07.22.08
Posted in Championships, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Upcoming, Results, Clubs at 7:08 am by Administrator
Andrew Jimenez, 13, of Jacobsen Middle School of Tehachapi won his age group in the shot put at the Junior Olympics Region 14 Championship with a mark of 42 feet,1 1/4 inches uly 12 in Livermore. Jimenez qualified for the USA Track and Field National Championships in Omaha Nebraska.
* Gabriel Gaeta, a Freedom Middle School seventh-grader, won the Midget boys 80-meter hurdles race at the California State Games July 12 in Vista. Gaeta’s winning time was 13.20 seconds. He competed in a field of 16 hurdlers in the 11- and 12-year-old boys division.
Gaeta also won the 80-meter hurdles race, Midget division, at the Valley School Championships May 17 in Clovis. In addition, he won the 80-meter hurdles race at the Kern County Track and Field Championships May 10 at Liberty High School in Bakersfield.
The 12-year-old Bakersfield native is coached by Freedom Middle School teacher David Brown and Frontier High School track and field coach David Gaeta.
* Eight Kern County Firefighter Activity League athletes qualified to compete in the National Junior Olympics based on their performances at the Region 14 Championships July 11-13 in Livermore.
The KFAL’s boys intermediate 4×800 relay team won its division in 8 minutes, 34.33 seonds. Relay members were Caleb Barger, Francisco Nava, Marco Perez, Stephen Burke and Alejandro Hernandez.
Evan Eggenberg won the high jump 5-73/4 in the youth boys division.
Alyssa Bennett was third in the midget girls discus (69-61/4), and Kaulyn Lee-McNeill was third in the youth girls 200 (32.55).
Another winner was Erik Garcia of the McFarland Track Club in the youth boys 3,000 meters (9:53). Garcia also was third in the 1500 in 4:36
The McFarland Track Club’s midget boys 3,000 meters relay team of Abran Ayon, Christian Romero, Abel Mota, Daniel Garcia was second (10:37).
They all qualified for this week’s national Junior Olympics in Omaha, Neb.
* Bowen Anderson, 12, recently won the 80-meter hurdles and was third in the long jump and high jump in a West Coast championship meet. He will compete July 29 in a national pentathlon competition in Detroit.

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06.27.08
Posted in Schools, Championships, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Upcoming, BHS, CSUB, Shafter, Taft, Olympics, Bakersfield at 5:53 am by Administrator
Men’s 110m Hurdles
Thomas Mack University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 13.74 - BAKERSFIELD HS
Men’s 3000m Steeplechase
William Nelson University of Colorado Longmont, CO 8:28.85 - TAFT HS (CE)
Men’s Shot Put
Chris Figures unattached Bakersfield, CA 20.38 - SOUTH HS (BAK)
Men’s Hammer Throw
Arnaldo Cueto unattached Bakersfield, CA 68.50 - CAL ST BAKERSFIELD - HS ??
Women’s Discus Throw
Rachel Varner unattached Bakersfield, CA 56.72 - BAKERSFIELD HS
Anastasia Jelmini unattached Bakersfield, CA 56.06 - SHAFTER HS
Cecilia Barnes unattached Bakersfield, CA 61.99 - CLOVIS WEST HS (FRESNO
california preps at the olympic trials HERE

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06.08.08
Posted in Invitationals, Schools, Results, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Foothill, Results, Stockdale, Ridgeview, Burroughs, Noise Flash!!! at 7:44 pm by Administrator
complete results HERE
meet website HERE
Event 25 Boys Triple Jump -A Section
===============================================================================
Name Year School Finals Wind
===============================================================================
1 CHRISTIAN TAYLOR GA,Sandy Creek High 15.53m 0.6 50-11.50
14.25m(+0.0) 15.19m(0.6) 15.14m(-0.0) 15.44m(-0.0) 15.45m(0.6) 15.53m(0.6)
2 KASEN COVINGTON 11 ID,Capital High Sch 14.75m NWI 48-04.75
14.19m(0.7) 14.14m(+0.0) 14.75m(-0.0) FOUL 14.51m(-0.0) FOUL
3 JOSH BUTLER 11 NV,Damonte Ranch 14.55m 0.6 47-09.00
14.12m(0.8) 14.55m(0.6) 13.88m(-0.0) FOUL FOUL FOUL
4 DUKE WILLIAMS NV,Hug High school 14.49m 0.6 47-06.50
14.18m(0.7) 14.49m(0.6) 13.71m(-0.0) 13.78m(-0.0) FOUL 14.33m(-0.0)
5 CHAD JONES 11 CA,Bishop O’ Dowd 14.29m 1.1 46-10.75
14.29m(1.1) 13.74m(+0.0) 13.84m(+0.0) 13.25m(-0.0) FOUL 13.91m(-0.0)
6 PHILIP BURKS CA,Royal High Schoo 14.11m NWI 46-03.50
14.08m(0.8) 13.82m(+0.0) 14.11m(-0.0) 13.93m(-0.0) 13.99m(-0.0) FOUL
7 RYAN SWAFFORD JR 12 CA,Vista Murrieta H 14.07m NWI 46-02.00
13.36m(0.8) 13.93m(+0.0) 13.85m(-0.0) 13.85m(-0.0) FOUL 14.07m(-0.0)
8 GARY ELLIS 12 GA,Collins Hill Hig 14.03m 0.7 46-00.50
14.03m(0.7) 13.83m(+0.0) FOUL 13.81m(-0.0) 13.67m(-0.0) FOUL
9 JOHNNY CARTER 9 CA,Ridgeview 13.60m +0.0 44-07.50
Event 27 Boys Discus Throw -A Section
==========================================================================
Name Year School Finals
==========================================================================
1 JORDAN CLARKE 12 AK,Bartlett High Sc 62.17m 204-00
50.81m 56.24m FOUL FOUL 62.17m FOUL
2 COLIN QUIRKE 12 CA,Los Gatos 55.81m 183-01
55.81m 51.55m 52.23m 54.42m 55.76m 52.56m
3 MATT DARR 10 CA,Frontier High Sc 54.87m 180-00
Event 33 Boys Shot Put -A Section
==========================================================================
Name Year School Finals
==========================================================================
1 JORDAN CLARKE 12 AK,Bartlett High Sc 19.77m 64-10.50
FOUL 19.38m FOUL 19.77m 19.73m FOUL
2 COLIN QUIRKE 12 CA,Los Gatos 18.95m 62-02.25
17.77m FOUL FOUL 17.94m FOUL 18.95m
3 MICHAEL CARDINAL 12 ID,Blackfoot High S 17.13m 56-02.50
16.53m 17.13m FOUL 16.47m 16.79m 17.06m
4 LEVKIV ANDREY 11 WA,Hazen 17.01m 55-09.75
15.73m 16.84m 17.01m 15.45m FOUL FOUL
5 DANE CHOBANIAN CA,Scripps Ranch Hi 16.95m 55-07.50
16.95m 16.64m 15.72m FOUL 15.84m FOUL
6 MATT DARR 10 CA,Frontier High Sc 16.84m 55-03.00
Event 65 Girls Discus Throw -A Section
==========================================================================
Name Year School Finals
==========================================================================
1 JESSICA SHARBONO 10 MT,Billings West Hi 47.99m 157-05
41.44m 47.99m 34.63m 45.34m FOUL 41.81m
2 ALEX COLLATZ 9 CA,Stockdale H.S. 47.73m 156-07
42.45m 47.73m FOUL 42.41m 45.34m 42.98m
3 KAYLA KOVAR 11 CA,Burroughs High S 45.84m 150-05
41.58m 45.84m FOUL 44.94m 43.20m 40.10m
Event 71 Girls Shot Put -A Section
==========================================================================
Name Year School Finals
==========================================================================
1 KATIE EVANS 11 MO,Putnam County HS 13.38m 43-10.75
12.54m FOUL 13.38m FOUL 13.16m 13.24m
2 SARAH BELLA 12 CA,West Morris Mend 13.25m 43-05.75
FOUL 13.25m 12.92m 13.02m 12.34m 13.21m
3 BROOKE GRITTERS 11 IA,Pella Community 13.04m 42-09.50
11.40m FOUL 12.80m 13.04m 12.68m 12.63m
4 SHANNON WATT 11 NJ,Jackson Memorial 12.21m 40-00.75
11.56m 11.22m 12.10m FOUL 12.20m 12.21m
5 JACKIE AH LOO 12 CA,St. Mary’s High 12.02m 39-05.25
11.22m 11.89m 10.74m FOUL 11.39m 12.02m
6 KAYLA KOVAR 11 CA,Burroughs High S 11.48m 37-08.00
11.22m 11.48m FOUL FOUL FOUL FOUL

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06.02.08
Posted in Yada Yada, Schools, Championships, State, Road Stories, Track Meets, Bakersfield at 8:15 pm by Administrator
our driller state trip started right after graduation on thursday night around 9. all the coaches were there at 9 but no athletes.
remarkably, the first athlete to show up was isiah griggs who sang at the graduation. isiah is our sophomore high jumper who improved from 6′2 to 6′6 this season with help from coach alex (csub jumper).
slowly but surely the rest of the gang showed up. emanuel turner, brandon gooden and johnny norwood who had just graduated and now were heading to state.
we all piled into the vans and headed to cerritos and were in are hotel rooms by 1 am and tried to get some sleep before friday’s prelims.

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06.01.08
Posted in Profiles, Athletes, Schools, Championships, State, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Results, Ridgeview, Noise Flash!!! at 8:34 pm by Administrator
Ridgeview freshman stuns field with state record triple jump
BY ZACH EWING, Californian staff writer
e-mail:zewing@bakersfield.com | Saturday, May 31 2008 11:39 PM
Last Updated: Sunday, Jun 1 2008 12:05 AM
The most amazing part of Johnny Carter’s performance wasn’t his impromptu jig after his final triple jump at the CIF Track and Field State Championships on Saturday.
Photos:
Ridgeview’s Johnny Carter is congratulated by Ryan Swafford, the second-place finisher, after his final jump failed to best Carter’s top leap. Carter won the state title Saturday, setting a Freshman all-time state record in the process.
Photo by John Harte / The Californian
Johnny Carter of Ridgeview made big news as he soared to the state championship in the triple jump with a jump of 49 feet, 1 inch.
It wasn’t, believe it or not, that the jump won him a state championship as a freshman or that it set a new rookie record for the Central Section.
No, the most amazing part might have come afterwards, when Carter asked his club throwing coach, Kim Jenkins, what the world record in the triple jump was.
“About 61 feet,” Jenkins told him (it’s actually 18.29 meters, about 60 feet, 1 inch).
Carter’s response? “Only 12 more feet to go.”
Seems farfetched, but not if you watched Carter, a 15-year-old at Ridgeview High, land his winning 49-1 jump at Falcon Stadium.
“I thought about it all night long,” Carter said. “I couldn’t get to sleep. I kept thinking, ‘I know what I’ve got to do tomorrow.’ Thought about it, and it came true.”
The freshman, who entered the event with the top seed mark in the state, struggled with nerves in Friday’s preliminaries but appeared to be past that problem for the finals. He landed a 48-0 — just three inches off his old personal record — to get within 3.75 inches of the lead, held by Vista Murrieta’s Ryan Swafford.
That was still the margin before Carter’s final jump. He needed a new PR.
“I was thinking to myself, ‘If I don’t get this, it’s over,’” Carter said. “When I hit the dirt, I said ‘Yes!’”
Freshman state champions are the stuff legends are made of, of course. It puts Carter in the same category as very few others, among them Olympic great Marion Jones.
Jenkins used Fresno-San Joaquin Memorial jumper David Tucker, who had held the section’s freshman record from 1968 until Saturday night, as an example.
“(Tucker) went on to do big things, national marks and whatnot,” Jenkins said. “At least now Johnny’s surpassed that.”
For now, Carter is going to enjoy Saturday night’s performance.
“I feel blessed,” Carter said, clutching his gold medal. “And this, this feels really good.”
Ridgeview finished 1-3 in the event, with senior Chris Kelly capping his career with a third-place finish. It was a sweet finish for him after he missed making the finals by less than an inch as a junior.
“I told (Carter) in the beginning that we had to take top three, both of us,” said Kelly, who jumped 47-11. “I’m happy for him, and I’m happy I placed.”
Even Kelly could only watch as Carter — who had to pull up his grades at the start of the semester just to be eligible for track — came from the frosh/soph team to the top of the state podium in only his second year of jumping.
“He jumped up, and I said, ‘OK, that must be 48-4 or better,’” Jenkins said. “They flipped up a 49, and I thought, ‘Oh my God, he did it.’”

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Posted in Profiles, Athletes, Schools, Championships, State, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Results, Shafter, Stockdale, Burroughs, Noise Flash!!! at 12:05 pm by Administrator
Competition nowhere near Shafter junior’s shot put, discus marks
BY ZACH EWING, Californian staff writer
e-mail:zewing@bakersfield.com | Saturday, May 31 2008 11:39 PM
Last Updated: Sunday, Jun 1 2008 12:04 AM
Shafter throwing coach Matt Godbehere found some shade Saturday afternoon and sat in his lawn chair, a pleasant day at Cerritos College’s Falcon Stadium gone exactly as planned.
Anna Jelmini smiled and posed for pictures, pleased but trying to look like she wasn’t sure what the big fuss was about.
The rest of Jelmini’s entourage, however, gave it away: The buzzing, handshaking and congratulating was the result of Jelmini’s long-awaited state championship.
“I feel great right now,” said Jelmini, her gold medals swinging from her neck. “I worked so hard this whole year, and it paid off. … I try not to look too conceited, but I feel really extremely happy.”
A couple of big early throws in the discus gave Jelmini a cushion no other competitor could touch, and her top mark of 169 feet, 4 inches beat the next-closest Californian by nearly nine feet.
Later, the shot put brought more of the same. All six of Jelmini’s throws were better than the best throw from the rest of the field. She threw a 42-9 on her first attempt, something that ended up good enough to win a state title, but used a 48-3.5 on her fourth throw as her best mark.
“That’s it, it’s over,” said Anna’s father, Rick Jelmini, a camera in hand beside the shot pit.
The double state championship, which single-handedly gave Shafter 20 team points and a share of fourth place in the state, capped an undefeated season for Jelmini, one in which she dealt with being the favorite week in and out.
“I try not to think about the pressure,” Jelmini said. “I feel really excited and relieved.”
Jeanette DeWitt of Nipomo finished second in the discus in 160-10, followed by two more of Kern’s finest: Kayla Kovar of Burroughs took third in 154-10, and Stockdale’s Alex Collatz placed fourth with 150-3.
“I felt like I did what I came here to do,” Kovar said.
Jelmini’s double title has only been done four times before in CIF history, and not since Stephanie Brown of Arroyo Grande did it in 1998. Fullerton’s Natalie Kaaiawahia turned the trick in 1981 and ‘83, and Bakersfield’s Melisa Weis doubled in 1989.
“She did what she needed to do,” Godbehere said. “She focused on herself, and by doing that, it took care of business.”
The feat deserves celebration. And despite outward modesty, there was no shortage of just that in the Generals’ camp — you couldn’t have wiped the smile off Jelmini’s face with a scrub brush, Mom and Dad beamed with pride, and Godbehere’s eyes welled up at the thought of the two-time state champion he had guided.
“She’s a wonderful girl,” Godbehere said. “She works really hard, and this is very deserved.”

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Posted in Profiles, Athletes, Schools, Championships, State, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Foothill, Noise Flash!!! at 11:17 am by Administrator
Foothill senior answers call with roar heard ’round Cerritos College
BY ZACH EWING, Californian staff writer
e-mail:zewing@bakersfield.com | Saturday, May 31 2008 11:39 PM
Last Updated: Saturday, May 31 2008 11:55 PM
Dayshan Ragans used a few bunny hops to dispel some early drama on championship Saturday. He saved the dancing for later, when his double state championship was sealed.
Foothill’s Dayshan Ragans lets it all out as he twirls following his state-winning throw in the shot put Saturday afternoon.
Ragans took his last throw Saturday to something he may have never heard before — wild cheering from his competitors in the event. With the title already in hand, they wanted to see him launch a monster throw, and he obliged with a toss over 203 feet.
With the CIF State Track and Field State Championships at Cerritos College under way for less than an hour, Ragans was locked in a tense shot put battle, the favorite from Foothill actually trailing Los Gatos’ Colin Quirke’s 62-foot throw by about eight inches.
“Oh man,” Ragans said later with a laugh. “That one was not going very well at the beginning.”
With Foothill throwing coach Wayne Brewer urging him on, Ragans, a burly senior headed to Cal State Bakersfield next year, answered the call. He unleashed a screaming 62-10 that gave him the lead and left him bouncing in the ring.
But Ragans wasn’t out of the woods. Quirke threw a 63-6 in the preliminaries Friday.
“It’s such a mental sport,” Brewer said. “You never know what can happen, especially with that kid, Colin. You never know what he’s going to do.”
The tension wasn’t released until Quirke’s final throw — and the final throw of the competition — resulted in a foul and gave Ragans a state championship to cap his high school career.
“I’m thinking, ‘Oh man, I screwed up, and he’s gonna pop a 63, 64 and win it,’” Ragans said. “To my surprise, he didn’t have such a good throw, and I’m like, ‘Did he just foul? Did I just win?’”
Ragans added a second, more lopsided victory and state title in the discus. He had about a three-foot lead with an early 196-10, but that was a subpar throw — for him — that might have soured the state title a little.
No problem. Ragans, who normally only screams when he lets a shot put go, took the advice of one of his defeated competitors and screamed on his last discus throw to the tune of a 202-6.
“I’m kind of speechless,” Brewer said. “It’s one of those things coaches dream about.”
He’s the first male in California to pull off the shot-discus double championship, and, along with Chris Scwartz’s second-place finish in the 3,200 meters, gave Foothill 28 team points and a fourth-place finish in state.
Ragans’ championships conclude a career that has several marvelous story lines.
First, he’s continued the line of Kern County greats in throwing. A list of names like Jeff Buckey, Van Mounts and Leon Patterson must now also include Ragans.
“It’s good to be up there, and it’s good to bring that state title back to Bakersfield,” he said. “It’s been coming back to my head more and more: I want to be on that list too.”
The other story line is how Ragans has defied the odds to get to this point. He comes from a nearly broken home, one that has struggled with finances and drugs and one from which he’s used throwing to distance himself. He started throwing as a freshman and might have won a state title last season, but he fouled out in the shot put finals and settled for second in the discus.
“It’s been a long three years,” Brewer said. “There’s been a lot of obstacles to overcome. To finally be here and be put in this situation, everything just came together. It was a perfect situation.”
This year, everything came up roses. Even Ragans’ grade-point average for his final quarter of school was a 3.5, his highest ever. And his two gold medals, up on the podium at Falcon Stadium in front of a throng of 10,712? Those look pretty good, too.
“That was a little embarrassing, because I’m a shy person,” Ragans said. “That’s a lot of people cheering. I was like, ‘Hey, did I do that?’ But I feel honored. So honored.”

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Posted in Schools, Championships, State, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Foothill, Results, Shafter, North, Centennial, Ridgeview, Burroughs, Noise Flash!!! at 10:02 am by Administrator
Foothill’s Schwartz has a great view of history
BY ZACH EWING , Californian staff writer
zewing@bakersfield.com | Saturday, May 31 2008 11:39 PM
Last Updated: Saturday, May 31 2008 11:41 PM
NORWALK — It was just like any of the other distance races Foothill junior Chris Schwartz has won this season.
He played along with the front-runners for most of the race, had a big kick in the final lap and then held off any challengers.
The only problem this time: German Fernandez, the distance machine from Riverbank, was nearly half a lap ahead of Schwartz shattering a national high school record.
“He’s insane,” Schwartz said.
Schwartz finished a distant second in the boys 3,200 meters race at the CIF Track and Field State Championships on Saturday despite a personal-record time of 8:58.50.
“I felt like I could have done better,” Schwartz said. “But I ended with the best I did this year. Next year, I’m definitely going to go for it.”
Doing Kern County proud
Schwartz’s performance gave Foothill 28 team points and momentarily placed it first in the boys team race with just two events to go.
The Trojans finished fourth — Compton-Dominguez (36 points), Long Beach-Poly (32) and Los Gatos (32) passed them after the pole vault and 1,600 relay were completed — but it was still part of a memorable Kern County showing.
Between Anna Jelmini of Shafter, Dayshan Ragans of Foohill, and Ridgeview’s Johnny Carter, the county brought home nearly one-sixth of the state’s titles, a great result for a county that makes up roughly two percent of California’s population.
Add to those five titles Schwartz’s second place, two thirds, a fourth and a fifth.
Shafter’s girls finished fourth in the girls race because of Jelmini’s championships in the throwing events. Long Beach-Poly won the girls title with 39 points, followed by San Jose-Mount Pleasant with 30 and Oakland-St. Elizabeth with 26.
Mitchell’s lead evaporates
For a few seconds in the first lap of the boys 800, North’s Anthony Mitchell pulled out ahead of a fast-paced race, showing the state what he could do. But it was only a few seconds.
Mitchell faded around the 400-meter mark and couldn’t make up ground in the second lap. He was able to hold off L.A.-Loyola’s Elias Gedyon for fifth place, finishing in 1:54.01. Charles Jock of San Diego-Mission Bay won the race in 1:51.64.
Coming up inches — actually less than an inch — short of the podium was Centennial’s Alana Alexander, who finished seventh in the long jump with a mark of 18-4.5. That was a quarter of an inch behind sixth-place Jackae Bridges of Santa Ana-Mater Dei. The top six in each event were given medals.
Alexander fouled her first and last attempts in the triple jump, thought to be her stronger event, and finished ninth of the nine finalists with a 37-2.
Fleetest of foot
Of all the spectacular shows put on at the state meet, the two that had half the crowd of 10,712 talking on cell phones afterwards were Christine Babcock of Irvine-Woodbridge and Fernandez in the 1,600.
Babcock won her race in the first lap, then began to pull away. The crowd rose to a crescendo as she began her last lap, a national high school record easily a possibility. At that point, she picked up the pace even more, finishing in an unbelievable 4:33.82 — a full 4.5 seconds better than the previous national record.
Not to be outdone, Riverbank phenom Fernandez quickly left his competition in the dust. The crowd, still abuzz from Babcock’s run, tasted another record. Fernandez missed it by about three-quarters of a second, his 4:00.29 just slower than a 3:59.51 ran by Alan Webb (South Lakes, Va.) in 2001.
Fernandez’s seemingly endless energy left him enough to power past the field in the 3,200, maybe an even more astounding performance. His 8:34.23 crushed the previous national high school record of 8:41.10. And — get this — he still had enough energy to take a lap around Falcon Stadium before his medal ceremony to give some newfound fans high fives.
BY A HAIR: Just before Babcock and Fernandez ran at their records in the 1,600, Long-Beach Poly held off a charging Compton-Dominguez team by one-hundreth of a second, 41.26 to 41.27 in the boys 400 relay.
There was another spectacular finish at the end, with San Luis Obispo-Mission Prep’s Jordan Hasay holding off Davis’ Laurynne Chetelat by less than a half-second in the 3,200, 9:52.13 to 9:52.51. Both times bested the old meet record.
The other meet record that fell came in the boys pole vault, where Los Gatos’ Nico Weiler cleared 17-3.
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05.31.08
Posted in Profiles, Coaches, Athletes, Schools, Championships, State, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Foothill, Results, Shafter, North, Stockdale, Ridgeview, Burroughs, Noise Flash!!! at 11:40 pm by Administrator
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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Posted in Profiles, Coaches, Athletes, Schools, Championships, Valley, State, Kern Track Results, Track Meets, Foothill, Results, North, Liberty, Centennial, Ridgeview, Garces, Frontier, Burroughs, Noise Flash!!!, Bakersfield at 11:20 pm by Administrator
Ridgeview’s Carter, Stockdale’s Collatz ahead of the curve
BY ZACH EWING, Californian staff writer
zewing@bakersfield.com | Thursday, May 29 2008 9:01 PM
Last Updated: Thursday, May 29 2008 9:10 PM
Johnny Carter could see this coming.
No, not the entire explosion of freshman and sophomore talent headed to this weekend’s CIF State Track and Field Championships. But at least his part of it.
“When I was around eight years old, I would get (an empty) TV box and jump into it,” said Carter, a freshman phenom in the triple jump for Ridgeview. “Then I would tell my mom that I was born to run and jump.”
To even Carter’s surprise, it didn’t take long for that prediction to come to fruition. He landed a 48-foot, 3-inch triple jump at the Central Section Championships on May 14 to win the event and head to the state meet with the best seeding mark in California. The meet begins with qualifying today at Cerritos College in Norwalk.
Carter’s 48-3 jump was an inch shy of the section’s freshman record, which was set in 1968 by David Tucker of Fresno-San Joaquin Memorial.
“Nobody really knew he was going to do that,” Ridgeview coach Adam Setser said. “He just didn’t look back. He continued to be real consistent all during the latter part of the season, and then, going into that Valley meet, I kind of thought he might have a really big jump.”
Carter already has passed his right-hand man, Wolf Pack senior Chris Kelly, who finished third at the section meet and has also qualfied.
Even more amazing: Carter has only been jumping since last summer.
“My coach (club coach Kim Jenkins) put me in the California state games, and he said, ‘Go out and try it and show me something big,’” Carter said. “I was like, all right, I’ll go out and try, but I never knew I’d get where I am right now.”
And Carter isn’t the only young phenom headed to Cerritos from Kern County.
Stockdale freshman Alex Collatz is qualified in both the girls discus and triple jump, showing off the versatility of her father, Cal State Bakersfield track coach Alan Collatz.
“Isn’t that amazing?” Stockdale coach Dave Losinger said. “You don’t see hardly anybody doing that. That’s an incredible double.”
Throw in Fresno-Central sprinter extraordinare Brendon Bigelow, and you’ve got a trio of fabulous Central Section frosh.
“For these young kids to be hitting the marks they’re hitting, I have no answer for that,” Garces coach Phillip McCullum said. “It’s just amazing.”
There are sophomores to watch too — Garces sprinter Matt Sumlin, Bakersfield high jumper Isiah Griggs and Frontier shot putter Matt Darr and girls hurdler Taylor Jackson.
“It’s the year of the young athlete,” McCullum said.
The old ones, of course, haven’t given up on their dreams. Kern County’s best chance for state championships comes from Foothill senior Dayshan Ragans and Shafter junior Anna Jelmini, both of whom have the top marks in the state in the shot put and discus. Last year, Ragans was second in the diuscus and fouled out in the shot put finals. Jelmini was fourth in the discus and seventh in the shot.
“We’re looking for big things,” Foothill coach Arron Rietz said of Ragans. “He was disappointed he didn’t win both events last year. … If he doesn’t get hurt and he wants to, he’ll be in the Olympics someday.”
Also of note:
* Foothill junior Chris Schwartz dropped out of the 1,600 to rest up for the 3,200, his stronger event. He’s already won the Division I cross-country state championship and has the state’s third-best time in the 3,200.
If Schwartz can post a top-three finish — German Fernandez of Riverbank is the event’s heavy favorite — and Ragans can win both throwing events, Rietz thinks Foothill will finish in the top three of the team race. Long Beach-Poly is the favorite.
* Alana Alexander, a junior at Centennial, and Tyler Thompson, a Shafter senior, both qualified for state in the long and triple jumps.
* Likewise, Bakersfield High pulled Emmanuel Turner out of the boys 100 so he could focus on the 400 and 1,600 relays, and Liberty’s Isiah Purvis is out of the 400 so he can rest for the 200 and 1,600 relay. All three of those relay teams are capable of reaching Saturday’s finals.
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05.21.08
Posted in Profiles, Driller of the Week, Athletes, Schools, Boys, Championships, Valley, State, Kern Track Results, Drillers, Track Meets, Upcoming, Results, BHS, CSUB, DyeStatCal, Noise Flash!!!, Bakersfield at 10:36 pm by Administrator
the driller’s isiah griggs is the #2 sophomore in the state as of 05/21/08. he came in second at the valley with a PR of 6′6 and has qualified for the state meet.
what makes his jump even more amazing is that bhs doesnt even have proper high jump facilities. our high jump gear is locked away in a storage bin and when we do bring it out, there isnt a proper place to set it out.
despite this, isiah (with the help of csub’s alex haver) contiunes to improve. one hopes he can make 6′8 at state.
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