the 75th edition of the Palatine Relays. We hope a
ton of alumni and parents show up for this huge event.
Check out the updated
PR
Performance Lists. A picture gallery will follow in the next
couple of days after the guys get me a CD.
Highlights from Five Team Meet:
 | Mat Smoody and Matt Dettloff proved
that they are in nice shape going 1-2 in the 3200 meter run.
Both ran all-time bests - Smoody in 9:37 and Dettloff in 9:46.
Behind them, our young guys continued to make progress. Eddie
Lopez continues to round into shape with a 10:26, and our two
freshmen, Chano Bernardo and Alec Bollman, ran 10:25 and 10:43,
respectively. We now have three freshmen under 10:45. |
 | Sagar Patel and Alex Mourousias
finished 1-2 in the 1600 with times of 4:36 and 4:41. Kevin
O'Brien also ran a season best 4:47. In the F/S, Adam Bethke set
a new PR at 4:52 to nearly win the race, and freshman Jeff Larson
broke 5:00 for the first time, recording a 4:58.7. Mike Grobner
nearly broke five as well with his 5:01.7. |
 | Our sprint relays continue to run
well. We ran 43.9 in the 4 x 100 and 1:31.9 in the 4 x 200. |
 | Chad Bobbit continues to improve in
the shot put and is nearing a spot on the all-time freshman best list.
His 42' 4" was another improvement. |
 | The open 1600 held it share of
surprises once again. Big props have to go out to Colin Morlock
(4:56.0), Brian Cepuran (4:58.7), and Paul Kwak (4:59.8) for breaking
five for the first time. Chris Perry won the race in 4:50.0
while other great PRs were set by Lewis Conley (4:53), Matt Baran
(5:05), and Bryan Perry (5:05). |
 | Let's all give it up for DREW SHALER.
One of the great things about our team is that every guy brings it
with his best effort from top to bottom. Drew's previous best
time in the mile was 5:43. Somehow, he found it within himself
not only to run 5:13, but also to win his heat of the open 1600.
Drew's tough run absolutely set the tone for the rest of the meet and
had everyone buzzing. This is more proof of how anyone's
performance can be the most important one of the day. Congrats
Drew! |
 | In the F/S 800, Vlad Novikov ran one
of the best races of his career. His 2:10 was a solid time, but
I was most proud of him for demonstrating a strong dose of
competitiveness. I got on him in front of the team for a weak
effort on Tuesday, and he ran like a warrior on Saturday to win his
race at the wire. Luke Kierys also ran great in the 800,
recording a 2:13 PR. |
 | In the varsity 800, Justin Olson ran a
PR of 2:11, but he learned a powerful lesson about controlled
aggression. A 27 second first 200 meters is not the way to
approach the 800, esp. for a F/S guy just trying to break 2:10 for the
first time. |
 | The 4 x 400 was a comedy of errors,
and we somehow managed to win. Mookie led off in 54.0 out of the
blocks to put us behind, but Brandon Peters (52.6) and Chris Norman
(52.1) ran great legs in the middle. We should have had it in
the bag with Smoody anchoring, but he botched the exchange with Chris
and dropped the baton. What unfolded next was unbelievable.
The baton went off the inside of the track, Mat exploded an entire
plastic bottle of Sprite trying to pick it up, emerged from the mess
in third place, and proceeded to run down everyone to win us the race
in a messy 3:33. Smoo split a 54.0 complete with a dropped baton
and an exploded pop. |
|
Sunday, April 8, 2007 - Small Updates
I was out of town for the Easter holiday so I
don't have a full update. Look for updates miles charts later this
week as well as an update of recent meet action. I did update the
Performance List to reflect times run in our first outdoor triangular with
Schaumburg and Barrington. Enjoy.
Miles Updates - I put up Mileage for
Week 8,
Week 9, and
Week 10 as well
as the season
Mileage Progression. Check out your workload so that you know how
much you are running.
Monday, April 2, 2007 - Illinois Prep
Top Times Results
We had a really solid meet on Saturday, and
it was a good feeling to have so much of the track team together for a big
state-level meet. I was really happy because almost everyone who went
either equaled or bettered their previous indoor best. We are making
solid progress as we turn to the outdoor season.
Illinois Prep Top Times Results - Smoody
Wins the 800 Meters
Mat Smoody put on quite a show on Saturday,
flashing his blazing speed in both the 800 meters and the 4 x 400. Mat
didn't run as fast as we had hoped in the 800, but he won, and I like seeing
guys win more than running fast. I counseled him to relax more in the
first 200 meters of the race, but also get out hard enough to avoid getting
boxed. Well, he went out in 31 and proceeded to get boxed. The
race came through the 400 in 61.5, but Mat caught a lucky break and got out
at exactly that point. He took the lead with another runner at the 600
(1:30.7), and then proceeded to absolutely demolish the field with a 26.3
last 200. Check out this You Tube video of his race:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jYQELV0Wzzo
In the 4 x 400, Mookie was bit distracted and
tired from being in the thick of the triple jump competition and ran a
really lazy first leg (53.0). I was mad because he didn't attack, but
Terrence and Telly did a good job of getting us back into the race.
Terrence ran a 52.8 in a lot of traffic and got it to Telly who turned in a
52.0. That was a 1.5 second drop from the week before. Smoody
then went nuts, anchoring in 49.4! Wow. He brought us
into 3rd for a time before giving way to one of the Matthies twins from
Glenbard South. We placed third in 3:27.13, breaking last week's
school record by .07 of a second. The pieces are starting to come
together now.
In other racing, Sagar Patel placed 10th
overall in the 3200 as he continued to improve from his early season
malaise. He ran 9:35.1, but I loved his competitiveness through 2000
meters. He went through the mile in 4:39 and hit a 71 to be at 5:50.
He rigged a bit from there and was passed, but I want our guys to run
aggressively and mix it up rather than laying back. That move will pay
off for him in the outdoor season.
Our DMR placed 8th overall in 11:07 behind
solid work from Chris Perry (2:12), Dan Sutton (54.9), Kevin O'Brien
(3:21.9), and Alex Mourousias (4:38.3). OB's leg in particular was
good as he brought us right back into the race from dead last to 6th.
Alex fought hard, but fell short even as he ran right on his indoor PR.
In the 1600, Dettloff looked sluggish and ran
a mediocre 4:31.0. I know that he was disappointed, but better races
are around the corner. He will rebound. Our 4 x 200 ran a solid
1:35.1 after we pulled two of the four legs from last Friday's school record
setter.
In the field events, Ed Anderson cleared 5'
11" before passing to 6' 3" and going out. Mookie just missed the
finals in the long jump with his one legal leap of 21' 8", but he placed 3rd
overall in the triple jump with a 46' 6" and a series that saw three other
jumps over 45'.
Friday, March 30 - Manderson Classic
Results, Train Trip Pics

This edition of PalatinCC.net is brought to
you by the boys of Section 338. Let's just say that it was all
Grobner's idea. Or maybe Morlock. Who knows. Anyway, I put
together all of the pictures
from Train Trip 2007 as well as the
results
and team pictures of the Manderson Classic. Check out all the updates.
Manderson Classic Results and Team
Pictures
The 4th Annual Manderson Classic lacked the
close team finish of the 3rd annual, but it was a hard fought contest which
was won by a bunch of young bucks who couldn't wait for their day in the
sun. That's right. The Beach Boys won despite the long odds that
some prognosticators had laid out for them. The 1-2-3 punch of Jeff
Larson, Colin Morlock, and Luke Kierys was just too much, and this team also
profited from the strong 4th man running of freshman Tirth Patel. We
only scored four men this year so their victory was a smashing success.
As for the Army of Juan, I tried to bring
some of that old man experience to my team, but we couldn't pull it out.
Now that I am a two time winner, I feel like more of a loser than ever,
beating up on the JV and frosh-soph. Just remember guys: I hope to run
enough Mandersons that I am the fifth man someday, just trying to keep up
and stay alive. I'll become another sad example of how fleeting glory
is...
Check out this year's results along with the
pictures and results from the first three editions of the Manderson Classic.

1st Place - The Beach Boys - 27 points (Captains Matt
Dettloff, Chris Perry, and Kevin O'Brien)

2nd Place - The Army of Juan - 35 points (Captains Justin
Olson, Juan Perez, Adam Bethke, and Vlad Novikov)

3rd Place - Waldo's Hoes - 43 points (Captains Terrence Thigpen, John Weatherton, and Omar Herrera)

4th Place - Finoody Knights, Part II - 48 points (Captains Eddie Lopez, Mat Smoody, and Mike Grobner)

5th Place - CK Waffers - 57 points (Captains Alex Mourousias and
Sagar Patel)
Tuesday, March 28, 2007 - Proviso,
Manderson Results
We had an eventful week leading up to our
Spring Break. Not only did we run great and finish 3rd as a team at
the Proviso Classic, but we also had a ton of fun at our 4th annual
Manderson Invite. Pictures of the Manderson and the Train Trip to
Chicago will follow shortly after I develop the film and scan in the
pictures. I will be updating the Miles for Week 8 soon, but check out
the
updated Performance Lists. They contain the final indoor times
(excepting the IPTT guys). We broke two school records on Friday
night! The 4 x 200 guys set a new record of 1:33.5, lowering the
previous mark from 1:34.1, and we broke the 4 x 400 record by an astounding
5 seconds, running 3:27.0.
Proviso Classic Results - Pirates Place
3rd Overall
Friday night was one of the best team efforts
I have seen from our track program since I started coaching here six years
ago. We are certainly headed in the right direction, qualifying a ton
of guys to the IPTT meet and starting to mix it up with top-notch
competition. We qualified Sagar in the 3200, Smoody and Dettloff in
the 1600, the 4 x 200 relay of Tim Williams, Brandon Peters, Telly Halloran,
and Chris Norman, and the 4 x 400 relay of Mat Smoody, Telly Halloran,
Terrence Thigpen, and Tim Williams. Check out the full recap:
 | The Varsity and F/S 4 x 400 relays
ended up being the highlights of the night. The foursome of Matt
Wiggen, Diego Cortez, Dan Scwiekert, and Chris Norman ran 3:42.5 in
the slow heat to steal the win. Norman ran one of the toughest
races I have ever seen, leaning on a tough Buffalo Grove anchor man
for 250 meters or so before barely holding him off at the line.
Chris ran 53.0! |
 | In the Varsity 4 x 400, we were also
in the slower section, but ended up in a sweet battle with Jacobs.
Smoody led off in 51.4 again and got it to Telly in the lead.
Telly lost the lead a bit despite his solid 53.5 split, and Terrence
got us back really close with a 51.9 indoor PR. It was then up
to Tim Williams to run down Evan Jager, the state cross country champ.
Tim gave him all he could handle, obliterating his PR with a 50.4 leg
and anchoring us to a 3:27.0 (3:27.20 FAT). We placed 3rd
overall behind Jacobs and East St. Louis Senior. |
 | Mat Smoody turned in a phenomenal
4:18.4 effort in the 1600, but his massive PR was no match for Kevin
Havel's 4:14.0. Havel looked terrific in establishing his own
PR, and it will be sweet to see these two knock heads over the next
year and a half. Smoody's time places him on
our all-time list.
Behind Smoody, Dettloff also recorded an indoor PR and punched his
ticket to the IPTT meet. Detty ran 4:29.5, nearly holding off a
hard-charging Dan Kuhlman in the stretch. |
 | Sagar Patel took a big step toward
returning to form by recording a 9:39.3 effort in the 3200. He
lost the race to Hersey's Bill Wisser, but he looks to be coming out
of an injury and illness funk that had slowed him the first half of
this indoor season. His splits were a solid 4:47-4:52.
Mourousias placed 4th overall in 10:05, equaling his PR from the first
Proviso. |
 | Our F/S 4 x 800 placed second in a
very close race. We ran splits of 2:13.2 (Olson w/ a botched
handoff), 2:12 (Bethke), 2:12 (Grobner), and 2:11.9 (Novikov).
The time of 8:49 was very solid, but we are looking for one of these
guys to step up and assert himself as a true leadoff or anchor.
The ultimate goal is to get down to 8:30.0 by the end of outdoors.
|
 | Our varsity 4 x 800 guys ran 8:45, but
most of them ran indoor PRs. OB 2:08, Perry 2:10, Lopez 2:12,
and Weatherton 2:13. |
 | Terrence ran 1:29.1 in the 600 to
place 5th overall while Omar turned in a nice 1:33 and change.
Both of these guys will have to keep improving and move up to the 800
for us later this season. |
 | Tim Williams shrugged off a 3 foul
performance in the long jump to put together a nice series in the
triple jump. He won the meet behind leaps of 44' 10", 45' 3",
and 45' 1". |
 | As mentioned before, we ran a school
record of 1:33.5 in the 4 x 200 relay. Tim Williams lead off
with a 23.1 split and was followed by Brandon Peters, Chris Norman,
and Telly Halloran. |
|
Manderson Classic Results
I will do a full write-up later, but here are
the
Manderson IV results along with the results from
Manderson I,
Manderson
II, and
Manderson III.
Wednesday, March 21, 2007 - Manderson
Classic Preview
I updated the
performance lists to reflect times run at the Glenbrook South
triangular. Congratulations go out to Mat Smoody, who broke two school
indoor records last night. Mat actually tied Jon Cermak's 1000 meter
record of 2:34.4, and he (along with Tim Williams) also broke the 300 meter
record, running 37.2 to Mookie's 37.3.
Manderson IV is upon us tomorrow afternoon.
Anyone wishing to catch this annual celebration of CC running can catch the
race at 5:00 pm at Deer Grove East. Without further ado...here is the
2007 Manderson Preview.
CK Waffers (Captains Alex Mourousias and
Sagar Patel)
This team’s captains are a bit like a situation comedy on television. You
throw a Greek and an Indian together and absolute hilarity ensues. They
figured that we were only scoring four so only four were needed to win.
Cepuran gives them a solid mileage base and a ton of heart, but his recent
travails with a nasty strain of diphtheria mixed with Grade III measles make
him a bit of a liability. Baran and Blyth also battled sickness in the last
week, making me think these guys were gathering the Infirmary All-Stars.
Which Baran will show up? The one who passed out and fell out of his desk in
science class freshman year? Or the one who ran 5:13 at Proviso? Sterner is
a tough kid, but the man blew a booger on the fence the other day that
looked like a Martian alien from the movies. Starcevich will have to be the
solidifier of this crew, but the odds say they have a better chance of
winning a race to the nearest hospital bed than the to the title of
Manderson IV. Odds: 12-1.
Beach Boys (Captains Kevin O’Brien, Matt Dettloff, and Chris Perry)
These three white dudes would blind anyone around with their pale
reflections if they ever found their way to a beach, and it is looking more
like sloppy jungle warfare than beach fiesta time for this edition of the
Manderson. These guys obviously don’t believe in experience, going with
three freshies and two sophs, but some of these boys are as hot as a day in
the sun. Larson, Morlock, and Kierys went 5:07, 5:10, 5:12 on Tuesday night,
and our man Tirth “Mini-Me” Patel has put in the time over the winter that
will allow him to shine in the bright lights of the Manderson. The X factor
is Jacob “The 4th Generation” McPherson who will impress if he just
remembers that Kretschmar is dating his sister. Still, these boys are a
little short in the tooth. It might be time for these beach dudes to break
out the swim trunks, grab their beach towels, and get on their spring break
plane. The baggage check should be easy since it won’t include a Manderson
trophy. Odds: 10-1.
Waldo’s Hoes (Captains Terrence Thigpen, John Weatherton, Omar Herrera,
and Kevin LeClair)
So an old joke goes something like this: what do a black dude, a short
basketball player, a Mexican soccer stud, and a French gimp with an inflated
knee have in common? The ability to pick out a team that wears stripes and
thinks it can get girls? Have you guys met Lewis? I think he’s a pimp, but
I’m not sure he should be one of Terrence’s hoes. It’s true that Lew Dog is
on fire, but I’m not sure that the Wojdyla brothers will be so easy to find
in this crowd of runners. The real guess here is Chano. Can he be found long
enough to strap on a uniform and make himself known? Sund is a key pickup,
but his knees are aching so bad lately that the only place where you would
find him is in an old person’s knee replacement facility. Team with the
worst collective form: check. Team with a captain who has dreadlocks: check.
Brother power: check. The only problem is that I don’t think you’ll be able
to find them anywhere near the awards podium. Odds: 5:1.
Finoody Knights Part II (Captains Mat Smoody, Eddie Lopez, and Mike
Grobner)
Well, at least this team will have the cutest and coolest new styles to get
them through the race. If we were trying to win three dates to the prom,
these captains might have some luck, but picking a winner? Finoody Part I
was a disaster, and its studly co-founder is now studying botany, co-eds,
Chinese linguistics, and spike removal technology somewhere in a field in
Virginia. Kwak is a solid pick up top if he manages to outlast the
debilitating sickness which threatened his cello-playing life last weekend,
but the perplexing pick is the founder himself. Did these guys think we were
racing to the end of a pole vault runway? At least they have Kretschmar, who
is the flux capacitor of Manderson running. You just stick his anger into a
small bottle, have everyone inhale prior to race time, and then wind all of
them up. Mike Murphy and Drew Shaler are wild cards here. Murph is slowly
creeping by people, and Shaler figures to run his best race ever on the 2.5
mile course tomorrow. Oh wait, it’s his first race. Odds: 7-1.
Army of Juan (Captains Adam Bethke, Justin Olson, Vlad Novikov, and Juan
Perez)
With a combined IQ of 643, a future ACT average of 31.1, and an average GPA
of 2.1 (thanks Vlad), these newb captains decided to make a great decision:
pick a defending champ. The old Coach may be a faded replica of a former not
so great tried really hard version of his not-so-champion self, but he
promises to give it the old college try (even in training flats to, you
know, level the field). Early reports from eyewitnesses outside the Quick
house report that at 10:28 the baby is sleeping peacefully. The sweet thing
about Juan’s army of hombres is that the new and improved BP is plotting,
rather gracefully, to usurp the Perry empire and topple his brother from his
throne of dominance. Never underestimate the motivating power of a sibling
rivalry. La arma secreta para estos boys es la duo de second generaciones of
Alec Bollman and Mack Murphy. Their secret basketball training has been kept
under wraps, but oh yes, it will be utilized when necessary. Don’t forget
that Tim “I Survived the Storm” Anderson has a new lease on life after his
tumultuous run and will be ready to bleed for the Army of Juan. Bring it on.
Odds: 5:2.
Monday, March 19, 2007 - MSL Results,
Mileage Updates
The Jim Nagel MSL Invite no longer resembles
a true conference meet since only 6 of the 12 schools send their varsity and
two others send only their JV. Still, we placed a strong second to
Barrington while leaving a great deal of our points on the bench. Our
four top distance guys ran only the 4 x 800, and our sprinters and jumpers
compensated by scoring a ton of points. I think we lost to Barrington
125-113.
Mileage Updates - I updated the
Miles for Week 7
and the
Mileage Progression for the entire season.
MSL Jim Nagel Invite
 | Our 3200 meter relay ran a season best
time of 8:31.0 behind a 1:59.4 leadoff leg from Mat Smoody. Alex
(2:12) and Sagar (2:13) kept us in the lead, and Dettloff finished
with a nice 2:06. That 8:31.0 is a pretty good time considering
the 150 meter track. |
 | Our 4 lap relay ran to an impressive
win, recording a 1:13.2 to best second place in 1:14.7. The
winning team was Chris Norman, Brandon Peters, JT Bobbit, and Dan
Sutton. |
 | We went 1-2 in the high jump to
continue a solid year of production in this event. Both Ed
Anderson and Nick Busch cleared 6' 0". |
 | Tim Williams only competed in the long
and triple jumps, but he gave us maximum points by winning both.
His leaps of 21' 11" and 43' 9" were both season bests and qualifiers
to the IPTT meet. |
 | Kevin O'Brien continues to round into
shape nicely after his swimming season. He recorded a 10:13 to
finish 5th overall. Juan Perez ran an 11:06 PR the hard way,
going out in 5:08 and coming back in 5:58. |
 | Chris Perry ran a lifetime PR of 4:53
to place 6th in the mile. I am really proud of Chris' hard
training and his solid race. |
 | Terrence Thigpen placed second in the
400 in his first open race of the year, running a solid 54.5. |
 | We placed third in the 4 x 400 out of
the slow heat with a couple of 57s from JT Bobbit and Dan Sutton, a 61
from Joe Scwiekert, and a sweet 56.2 from sophomore Matt Wiggen. |
 | Taylor Aiello continued to improve in
the shot with a 45' 5" throw and Robbie Morris placed 5th or 6th by
duplicating his 47' 0" throw from the previous week. |
 | George Faber placed in both hurdle
races, and Telly Halloran mad the final and finished 5th in the 55
meter dash. |
|
State Meet Recap - Palatine Pirates Place
6th at 2006 State Finals

The boys were relaxed heading into the state
meet after winning the Schaumburg Sectional the week before without the
services of junior All-Conference runner Kevin O'Brien. Kevin had
struggled for two weeks with an IT band problem, but he was determined to
run at state and be at his best. His presence certainly gave us a
lift, and it was good to have him back in the lineup. I worried that
the time off had ruined his sharp edge, but OB is a tough one, and I knew
that he would try his best.

We broke from Box 29, which put us right in
the thick of things. You can see from the picture above that we were
right next to York and three boxes away from St. Charles North. Evan
Jager, the eventual champion, and Kevin Havel, the runner-up, were also
nearby. Our plan was to get out at the half in the times that we had
discussed. Smoody and Sagar targeted a 2:15 split while the rest of
the guys dialed in on the 2:18-2:22 range. Times were blazing at the
800. All of our guys came through fast and still seemed to be buried.
Smoody hit the 800 in 2:12 and all five of our guys were through at or under
2:20.

The first mile of the race was totally
smoking. Smoody and Sagar hit the mile in 4:40 and 4:41, Dettloff hit
4:49, OB was 4:50, Alex and Eddie were 4:56, and Tommy was 5:08. We
had trained all year to run these splits and still be ready to maintain for
the rest of the race. The problem this year was that other teams were
ready as well. At the 1 1/2 mark, I knew that we were running fast,
but we were not in great position. I felt that gnawing feeling that a
CC coach only gets when there is a gap too big in the lineup. Sagar
went by the 1 1/2 in 9th place with Smoody in tow around 14th, but the gap
to Dettloff felt big, and it was. OB was ahead of Mourousias, but he
was nowhere near his normal running position with Dettloff. The last
three years, I had felt an amazing feeling at that point of the race, but
this year I was filled with trepidation. We had gone out fast, and our
guys were still buried.
At the two mile mark, our splits were still
great. Smoody (9:42), Sagar (9:43), Dettloff (9:59), OB (10:09), and
Alex (10:11) were in solid position to bring home a trophy. The
problem was that we hadn't finished well all year in the final kick, and OB
was not in his normal running position. We squeaked out wins all year
with OB and Dettloff running together and our 5th man doing his best to stay
within 45-60 seconds of our #1 guy. At state we ran with two fifth men
due to OB's injury.

At the 2 1/2 mark, Smoody had passed Sagar
and was in 10th place, looking like he could charge into the top 7-8.
I hoped that he could kick, but in all of Smoody's best CC races he has
little left at the end. In the picture above, you can see him kicking
with Deerfield's Noble Schermerhorn in a finishing battle for 11th place.
Mat would end up 12th in a remarkable time of 14:35, the 4th best in
Palatine history. Sagar hung on for dear life after his 9:43 opening
two miles, and he managed to keep 14th place and just hold off a ton of
kicking opponents. With two All-State finishes in the bag, I thought
we might be home free. The problem was that all of the contenders also
had at least two great guys up top: York (8, 9 ,15), St. Charles North (26,
28), Schaumburg (17,23), and Neuqua Valley (3, 20). In essence, our
front runners earned us no points against the three teams that would
eventually trophy.

The battle thus went down to the depth guys
on the top teams, and my heart sunk as I saw streams of guys going by all of
our 3-4-5 runners. I am convinced that we lost a trophy from the 600
meter mark into the finish. Gobs of guys were passing Dettloff and
Mourousias, and OB had a lot of trouble in the last mile and didn't look as
sharp as usual. I wanted to believe that we had trophied, but I knew
that York had beaten us and I thought that Sandburg had kicked past us
heading into the finish. When I saw Coach Macnider from Schaumburg, I
got more down because he was at the finish line and knew that his kids had
run great. All year we had beaten Schaumburg, but they always came
back on us and made it close with great kicks. Those great kicks won
them a trophy in the last 400 meters of the race. When coupled with
the great run by St. Charles North and the solid pack race of Waubonsie
Valley, that put us 6th in the state.

Our top five placed 12th (14:35), 14th
(14:41), 66th (15:12), 98th (15:24), and 108th (15:31). In most years
those times would win a trophy, but Illinois is just too tough now.
Six of my seven guys ran PRs, but we got smoked in the last 800 by a bunch
of teams that we had beaten during the year. I am incredibly proud of
this team, and not disappointed with our finish. The only problem that
lingers in my head is that we beat Schaumburg four times, and they got third
in the state. This finish is obviously to their credit, but it hurts a
bit more when you know that a team who won a trophy was beatable. We
just didn't get it done when it mattered most.
I'll remember the 2006 season as a
transitional one when we tried to move on from the athletes who established
the distance running renaissance at Palatine. Glenn Morris was at the
core of this rebirth, and it was a challenge to move on without him and
prove that we could be champions still. In the end, we won the MSL
West, the MSL, and the Sectional, placed 6th in the State, and had two
athletes earn
All-State honors. Most programs would take that any day of the week,
and our goal in the future is to continue to give ourselves opportunities to
win the big one. It is tough to win a state trophy in Illinois, and
our athletes are dedicated to keeping the program up to the expectations set
by former and recent athletes. We will be great again next year with
five athletes returning, and the state will be ultra-competitive.
Let's hope that we can keep training hard and being good people. The
results and the fun will then take care of themselves.

Above: The Quick family poses after
the 2006 IHSA State finals. Meredith is conspicuously absent because
she was home taking care of Madeline Grace, who was born just three weeks
prior to the race.
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75th Annual
Palatine Relays |
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2007
Performance Lists |
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Alumni Results |

Baby Madeline and Daddy eat their hands for
supper. |

Maddie Grace gets crazy in her ExerSaucer. |

Bethke says hello to Soldier Field. |

Jacob Starcevich brings you Sue. Alas, the
lack of Free Tuesday kept us from getting inside for a better
picture. |

Best pose ever.
Check out Baran. |
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