05.31.08

Local throwers take center stage!

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Local throwers take center stage at State Track qualifying
BY ZACH EWING, Californian staff writer, e-mail: zewing@bakersfield.com | Friday, May 30 2008 11:19 PM
Last Updated: Friday, May 30 2008 11:23 PM

NORWALK — It was Kern County’s own little game of “Can you top this?” right here at the wide world of the CIF State Track and Field Championships outside Falcon Stadium at Cerritos College.

Kayla Kovar of Burroughs High was one of three Kern County girls to qualify for today’s state finals at Cerritos College.
Burroughs junior Kayla Kovar started things off Friday with an impressive discus toss of 147 feet, 10 inches. Shafter’s Anna Jelmini, the state’s leader in the event, calmly took the lead with a 155-9 — mediocre by her lofty standards. Then Stockdale freshman Alex Collatz threw in a 150-10.

“It’s pretty cool,” Kovar said. “It’s amazing, because you hardly ever see three girls from the same county do so well.”

Things got really interesting when Kovar unleashed a personal record 157-8 with her final throw — and taking the lead on the second-to-last throw of the day.

The last belonged to Jelmini — and she wasn’t about to go into today’s state finals with anything but the top seed. So she arced out a beautiful 166-4 to reclaim her spot atop the leader board.

“I had in my mind what I needed to do before she went,” Jelmini said. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, she passed me, I need to pass her right now.’ … But I kind of keep in my mind what everybody else is doing. I like it when other people are coming close to me. It just pumps me up more.”

Or, as Kovar said with a laugh: “Anna’s very competitive. She didn’t (say anything), but I could just tell.”

When the dust settled, three of the top four throwers in the event were from Kern County, not to mention Taft’s Carey Tuuamalemalo, who finished 13th. The top nine in each event advance to the finals, which begin at 2 p.m. today for field events and at 4 p.m. for running events.

Jelmini also reached the shot put final on just one throw, a 47-1 that beat anyone else by more than four feet. She has the state’s best mark by a wide margin in both throwing events.

“The marks don’t even count (today); they just get erased,” Jelmini said. “So I just passed on those last two. I did what I needed to do.”

Also into the finals is Foothill’s Dayshan Ragans, who took it easy on qualifying day. He threw a 60-2 on his first throw in the shot, then passed on his final two to qualify in third.

In the discus, he forgot to change his shoes and missed nearly all of his warm-up time, but then tied his PR with a 203-7 on his first throw.

“I was standing in line (for warmups), I look down, and someone says, ‘You’re throwing in New Balances?’” Ragans said. “I was like, ‘Oh. My. God.’ That’s exactly what I said. So I ran all the way down to the fence and changed my shoes and … had like four minutes left to warm up.”

The forgetfulness didn’t cause Ragans any problems. After his big first throw and a foul on his second, Ragans passed on the third to rest up for today.

“Throwing takes so much out of you mentally and physically,” Foothill throwing coach Wayne Brewer said. “There’s no reason to wear yourself out when you’ve already qualified.”

Inside the stadium, in front of 8,542, Centennial’s Alana Alexander also reached the finals in two events. In one, the triple jump, she came with the fourth-best seed and reached the final in eighth place (38-1).

The other, the long jump, was a bit more of a surprise. Alexander had the 22nd seed and was nowhere to be found on the list of top-25 marks in the state this year. But Alexander, jumping in the first heat, put up an 18-1 that stood up in eighth place.

Also in the jumping pit, Ridgeview’s Johnny Carter and Chris Kelly qualified with the exact same mark — 47-10.5, tying them for fifth heading to the finals.

“It’s kind of strange that we would get the same mark,” said Carter, a freshman who entered with the top seed. “But I’m happy with what I did today. I was real nervous through the whole process. I should come out better (in the finals).”

The happenings on the track weren’t nearly so prosperous for the Bakersfield area, at least until North’s Anthony Mitchell took off his jacket. Not a single local runner qualified until Mitchell won his heat in the 800. That performance, a 1:53.77, will give him the No. 2 seed in the finals. He had the eighth-best time in the state coming in.

“I could see myself winning it,” Mitchell said. “We’re all right there. It could be anybody’s race.”

He will be in one of only two races that involve locals today. The other is the boys 3,200, where there is no qualifying and where Foothill’s Chris Schwartz carries the third-best time in the state.

But while Mitchell and Schwartz will have to carry the local torch on the track, the girls discus outside the stadium will have a distinct southern San Joaquin Valley flavor. And this time, “Anything you can do, I can do better” will be played with a state championship at stake.

“It’s kind of interesting,” said Collatz, who has the state’s second-best mark this season. “I’m number two to Anna, and she’s right close to me (in Shafter). It’s all I know.”

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