Two PRs for Yashahya Brown, who places 3rd in 110 hurdles at CAA Championships!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Two races and two PRs for Washington Township’s Yashahya Brown, a sophomore at Hampton.

Brown ran 13.81 with a legal 0.7 tailwind in the trials of the Coastal Athletic Association Championships on Friday in Elon, N.C., and then placed 3rd in the final in 13.80 with a 0.5, another PR.

His time is No. 10 on the all-time South Jersey Alumni List.

Brown’s PR previously was 13.82, which he ran last year as a freshman at Rutgers in a meet in Tampa. His best time at Hampton before this weekend was 14.03 in Lynchburg, Va., earlier this month, and his best previous wind-legal time this year was 14.09 in Greensboro, N.C., last month.

All-Time South Jersey 110-Meter Hurdles Alumni List
12.94 … Jack Pierce [Woodbury], June 22, 1996, Atlanta

13.12 … Anwar Moore [Camden], May 5, 2007, Modesto, Calif. [+1.9]

13.25 … Jamir Brown [Riverside], May 14, 2026, Louisville, Ky. [+0.7]

13.43 … Isaac Williams [Willingboro], April 16, 2016, Walnut, Calif.

13.48 … Sincere Rhea [St. Augustine], May 12, 2023, Raleigh, N.C. [+1.2]

13.51 … Martin Booker [Camden], June 7, 1986, Indianapolis

13.54 … Sultan Tucker [Delsea], May 22, 2004, St-Martin, France
13.77 … Jeffrey Young [Camden], May 11, 2022, Bloomington, Ind.
13.78 … Greg Foster [Lumberton], May 11, 2025, New Haven, Conn. [+0.5]
13.80 … Yashahya Brown [Washington Twp.], May 17, 2026, Elon, N.C. [+0.5]

HAMPTON’S JAYDEN POTEAT FROM WINSLOW BECOMES 5TH NEW JERSEY SPRINTER EVER TO RUN SUB-21 AND SUB-46!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Huge weekend for Hampton freshman Jayden Poteat from Winslow, who recorded speedy PRs in the 200 and 400 at the Coastal Athletic Conference Championships in Elon, N.C.

Poteat moved into the all-time South Jersey alumni top-10 in both races. Hampton does not have an all-time top-10 performance list on its web site, unfortunately, so can’t tell you where he ranks in school history.

Poteat’s previous PRs were 21.05 in the 200 from last month in Greensboro, N.C., and 47.21 from the indoor conference meet in February in Boston. He dropped to 46.38 in the trials before his breakthrough 45.97 in the final.

Poteat is only the 5th New Jersey sprinter ever to run sub-21 and sub-46 at any point in his life. Olympic gold medalist Dennis Mitchell from Edgewood had PRs of 20.09 and 45.26 and Erison Hurtault of Matawan [20.86, 45.40],  Clayton Parros of Seton Hall Prep [20.85, 45.25] and Clayton Gravesande of Franklin [20.95, 45.93] also pulled off that rare double.

Poteat placed 2nd in the 400 final. He was 7th in the 200 after running that 20.94 in the qualifying rounds.

With his 45.97, Poteat is the No. 11 freshman in NCAA Division 1, four spots below Alabama freshman Alexander Osayemi from Clayton, who ran 45.59 at the SEC Championships at Auburn this weekend.

SCHALICK’S DAVID STEWART JOINS FIVE ALL-TIME GREATS AS 6TH SOUTH JERSEY SECTIONAL QUAD WINNER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

What a weekend for Schalick junior David Stewart! Stewart turned in a rare sectional quad win this weekend in the South Jersey Group 1 meet at Lenape.

It was only the 6th quad win – individual events only – in South Jersey sectional history and the 2nd by an underclassman. He was the only New Jersey boy to win four individual events this weekend in any sectional.

Let’s take a look at Stewart’s weekend:

He started out Friday in the 400, dropping his PR from 49.10 from a meet last May at Delsea, down to 48.64, 3rd-fastest all-time by a Salem County quarter-miler behind Penns Grove’s Tim Reed, who ran 47.8 hand-timed at the 1984 Delaware Valley Meet of Champions at Franklin Field, and Penns Grove’s Jaymes Dennison, who ran 48.33 at the 2013 state Group 1 meet at Egg Harbor. Stewart’s time is fastest this year in Group 1, so he’ll go into the state meet as the No. 1 seed.

His second event Friday was the 400-meter hurdles, which Stewart won with a 55.33. His 54.91 from the Salem County meet last month at Pennsville is fastest this year by a Group 1 runner, and his 55.33 makes him the top seed at states. Salem County record is 53.50 by Schalick’s Chris Mesiano at the 2015 state Group 1 meet at Egg Harbor. Mesiano went on to earn all-America honors for Rowan.

In the long jump, Stewart jumped a lifetime-best 22-8 ½ with a legal 0.0 wind, finishing 8 ¼ inches ahead of junior William Roy of Penns Grove, who jumped a PR 22-0 ¼ for 2nd. Stewart’s previous long jump PR was a 22-3 ¾. Stewart will be the No. 2 seed at states behind Ilario Badalamenti of Kinnelon, who jumped 22-10 ½ at the North Jersey Section 1 Group 1 meet at Livingston.

Stewart finished his remarkable weekend by winning the triple jump Saturday with a final-attempt PR 48-7 ¼ with a legal 1.4 tailwind, No. 6 in South Jersey history, a Salem County record and again best in Group this year, making him the top seed in the triple as well. It’s the best jump by a New Jersey Group 1 triple jumper in 16 years, since Devin Jones of Boonton went 49-11 ½ (with no wind gauge) at the 2010 Meet of Champions at South Plainfield. Overall, Stewart is No. 2 in New Jersey this year behind only Northern Valley’s Brendan Alef, who jumped 49-3 ½ at a meet last month at Hasbrouck Heights (also with no wind gauge). Alef’s best legal jump this year is a 48-2 ½ at North 1 Group 2 sectionals at Vernon Township.

Here’s a look at the five previous South Jersey boys who’ve recorded an individual quad at sectionals:

ROYCE REED, BRIDGETON, 1995: Competing in Group 3 on his home track, Reed won the 200 in 21.9, the 400 in 48.4, the 400 intermediates in a then-meet record 53.3 and the javelin with a throw of 203-3. Reed won the javelin, intermediates and 400 easily, but in the 200 he edged Egg Harbor’s Khari Reynolds by 1-10th of a second.

NICK BROWN, BRIDGETON, 1999: Another Bridgeton great. In Group 2 at Buena four years after Reed’s quad, Brown won the 200 in 22.0, the 400 with a meet-record 47.6, the long jump with a 23-5 and the high hurdles in 13.9. It was not an easy quad. In the 400, Pleasantville’s Devon Matthews also ran 47.6, with the hand timers giving Brown the edge. Brown edged Matthews in the 200 as well (22.0 to 22.2).

REUBEN MCCOY, WINSLOW TWP., 2004: McCoy was dominant at Egg Harbor in the only South Jersey Group 4 quad. He ran 21.53 to win the 200 by more than half a second, ran 47.38 to beat a very good quarter-miler from Vineland, Marcus Lee, by more than a second (Lee ran 48.61), out-raced teammate Robert Penn to win the 110 highs 14.09 to 14.29 and edged Lee in a very fast intermediates race, McCoy winning in 52.24 and Lee running 52.59.

ANTHONY AVERETT, WOODBURY, 2012: In Group 1 at Egg Harbor, Averett won the 100 in 10.91, the 200 in 22.66 (why did they run trials in a FAT-timed 200?), the long jump with a 23-7 3/4 and the high jump with a 6-4 clearance. Averett, a cornerback, played football at Alabama, and was the Ravens’ 2018 4th-round draft pick. He spent five years in the NFL, starting 27 of 51 games.

TERMEIR HILL, CLAYTON, 2021: In the Group 1 meet at Washington Township, Hill won the 100 in 10.86, triple jump at 44-6 ¾, 200 in 22.59 and long jump at 23-6 ½, leading Clayton to the Group 1 team title by nine points over Audubon. Hill went on to win the long jump at states with a 22-11, take 2nd in the 100 at states [behind Burlington’s Malachi James], 5th in the 200 at 22.87 and 6th in the triple jump with a 42-9 ¼.

Peter Simpson doubles and Haddonfield boys roll to 11th sectional title in South Jersey Group 2!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Peter Simpson won the 1,600 and 3,200, and the Haddonfield boys piled up 68 points in the 800, 1,600, 3,200 and 4-by-8 and rolled to their 2nd straight sectional title and 10th overall.

Haddonfield outscored 2nd-place Pleasantville 109-53, with Manchester 3rd with 51, followed by Overbrook and Pemberton [47 each], Seneca [41], West Deptford [37], Haddon Heights [34], Cedar Creek [29], Pinelands [26], Sterling [25] and Barnegat [24].

Haddonfield won its 1st sectional title in Group 3 in 1968, then won Group 1 in 1983, 1984, 1987, 1988 and 1993 and has won Group 2 in 2015, 2016, 2024 and 2025.

Haddonfield hit the motherlode with 24 points in the 3,200, Simpson winning in 9:25.55, Ryan Gibson 2nd in 9:30.80 and Benjamin Andrus 3rd in 9:31.11. Simpson won the 1,600 in 4:20.19, closing in 2:06.93, and Andrus was 2nd in 4:20.96, closin in 2:07.63. Senior Michael Sinnes placed 4th in 4:31.67. Brandon Stoner won the 800 in 1:56.30, with junior Owen Snyder 5th with a PR 1:59.77.

Haddonfield also won the 4-by-8, with Stoner, senior John Leibrandt, sophomore Augustan Coley and sophomore Connor Brand running 8:08.06.

Junior Ryder Bozine scored 18 points in the hurdles, winning the 400 intermediates in 56.50 and taking 2nd in the 110 highs in 14.75, both PRs. Junior Mark Derets placed 3rd in the 400IH in a PR 57.71 and senior Mark DiMedio was 6th in the highs with 15.44.

Junior Jack Brand was 3rd in the 400 [50.34], sophomore Ian Blair placed 6th in the pole vault [11-0] and DiMedio was 6th in the high jump [5-8].

Haddonfield also placed 2nd in the 4-by-4 in 3:29.07 with Brand, Bozine, Derets and Stoner.

Seneca got wins from senior Chase Horner in the javelin [164-6] and junior Bradley Cooper in the high hurdles [14.73].

Overbrook senior John Froehlich ran a PR 48.48 to win the 400, Pemberton senior Jaden Goins ran PRs of 10.66 and 21.84 to sweep the sprints and Pleasantville senior Raliel Wiggins won the long jump at 24-0 ½.

Pleasantville won both sprint relays, with Semaj Dozier, Nazir Griffin, Wiggins and Jamaad Washington running 42.12 in the 4-by-1 and Dozier, Qwasim Jackson, Todd Watson and Brandon Williams running 3:23.57 to win the 4-by-4.

Glassboro boys win 4th in a row, Camden dominates sprints, Schalick’s David Stewart completes rare quad win in SJ-1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

The Glassboro boys, with their remarkable sophomore class, rolled to their 4th consecutive sectional title this weekend at Lenape.

Glassboro finished with a 120-74 margin of victory over Camden in South Jersey Group 1, with Schalick 3rd with 68 points and Woodstown 4th with 57.

Glassboro is the 1st school to win four straight South Jersey Group 1 titles since Bordentown from 2000 through 2003. They’re the first South Jersey school in any group to win four straight since Timber Creek in Group 3 from 2008 through 2011.

The Bulldogs’ 120 points are 5th-most ever in Group 1. Glassboro owns four of the six-highest point totals ever in Group 1, with 181 ½ in 2009, 135 last year, 122 in 2024 and 120 this year.

The Bulldogs, missing several potential big point scorers who elected not to compete this spring, nonetheless scored in 13 of 18 events, showing tremendous balance by piling up 46 points in distance, 34 in the jumps and vault, 18 in the throws, 10 in the sprints and hurdles and 12 in the relays.

Not including relays, Glassboro 84 points from underclassmen, with juniors scoring 18, sophomores 59 and freshman adding seven.

This was Glassboro’s 5th sectional title. The 2009 team, considered the greatest Group 1 ever in South Jersey, won the program’s 1st sectional title but then it was 14 years until the Bulldogs embarked on their current streak.

Glassboro’s distance group led the way, scoring 46 points in the 800, 1,600 and 3,200. Sophomore Joe Saicic won the 1,600 in 4:27.87 with senior Jaeden Wesley 2nd in 4:28.87, and they switched spots in the 3,200, with Wesley winning with a PR 9:34.67 and Saicic running 9:37.24 for 2nd.

Sophomores Aaron Johnson and Zacchaeus Harrigan and freshman Gavin Rakitis also contributed to the distance haul, Harrigan with a 2nd in the 800 in a PR 1:55.06, 3rd-fastest sophomore in New Jersey this year, Johnson taking 6th in the 800 in a PR 1:59.19 and Rakitis 6th in the 3,200 with a PR 9:56.59. Harrigan also placed 2nd in the 400-meter hurdles in 58.24.

Sophomore Moses Robles had a huge meet, scoring 24 points with a win in the high jump at 6-2, 2nd place in the triple jump with a PR 47-5 and 3rd in the long jump at 21-8 ½.

Johnson and Rakitis also contributed legs to the 2nd-place 3,200-meter relay team, which ran 8:20.01. Junior Ryan Ejalili and senior Jason Martin also ran on the 4-by-8.

Glassboro also got scoring performances from senior Jack O’Connell [2nd in javelin, 156-10], junior Logan Toledo [3rd in pole vault, 12-0], freshman Gabriel Tarasevich [3rd in discus, 137-6], junior Joseph Delecce [4th in discus, 131-9], junior Marley Crowl [5th in long jump, 20-11 ¾, 5th in triple jump, 42-11 ½] and junior Alex Adeleye [5th 200, 22.91].

Also, Taylor, Adeleye, Crowl and Butler placed 4th in the 400-meter relay in 43.97.

Camden’s tremendous sprint and hurdle talent earned the Panthers 2nd place.

Senior Jaiden Steele led a 1-2-3 sweep in the 100, running 10.74 in the final, with senior Jawan Brownlee 2nd in 10.85 and senior Christian Braxton 3rd in 11.01. They reversed order in the 200, Braxton winning in 22.22, Brownlee 2nd in 22.64 and Steele 3rd with 22.65.

Junior Jaleel Dickerson-Dempsey won the 110-meter hurdles in 14.69 with a legal 1.7 wind.

Brownlee, Braxton, junior Giovanni Marshall-Edwards and Steele won the 400-meter relay in 42.32, and Brownlee, Braxton, senior Wasi Muhammad and sophomore Terrell Davis won the 4-by-4 in 3:23.15.

Schalick senior David Stewart completed his quad win, taking 1st Saturday in the 400 [48.64] and triple jump [48-7 ¼] after taking 1st Friday in the intermediates [55.33] and long jump [22-8 ½]. Stewart would have finished 7th in team scoring by himself. More on his remarkable performance soon.

Other Group 1 winners were Woodstown senior Aidan Taulane [159-2 discus, 53-5 shot], Schalick senior Salvatore Longo [13-0 pole vault] and Schalick junior Gary Simonini [176-8 javelin]

Woodbury won the 4-by-8 in 8:09.42 with senior Elijah Young, senior Curtis Stokes, sophomore Elijah Smith and junior Jason Ortiz.

JAMIR BROWN WINS 110 HIGHS AT ACC CHAMPIONSHIPS WITH 9TH-FASTEST TIME IN THE WORLD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Riverside’s Jamir Brown won his 1st outdoor conference title Saturday and ran the 9th-fastest time in the world this year at the ACC Championships in Louisville.

Brown, who PR’d with a 13.28 in the trials, ran a wind-legal 13.25 in the final at Owsley B. Frazier Cardinal Park at the University of Louisville, breaking the school record he shared with Jaheen Hayles, who ran 13.28 in Austiin in 2023.

The race was delayed 3 ½ hours by a thunderstorm that struck after the runners had initially warmed up

Brown’s time is tied for 5th-fastest ever by a New Jersey native and fastest in 14 years, since Jeff Porter of Franklin ran 13.08 at the 2012 USATF Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene. He’s 6th-fastest American this year and 5th-fastest collegian.

He’s 6th on the 2026 U.S. list and 7th on the 2026 collegiate list but 4th among hurdlers with wind-legal times.

As a freshman at Rowan last year, Brown set the NCAA Division 3 record of 13.60 in the trials of the NJAC Championships in Ewing, but he didn’t race in the final. So this is his first outdoor conference title.

Brown outraced Florida State hurdlers Zach Extine [13.32] and Andre Korbmacher [13.36] in the final. Extine was the NCAA runner-up last year as a junior at Arizona State.

Brown joins Donald Pollit in 2014, Freddie Crittenden in 2016 and 2017 and Hayles in 2024 as the 4th hurdler to win a conference title since Syracuse joined the ACC in 2014.

All-Time New Jersey Hurdles List
12.93 … Renaldo Nehemiah [Scotch Plains-Fanwood], Aug. 19, 1981, Zürich
12.94 … Jack Pierce [Woodbury], June 22, 1996, Atlanta
13.08 … Jeff Porter [Franklin Twp.], June 30, 2012, Eugene, Ore.
13.08 … Anwar Moore [Camden], May 5, 2007, Modesto, Calif.
13.25 … Dudley Dorival [Ewing], Aug. 9, 1995, Edmonton, Alberty [Canada] [-0.3]
13.25 … Jamir Brown [Riverside], May 16, 2026, Louisville [+0.7]

Deptford edges Winslow by half a point in titanic S.J. Group 3 meet between two powerhouse programs!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It can’t get any closer than this.

Deptford won the South Jersey Group 3 championship this weekend by half a point over Wilson, finishing with a 110-109 ½ edge.

Terrific meet for both teams that came down to the final event and both programs bring a strong lineup to the state Group 3 meet in two weeks at Northern Burlington.

The team title was Deptford’s sixth and 1st since 2021. The Spartans also won Group 3 in 1970, 1971 and 2019 and Group 4 in 1973. Winslow was seeking its sixth title and 2nd in a row. The school has won 13 sectional titles if you include Edgewood’s eight between 1978 and 1987

Let’s take a look at how the meet went for Deptford and Winslow:

100-METER DASH [Deptford 10, Winslow 14]: Deptford senior Johann Hernandez won the race in 10.51, 9th-fastest in South Jersey history, but Winslow took 2nd and 3rd with senior Quayd Hendryx running 10.66 and freshman Keyon Ali 10.76 in a wind-legal race.

200-METER DASH [Deptford 9, Winslow 16]: Four of the first seven finishers were from Deptford or Winslow. Hendryx won the race in 21.44, fastest since 2012, when Fabian Santiago of Oakcrest ran 21.00. Hernandez took 2nd in 21.72, Winslow senior Prince Owusu-Twum was 3rd in 21.85 and Deptford junior Xavion Holmes placed 6th in 22.22, 8-100ths of a second ahead of Winslow’s Ali, who ran 22.30

400-METER DASH [Deptford 0, Winslow 10]: Senior Prince Owusu-Twum ran a big PR 48.12 to win the 400.

800-METER RUN [Deptford 0, Winslow 0]: Delsea’s Matthew Littlehales won the race in 1:55.41, but neither Deptford or Winslow scored.

1,600-METER RUN [Deptford 0, Winslow 0]: Littlehales won the 1,600 in 4:20.55 on his way to a triple, and Deptford and Winslow were held scoreles.

3,200-METER RUN [Deptford 0, Winslow 0]: Another one for Littlehales, who ran 9:26.79, but Deptford and Winslow didn’t score, although Winslow senior Vincent Peri ran a strong PR for 7th in 9:52.59.

110-METER HURDLES [Deptford 18, Winslow 3]: Seniors Kareem Brown and Larry Norman ran 1-2 in the hurdles final, Brown in14.00 and Norman 14.34. Winslow senior Elijah Deanley and junior Jibril Hammond both placed, Deanley 5th in 14.89 and Hammond 6th in 14.92.

400-METER HURDLES [Deptford 18, Winslow 6]: Seniors Kareem Brown and Larry Norman repeated their high hurdles 1-2 finish, Brown winning with a South Jersey 2026 best 53.81 and Norman 55.11. Winslow’s Deanley placed 3rd in 55.72.

HIGH JUMP [Deptford 0, Winslow 5 ½]: Winslow junior Cayden Hester took 4th with a 6-0 clearance and junior Andrew Kratee tied for 5th, also at 6-0. Timber Creek sophomore Devin Perry won it with a 6-4 on his final attempt.

LONG JUMP [Deptford 1, Wnislow 24]: Winslow swept the long jump behind some huge jumps by juniors Andrew Kratee and Ka’Ron Caesar and senior Zyaire Rothmiller-McIntosh. Kratee won with a PR 24-1 ½, best in South Jersey Group 3 since 1996, when Wilson’s William Spearman won with a 25-0. Caesar also hit 24 feet for the first time, taking 2nd in 24-1 and both those 24-foot jumps were on the 6th and final attempt. And Rothmiller-McIntosh jumped 23-1 for 3rd. No wind readings in the results, although it sounds like they may have been recorded. We’ll see. Hopefully.

TRIPLE JUMP [Deptford 2, Winslow 8]: Camden Tech’s Jabari Woodard won it by one inch over Winslow junior Ka’Ron Ceasar, Woodard jumping 45-11 and Casaar a lifetime-best 45-10. Deptford senior Damon Morton placed 5th with a 44-10.

POLE VAULT [Deptford 17, Winslow 0): Senior Mason Henry won the vault with a 14-0 clearance, senior Kamaldeep Singh was 3rd at 12-0 and senior Dominic DiPietro was 6th, also at 12 feet.

SHOT PUT [Depford 0, Winslow 0: Delsea went 1-2-6, with junior Sheldon Goldsborough throwing 53-6 ¼, sophomore Eneas Tavella 52-1 ¾ and freshman Holden Roskoski 48-3.

DISCUS [Deptford 0, Winslow 0: Highland senior Zion Josia Brockenbaugh threw a lifetime-best 166-3 for the win, while Deptford and Winslow didn’t score.

JAVELIN [Deptford 8, Winslow 1]: Deptford senior Kaden Roane threw 169-8 for 2nd to Cumberland Regional senior Richard Pierce, who threw 175-7 for the winner. Winslow’s Hammond threw 145-4 for 6th place.

400-METER RELAY [Deptford 10, Winslow 8]: Deptford ran 41.76 to Winslow’s 41.93 to win the race. Liam Brown, Xavion Holmes, Johann Hernandez and Kareem Brown ran for Deptford and Keyon Ali, Quayd Hendryx, Elijah Deanley and Jalen Moss for Winslow.

1,600-METER RELAY [Deptford 10, Winslow 8]: The deciding race saw Deptford win in 3:20.15, with Winslow 2nd in 3:24.02. For Deptford, Kyle Wilson led off with a 49.25, Norman split 51.42, Hernandez ran 50.96 and Brown anchored in 48.54. Winslow ran with senior KaRon Ali, freshman Keyon Ali, Ka’Ron Caesar and Deanley, with KaRon Ali splitting 49.13, Caesar 49.32 and Deanley anchoring in 47.44.Triton leadoff Mukthat Abdulhakeem spliit 49.97 and the Mustangs were 3rd with a 3:24.33.

3,200-METER RELAY [Deptford 8, Winslow 0]: Ocean City was 1st in 7:56.84 with Keenan Neuman, Nathan Aschmann, Nevin Millstein and Erik Preisner, with Deptford placing 2nd in 7:59.13 with Anthony Schilling, Christian Ramirez, Zach Harrison and John Collier, who anchored in 1:57.69.

Willingboro’s Jade Pinder, Trinity Brapoh win three events each at Central Jersey Group 2 meet!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Juniors Jade Pinder and Trinity Brapoh turned in massive performances for Willingboro in the Central Jersey Group 2 Sectionals at Hillsborough, both winning three events and placing in a 4th.

Pinder won the 100 in 12.34 after a 12.25 in the trials, ran a PR 24.23 to win the 200 and ran 57.51 to win the 400. She also jumped a big long jump PR 18-4 ½ to finish 2nd to Brapoh.

Brapoh won the 100-meter hurdles, long jump and triple jump, all with PRs. She hurdled 14.35 and jumped 18-11 ¼ and 37-3. She also took 3rd in the high jump at 4-10.

Brapoh and Pinder recorded the best long jumps by Willingboro girls in 47 years, since Olympian and former U.S. record holder Carol Lewis set the national schoolgirl record of 21-7 3/4 at the Liberty Bell Classic at Franklin Field. Willingboro’s only other 18-footer since Lewis is Shanavia Thomas, who went 18-0 in 2009.

Willingboro, which competed this spring without a couple returning sectional point scorers from indoors and last spring, fell two points shy of winning the team title, but also got big performances from junior Maya Bolden, who was 3rd in the 100 with a 12.54 after a 12.41 in the trials, and 4th in the 400 in 59.07, and freshman Erin Scott, who took 3rd in the 200 in a PR 25.58, 4th in the intermediates with a PR 1:08.88 and 6th in the 100 in 12.80 after a PR 12.38 in the trials.

Sophomore Annalyse Brown placed 2nd in the intermediates in 1:08.08, also a PR.

Riley Fayer’s historic distance triple leads Audubon girls to sectional title with South Jersey Group 1-record point total!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Senior Riley Fayer repeated her 2024 distance triple, leading the Audubon girls to their 2nd sectional title in three years.

Fayer won the 800 in 2:16.66, the 1,600 in 4:57.97 and the 3,200 in 11:21.91 amd Audubon piled up 153 points to win the South Jersey Group 1 Sectional at Lenape.

She’s the first girl to triple the 800, 1,600 and 3,200 in multiple seasons since Haddonfield’s Briana Gess did it in Group 2 in 2014, 2015 and 2016 and Annika Merkh did it in Group 1 in 2015 and 2016.

Audubon won by 50 points over Glassboro, which scored 103 points. Audubon’s 153 points are the most ever in South Jersey Group 1 and 4th-most in any South Jersey sectional. The previous high in Group 1 was Penns Grove’s 148 points in 2013.

Other Audubon winners were senior Julianna Laxton, who cleared 5-2 in the high jump, and senior Morganna Makuszewski, who cleared 9-0 in the pole vault.

Freshman Emma Camm had a big weekend, placing 3rd in the 1,600 [5:21.66] and 3,200 [PR 11:30.82] and 4thin the 800 [PR 2:23.98].

Senior Marissa DeValerio placed in four events, taking 4th in the high jump [4-10] and long jump [16-7], 5th in the hurdles [17.26 into a 3.7 meters-per-second headwind] and 6th in the triple jump [34-0].

Junior Sophia Rizzo was 2nd in the 400 [59.80] and 4th in the 200 [26.83], junior athryn McGuire
was 2nd in the 100 [12.79] and 3rd in the 200 [26.51], freshman Kathryn Black cleared 4-10 for 3rd in the high jump, junior Lydia Gravante placed 6th in the 1,600 [5:34.75] and 3,200 [12:08.19],  senior Julianna Laxton placed 4th in the hurdles [17.23], senior Kyle Tocco was 4th in the 400 [1:01.30] and freshman Sabrina Passon took 3rd in the intermediates [1:08.95] and 6th in the highs [17.28].

Audubon won the 3,200-meter relay with junior Isabella Legatie, seniors Tallulah Witherington and Charlie Owens and freshman Amanda Drummond running 10:18.53. Rizzo, Passon, Tocco and junior Ava Lebb ran 4:05.99 for 2nd in the 4-by-4, and McGuire, Rizzo, Tocco and Laxton ran 50.29 for 2nd in the 4-by-1.

AJANI DWYER DROPS A 10.04 IN BIG TEN QUALIFYING, 7TH-FASTEST 100 BY AN AMERICAN THIS YEAR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Washington Township’s Ajani Dwyer, a Penn State sophomore, ran the 7th-fastest 100-meter dash time by an American sprinter this year in the trials of the Big Ten Championships in Lincoln, Neb.

Dwyer led all qualifiers with a wind-legal time of 10.04, the 3rd-fastest time ever by a New Jersey native behind Olympic gold medalists Carl Lewis [9.86 in 1991] and Dennis Mitchell [9.91 in 1996].

Dwyer’s time, made with a legal 1.9 meters-per-second tailwind, is 2nd-fastest legal time by a collegian this year, behind a 10.00 by John Caleb of Minnesota last month in Gainesville.

Dwyer has run a wind-aided 9.96 this year, but his previous legal PR was a 10.06 in Gainesville (at a different meet). That was also the previous Penn State school record.

Dwyer will race in the final at 2:52 p.m. Sunday, starting in Lane 5.

Jelani Watkins
Nketia
Ajayi
Kaalund
Okon
Mosebi
Caleb
Ian Johnson
J. Reid
Fakorade