DELSEA’S JOSH AWOTUNDE BOMBS #2 SHOT PUT THROW IN THE WORLD THIS YEAR!!!!!

Delsea graduate Josh Awotunde uncorked the No. 2 shot put throw in the world this year and No. 20 throw in U.S. history in a meet in Louisville.

Awotunde popped a throw of 70-7 1/2 on his third attempt at the American Track League event at the Norton Sports Complex in Louisville. He won the event by about a foot over Darrell Hill, who was second with an indoor PR of his own at 69-6 ½.

Awotunde came into the meet with an indoor PR of 69-11 ¾ from a meet during the 2018 season at College Station, Texas.

In Louisville, he opened with a PR 70-2 ½ and then a 69-1 ¾ before the 70-7 ½ bomb on his third attempt. After a 69-2 ½, he fouled on his to final attempts. He averaged 69-9 ½ on his four legal throws, so his average throw was only two inches off his indoor lifetime best coming into the meet.

Awotunde now ranks No. 2 in the world behind Darlan Romani of Brazil, who threw 71-2 ¾ at a meet this weekend in Cochabamba, Bolivia.

On the all-time IAAF world list, the 26-year-old Awotunde ranks No. 38.

Awotunde’s throw extends his own all-time New Jersey alumni indoor record. The previous record belonged to Morristown graduate Nick Vena, who threw 67-8 ½ in a meet at Monmouth University in West Long Branch in January of 2018.

Outdoors, Awotunde has a PR of 72-2 from Meeting Città di Padova at

Stadio Colbachini in Padova, Italy, in September. That’s No. 15 in U.S. history.

Awotunde, a Franklinville native, was an All-America at South Carolina. He placed 5th at the 2020 U.S. Olympic Trials with a throw of 71-8.

He’s scheduled to compete at the USATF Indoor Nationals at the Podium in Spokane, Wash., this coming weekend. U.S. Nationals this year are a qualifier for the World Championships, scheduled for March 18-20 at Štark Arena in Belgrade, Serbia.

The top two finishers in Spokane will represent the U.S. in Belgrade as long as they’ve met the world qualifying standard. For the shot put, it’s 69-2 ½, which Awotunde has already met.

Cherokee grad Lucciano Pizarro smashes 60-foot shot barrier for first time indoors!!!

Cherokee graduate Lucciano Pizarro bombed a massive shot put PR this weekend at Penn State, surpassing the 60-foot barrier with the 16-pound shot for the first time.

Pizarro, a Penn State sophomore who’s competerd unattached so far this season, threw 60-8 ¼ at the Penn State Tune-Up at Ashenfelter Indoor Track in State College.

That ranks No. 41 among all U.S. men this year.

Pizzaro’s previous indoor best was a 57-6 ½ at the Sykes & Sabock Challenge last month at the same facility on Penn State’s campus. Earlier in January he threw 57-2 ½ at the Penn State National.

But before Jan. 22, his indoor PR was a 55-1 ½ from last year’s Sykes & Sabock Challenge. So he’s added over five feet to his indoor PR since Jan. 22.

Pizzaro has a lifetime best of 61-1 ½ from the Jim Thorpe Invitational last May, also at Penn State. That’s No. 9 in Penn State history outdoors.

His longest lifetime throw that didn’t come in State College was a 58-4 at the NCAA East Preliminaries at Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville this past May.

His top seven indoor performances have come at Ashenfelter, and if we checked all his series (which we’re tempted to do) that probably means at least his top 15 indoor throws have all been at his home circle. Pizzaro’s longest lifetime indoor throw that wasn’t at Ashenfelter was a 50-1 ½ at last year’s Big 10 Championships at SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio.

Kingsway graduate Kylie Anicic of Edinboro runs huge 5,000 PR, #14 time in NCAA Division 2!!!

Kingsway graduate Kylie Anicic ran a fast 5,000 Friday, and she did it the hardest way possible.

Anicic, a sophomore at Edinboro (Pa.) University, ran 16:47.87, which is 14th-fastest in all of NCAA Division 2 this year and strengthens her qualifying mark for NCAA Division 2 Nationals.

Anicic moved up to No. 3 all-time on the Edinboro performance list, just 3 ½ seconds shy of the school record of 16:44.22 set by Rachael Lanzel at the 2009 Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference Championships in Edinboro. Ida Narbuvoll ran 16:44.50 when she placed 9th at the NCAA Division 2 Championships in Pittsburg, Kans.

That 16:47.87 is a personal-best by more than half a minute. Anicic ran 17:42.62 outdoors last spring – competing unattached – and ran 17:19.46 in her only previous indoor 5,000, earlier this monthg in a meet at Allendale, Mich.

During her stint at Towson – from the 2019 indoor season through the 2020 indoor season – she never ran a track 5,000. Her best 3,000 time was a 10:18.72 in an indoor meet at Bucknell in December of 2019. She’s now running 5,000 meters at a faster pace [5:25 per mile] than she ran 3,000 meters at her previous school [5:32].

What made Anicic’s 5,000 PR so remarkable is that she solo’d the entire race.

According to the official results, there were only four starters and only two finishers, and the only other finisher ran about two minutes slower than she did.

Anicic ran 2:17.59, 5:07.11 and 11:09.09 at Kingsway. After a brief stint playing soccer at Temple, she began her college track career Towson before transferring to Edinboro last year. This is her first year of eligibility at the Northwestern Pennsylvania school.

Anicic ranks 27th in Division 2 at 3,000 meters with her school-record 9:43.39 from a meet earlier this month in Ashland, Ohio.

Edinboro competes at the PSAC Championships Sunday at the Fighting Scots’ own Mike S. Zafirovski Sports and Recreation Dome. NCAA Division 2 Nationals are March 11-12 at Pittsburg, Kans.

Burlington Twp.’s Jalen Jones wins another MAAC 400 title, helps Monmouth to team title!!!

Monmouth’s Jalen Jones, a junior from Burlington Township, won his second conference 400 title Sunday at the MAAC meet at the Armory.

Jones ran 48.59 in the second race of the two-section final, edging Rider’s Jerome Boyer, who ran 48.87 in the first section.

The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference 400 title is Jones’ third. He won the 400 indoors at the Armory in 2020 in 48.38, then won the outdoor title last spring at Rider in 48.28.

In the same race, Monmouth freshman Matt Martino of Paul VI ran a personal-best 49.01 for 3rd place. He was the top freshman in the race. Martino’s  previous best indoors was a 49.93 at Ocean Breeze last month. He ran 49.89 last spring in a meet at Monmouth. Martino had PRs of 50.41 outdoors and 50.82 indoors at Paul VI.  

Kingsway’s Stone Caraccio, a freshman at Monmouth, ran 1:52.08 for 3rd in the 800 after a 1:52.02 in Friday’s trials. He closed in 27.74, moving up two spots on the final lap.

Caraccio came back to contribute a 1:53.07 third leg on Monmouth’s record-setting 3,200-meter relay team, which ran 7:36.98, breaking the meet record of 7:41.79 set in 2018 by the Monmouth team of Dylan Capwell, Rafferty, Marco and Cabral. Joining Caraccio were Tennessee Tremain, James Hoffman and Louis DiLaurenzio.

Rider also ran under the old record, taking second in 7:39.14. Cape May Tech graduate Leo Zaccaria, who competed for Wildwood in high school, ran the third leg for Rider, splitting 1:55.12. Nathan Armstrong, Kevin Heredia and Tamrat Snyder also ran for Rider.

Pitman graduate Sebastien Reed, another Monmouth freshman, ran 8:22.31 for 3rd in the 3,000, and Highland’s Ben Woodward, a Rider senior was just behind in 8:32.19. On Saturday, Woodward anchored Rider’s 2nd-place DMR with a 4:12.78. Rider ran 10:06.47. Egg Harbor’s Gobi Thurairajah ran the 800 leg in 1:58.05.

Collingswood’s Keven Kevelier, who won the high jump on Saturday with a PR 6-8 ¾ and was 4th in the long jump, placed 4th in the triple jump with a 46-8 ¾ on his second jump. He only had two legal jumps and hit 46-7 ¼ on the other.

Another win for EHT’s Mariah Stephens of Rider, huge PRs for Shawnee’s Grace Kearns & Cinnaminson’s Prisca Blamon as Monmouth women roll to MAAC title!!!!!

Rider freshman Mariah Stephens from Egg Harbor, who won the long jump on Saturday, made it a conference double Sunday with a big win in the triple jump on Sunday

Stephens jumped a lifetime-best 38-5 ½ and won the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference title at the Armory by 1 ¼ inches over Britney Del Mundo of Quinnipiac, who jumped 38-4 ¼.

Stephens also had jumps of 38-1 and 38-4 ¼ along with three fouls in her series. All three legal jumps surpassed her indoor PR of 37-10, which she jumped in the Gotham Classic at Ocean Breeze last month.

Her previous overall best jump was a 38-4 this past June to win the state Group 4 title at Franklin High School as an EHT senior.

In addition to the two horizontal jump wins, Stephens placed 4th in 60 hurdles in 8.81 and 6th in the 60-meter dash final in 7.88.

In the women’s 400, St. Peter’s freshman Diamond McLaughlin ran an indoor best 58.20 and placed 3rd, and Anne Rutledge of Egg Harbor Township placed 7th in 59.98.

Kingsway graduate Allie Pierontoni, a Monmouth freshman, placed 5th in the mile with a time of 5:01.17.

Rancocas Valley graduate Abby Boggs, a Monmouth freshman, cleared 10-11 ¾ on her seond attempt and placed 3rd in the pole vault.

Shawnee graduate Grace Mary Kearns, a Monmouth junior, recorded a huge PR of 2:14.56 Sunday and placed 3rd in the 800.

Kearns’ previous best 800 indoors or outdoors was a 2:16.56 in her last race on Feb. 5 in Boston. She also ran 2:16.81 a week earlier at Ocean Breeze. But before Jan. 28, her lifetime PR indoors or outdoors was 2:18.30 from the 2020 indoor MAAC Championships qualifying heatrs at the Armory.

So she’s dropped nearly four seconds in three weeks.

At Shawnee, Kearns had an indoor PR of 2:21.33 from 2018 Easterns – also at the Armory – and an outdoor PR of 2:19.97 at 2018 spring sectionals at Washington Township. Her current outdoor PR is a 2:18.74 from a meet at Lafayette in Easton, Pa., last March.

Cinnaminson graduate Prisca Blamon, a Monmouth senior, moved up from 4th to 3rd on her final throw in the shot put Sunday, improving from 45-2 ½ to a lifetime-best 45-8 ½. Her previous best was a 45-7 ¾ outdoors at Monmouth last spring, and her indoor PR was 45-6 ¼ last month at Ocean Breeze.

Blamon’s 45-8 ½ is No. 6 in Monmouth indoor track history. She also placed 5th on Saturday in the weight throw with a 56-0 ½.

Bordentown graduate Genesis Walker, a Rider senior, placed 5th in the 60 in 7.98 and 8th in the 200 in 25.92.

Monmouth outscored Rider 187-134 ½ to win its 7th title in the last eight years.

After FOUR-YEAR layoff, former Lenape star Jasmine Staten of Bloomfield wins hurdles at Princeton Invite!!!!!

Here’s a name out of the past we should all be happy to see: Jasmine Staten.

In what appears to be her first race in nearly FOUR YEARS, the Bloomfield sophomore won the 60-meter hurdles Sunday at the Princeton Invitational at Jadwin Gym.

Staten, who starred for Lenape before graduating from Rancocas Valley, last competed in the 2018 spring season, according to her Direct Athletics profile.

As a Bloomfield freshman at the Central Athletic Collegiat Conference Championships in Lakewood, she won the 100-meter high hurdles in 14.40, won the 200 in 25.53, was 3rd in the long jump at 17-1 ½, took 4th in the 400 in 1:00.18, led off the winning 400 relay team and anchored the winning 1,600-meter relay team.

And then nothing in all of 2019, all of 2020 and all of 2021.

But on Sunday, Staten resurfaced in what looks like her first indoor meet since her junior year at Lenape, when she finished the season at the Varsity Classic at the Armory in February of 2016. Although she graduated from R.V., she never

In the 60 hurdles trials, she led all qualifiers with a 8.91, with teammates Autumn DeMary of Kingsway next at 9.01 and TeSeanna Harris who ran at Camden (and graduated from Creative Arts Morgan Village Academy) 3rd at 9.20.

In the final, Staten ran 8.93, DeMary was 2nd at 8.96 and Harris 3rd in 9.03. Harris, DeMary and Staten also ran on the 2nd-place 1,600-meter relay tam, which was 2nd in 4:00.40.

The CACC only lists an outdoor track championships on its 2022 championship schedule, so I guess there is no indoor conference championship meet this year, unfortunately.

It’s been a while, but it’s great to have Staten back!

Northern Burlington’s Lilliah Gordon records a 1st and a 2nd in record-setting performance at sectionals!!!!!

Big weekend for Northern Burlington’s Lilliah Gordon, who ran a fast 1,600-3,200 double at the South Jersey Group 3 meet at the Bubble.

Gordon ran 5:09.82 for 2nd place in the 1,600 behind only Toms River South’s Lily Oliver, who won the race in 5:03.53, and she came back to win the 3,200 in 11:09.91, finishing half 1-10th of a second ahead of Clearview junior Abigail Waddington, who ran 11:10.01.

Gordon, a freshman, had only run the 1,600 and 3,200 once previously, so those races were her previous PRs – 5:18.18 earlier in the week at Ocean Breeze and 11:20.06 last month at the Bubble.

This past fall, Gordon was 2nd to Colts Neck’s Lilly Shapiro in the state Group 3 meet and 8th in the Meet of Champions with an 18:29 at Holmdel.

She’s only run four open races this winter, which tells you her coaches know what they’re doing.

Her 5:09.82 is fastest by a South Jersey freshman in 10 years, since Lindsey Kane of Washington Township [5:04.81] and Camille Franklin of Lenape [5:07.01] at the 2012 Meet of Champions. The 11:09.91 is fastest by a South Jersey freshman since Kingsway’s Chelsea Ley ran 11:00.79 at 2007 Group 3 states and broke the Burlington County freshman 3,200 record of 11:13.52 set in 2010 by Lenape’s Natalie Ocasio at Group 4 states.

Gordon broke her own school record in the indoor 1,600 and ran within four seconds of the 3,200 record of 11:06.32 (converted from yards) set in 1995 by Colleen Sunderland. Her 3,200 time is No. 7 indoors in Burlington County history.

She’s the No. 1 freshman in New Jersey at both distances, and she’ll go into next weekend’s Group 3 states as the No. 1 seed in the 3,200 and the No. 2 seed in the 1,600. Her times rank 9th overall out of all the sectionals in the 1,600 and 2nd in the 3,200, behind only Angelina Perez of Lakeland Regional, who won Group 2 Sunday in 10:27.80. Perez was the Meet of Champions and Eastbay Northeast XC champ and placed second at Eastbay Nationals in San Diego.

Junior Zoe Lartey also had a nice day for Northern at sectionals, running PRs of 7.48 for 3rd in the 55-meter dash and 1:02.92 for 6th in the 400. Senior Keira Mansure also advanced to states in the 1,600 with a 5:29.38 for 4th place at sectionals. She’s run 5:13.85 outdoors. With 29 total points, Northern placed 6th in team scoring at sectionals

Here’s a look at the all-time Burlington County indoor lists at 1,600 and 3,200:

4:57.12 … Megan Quimby [Lenape], 2016
4:57.72 … Caitlin Orr (Lenape), 2010
4:58.48 … Natalia Ocasio (Lenape), 2010
4:58.69 … Nicole Clifford [Cherokee], 2022
4:59.29 … Julia DeSpirito [Shawnee], 2014
4:59.39 … Megan Lacy [Cherokee], 2012
5:00.39 … Lisa Burkholder [Cherokee], 2004
5:00.73y … Monica Olkowski (Cherokee), 1990
5:01.86 … Kristen Niedrich [Shawnee], 2012
5:03.97 … Camille Franklin [Lenape], 2014
5:06.53 … Brittnee Bynoe (Willingboro), 2003
5:07.60 … Miya Johnson (Lenape), 2008
5:08.12 … Shelby Bobbie [Rancocas Valley], 2014
5:08.46 … Casey Doyle [Shawnee], 2008
5:08.7h … Deanna Germano [Shawnee], 1986
5:09.19 … Sydny Warner [Seneca], 2017
5:09.41y … Liz Moore [Shawnee], 1994
5:09.73 … Emily McGee [Lenape], 2011
5:09.82 … Liliah Gordon [Northern Burlington], 2022

10:31.06 … Megan Lacy [Cherokee], 2012
10:46.63 … Erika Kemp [Rancocas Valley], 2013
10:55.58 … Nicole Clifford [Cherokee], 2022
11:00.7y … Deanna Germano (Shawnee), 1986
11:06.32y … Colleen Sunderland (Northern Burlington), 1995
11:08.85 … Nina Bendixen, [Shawnee], 2015
11:09.91 … Liliah Gordon [Northrn Burlington], 2022
11:10.88 … Caitlin Orr (Lenape), 2009
11:12.32 … Mara Schiffhauer [Seneca], 2014
11:13.52 … Natalia Ocasio (Lenape), 2010
11:16.51 … Meghan Hughes [Moorestown], 2002
11:16.51 … Meghan Hughes (Moorestown), 2002
11:16.97 … Meghan Malloy [Cinnaminson], 2011
11:16.17 … Kara Bonner [Shawnee], 2017
11:16.99 … Brittnee Bynoe (Memorial Middle), 2002

Lathan Brown, Gursharan Singh lead Deptford to second sectional championship!!!

Junior Lathan Brown and senior Gursharan Singh combined for 46 points Friday and led Deptford to it’s second indoor sectional title.

The Spartans out-scored Gloucester County rival Delsea 75-59 to win the South Jersey Group 2 title at the Bubble in Toms River.

Brown won the 400 and 800, placed 3rd in the high hurdles and ran on the winning 4-by-4, and Singh won the pole vault, placed 3rd in the high jump and took 4th in the hurdles.

Deptford also won the South Jersey Group 2 title in 2019. The Spartans placed 3rd in 2020. The meet wasn’t held last year.

You don’t see a lot of half-milers medaling in the hurdles, and you certainly don’t see a lot of pole vaulters medaling in the hurdles, but their versatility helped Deptford outscore Delsea 75-59 to win the South Jersey Group 2 meet at the Bubble in Toms River.

Brown won the 400 in 50.59 and the 800 in 2:00.42 and took 3rd in the hurdles in a PR 8.23. Singh cleared 12-6 to win the vault, jumped 5-8 for 3rd in the high jump and ran 8.37 for 4th in the hurdles.

Sophomore Manny Perdue, a 1st-year hurdler, ran 8.14 to win the hurdles in his 7th hurdles race ever. His previous PR was 8.26 at a SJTCA meet at Ocean Breeze earlier this month.

Senior Param Grewal and sophomores Carl Carter and Christian Berry joined Brown on the winning 4-by-400 team, which ran 3:37.15.

The Spartans also got point from sophomore Abu Jabbie [4th in high jump, PR 5-8], junior Aiden Doerr [4th in pole vault, PR 10-6] and freshman Henry Julian [6th in pole vault, PR 9-6 in what looks like his first official high school pole vault competition].

Second-place Delsea scored 24 of its 59 points with a sweep in the shot put, led by senior Jason Nwosu’s 60-3 ¼. Senior Josh Caudill [51-10 ¾] took 2nd and sophomore Greg Masso was 3rd with a 49-3.

Egg Harbor’s Mariah Stephens – who didn’t jump 15 feet in high school – wins MAAC title with #3 mark in Rider history!!!!!

Rider freshman Mariah Stephens, who never even broke 15 feet long jumping in high school, is now a conference champion.

Stephens, who graduated this past spring from Egg Harbor Township, jumped a PR 18-5 ¾ Friday at the Armory, winning the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference long jump title by two inches over top-seeded Kedarjah Lewis of Iona, who was 2nd at 18-3 ¾.

Her previous indoor and overall PR was 18-1 from her first college meet in December at Ocean Breeze.

Before this year, Stephens hadn’t long jumped since the spring of 2018, her freshman year at EHT, when she PR’d with a 14-11 ½ at the Atlantic County Championships at Buena. She went on to place 27th at Group 4 sectionals at Washington Township with a 14-8 ¼.

Stephens never long jumped indoors in high school. She  focused at EHT in the sprints, high jump and triple jump and there’s only so much time to focus on each event, and she was  a state champion in the triple jump.

On Friday, she moved up to No. 3 in Rider women’s indoor history in the long jump behind only school record older Asia Young, another Atlantic County product, from Holy Spirit, and Dashana Ransome from Irvington. Young jumped 19-8 ¾ in 2018 and Ransome 18-10 ½ in 2013.

Stephens fouled on her first two attempts, and faced with getting no legal marks, she hit her 18-5 ¾ on her third jump. In the finals she opened with jumps of 17-11 and 18-1 ¼  before fouling on her final attempt.

She averaged 18-1 ½ on her three legal jumps, so her average jump Friday was longer than her lifetime best coming into the meet.

Stephens also ran a personal-best 8.86 and placed second in the second of three 60-meter hurdles semifinals. Each winner and the next five-fastest times from three races advanced, and Stephens’ time was fastest of the non-winning times and actually faster than one of the winning times (by two-1,000ths of a second), so she was 3rd-fastest in the field but will be th 4th seed. She’ll run in the hurdles final at 5:25 p.m. Saturday.

Stephens and Rider teammate Genesis Walker from Bordentown both advanced to the final in the 60-meter dash, Walker with a 7.91 and Stephens with 7.92. Freshman Balikis Iyiola of St. Peter’s ran 8.03, missing the final by 9-100ths of a second. (Her first name was apparently mis-spelled in the MileSplit database as Balkis, so we apologize for getting that wrong for the last four years when she was at Willingboro). Walker also advanced in the 200 with a 25.90.

Kingsway graduate Alli Pierontoni, a freshman at Monmouth, placed second in the first section of the women’s mile prelims in 5:01.01, picking up an auto qualifier into Saturday’s final, which is scheduled for 5:10 p.m. Even in a strategic qualifying race, Pierontoni ran just over a second off her PR of 4:59.74, which she ran last month at Ocean Breeze.

Former Atlantic County rivals Diamond McLaughlin of Absegami and Anne Rutledge of Egg Harbor both advanced to the 400-meter dash final.

McLaughlin, a freshman at St. Peter’s, ran an indoor personal-best 58.25, the 3rd-fastest qualifying time, and Rutledge, a freshman at Monmouth, posted an auto qualifier by winning her heat in 1:00.92. McLaughlin’s previous PR was 58.76 earlier this month at Ocean Breeze.

McLaughlin and Rutledge ran 1-2 last spring in the Atlantic County Championships 400 at Buena.

For South Jersey men’s results from the MAAC meet click here.

 

 

 

Monmouth’s Keven Kevelier wins MAAC high jump with huge PR; Jalen Jones lead Stone Caraccio qualifiers!!!!!

Collingswood grad Kevin Kevelier, a freshman at Monmouth, hit a big high jump PR and won his first conference title Friday.

Kevelier, who entered competition at the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Championships with a PR of 6-7 and was best-known for his triple jump exploits, cleared 6-8 ½ to win the high jump at the 168th Street Armory in Manhattan.

Kevelier, who also placed 7th in the long jump, just PR’d at 6-7 two weeks ago at Boston University. At the start of February, he had a high jump PR of 6-4 ¾.

Kevelier passed at 5-8 ¾ and 5-10 ¾,  then cleared 6-0 ¾ on his 1st attempt, 6-2 ¾ on his 2nd try and 6-4 ¾ and 6-6 ¾ meters on his first try. Because teammate Blake Wehr was clean through 6-6 ¾ and Kevelier had a miss, Kevelier had to clear a PR 6-8 ¾ to have a chance to win the title if Wehr did not clear 6-8 ¾. After missing his first attempt, Kevelier got over the bar on his 2nd try, and when Wehr missed his third try, the title was Kevelier’s. With the event won, Kevelier had the bar moved up to 6-9 ¾, missing three tries.

Kevelier’s 6-8 ½ is No. 6 in Monmouth history indoors and the best jump by a Monmouth high jumper in seven years, since Erik Anderson cleared 6-9 ½ in 2015.

In the long jump, Kevelier jumped a personal-best 22-0 ½ for 7th place. It was his first indoor long jump competition as a collegian and surpassed his high school indoor long jump PR of 20-0 from his only career indoor long jump competition in high school, a meet at Ocean Breeze in January 2020. Kevelier jumped 22-2 ¼ outdoors last April in a meet at Rider.

On Saturday, Kevelier competes in the triple jump at 6:15 p.m. He’s the No. 2 seed with a season-best 46-10 ¼.

I’ll have a South Jersey round-up from the women’s meet later tonight, but here are a couple more strong results from South Jersey athletes in the men’s meet:

Burlington Township graduate Jalen Jones, a junior at Monmouth from Burlington Township, posted the fastest qualifying times in both the 200 and 400 Friday at the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Championships at the Armory.

Jones easily won his 400 section in 48.65, not far off his indoor PR of 48.38 or his lifetime PR of 48.28 from last outdoor season. He came back to run 21.90 to lead all qualifiers in the 200. That’s not far from his indoor best of 21.80, which he ran earlier this month in Boston. He has run 21.72 outdoors.  Jones won the MAAC 400 both indoors and outdoors last year.

The men’s 400 final is scheduled for 5:45 p.m. Saturday with the 200 final following at 6:25 p.m.

Stone Caraccio, a Monmouth freshman from Kingsway, led all qualifiers in the 800. Caraccio ran 1:52.02, winning the first of four heats. The winner of each heat plus the next four-fastest times advanced to the final at 6:05 p.m. on Saturday.

Caraccio was the only half-miler to run under 1:53.34. Caraccio ran 1-100th of a second off his PR of 1:52.01, which he set earlier this month at Monmouth. Caraccio’s high school PR was 1:54.53, also at Ocean Breeze.