Wednesday, December 6, 2023

BEYOND THE FINISH LINE

I love Cross Country.  I love the preparation required during the summer months.  I love the challenge of creating training plans to accommodate a team that has a number of ability levels.  I love analyzing data to create those plans and I love make comparisons between our team and our opponents.  I enjoy submitting results to our AD and Administration to let them know how well our team performed, or if the team didn’t fare as well as hoped, the individuals that stood out in a loss. I love practice and seeing young student-athletes gain fitness and confidence through the physical effort required by this sport.  And I love to see that effort translate into improvement and accomplishment.  And if I had to cite one aspect of Cross Country I love most, it would be that: improvement and accomplishment.  One of the awards we present each season is to the boy and girl athlete who has made the most dramatic improvement between last fall and this fall.  And this award serves to illustrate why this sport goes well beyond the finish line because improvement represents the culmination of the preparation, effort and enjoyment I speak of.  And this year we have two team members very deserving of this award.  In 2022, Lauren Smith joined us after a year of freshman soccer and went about quietly (very quietly in fact) showing us that she had potential as a runner.  She competed in 5 of our 6 dual meets with her best race a 9th place finish at Duxbury where she scored her first point in competition.  When it came time to choose our Divisional Meet runners, she had posted the team’s 8th best 5K with a time of 24:21.  So while she was close to being selected, she missed by a minute or so.  Perhaps motivated by that, she came into this season well prepared and immediately made her presence felt.

 In this season’s first meet she was among the top 5 finishers for our girls at Marshfield, a tough team and a tougher place to run. The next week she matched that against Silver Lake.  And in week 3 against Plymouth North, while showing continued improvement, she finished 3rd for the team.  She continued to improve her times in the following weeks with a 4th place at Hingham, 3rd against Duxbury, a 2nd at Franklin Park in the Catholic Memorial Invitational and a 2nd at the Patriot League Championship.  And finally, at the Divisional Meet in Wrentham she was the 3rd finisher for the team with a new Personal Record of 21:31 in the 5K while helping the girls’ team qualify for the All-State Championship.  Her finish in that race was just under a 3:00 minute improvement from the previous season; the largest improvement among our girls; again, all very quietly.  Lauren scored a single point in 2022 but scored in all 9 meets this year in which the girls competed (the only girl to do so, in fact.) Congratulations to a soft-spoken young lady who makes noise on the XC course and is on course to become an even better runner in 2024, Lauren Smith. 

Improvement and accomplishment; what I love most about this sport.  And for a coach these achievements can be measured quite easily in Cross Country, with a stopwatch.  But for the athlete, there is always the physical and mental challenge in meeting goals and expectations. Improvement doesn’t come easy.  In addition to preparation and effort, cross country tests an individual’s endurance, strength and agility. It emphasizes the mental toughness needed to overcome obstacles and push through pain.  And our award for the most improved boy runner goes to a boy who has shown those abilities since he joined us a freshman last year, Caleb Poth.  Any long-time runner remembers at the outset, running is chore, hard work; an effort that often makes a newcomer to this sport wonder if he or she should look elsewhere.  Injury and pain almost always accompany the start of a running program, and many decide to abandon the effort.  In 2022 Caleb, I believe dealt with both injury and pain on his way to becoming a true athlete. In 2022 Caleb showed the desire needed to work through that pain.  In the first three weeks of the 2022 season in fact, Caleb ran consistently, but in week four at Plymouth North he hit a wall of sorts and ran for him, a disappointing race.  But Caleb is tenacious and persistent.  He continued to work through pain and fatigue and ultimately competed in each dual meet during the season.  He closed out his 2022 Cross Country season in the JV Meet at the Patriot League Championship where he ran his best 5K time of that year finishing 85th out of 96 runners, in 24:47.  Caleb got a taste of accomplishment in 2022 and vowed to come back stronger in 2023.

This year, Caleb, like Lauren, was prepared coming into the season.  He experienced little pain and showed the effort of a young man on a mission to improve.  And improve, he did: in dramatic fashion.  No, he didn’t win any races.  In fact, he didn’t score any points.  But he practiced hard each day in an effort to get better and slowly but surely, he climbed in the team ranking.  Before it was over Caleb had posted the 7th best 5k time among the boys with his 20:21 finish, again at the Patriot League Championship where he finished 75th out of 98 runners, this time in the Varsity race.  His improvement over 2022’s best time was an amazing 4:26, about 2 ½ minutes better than the improvement of any of his teammates.  This season provided many obstacles and challenges for Caleb, all of which he dealt with capably and professionally.  Congratulations to Caleb Poth on his amazing accomplishments this year.  He has put the coaches on notice by telling us he anticipates further improvement in the fall of 2024.  None of us doubt his doing just that. 

Cross Country provides an opportunity to enjoy the camaraderie and sense of community that exists within a team. The common experiences found in the sports challenges, its victories and yes, in its losses, bring team members closer together and strong bonds are formed along with lifelong friendships.  Evidence of that can be found in not only the relationship among the coaching staff, but even more so in the relationships we have with others as a result of our having taken up distance running ourselves.  However, team unity was not in abundance this year, and I’ll take the blame for that.  And I’ll work hard to resolve that in the future.  But nonetheless there were many of those lifelong friendships formed that I spoke of earlier.  One such friendship is that between Alex Kehayias and McKenna McCarthy, coincidentally our Boys and Girls Most Valuable Players this season.

Alex, a senior, served as team Captain this fall and was Whitman-Hanson’s top finisher in each of the team’s eight meets this season.  Alex established a new 5K Personal Record with an impressive 17:04 finish at the Patriot League Championship at Hingham.  He was selected as a Patriot League All-Star.  He placed 45th at the MIAA Divisional (D2) Meet at Wrentham in which he completed in an impressive time of 17:35. 

Junior McKenna McCarthy was the Panthers top finisher in each of the team’s meets this season and finished behind only a total of five perennial Patriot League All-Stars during the dual meet segment of the season.  McKenna established a new 5K Personal Record of 19:58 in the team’s win over Duxbury.  McKenna was a unanimous Patriot League All-Star selection.  McKenna finished 14th at the Division 2 State Qualifier in Wrentham and 46th at the Divisional Meet of Champions at Fort Devens.

Cross Country, like most sports, provides us all the chance to celebrate individual achievements and we acknowledge a great number of those with these two student-athletes.  Cross Country has provided both Alex and McKenna personal growth opportunities and a chance to discover their potential.  Each will establish new goals again next year as Alex heads to Suffolk University as a member of the Cross Country and Track teams, while McKenna will return for her Senior year at Whitman-Hanson.  I’m excited to see where it takes them. 

It’s my opinion that participating in Cross Country provides an athlete with invaluable life skills and lessons.  Discipline immediately comes to mind.  We’ve just seen where athletes that participate in practice each day and put forth a genuine effort at each of those practices, accomplish great things.  It’s like any task.  Whether it’s your academics, your job, your relationships with others; you’ll only succeed with consistent and meaningful effort. You have to work at it. Time-management skills can be greatly enhanced through participating in athletics.  Each day you’re asked to set aside a specific block of time for practice.  Giving similar attention to other aspects of your life such as homework, nutrition, time with your family and friends, and rest and relaxation, all very necessary for a happy and healthy life, will ensure that you get to everything you should be getting to.  Less stress, less anxiety, less grief.  Of course, nobody lives that perfect life forever.  Things happen.  Obstacles and events occasionally get in the way of your routine.  Often times these obstacles are quite impactful.  Illness, injury, at times, chaos, can be terribly distracting, and can get in the way of doing what we need to do.  But what this sport teaches us is resilience.  We overcome those obstacles, move on from them, and most often we’re better for having done so.   And Cross Country, a goal-oriented sport, continuously reminds us of the fact that there is always a better day ahead. If you don’t achieve that goal today, you may tomorrow.  And Cross Country teaches us that commitment, the genuine and consistent effort I’ve been talking about, whether it is applied to this sport or in any other meaningful endeavor we take on, will result in us reaching our full potential for success and happiness. 

Our next award goes to an individual who has provided a benchmark this year for that commitment.  You are already aware of some of his accomplishments during the season, all a by-product of his dedication to improvement.  He is the sole member of this year’s team to be in attendance and participate in each practice and every meet, Alex Kehayias, this year's recipient of the team's Commitment Award.

Of course, individual achievements for our student athletes aren’t limited to accomplishments on the Cross-Country course or the Track.  Of greater importance, and I want to stress that; of greater importance, is what these student-athletes accomplish in the classroom.  High grades and outstanding GPAs have been a hallmark of every team I’ve coached in Cross Country.  A far wiser, and older, coach once told me that the best recruits for Cross Country are not found in the gym class, they are found in the math class.  And I tend to agree.  They are a very intelligent group overall.  And although Whitman-Hanson doesn’t rank its students and GPAs aren’t available to coaches, we do have access to grades for the primary purpose of counseling those students with problems or in danger of losing his/her eligibility.  Those lists for this sport, where existent, are very short.  We don’t see a lot of Ds or Fs.  We pretty much see kids with one or two Cs.  When I speak with those students, I almost always learn their deficiency is the result of either a missed exam which will be made up, or an assignment which will be submitted within a short time.  Within a week or two, the matter is usually resolved favorably.  There are those kids who never make those lists and whose grades are extremely impressive.  In fact, there are many members of the team who should be acknowledged for their academic achievements.  It makes it difficult to single out athletes among that large group of deserving kids for the Scholar-Athlete Award, but this year there are two standouts who are high achievers: not only within Cross Country but in the far more important realm of academics.  And those students, both seniors, are Shane Johnson and Lynn McCoy.  It is important to note that both Shane and Lynn have been outstanding students since they arrived at Whitman-Hanson.  The consistency and hard work they’ve displayed in sports is a reflection of what each brings to the classroom.  They’ve chosen to follow the same path in athletics as they have in academics; a path that will undoubtedly serve each of them well in the years to come.  We’ll miss Shane and Lynn next year, but we can look forward to others taking their places.  We know others are ready to follow their lead and take on the role of leaders in the classroom and in Cross Country. 

 

 

Two of our younger student-athletes appear to be following comparable routes as Shane and Lynn: both are very good students and impressive athletes and each season we recognize a member of both the Boys and the Girls team with the Rookie-of-the-Year Award.  This award is presented to the first-year athlete who makes the greatest impact on team results, but it takes into consideration traits beyond the finish line.  These kids are committed to running, hard-working in practice, respectful to both teammates and the coaches, and quite honestly children any parent should be enormously proud of.  The Cross-Country Rookies- of-the-Year for 2023 are Sophomores Haley Gillis and Ben Andrews.

Haley joined Cross Country with no expectation of even running a 5K.  In her first season of Track and Field this past spring she participated in four events: the 100, 200, and 4 X 100 Meter races, along with the High Jump.  After a week or so of working with Coach S’s group (formerly known as the Mod Squad) at practice this fall, I asked Haley to consider running with Coach Coletti’s group, made up of mostly newcomers to the sport of Cross Country.  I asked that she simply try distance running and let her know that I saw potential in her as a distance runner.  I also told Haley that if she didn’t like it, she could return to Coach S’s group if she wished.  But from the moment she started running with the distance crew she seemed to not only enjoy it, but she rapidly improved.  She didn’t compete in our first meet at Marshfield, but in her first meet at Silver Lake, Haley finished 3rd among the Panther girls, and the following week against Plymouth North she ran 4th among her teammates.  She dropped to 5th at Hingham, no surprise given her effort in her new event over the first few weeks of distance running.  But 3 weeks later she was the team’s 3rd place finisher in the Patriot League Varsity Championship with a time of 22:46. And two weeks following the League Championship, Haley was a major factor in the team’s qualifying for the State Championship when she ran the team’s 2nd best time of 21:25 at the Division 2 State Qualifying Meet. She finished 24th overall and established her current Personal Record in that race.  The following week she closed out her season finishing 3rd for the team at the Divisional State Championship.  So, in less than two months, Haley both began her distance running journey and accomplished incredible success as a distance runner.  I’m looking forward to watching her progress over the next two years and feel she will undoubtedly become one of our league’s top athletes.

Ben Andrews path to becoming the terrific distance runner he is, while far different than Haley’s, parallels it in many ways. He too is a sophomore running his first season of Cross Country.  Ben had also participated in Track and Field but had already established himself as an excellent distance runner while exclusively running the Mile and 2 Mile, where he holds Personal Records of 5:08 (in the Mile) and 11:11 (in the 2 Mile.)  Ben played a year of soccer before joining us at Cross Country this past fall.  But he had some experience with the 5K having competed in a number of local races, some of which he won.  We were elated when Ben decided to join us in Cross Country this past fall, and expectations for him were high.  And Ben delivered.  While he ran on a team with many experienced upperclassmen, he climbed the ranks quickly, and stayed there, as the team’s 3rd place finisher at Silver Lake and at home versus Plymouth North, and the Panthers’ 2nd place finisher in his other six races during the season.  He showed extraordinary durability in maintaining his practice and racing schedule, along with the dedication and commitment we love seeing in our student-athletes.  My own personal goal for Ben was to see him run a sub 18:00 minute 5k which he achieved at the Patriot League Championship where he established his current personal record of 17:59.  At the Division 2 State Qualifier at Wrentham he ran an impressive 18:02 on a far more difficult course than Hingham in what I thought was Ben’s best race of the season and a precursor to what we expect to see from Ben in the years to come.   Ben, like Haley, not only made a major contribution to the success of the team this past fall but can look forward to improvement in the years ahead as one of the league’s premier distance runners.

 

You can see in Ben and Haley that this sport offers the opportunity for not only racing achievements but self-discovery.  A sprinter and a soccer player have each become in just one season, both accomplished runners and outstanding athletes, something they may not have envisioned when their journey began.  There are though, many pleasant surprises that took place during our 2023 season and to present awards to two athletes who provided us with a lot of thrills during this season is our own Coach S (chlicting).

(Coach S presented what we've titled the "Coach S" award to two outstanding athletes, Lauren Smith and Andrew Buckley.  The award was created through his wish that a student-athlete who having exceeded expectations, be acknowledged for having done so. Both Lauren and Andrew were vital members of the Cross-Country team.  Each was a major contributor to the success of their respective squads.  Both Lauren and Andrew scored in every meet in which the team participated this season.  There are no more deserving recipients in my opinion.) 

We’ve shared with you through these award presentations, stories of improvement and accomplishing goals, overcoming adversity, along with commitment, hard work, athleticism, and academic achievement. Each member of the team can, in some way, relate to most, if not all of those stories.  Cross country is a sport which encompasses physical challenges, team unity, life lessons and personal growth and the sport should be recognized as a vehicle to the self-discovery and friendships I spoke of, more so than simply racing.  It is so much more than that.  And that too is a reason I love this sport.

But what about the many that never win a race: those that come to practice each day and run their races with no real expectation of winning but with the anticipation of simply competing?  As you know, most of you fall into that category.  But each day you return simply for the love of the sport.  You applaud your teammates and your opponents as well.  You get beyond the finish line after quite a few have done so before you arrive.  You work hard, and you follow the direction of your coaches, you never complain, and you maintain a smile as long as possible during each workout.   You have never been an All-Star or an All-Scholastic, and maybe you’ve never received any recognition for what you know you’ve accomplished, but you accept that and take pride in knowing you’ve always done your best.  And at every turn along the way you have exhibited what this sport and any sport is really all about, sportsmanship.  Not an easy feat in an atmosphere in which competition and being the best are its most distinguishing characteristics.  Two student-athletes who I’ve essentially just described are this year’s recipients of the Patriot League Sportsmanship Award:  from the Boys team – Adam Vinton, and from the Girls team – Evelyn Williams.

Thank you to all who attended last night's gathering.  I apologize for trying to change my presentation "on the fly" in order to get everybody home at a reasonable time and reduce the time you were asked to sit through my babbling.   

 

 

 

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