The Ramblers got off to a hot start with two first-place wins Friday.
The Ramblers got off to a hot start with two first-place wins Friday.
The Loyola track and field team brought home five first-place finishes after competing in the Atlantic 10 Indoor Track and Field Championships in Virginia Beach, Virginia Feb. 23-24.
The Ramblers got off to a hot start with two first-place wins Friday. Graduate distance runner Francois Guilhot finished the men’s 5,000-meter with a time of 14 minutes, 5 seconds — 10 seconds ahead of the second-place finisher.
In the distance medley relay, third-year middle distance runner Gabe Smit, first-year middle distance runner James Howell, fourth-year middle distance runner Miguel Abaitua and third-year middle distance runner Jason Clayton finished in first place after running the fourth fastest time in program history at 9:51.
Graduate distance runner Emma Watcke, fourth-year middle distance runner Fran Hendrickson, graduate middle distance runner Kate Wojcikiewicz and third-year distance runner Grace Kuhn competed as a team in the distance medley relay. They finished in third place in the meet and set a new program record with a time of 11:38.
In the 5,000-meter race with Guilhot were second-year distance runner Jake Phillips, graduate distance runner Stephen Lavey and second-year distance runner Woody Jerome, who recorded times of 14:27, 14:58 and 15:19, respectively.
In the women’s 5,000-meter, first-year distance runner Eileen Seebon finished with a time of 17:26 and placed seventh overall while third-year distance runner Grace Jostock finished in eighth place after running a 17:30. Graduate distance runner Delia McDade-Clay placed in 11th with a time of 17:40.
The Ramblers walked away from the men’s 800-meter preliminaries with a fourth place finish from Abaitua who qualified for the finals with a time of 1:52. Howell and third-year middle distance runner Jack Slaughter finished with times of 1:56 and 1:57.
Fourth-year sprinter Jayla Johnson qualified for the finals of the 60-meter hurdles after her first place finish in the preliminaries, clocking 8.61 seconds. On the final day of the event, she placed first in the 60-meter hurdle event with a time of 8.73. With the victory, Johnson has now broken the program record four times this season.
Clayton ended with a time of 8:15 while Kuhn crossed the finish line with a time of 9:34, both taking home first place wins in the men’s and women’s 3,000-meter.
Third-year distance runner Roisin Treacy came in sixth place posting a time of 9:56 in the 3,000-meter race, and fourth-year distance runner Grace Maurer placed eighth at 9:57.
In the men’s 3,000-meter, first-year distance runner Nate Boutin placed sixth with a time of 8:23, third-year distance runner Fionn Harrington finished in eighth place at 8:24 and first-year distance runner Cael Mulholland came just behind in 10th, clocking 8:25.
In the men’s mile race, Smit achieved a fourth-place finish at 4:09 while first-year distance runner Trent Anderson took 10th with 4:20. Watcke led the women’s team after clocking a 4:53 and landing a third-place win.
The Ramblers sent a team of graduate middle distance runners Cameron Arkesteyn, Smit, Slaughter and Howell to the 4×800-meter relays. They finished in third with a time of 7:37, running the 10th best time in program history.
The women’s team of Wojcikiewicz, Hendrickson, first-year middle distance runner Jo Collins and fourth-year hurdler Madi McLain posted a time of 9:21, landing them sixth on Loyola’s top-10 list.
Next up, the Ramblers travel to Boston for the NCAA Indoor Championships March 8.
Featured image courtesy of Chandler Hart | Loyola Athletics
Lilli Malone is the News Editor of The Phoenix and has written for the paper since the first week of her first-year. She is studying journalism, criminal justice and political science, is on the board of SPJ Loyola and was previously the deputy news editor of The Phoenix. She has worked as a Breaking News Correspondent for The Daily Herald, and has interned at Block Club Chicago, Quotable Magazine, and UCLA. Originally from Columbus, Ohio, Malone enjoys traveling, reading, and telling the stories of Loyola and Rogers Park community members.
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