A look at every South Jersey track Olympian in history – 1908 through 2024!!!!!!!!

With Olympic track getting underway Thursday morning, and Florence’s Curtis Thompson scheduled to compete in the javelin next week, we thought it would be fun to take a look at every track Olympian South Jersey has produced.

I counted 16 Olympians from 11 high schools – Willingboro has produced three and Haddonfield and Woodbury two each and one Olympian grew up in South Jersey but went to high school in Philadelphia.

Incredibly, of South Jersey’s 16 track Olympians, 11 won at least one medal! That’s incredible!

Thompson joins Carl Lewis and Carol Lewis, Dennis Mitchell, Browning Ross and Mel Sheppard as the 6th South Jersey athlete to reach two Olympic Games in an individual event. So he’s the first since  Willingboro Track Club teammates Carl Lewis and Mitchell in 1996.

I think I have everyone but could be missing someone, possibly from the early years of the Olympic Games. I’m sure if I dud forget someone, Bill Collins will let me know within 30 seconds of this post going up! He’s quite the South Jersey track historian!

As for Thompson, he’s scheduled to throw the javelin early  Thursday morning. We don’t know yet if Thompson will be in Group A or Group B for qualifying, but they will throw at 4:20 a.m. and 5:50 a.m. early Thursday morning.

Don’t forget to set your alarm and support South Jersey’s only track Olympian in 2024!

Nia Ali [Pleasantville]: Ali won the silver medal in the 100-meter hurdles in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 2016 with a time of 12.59.

Don Bragg [Penns Grove]: After setting a pole vault world record of 15-9 ¼ at the Olympic Trials, Bragg won the gold medal at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome with a 15-5 clearance.

Nadia Davy [Bridgeton]: Davy won a bronze medal after running the third leg on Jamaica’s 3rd-place 1,600-meter relay team at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. Jamaica ran 3:22.00. Davy also competed in the open 400 and ran 52.04. She was the fastest non-qualifier in the trials and officially finished 25th.

Erin Donohue [Haddonfield]: Donohue qualified in the 1,500-meter run in the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. She ran 4:16.05 and placed 28th overall.
Priscilla Frederick [Paul VI]: Competing for Antigua and Barbuda, Frederick qualified for the high jump at the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro. She cleared 6-2 ¼ in qualifying and finished 28th overall.

English Gardner [Eastern]: Gardner won a gold medal on the U.S. 400-meter relay team in the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro and a silver medal in the 2021 Games in Tokyo on the 4-by-1. She ran the 3rd leg in 2016, racing with Tianna Bartoletta, Allyson Felix and Tori Bowie, who ran 41.01, still 2nd-fastest in world history. In 2021, she didn’t run in the final but ran the 3rd leg in qualifying, joining Javianne Oliver, Teahna Daniels and Aleia Hobbs to run 41.90. The U.S. ran 41.45 in the final with Oliver, Daniels, Jenna Prandini and Gabrielle Thomas. Gardner also reached the 100 final in 2016 and placed 7th in 10.94.

Marielle Hall [Haddonfield]: Hall ran the 10,000 in the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro and placed 33rd in the final in 32:39.32.

Al LeConey [Moorestown]: At the 1924 Olympics in Paris, LeConey won a gold medal as part of the record-setting U.S. 400-meter relay team. In the trials, LeConey ran the 3rd leg and the team of Louis Clark, Frank Hussey, LeConey and Loren Murchison set a world record of 41.2. They lowered the world record to 41.0 in the semifinals and then tied it in the final, edging Great Britain by 2-10ths of a second for the gold medal.

Carl Lewis [Willingboro]: Despite being robbed of likely medals by the 1980 U.S. Olympic boycott, Lewis won nine Olympic gold medals and a silver and is one of only two Olympians to win a gold medal in the same event (long jump) in four consecutive Olympics. Al Oerter (discus) is the other. Lewis’s first Olympics was in 1984 in Los Angeles, where he won the 100 in 9.99, the long jump at 28-0 and the 200 with an Olympic-record 19.80. In his final event, he anchored the winning 400-meter relay team, with Sam Graddy, Ron Brown, Calvin Smith and Lewis setting a world record of 37.83. In 1988 in Seoul, South Korea, Lewis won the 100 with a world-record 9.92 after Ben Johnson was DQ’d for a positive test for a banned substance, he won the long jump 28-7 ¼ and took 2nd in the 200 to Joe DeLoach with a 19.79. In 1992 in Barcelona, he won his 3rd straight long jump with a 28-5 ¼ (after a 28-5 ¾ in qualifying) and anchored the gold-medal 4-by-1, which also included Michael Marsh, Leroy Burrell and Edgewood graduate Dennis Mitchell. That quartet set a world record of 37.40 and won by more than half a second over Nigeria. In 1996 in Atlanta, Carl won his 4th straight long jump gold medal with a 27-2 ¾ on his final attempt. He never competed again.

Carol Lewis [Willingboro]: Carol made the 1980 team but lost an opportunity to compete because of the U.S. boycott. In the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, She made the final and placed 9th at 21-1 after a 21-5 ¾ in qualifying. In 1988 in Seoul, Lewis jumped 21-2 ¾ in qualifying and was the top non-qualifier, finishing 13th overall.

Dennis Mitchell [Edgewood]: In his first Olympics, 1988 in Seoul, Mitchell lost out on a likely gold medal when the U.S. team was DQ’d for baton pass from Calvin Smith to Lee McNeill outside the exchange zone. He also just missed a medal in the 100, placing 4th in 10.04, just 5-100th of a second behind Smith in 3rd. In 1992 in Barcelona, Mitchell took 3rd in the 100 in 10.04, finishing behind only Linford Christie of Great Britain [9.96] and Frankie Fredericks of Namibia [10.02], and ran 3rd leg on the winning 400-meter relay team, following Michael Marsh and Leroy Burrell and handing off to anchor Carl Lewis, his one-time Willingboro Track Club teammate. Their 37.40 set a world record. In 1996, Mitchell, anchored the Silver Medal 4-by-1, which ran 38.05 and finished 2nd to Canada. Jon Drummond, Tim Harden and Marsh ran the first three legs. Mitchell again placed 4th in the 100 final, this time in 9.99.

Jack Pierce [Woodbury]: Pierce ran 13.26 to place 3rd and win the bronze medal in the 1992 Games in Barcelona behind Canadian Mark McKoy [13.12] and American Tony Dees [13.24].

Browning Ross [Woodbury]: In London in the 1948 Olympic Games, Ross placed 7th in the steeplechase in 9:23.2. He qualified for the steeple at the 1952 Games in Helsinki but finished 12th in his qualifying heat in 9:44.0 and was 23rd overall.

Mel Sheppard [Almonesson]: In the 1908 Olympics in London, Sheppard set an Olympic record of 4:05.0 in the 1,500 semifinals, a record that stood until the next semifinal race, when Great Britain’s Norman Hallows ran 4:03.6. In the final, Sheppard won in 4:03.6, winning his first gold medal and tying Hallows’ Olympic record. In the 800, Sheppard set a world record of 1:52.8 and then he ran a 1:55.4 anchor on the medley relay (now called the sprint medley), with William Hamilton and Nate Cartmell on the 200 legs and Philadelphia’s John Taylor the 400. The U.S. won the gold medal with a time of 3:29.4. In 1912, Sheppard ran 1:52.0 in the 800, finishing 2nd to Ted Meredith of the U.S., who set a world record of 1:51.9. Sheppard won his 4th and final gold medal anchoring the U.S. 1,600-meter relay team, which also included Edward Lindberg, Meredith and Charles Reidpath and set a world record of 3:16.6. Meredith died in 1957 after spending his final years living in Haddonfield.

Lamont Smith [Willingboro]: After running 44.30 and placing 4th in the 400 at the 1992 Trials in Atlanta, Smith earned a spot in the relay pool and led off the U.S. gold-medal relay in Atlanta with a 44.62 split. He was followed by Alvin Harrison, Derek Mills and Anthuan Maybank. The U.S. ran 2:55.99, which remains 7th-fastest in world history.

Curtis Thompson [Florence]: In the 2021 Games in Tokyo, Thompson threw 256-6 on his 1st attempt and placed 21st overall. He also had throws of 256-2 and 255-6 and missed the 12-man final by about 14 feet. Thompson, now a four-time U.S. champion and two-time Olympic Trials champ, is ranked 23rd in the world this year with his 272-5 in Eugene at the Trials last month.

Shana Williams [Bridgeton]: At the 1996 Games in Atlanta, Williams failed to get a legal mark in the long jump. In 2000 in Sydney, she placed 20th with a 21-1 ½ on her 1st attemptin the qualifying round. She missed advancing to the final by about six inches.

Let’s not forget about … MILLVILLE’S ALTON CURTIS!!!!!!

Over the next few weeks, we’ll spotlight 30 athletes who excelled during the outdoor track season that we didn’t have a chance to write about extensively. We’d love to write about every athlete in South Jersey, but that’s not practical. But we will try to spotlight some who may have gotten overlooked over the past few months. We apologize in advance if we don’t get to you or your son or daughter or an athlete you coach.

Today: Alton Curtis, Millville

Millville sophomore Alton Curtis proved himself one of the more versatile athletes in South Jersey this spring.

Start with the 110-meter hurdles. Curtis was the top sophomore in New Jersey this spring with his 14.80 PR in the trials of the Group 4 sectionals at Pennsauken. He just missed placing in the final – he placed 7th, 6-100ths of a second out of 6th – but he was the top sophomore in the race, and his 14.80 was fastest by a Cumberland County sophomore since Millville’s Azim Smith ran 14.25 at the 2000 Meet of Champions in South Plainfield.

But Curtis tried a little bit of everything this spring. At the Mustang Pentathlon at Mainland Regional, he finished first with 3,048 points, high jumping 5-8, long jumping 20-1, pole vaulting 10-6, throwing the shot 35-2 ½ and running 1,500 meters in 5:08.00.

But his main event is the 110 highs, and he was the top soph at the South Jersey Elite [15.19], he placed 2nd to senior teammate Isaac Roberts in the Cumberland County Championships at Bridgeton with a 15.71 (Millville swept, with sophomore Amir Sweazie 3rd) and then he was 5th at the Cape-Atlantic Meet at Bridgeton in 15.62 and again the top sophomore. He also won the pole vault at the Cumberland County meet.

Indoors, Curtis ran as fast as 7.83 and placed 5th in the state Group 4 meet at the Bubble and was the top sophomore. He was the No. 2 soph in the state [Chad Stone of St. Peter’s Prep ran 7.76], and his 7.83 was 2nd-fastest by a South Jersey soph in the last 20 years, behind only national champion Sincere Rhea of St. Augustine, who ran 7.70 at 2017 Easterns at the Armory and won Armory Nationals two years later.

Let’s not forget about … PAUL VI’S CLAIRE MAGEE!!!!!!

Over the next few weeks, we’ll spotlight 30 athletes who excelled during the outdoor track season that we didn’t have a chance to write about extensively. We’d love to write about every athlete in South Jersey, but that’s not practical. But we will try to spotlight some who may have gotten overlooked over the past few months. We apologize in advance if we don’t get to you or your son or daughter or an athlete you coach.

 Today: Claire Magee, Paul VI

There was quite a group of sophomore 400 runners in South Jersey this year, led by Sianni Wynn of Pennsauken, Natalie Dumas of Eastern and and Olivia Okaro of Winslow. But don’t forget Paul VI’s Claire Magee, who was the 6th-fastest sophomore quarter-miler in New Jersey this past season.

Coming off an indoor season where she ran 7.49 for 55 meters and 58.11 for 400 meters, Magee ran a PR 56.59 at the South Jersey Elite at Delsea, where she placed 2nd to Wynn, who ran 54.24.

She placed 2nd to Dumas, the national 400 hurdles champ, at the Camden County meet at Haddon Township in 57.22 and then took 6th in the state Parochial A meet at Stockton, where she was the first South Jersey finisher.

Magee’s 56.59 made Magee the No. 6 sophomore in New Jersey and No. 4 in South Jersey, behind Dumas, Wynn and Okaro. 

She broke the school record of 56.88 set at the 2019 Rowan Open in Glassboro by Aliya Rae Garozzo, who competed in the 400 hurdles last month at the U.S. Olympic Trials and will be a senior at Penn this fall.

Her 56.59 was also the fastest time by any South Jersey parochial school runner in 48 years, since Carla Hunt of Holy Cross ran 55.4 over 440 yards at the 1976 Eastern States Championships in Washington, D.C. That converts to 55.1 for 400 meters.

Let’s not forget about … GLASSBORO’S XAVIER SABB!!!!!!

Over the next few weeks, we’ll spotlight 30 athletes who excelled during the outdoor track season that we didn’t have a chance to write about extensively. We’d love to write about every athlete in South Jersey, but that’s not practical. But we will try to spotlight some who may have gotten overlooked over the past few months. We apologize in advance if we don’t get to you or your son or daughter or an athlete you coach.

 Today: Xavier Sabb, Glassboro

Xavier Sabb had quite a freshman year for Glassboro, and since he plays basketball for the Bulldogs the spring season was actually his first try at high school track.

Sabb didn’t take long to make a name for himself. At his first major meet – Delsea Crusader Field Meet – he won the long jump with a 20-7 1/2. Two weeks later at the Gloucester County Championships at Deptford, he ran 10.97 and placed 2nd to All-America Ajani Dwyer in the 100, ran 22.23 for 3rd in the 200 and high jumped 6-0 to take 2nd.

Championship season brought out the best in Sabb, who ran a PR 10.79 for 3rd in the 100 at the South Jersey Group 1 meet and 22.50 for 5th in the 200. He went on to place 3rd in the 100 at states and 7th in the 200.

And at West Philly Nationals, he ran 10.83 and set a high jump PR of 6-2 ¾, taking 3rd and 6th in the country in the freshman division.

Sabb was the No. 1 freshman in New Jersey in the 100, No. 2 in the 200 (Neptune’s Essien Plummer ran 22.02 at Group 3 states), No. 3 in the high jump and No. 14 in the long jump.

His 10.79 is 2nd-fastest ever by a South Jersey freshman, behind Malachi James’ 10.76 for Willingboro at the 2021 Meet of Champions. His 100 and high jump marks are best ever by Gloucester County freshmen.

Amari Sabb, Xavier’s brother, was Gloucester County high jump champ at 6-2 this spring as a sophomore.

MILLVILLE’S KAITLYN DERMEN SHATTERS NEW JERSEY ALUMNI POLE VAULT RECORD!!!!!!!!!!!!

Kaitlyn Dermen, a 2014 Millville High School graduate and NCAA Division 3 All-America at Stockton, became the No. 1 woman pole vaulter in New Jersey history earlier this month with a massive PR at an indoor meet in Basking Ridge.

Dermen cleared 14-4 at the Vault Factory Independence Day Pole Vault Meet. The previous New Jersey alumni record was 14-0 ½ by Shawnee graduate Stephanie Maugham as a University of Rhode Island senior at a meet in Fresno, Calif., on April 6, 2002.

Dermen’s previous PR looks like a 13-8 ¼ from a Vault Factory meet last summer, also in Basking Ridge.

Dermen’s mark makes her the No. 32 woman in the U.S. this year. No progression information is available in the results.

Dermen first vaulted as a sophomore at Millville, clearing 8-6 indoors and 9-0 outdoors. She improved to 9-6 as a junior indoors and placed at Group 4 states and then took 8th at the Meet of Champions outdoors with a 10-6 clearance. She was a state runner-up and Meet of Champions 6th-place finisher indoors as a senior and improved to 11-1 and had a series of 11-6 clearances outdoors.

At Stockton, she won NJAC titles indoors [11-9 ¾] and outdoors [12-3 ¾] as a junior in 2017 and indoors [12-1 ¾] and outdoors [12-1 ¾] as a senior in 2018. She earned All-America honors by clearing 12-3 ¾ for 4th place at NCAA Division 3 Championships in May of 2018 in La Crosse, Wisc. She was also a conference medalist at Stockton in the 100-meter high hurdles and 400-meter intermediates.

Here’s a look at her pole vault year-by-year PRs:

2012: 9-0
2013: 10-6
2014: 11-5 ¾
2015: 11-2 ½
2016: 11-10
2017: 12-7 ½
2018: 12-5 ½
2019: 11-11 ¾
2020: 11-9 ¾
2021: 13-7 ¼
2022: 13-6
2023: 12-10 ¼
2024: 14-4

Here are the known 13-footers in South Jersey alumni history:

14-0 ¾ … Stephanie Maugham [Shawnee], April 6, 2002, Fresno, Calif.
13-8 ¼ … Kaitlyn Dermen [Millville], July 29, 2023, Basking Ridge
13-8 … Anna Heim [Moorestown], May 13, 2010, Springfield, Mass.
13-5i … Danielle O’Reilly [Shawnee], Feb. 9, 2004, New York
13-3 ¾ … Ashley Preston [Delsea], April 17, 2021, Philadelphia

TIONNA TOBIAS POPS INSANE LONG JUMP PR, RECORDS #5 JUMP IN THE WORLD THIS YEAR at HOLLOWAY PRO CLASSIC!!!!!!!!!!!!

Tionna Tobias recorded an absolutely unbelievable long jump PR Friday at the American Track League Holloway Pro Classic at James G. Pressley Stadium in Gainesville.

Tobias, a 2019 Winslow Township graduate who finished her University of Iowa career this spring, popped a massive 22-9 ¼ on her final attempt with legal wind to win the event.

Tobias’s previous lifetime best was 21-4 ¼ at the Pepsi Florida Relays at the same facility in March, so that’s a nearly 1 ½-foot PR.

Her jump is 5th-best in the world this year and 3rd-best by an American woman, behind only Tara Davis-Woodhall [23-6 ½ in Rome in June] and Jasmine Moore [22-10 ¾]. Davis-Woodhall, Moore and Monae’ Nichols made the U.S. Olympic Team headed to Paris, but Tobias’s 22-9 ¼ would have placed her 3rd in the Trials.

Tobias’s jump is No. 20 on the all-time U.S. list.

Tobias, 23, opened with a 20-1 ¾, 19-11 and 20-3 ½ before jumping 19-2 ¾ and 19-9 ½ before her monster PR on her final jump with a legal 0.9 meters-per-second tailwind.

She won by nearly two feet over Trinidad-Tobago Olympian Tyra Gittens, who jumped 20-10 ¾ on her final attempt.

It’s also No. 3 in New Jersey history, behind Olympians Carol Lewis of Willingboro [23-1 ¼ in 1985] and Shana Williams of Bridgeton [23-0 in 1996].

It’s the best jump by a New Jersey woman since Williams jumped 22-10 at the 1998 Penn Relays – 26 years ago.

Tobias, a two-time All-America at Iowa, split her time among the long jump, high hurdles and heptathlon in college. She ran 13.11 and reached the NCAA Championships in the 100-meter highs in 2023 and won the Big Ten Conference heptathlon with 5,640 points last year.

But with one huge jump Friday, she showed that her best opportunity to be in elite could very well be in the long jump.

Tobias was listed as a senior at Iowa this past spring and has apparently exhausted her NCAA eligibility. She competed Friday with a “USA” affiliation.

All-Time South Jersey Alumni Long Jump List
23-1 … Carol Lewis [Willingboro], Aug. 21, 1985, Zurich
23-0 … Shana Williams [Bridgeton], June 21, 1996, Atlanta
22-9 ¼ … Tionna Tobias [Winslow Twp.], July 19, 2024, Gainesville, Fla.
22-1 … Shameka Marshall [Oakcrest], June 26, 2010, Des Moines, Iowa
21-6 ¾ … Tisifenee Taylor [Woodbury], April 21, 2007, Bethlehem, Pa.
21-5 ½ … Gabrielle Farquharson [Williamstown], April 15, 2016, Tallahassee, Fla.
21-0 … Cidae’a Woods [Winslow Twp.], May 12, 2017, Columbia, S.C.
20-9 … Kristina Tossas [Rancocas Valley], Feb. 24, 2023, Geneva, Ohio
20-6 … Asia Young [Holy Spirit], April 6, 2019, Tucson, Ariz.
20-5 ½ … Tina Johnson [Burlington Twp.],  May 22, 1999, West Lafayette, Ind. [+1.2]

 

Let’s not forget about … ATLANTIC COUNTY TECH’S BRIANNA GROWALT!!!!!!

Over the next few weeks, we’ll spotlight 30 athletes who excelled during the outdoor track season that we didn’t have a chance to write about extensively. We’d love to write about every athlete in South Jersey, but that’s not practical. But we will try to spotlight some who may have gotten overlooked over the past few months. We apologize in advance if we don’t get to you or your son or daughter or an athlete you coach.

Today: Brianna Growalt, Atlantic County Tech

You name the event, Brianna Growalt was one of the top freshmen in New Jersey this year.

Growalt, a freshman at Atlantic County Tech in Hamilton Township, ran 12.43 at sectionals, 25.60 at the Cape Atlantic County Championships and 15.16 at sectionals and long jumped 17-2 ½ at the Atlantic County Championships.

Wow.

Growalt was the No. 6 freshman in New Jersey in the 100 and No. 2 in New Jersey [behind Willingboro’s Maya Bolden, 12.07], No. 5 in the 200 [and No. 3 in South Jersey behind Bolden, 24.54, and Timber Creek’s Amaya Jones, 25.38], No. 3 in the 100-meter hurdles and No. 1 in South Jersey and No. 3 in the long jump and again No. 1 in South Jersey.

Growalt’s first big meet was the Atlantic County Championships at Buena, where she won the 200 in 26.09, won the 100-meter hurdles in 15.71 and placed 2nd in the 100 [1-100th of a second behind Pleasantville soph Sunya Powell] and long jump [behind Absegami’s Jaidah Garrett].

At the Cape-Atlantic Championships at Bridgeton, she won the 200 with a PR 25.60 and hurdles in 15.43 and placed 3rd in the 100 in 12.69 and long jump at 16-6 ¼.

Then it was off to South Jersey Group 4 sectionals at Pennsauken, where she placed in the 100 [PR 12.43], 200 [25.62] and hurdles [PR 15.16].

Growalt’s 15.16 is fastest ever by an Atlantic County freshman. Her 12.43 is 3rd-fastest, 25.60 is 4th-fastest and her 17-2 ½ is 4th-best.

Let’s not forget about … DELSEA’S MATTHEW LITTLEHALES!!!!!!

Over the next few weeks, we’ll spotlight 30 athletes who excelled during the outdoor track season that we didn’t have a chance to write about extensively. We’d love to write about every athlete in South Jersey, but that’s not practical. But we will try to spotlight some who may have gotten overlooked over the past few months. We apologize in advance if we don’t get to you or your son or daughter or an athlete you coach.

Today: Matthew Littlehales, Delsea

Delsea sophomore Matthew Littlehales followed an auspicious indoor season with a terrific outdoor season.

Indoors, Littlehales was the No. 2 sophomore in New Jersey at 4:21.71 at the state Group 3 meet [behind only Manalapan’s Clay Stevens, who ran 4:20.82], No. 4 in the 800 at 1:59.93 and No. 5 in the 3,200 [9:40.15]. He was fastest sophomore in South Jersey at all three distances.

This spring, Littlehales was the No. 2 sophomore half-miler in the state with his 1:54.93 to place 2nd at South Jersey Group 3 sectionals to Winslow junior Dominic Bassey.

That was fastest by a South Jersey sophomore since Rancocas Valley’s Jacob Tyndale ran 1:54.33 at 2016 Group 4 states at Egg Harbor and fastest ever by a Gloucester County sophomore.

Littlehales ran within about 1 ½ seconds of the Delsea school record of 1:53.49 set at Group 3 states at South Plainfield in 2011 by Steve Butenewicz.

Overall, Littlehales will be the 11th-fastest returner at 800 meters in the state and No. 2 in South Jersey, behind only Bassey.

In cross country last fall, Littlehales placed 4th at South Jersey Group 3 sectionals with a 16:07.51, fastest last year by a sophomore at DREAM Park.

Let’s not forget about … MOORESTOWN’S I’MARA FORD!!!!!!

Over the next few weeks, we’ll spotlight 30 athletes who excelled during the outdoor track season that we didn’t have a chance to write about extensively. We’d love to write about every athlete in South Jersey, but that’s not practical. But we will try to spotlight some who may have gotten overlooked over the past few months. We apologize in advance if we don’t get to you or your son or daughter or an athlete you coach.

Today: I’Mara Ford, Moorestown

Moorestown’s I’Mara Ford enjoyed a huge junior year, long jumping 17-11, triple jumping 37-4 and high jumping 5-6.

She’s the No. 3 returner in South Jersey in the long jump [behind Winslow’s Ma’Syiah Brawner and Absegami’s Jaidah Garrett], No. 3 in the triple jump [behind Brawner and Garrett] and tied for No. 1 in the high jump [along with Williamstown’s Addison Inge].

At the South Jersey Elite at Delsea, Ford was 2nd in the long jump [behind Garrett], 3rd in the triple jump [behind Sophia Curtis and Garrett] and 3rd in the high jump [behind Clayton’s Alanna Woolfolk and Egypt Bolan of Lindenwold].

At the Burlington County Open at Northern Burlington, she won the high jump and took 2nd in both horizontal jumps [behind R.V.’s Lauren Fadairo].

And at the Olympic Conference Championships at R.V., she was 2nd to Brawner in the high jump, 3rd in the long jump [behind Brawner and Shawnee’s Sakiyah Horsley] and 4th in the triple jump.

Ford had a big weekend at South Jersey Group 3 sectionals, placing 2nd [to Brawner] in the high jump, 4th [behind Garrett, Brawner and Curtis] in the long jump and 6th in the triple jump.

At states, she was top 10 in all three jumps, and at Meet of Champions she placed 2nd in the high jump with her 5-6 PR. Inge also cleared 5-6, getting the win with one fewer miss at 5-6 than Ford.

Moorestown hadn’t had a girl place in the top three at Meet of Champions since Jessica Kloss took 2nd in the pole vault at the 2005 meet in South Plainfield, but both Ford and junior Hannah Byrd-Leitner – who won the pole vault – did it this year.

The last Moorestown girl to place in the high jump at Meet of Champions was Sandy Tokoto, who tied for 2nd at the 1991 meet in South Plainfield with a 5-4 clearance.

Let’s not forget about … BURLINGTON TWP.’S DYLAN FITZPATRICK!!!!!!

Dylan Fitzpatrick was the top underclass javelin thrower in South Jersey and No. 5 in the state and became the first Burlington Township boy to ever win a sectional javelin title.

Fitzpatrick’s progression is eye-opening. He threw 125-0 as a freshman in 2022 and 145-3 as a sophomore.

But in his first meet of his junior year, he threw a school-record 170-5 at the Don Danser Relays at Rancocas Valley – a quick 25-foot PR to open the season. At the Central Jersey Group 3 meet at Jackson Liberty, he improved 177-4, winning by 17 feet.

Teammate Dylan Zerillo, a senior, was 3rd with a 159-0, and junior Anthony Barber took 5th with a 151-10. Those 18 points helped Burlington Township place 4th in team scoring with 52 points.

Fitzpatrick  became Burlington Township’s first thrower to win a sectional title since Jaehlan Joyner won the shot at the 2016 CJ-3 meet at Northern Burlington with a 52-5 ½ and the Falcons’ first underclassman to win a sectional title since junior Eriq Morris won the Central Jersey Group 2 800 in 2009 at Monmouth Regional in 1:58.71.

Fitzpatrick then placed 2nd at states at Delsea, less than 2 ½ feet behind senior Evan Brooks of Old Tappan. He was the No. 2 South Jersey finisher at the Meet of Champions at Pennsauken, behind only runner-up Miles Acchione of Lenape.

His 177-4 is the best throw by a Burlington County underclassman since Nick Mirabelli of Rancocas Valley threw 213-5 to win the Burlington County Open in 2017 at R.V.

Burlington County 175-Foot Javelin Club [new javelin since 2003]
227-10 … Nick Mirabelli [Rancocas Valley], 2017
224-10 … Curtis Thompson [Florence], 2014
216-6 … Chris Mirabelli [Holy Cross], 2014
204-4 … Kevin Burr Jr. [Rancocas Valley], 2023
201-1 … Sean Biehn [Burlington City], 2006
195-10 … Miles Acchione [Lenape], 2024
192-6 … Matt Rafferty [Northern Burlington], 2012
192-3 … Shane McDevitt [Cinnaminson], 2014
191-6 … Robert Marks [Rancocas Valley], 2016
187-8 … Jerry Fusco [Holy Cross], 2016
187-0 … Jeremy Wilbur [Moorestown], 2013
181-3 … Matthew Dash [Willingboro], 2011
180-1 … Justin Nykiel [Cherokee], 2010
178-5 … Shaun Schaeffer [Cinnaminson], 2011
177-9 … Matthew Gross [Cherokee], 2016
177-4 … Dylan Fitzpatrick [Burlington Twp.], 2024
177-0 … Warren Oliver [Palmyra], 2009
176-2 … Jarrett Braitwaite [Willingboro], 2014
175-8 … John Szymanek [Seneca], 2010
175-2 … Kyle McDevitt [Cinnaminson], 2011
175-2 … Adam Rotsides [Northern Burlington], 2008