Sterling’s Jah’mere Beasley blazes 3rd-fastest qualifying time in NCAA Division 3 200 prelims!!!!!!

Sterling’s Jah’mere Beasley easily advanced to the finals of the 200-meter dash at the NCAA Division 3 Championships Thursday in Rochester.

Beasley, a Rowan sophomore, ran 21.00 in the second of three heats. The winner of each heat and the next-five-fastest runners advance to the final at 3:40 p.m. on Saturday.

Beasley was in a heat with Ramapo’s Cheickna Traore, the NCAA Division 3 record holder with his 20.49 in March in Coral Gables, Fla.

Traore, the NCAA champ at 200 meters indoors in March, ran 20.71 and is the fastest qualifier. Even though Beasley is a small-Q qualifier, his 21.00 was 3rd-fastest of the 22 entrants. But he’s the No. 4 seed in the final because he didn’t win his heat. Wind was a legal 0.4.

Beasley ran his PR of 20.91 – the Rowan school record – at last year’s nationals, where he placed 5th. That makes him No. 16 in NCAA Division 3 history. Beasley is already a seven-time All-America.

Earlier Thursday, Beasley ran on Rowan’s school-record 400-meter relay team, which also advanced to Saturday’s final.

Rowan’s Marquise Young from Sterling PRs in 400IH, advances to finals at NCAA Division 3 Championships!!!!!!

Sterling’s Marquise Young, a Rowan junior, PR’d in the 400-meter hurdles Thursday and advanced to the final at the NCAA Division 3 Championships in Rochester, N.Y.

Young ran 52.64 and advanced as the 3rd-fastest small-Q qualifier. The winner of each of three heats and the next five-fastest times advanced to the final, which is scheduled for 3:15 p.m. Saturday.

Young finished in a virtual dead heat with Ellis Phillips-Gallucci of Amherst. Both were credited with 52.64 in the third and final heat, but when their races were examined down to the 1,000th of a second, Phillips-Gallucci was given a 52.632 and Young a 52.638, which means Phillips-Gallucci advanced as an auto-qualifier and Young advanced on time.

The 400 intermediates is still a relatively new event for Young, who is a three-time NJAC high hurdles champion. He ran it in high school but never broke 56.46. He only broke 54 seconds for the first time earlier this month with a 52.88 to win the conference meet, then tuned up for nationals with a 53.37 at the AARTFC meet in Selinsgrove, Pa.

Young is also scheduled to run the highs and run on Rowan’s 4-by-4 at D-3 nationals.

Paulsboro’s Edgar Rosa earns All-America honors in javelin for Rowan as part of 2-5 finish at Division 3 nationals!!!!!!

Greg Poloso and Paulsboro’s Edgar Rosa placed 2nd and 5th in the javelin Thursday at the NCAA Division 3 Championships in Rochester, N.Y., piling up 12 team points for the Profs.

Poloso, a junior from Wayne Valley and transfer from Rider, took the lead with a season-best 220-11 on his 3rd throw but got bumped into 2nd by top-seeded Will Lawrence of Wisconsin-Platteville, who threw a lifetime-best 236-8 on his 1st throw of the finals. That’s the 4th-best throw in meet history.

Poloso came back with a 212-4 and a 209-9 on his last two throws. He averaged 216-2 on his five legal throws. Lawrence and Poloso combined for eight of the nine-best throws of the competition.

Rosa, whose high school best at Paulsboro was 161-0, had a strong series with three 200-foot throws, including a 209-3 on his 4th attempt. That was only four feet shy of his PR of 213-2 from a meet at Rowan last month.

Poloso and Rosa both earn All-America honors. It was Rosa’s 1st but Poloso’s 2nd after he placed 3rd last year. Rowan has had seven javelin All-Americans the last four years the meet was contested. This is the 3rd straight year and 5th time overall Rowan has had two javelin All-Americas the same year.

Here’s a look at all the javelin All-Americas in Glassboro State / Rowan history:

1978: Mike Juskus, Hopatcong [1st, 222-8]
1979: Mike Juskus, Hopatcong [2nd, 217-1]
1980: Mike Juskus, Hopatcong [1st, 258-5]
1981: Mike Juskus, Hopatcong [1st, 248-8]
1992: Mike Boone, Burlington City [1st, 219-4]
1993: Richard Bodine, Vineland [6th, 205-11
1995: Richard Bodine, Vineland [4th, 206-0]
1995: Bruce Davies, Kinnelon [6th, 198-3]
1996: Richard Bodine, Vineland [2nd, 206-5]
1996: Ed Colleton, Matawan [5th, 195-3]
1997: Ed Colleton, Matawan [4th, 197-5]
1998: Ed Colleton, Matawan [1st, 210-4]
1999: Ed Colleton, Matawan [2nd, 209-1]
2009: Sean Biehn, Burlington City [2nd, 200-1]
2010: Sean Biehn, Burlington City [2nd, 204-5]
2019: Dan McAleavey, Howell [8th, 197-7]
2021: Julio LeBron, Memorial West New York [6th, 192-6]
2021: Dan McAleavey, Howell [2nd, 206-6]
2022: Dan McAleavey, Howell [8th, 206-11]
2022: Greg Poloso, Wayne Valley [3rd, 216-4]
2023: Greg Poloso, Wayne Valley [2nd, 220-11]
2023: Edgar Rosa, Paulsboro [5th, 209-3]

Bridgeton’s Shamar Love, Sterling’s Jah’mere Beasley, Kingsway’s Evan Corcoran lead Rowan’s 4×1 to school record, #9 in NCAA Division 3 history at D-3 Nationals!!!!!!

Bridgeton’s Shamar Love, Sterling’s Jah’mere Beasley and Kingsway’s Evan Corcoran led Rowan to a school-record 40.36 in the 400-meter relay trials Thursday afternoon at the NCAA Division 3 National Championships.

Love and Beasley ran the first two legs for the Profs, Parsippany’s Nana Agyemang ran 3rd, and Corcoran anchored for Rowan, who posted the 2nd-fastest qualifying time at St. John Fisher University in Rochester, N.Y.

The top two finishers in each of two heats plus the next-four-fastest times advanced to the final, which is scheduled for 12:55 p.m. Saturday.

Rowan’s time is 20th-fastest in NCAA Division 3 history and the Profs are the 9th-fastest D-3 school ever in the event.

The previous school record was 40.37 from just last week at the AARTFC Championships in Selinsgrove, Pa., with the same lineup.

Wisconsin-La Crosse ran 39.86, which broke the NCAA Division 3 record of 39.95 set by New Jersey City College at the 2006 Penn Relays. Leadoff on that team was Winslow graduate Anthony Miles. La Crosse broke the meet record of 40.01 set in 2016 by Wesley of Dover, Del.

Washington Twp.’s Izzy Deal records 3rd straight All-America performance in javelin at NCAA Division 3 Nationals!!!!!!

Washington Township graduate and Ursinus junior Isabella “Izzy” Deal recorded her 3rd consecutive All-America performance in the javelin Wednesday at the NCAA Division 3 Championships.

Deal, who placed 8th as a freshman in 2021 and 6th last year, placed 6th again this year at St. John Fisher University in Rochester, N.Y.

Deal threw 139-9 on her 1st attempt of the finals. She threw 137-0 at last year’s nationals and 135-1 as a freshman.

Deal was in 5th place after her final throw but was bumped to 6th when Avery Decker of Nebraska Wesleyan hit a 145-9 on her final attempt.

On her 1st throw, Deal hit 136-9. After a foul, she finished the trials with a 129-10. She was 6th among the nine qualifiers for the finals and moved up to 5th with her 139-9 on her 4th throw. She threw 137-8 on her 5th attempt before fouling on her final throw.

Chrissy Strickland of George Fox University of Newberg, Ore., won with a 149-6 on her 2nd throw.

Deal had a career-best throw of 155-0 in Selinsgrove, Pa., last week.

Clayton junior Maylisa Bluford records huge PR shot-discus double at Delsea , now #1 N.J. junior in in both throws!!!!!!

Williamstown senior Ciara Demarest did her usual thing Wednesday at the Delsea Crusader Field Meet, , winning the shot at 42-2 and the discus with a 128-4.

Demarest is No. 3 in New Jersey in the shot with her 44-8 at the Tri-County Championships and No. 5 in the discus with that 128-4.

But this time we’re going to write about the girl who finished second to Demarest in both throws.

Clayton junior Maylisa Bluford.

Bluford threw two huge PRs of her own Wednesday night, improving her shot PR from 38-5 ½ just a week earlier at the Tri-County meet to 41-7 ½ and her discus from 124-10 at the South Jersey Elite earlier this month to 127-4.

Bluford is now the No. 2 underclassman in New Jersey in both the shot and discus behind Layla Giordano of Old Tappan, who is the No. 6 junior nationally at 156-3 in the disc and No. 10 in the shot at 45-6.

Bluford is also top-ranked state-wide in Group 1. No other girl in Group 1 has thrown more than 37-10 ¾ or 116-7.

Her 41-7 ½ is No. 11 in Gloucester County history – a quarter of an inch out of the top-10 – and her 127-4 is No. 15 in Gloucester County history. Lists are below.

Along the way, Bluford broke the 43-year-old Clayton school record in the shot set of 40-0 ¾ in 1980 by Emma Painter, who went on to become an NCAA Division 3 javelin champion for Glassboro State, now Rowan. Bluford also holds the Clayton discus record, but it looks like that was previously held by Allison Reuter, who threw 123-10 at the 2015 state Group 1 meet at Egg Harbor.

She’s the top Gloucester County junior in the shot in 13 years – since Delsea’s Janiece Rose threw 42-4 ½ at the 2010 Rowan Open.

She’s also the top South Jersey Group 1 thrower in the shot since Schalick’s Zyra Thomas – the 2018 national indoor champ – threw 45-0 ½ in 2018

Bluford threw 38-3 ¾ indoors when she placed 3rd at Easterns at the Armory, and she also won South Jersey Group 1 and placed 2nd in state Group 1.

Clearview’s Daniel Couse, Haddonfield’s Alex Hurly, Cinnaminson’s Ed Frey all clear 14-0 at Delsea Crusader Field Meet!!!!!!

Some fantastic pole vaulting Wednesday night at the Delsea Crusader Field Meet, with Clearview junior Daniel Couse, Haddonfield senior Alexander Hurly and Cinnaminson sophomore Ed Frey all clearing 14-0 – the first time for Couse and Frey.

Couse got the win on fewer misses – he actually had no misses through 14-0. Hurly cleared 14-0 on his 2nd attempt and placed 2nd and Frey cleared on his 3rd try and took 3rd.

Most importantly, they are now tied for the No. 2 spot in South Jersey, behind Oakcrest junior Ryan Merlino, who cleared 15-0 at the Atlantic County Championships and won the Cape-Atlantic Meet at Bridgeton Wednesday at 14-0.

Last time three South Jersey vaulters cleared 14-0 in the same meet was the 2019 South Jersey Invitational at Delsea, when five did it – Marco Morales of Delsea [15-6], James Lynch of Deptford [15-0], Nico Morales [15-0], Josh Cohen of Egg Harbor [14-6] and Ryan Jilliard of Delsea [14-0].

In all, the top six placers all PR’d. In addition to Couse, Hurly and Frey, Willingboro junior Jackson Murry cleared 13-6 for 4th, Delsea junior Carlos Reyes 13-0 for 5th and Delsea junior Carlos Reyes 12-6 for 6th. In all, Delsea had five underclassmen over at least 11-6.

One other note about Murry: He’s the first Willingboro vaulter over 13-6 since Marv Forchion cleared 14-6 in 1986. Forchion was a unique athlete – at 1986 state Group 3 meet, he won the pole vault [14-6] and placed 3rd in the long jump [21-8] and he also took 4th at sectionals in the 110 hurdles [14.9h].

Let’s take a look at each vaulter:

Daniel Couse: Tied a 51-year-old Clearview pole vault record and moved into the No. 2 spot among New Jersey juniors with his first lifetime 14-0 clearance.

Couse now shares the school record with Ed Cundey, who cleared 14-0 at the 1972 Easterns on Randall’s Island. Cundey placed 3rd on more misses than 2nd-place Mark MacCracken of Tenafly, who also cleared 14-0.

Couse’s improvement has been remarkable. His best jump last spring was 11-6 and then he cleared 12-0 for the first time at Group 3 sectionals at the Bubble in February – just three months ago.

But he PR’d at 13-0 earlier this month when he won the Gloucester County meet at Deptford two weeks ago and then improved to 13-6 in his next meet, the Tri-County Championships at Delsea last week.

Couse passed until 12-0 Wednesday night, cleared that on his first try, then passed 12-6 before clearing 13-0, 13-6 and 14-0 on his first attempts.

Alexander Hurly: Another one who’s made very quick improvement. Hurly cleared 12-0 once last spring in his first year of track, didn’t compete indoors, then PR’d at 12-6 in late April before suddenly clearing 14-0 when he won the Camden County meet at Haddon Township two weeks ago.

Haddonfield has a rich pole vaulting history, with four 15-footers – Mike Davis [15-5 in 2004], Devon Purves [15-5 in 2006], Mark Murphy [15-0 in 1985] and Mike Rivard [15-0 in 2010]. But Hurly is Haddonfield’s first 14-footer since Rivard 13 years ago.

Hurly passed to 12-6 Wednesday, cleared that on his 2nd attempt, then was clean at 13-0 and 13-6 before clearing 14-0 on his 2nd try.

Ed Frey: Another monster PR, Frey’s previous best was a 13-0 earlier this month at the South Jersey Elite meet at Delsea.

Frey cleared 12-6 as a freshman last spring at South Jersey Group 2 sectionals at Delsea, like Hurly he didn’t compete indoors, and he’s now the No. 2 sophomore in New Jersey, a quarter of an inch behind Cade Zeolla of West Morris Central, who cleared 14-0 ¼ earlier this month at a meet in Rockaway Borough.

Frey is only the 3rd South Jersey sophomore I could find who’s cleared 14-0. Eddie Zubryzcki of Highland went 14-0 at the 2007 Meet of Champions at South Plainfield, and Nico Morales of Delsea hit 14-10 at the 2018 Tri-County Conference meet at Delsea. There may have been a few others back in the day.

(One thing you’ll notice reading this post is that almost all big-time vaults in South Jersey occur at Delsea!)

Cinnaminson’s school record is 15-0 by Matt Mancini from the 2006 South Jersey Group 2 meet at Buena. Frey is the first Burlington County vaulter to clear 14-0 since 2017, when Mitchell Casey of Shawnee cleared 14-6 at the Meet of Champions at Northern Burlington.

Another new event, another county record for Ocean City’s remarkable Sophia Curtis!!!!!!

Sophia Curtis is usually so busy with the hurdles, horizontal jumps and various relay duties, she doesn’t have a chance to run the flat 400.

Curtis, No. 2 in South Jersey history in the triple jump, a Meet of Champions medalist indoors in the high hurdles, No. 1 in the state in the intermediates and the No. 2 junior long jumper in New Jersey (a quarter of an inch behind No. 1), finally got a chance to run a big-meet 400 Wednesday night at the 2023 Cape-Atlantic results at Bridgeton.

It was her first open outdoor 400 since last April, when she was a sophomore at Padua Academy in Wilmington, Del., and she ran 1:00.60 in a meet in Greenville, Del., finishing behind an 8th-grader from Caravel Academy in Bear, Del. (Apparently 8th-graders are allowed to compete in high school meets in Delaware).

Anyway, all Curtis did was break another Cape May County record, winning the 400 in 57.45. It’s the sixth county record in her first year at Ocean City.

Her 57.45 snapped the 19-year-old county record of 57.67 set at the 2004 state Group 3 meet at Egg Harbor by Ocean City’s Renee Tomlin, who was better-known as a half-miler. Tomlin ran 2:09.50 in high school in 2005 – still No. 4 in South Jersey history – and went on to run 2:05.42 for Georgetown and was a three-time Big East champ and three-time All-America.

Curtis is now the Cape May County record holder in the 400, intermediates [1:01.50 at South Jersey Elite at Delsea] and triple jump [40-10 ¼ at the Penn Relays] outdoors and the 400 [57.99 at the state Group 3 meet at the Bubble], 55-meter hurdles [8.33 at the Meet of Champions at Ocean Breeze] and triple jump [41-3 ¼ at Boston Nationals] indoors.

Curtis hasn’t run the 100-meter hurdles in a big meet yet for Ocean City and she hasn’t long jumped indoors.

The one event she’s made a serious attempt at that she hasn’t broken the county record is the outdoor long jump. She’s only long jumped twice this spring, but she did get off a 17-8 at the Lenape Girls Invitational in April. Her versatile teammate, senior Elaina Styer, has gone 18-5 in a dual meet and 17-7 ½ in an invitational.

The county record is pretty good – Yvonne Wolef jumped 19-1 at the 2012 Cape-Atlantic Championships at Egg Harbor. The top mark in a big meet by an Ocean City girl is 18-2 by Sophia Grisham at the 2018 state Group 3 meet at Central Regional.

Although she did anchor Ocean City’s 1st-place 400-meter relay team, which ran 50.11 (and also included Styer, sophomore Naomi Nnewihe and senior Tricia Nicoletti), the 400 was Curtis’s only individual event Wednesday.

In 2nd place, Atlantic County Tech senior Amalinally Pemberton ran 59.57, lowering her PR from 59.67 at Fast Times at Cherokee.

Cherokee’s Lucciano Pizarro, Cinnaminson’s Austin Gabay THISCLOSE to advancing at NCAAs!!!!!!

It was a frustrating Day of the NCAA Championships for Cherokee’s Lucciano Pizarro and Cinnaminson’s Austin Gabay, who both missed advancing by the smallest of margins.

But both concluded breakthrough sophomore seasons, Pizarro for Penn State and Gabay for Duke.

Pizarro was sitting in the 12th and final qualifying spot to advance to the shot put semifinals at the NCAA Championships in Austin next month with only one thrower remaining who could knock him out of the last spot – Isaiah Rogers of Kenesaw (Ga.) State. Pizarro had thrown 61-2, 61-4 ¼ and 61-3 in a very consistent series, but Rogers bumped him with a 61-6 ¼ on his 3rd and final attempt to earn the last qualifying spot.

Pizarro ranks 19th among U.S. men with his 65-0 ¾ at the Big Ten Championships earlier this month in Bloomington, Ind., and No. 4 in Penn State history.

Gabay, who qualified for NCAAs with a 3:42.94 in Winston-Salem, N.C., last month, had the misfortune of competing in the 4th and final heat of the 1,500 trials, which produced seven of the eight-fastest times of all four races. So even though he had the 16th-fastest time and 24 runners advance to Friday’s quarterfinals, he didn’t advance because he had the 5th-fastest time outside the five auto qualifiers per heat, and only those 20 auto-qualifiers and the next four-fastest advance.

If he ran 3:46.07 in the 1st or 3rd qualifying heat, he would have advanced. Gabay actually ran faster than nine auto-qualifiers. He missed snagging the final small-Q qualifier by 11-100ths of a second.

In the long jump, none of the three South Jersey qualifiers advanced. Princeton freshman Greg Foster from Lumberton only managed one legal attempted and jumped 23-6 ¾, Rutgers junior Jabari Higgs-Salaam of Haddon Heights jumped 23-4 ¼ and Rider junior Zach Manorowitz of Pennsville didn’t get a legal mark.

Foster jumped 26-1 ¾ this year, Manorowitz went 25-0 ¾ and Higgs-Salaam hit 24-11 ¾ and has a wind-legal PR of 24-0 ¾.

Foster will be back in action Friday in the triple jump at 6 p.m.

South Jersey’s one qualifier from Wednesday’s first round is St. Augustine’s Sincere Rhea, who advanced in the 110-meter hurdles. Details here.

The women’s East and West prelims begin on Thursday. Click here for details on all of South Jersey’s NCAA Division 1 qualifiers.

Cinnaminson’s Malicah Etienne PRs again in discus, now #5 in New Jersey, #2 in Burlington County history!!!!!!

Competing against U.S. No. 3 Fabian Gonzalez of Southern Regional brought out the best in Cinnaminson senior Malicah Etienne, who moved into the all-time South Jersey discus top-20 Wednesday evening at Delsea.

Gonzalez, an All-America in both the shot and the discus, threw 203-2 at the Penn Relays, No. 7 in state history and No. 3 in the U.S. this year.

On Wednesday at the Delsea Crusader Field Meet, Gonzalez won the discus with a 191-10, and Etienne took second with a PR 176-9, which is No. 19 in South Jersey history, No. 2 in Burlington County history and No. 5 in the state this year. It’s also No. 1 in New Jersey Group 2.

Another Cinnaminson thrower, Kamron Kobolak, set the Burlington County record of 185-6 at the 2018 Meet of Champions at Northern Burlington, so Cinnaminson has the No. 1 and No. 2 discus throwers in county history.

Etienne only got two legal throws off – a 165-10 on his 1st attempt and the 176-9 on his 3rd. Gonzalez threw 172-2 on his 1st, 186-3 on his 3rd and 191-10 on his 5th. Etienne’s previous PR was a 174-5 at the Burlington County Open at Northern earlier this month.

Glassboro junior Damere Lassiter also PR’d with a 159-7 for 3rd place on his final attempt. Lassiter, who also had a 152-0, 157-0 and a 159-4, had a previous best of 159-1, so he had his two-best throws so far. Lassiter is the No. 4 junior in New Jersey and No. 2 in Group 1, behind Penns Grove’s Janier Armstead, who threw 177-3 at Woodbury

All-Time Burlington County Discus Top 10
185-6 … Kamron Kobolak [Cinnaminson], 2018
176-9 … Malicah Etienne [Cinnaminson], 2023
174-5 … Malicah Etienne [Cinnaminson], 2023
174- 4 … Dennis Norman [Cherokee], 1997
174- 3 … Alex Lewis [Delran], 2000
171-10 … Steve Muse [Kennedy], 1984
171- 6 … Rashaun Graves [Willingboro], 2013
170-10 … John McNeil [Kennedy], 1976
170- 4 … Kurtis Johnson [Burlington Twp.], 1987
169- 8 … Ell Ash [Willingboro], 2004
169- 7 … Chuck Spinner [Willingboro], 1979

All-Time South Jersey Discus 170-foot List
216-11 … Ron Dayne [Overbrook], 1996
199-6 … Braheme Days Jr. [Bridgeton], 2013
197-0 … James Plummer [Egg Harbor Twp.], 2013
192-5 … Josh Awotunde [Delsea], 2013
191-11 … Franklin Simms [St. Augustine], 2022
189-7 … Ray Wilks [Bridgeton], 1995
185-11 … John Mooers [Middle Twp.], 2015
185-10 … Russ Willett [Penns Grove], 1985
185-7 … Matt Huckabee [Timber Creek], 2010
185-6 … Kamron Kobolak [Cinnaminson], 2018
185-5 … Ken Manahan [Deptford], 1976
184-4 … Adam Hunt [Collingswood], 2017
183-9 … Jason Nwosu [Delsea], 2022
181-10 … Jason Winrow [Cumberland Reg.], 1989
180-3 … Howard Clark [Pennsauken], 1998
179-11 … Nick Pulli [West Deptford], 2014
179-11 … Will Cioffi [Pitman], 2013
178-0 … Jim Stites [Millville], 1970
177-3 … Janier Armstead [Penns Grove], 2023
176-9 … Malicah Etienne [Cinnaminson], 2023
174-9 … John Ridinger [West Deptford], 1982
173-10 … Mark Rifkin [Cherry Hill West], 1978
175-7 … John Clark [Pennsville], 2007
174-11 … Rich Lewis [Williamstown], 1985
174-11 … Cadee Berardelli [Delsea], 2022
174-6 … Josh Dillard [Lindenwold], 2005
177-9 … Malicah Etienne [Cinnaminson], 2023
174-4 … Dennis Norman [Cherokee], 1997
174-3 … Alex Lewis [Delran], 2000
173-6 … Ryan Knight [Delsea], 1996
173-3 … Jake Nwosu [Delsea], 2019
173-2 … Darren Wan [Egg Harbor Twp.], 2016
172-1 … Derek Frazier [Williamstown], 1978
171-10 … Steve Muse [Kennedy], 1984
171-6 … Rashaun Graves [Willingboro], 2013
171-4 … Jon Kalnas [Paulsboro], 1998
170-10 … John McNeil [Kennedy], 1976
170-4 … Kurtis Johnson [Burlington Twp.], 1987
170-0 … Anthony Robertson [Penns Grove], 2014