WASHINGTON TWP.’S ISABELLE DEAL EARNS JAVELIN NCAA DIVISION 3 ALL-AMERICA HONORS FOR 4TH STRAIGHT YEAR!!!!!!!!

For the 4th year in a row, Washington Township graduate Isabelle Deal is a javelin All-America.

Deal placed 8th in the javelin Thursday at the NCAA Division 3 Championships at Doug Shaw Memorial Stadium in Myrtle Beach, S.C., with a throw of 137-9.

Deal – the No. 16 seed – opened competition with a 132-0 before hitting 137-9 on her 2nd throw of the trials. She threw 134-3 to finish the qualifying round and then closed with a foul and a couple 127-foot throws – 127-11 and 127-2.

She was sitting in 3rd place after the first flight – the lower-seeded throwers – and then hung on as only five of the 11 higher-seeded throwers passed her in the second flight. So she was seventh after the first round, and the top nine throwers got three more throws.

The 137-9 is Deal’s best throw since she transferred from Ursinus to Rowan last summer and her best overall since she threw 139-9 to place 6th at last year’s NCAA Division 3 Championships in Rochester. Her previous best throw this spring was a 135-8 in a meet at Widener. She threw her lifetime-best 155-0 – the Ursinus school record – last May in the AARTFC meet in Selinsgrove, Pa.

Deal also placed 8th at the 2021 nationals in Greensboro, N.C., at 135-1 and 6th in the 2022 meet in Geneva, Ohio, at 137-0.

Deal is the 3rd javelin All-America in Rowan women’s track history. Clayton’s Emma Painter placed 4th at 146-9 in the 1983 meet in Naperville, Ill., 2nd at 158-9 in 1984 in Northfield, Minn., and was national champ in 1985 in Granville, Ohio, with a 150-4. And Cherokee’s Melissa Lake was 8th in 2012 with a 138-5 in Claremont, Calif., and 8th again in 2013 at 137-6.

Deal is 4-for-4 finishing in the top eight in the javelin, but this year for the first time she also qualified for NCAA Division 3 nationals in the shot put with a lifetime-best and Rowan school-record 45-8 when she won the NJAC meet in Galloway Township earlier this month.

She’s No. 14 seed in the shot and scheduled to throw at 4 p.m. Friday.

Don’t forget amazing Mawali Osunniyi of Mainland and Gabriel Moronta of Pleasantville at NCAAs!!!!!!!! (I did)

I recently posted a list of all South Jersey athletes headed for the NCAA Division 1 Track Championships.

Turns out I missed a couple guys. A couple very impressive guys enjoying breakthrough 2024 outdoor seasons.

Mainland graduate Mawali Osunniyi, a freshman at Connecticut, is scheduled to compete in the high jump at the NCAA East First Round at 2 p.m. Friday in Lexington, Ky.

Osunniyi is tied for No. 6 freshman in NCAA Division 1 this year with a 7-1 ¼ from the UConn Northeast Challenge in Storrs back in April.

In all, he’s cleared 7-0 or better four times this year, including twice indoors. He won the indoor Big East title in Chicago with a 7-0 ¼ clearance and won the outdoor conference title at 6-11 at Villanova.

As we know from writing about Jailya Ash, UConn is one of the few Division 1 programs that doesn’t list an all-time top-10 anywhere on its web site, so we can’t tell you where Osunniyi ranks in school history. They do have media guides from 2009 through 2016 posted but none of them have all-time performance lists either.

Osunniyi only competed in the high jump one season at Mainland with a best of 6-8, which he cleared six times last spring. He played basketball in the winter and according to MileSplit his first competition ever was the 2023 Bridgeton Relays about 13 months ago. By June he was state Group 3 champ and 2nd in the Meet of Champions.

He also triple jumped 47-0 ½ in high school and was runner-up in the state Group 3 meet at Delsea. He hasn’t triple jumped yet in college, although a 47-0 ½ would have placed in the top five at the Big East meet.

Although the UConn web site is useless, we can tell from TFRRS that Osunniyi is already UConn’s best high jumper since Noel James cleared 7-1 ½ at indoor IC4As in Boston in 2012. Earlier that winter he cleared 7-3 in a meet at Penn State. But James’ best outdoor jump was a 7-0 ½ in Baton Rouge, and it appears that Osunniyi’s 7-1 ¼ is the best outdoor jump by a Huskie since at least 2010 (as far back as TFRRS goes).

I believe Osunniyi is Mainland’s first 7-footer since Paul Klemic, who cleared 7-4 1/2 – still the state record – at 2000 Outdoor Nationals in 2000. 

The other South Jersey athlete I missed is South Florida junior Gabriel Moronta, who will run on USF’s 5th-seeded 1,600-meter relay team, which ran 3:02.16 in March at the Florida Relays in Gainesville. Moronta, a transfer from Mississippi State, ran an eye-popping 400 PR of 45.81 in San Antonio two weeks ago. That’s 4th-fastest ever by a South Jersey athlete and should have qualified Moronta for the open 400 at East Regionals – it’s 17th in the East – but he wasn’t entered.

The only South Jersey athletes to run faster are Olympic gold medalists Lamont Smith [44.30 in 1996] and Dennis Mitchell [45.26 in 1986] as well as Woodbury’s Darrell Bush [45.49 in 2015].

Moronta is now under the B standard of 46.00 for the Olympic Trials next month in Eugene. He’s not far off the A standard of 45.20.

Moronta only ran one open 400 at Mississippi State and ran 46.24 in an indoor meet at Clemson in February of 2023. He focused more on the 400-meter hurdles [51.38] and 800 [1:49.33]. This spring at South Florida, he hasn’t run a single 400 hurdles race and his focus has been on the 400. Sure looks like that was the right thing to do.

South Florida races in the 4-by-4 quarterfinals at 8:45 p.m. Friday.

7-5 ¾ … Darren Burton [Delran], July 23, 1989, Ylivieska, Finland
7-5 ¼ … Mike Pascuzzo [Lenape], June 6, 1992, New York
7-4 ½ … Jim Pringle [Moorestown], March 21, 1982, Tallahassee, Fla.
7-4 ½ … Paul Klemic [Mainland Reg.], June 17, 2000, Raleigh, N.C.
7-4 ½ … Montez Blair [Timber Creek], June 23, 2013, Des Moines, Iowa
7-4 ½ … Robert Jordan [Millville], 2000
7-4 ¼ … Terrance Ferguson [Cherry Hill West], May 5, 1991, Princeton, N.J.
7-3 ¾ … Mike Morrison [Willingboro], May 14, 2005, Nashville, Tenn.
7-3 … Anthony Butler [Schalick], June 10, 2006, Colts Neck, N.J.
7-2 ¼ … Jeffrey-Jon Tucker [Eastern], April 28, 2018
7-1 ¾ … Drew Kanz [Seneca], Feb. 28, 2014, Birmingham, Ala.
7-1 ½ … Devin Bradham [Williamstown], May 3, 2019, University Park, Pa.
7-1 ½ … Mawali Osunniyi [Mainland Regional], Feb. 2, 2024, Cambridge, Mass.
7-0 ½ … Todd Lowber [Delran], May 26, 2006, Lisle, Ala.
7-0 … Kerry Vivett [Edgewood], Feb. 8, 1986, Oklahoma City

44.30 … Lamont Smith [Willingboro], June 19, 1996, Atlanta
45.26 … Dennis Mitchell [Edgewood], April 12, 1986, Tampa, Fla.
45.49 … Darrell Bush [Woodbury], April 11, 2015, Tucson, Ariz.
45.81 … Gabriel Moronta [Pleasantville], May 10, 2024, San Antonio, Texas
45.98 … Antonio Abney [Willingboro], May 29, 2010, Charlotte, N.C.
46.05 … Schefer Sherrer [Vineland], May 18, 2005, Levelland, Texas
46.13 … Brandon Outlaw [Moorestown], May 15, 2021, Raleigh, N.C.
46.19 … Maurice Ransome [Vineland], May 23-25, 1990, Naperville, Ill.
46.26 … Marvin Lewis [Willingboro], July 29, 2010, Nairobi, Kenya
46.48 … Reuben McCoy [Winslow], April 1, 2006, Atlanta

Millville’s Isaac Roberts wins Cape-Atlantic 110 hurdles with another big PR, moves up to 7th-fastest in South Jersey!!!!!!

Millville senior Isaac Roberts continued his rapid progression in the high hurdles with a speedy win Wednesday at the Cape Atlantic Championships at Bridgeton.

Roberts ran a lifetime-best 14.58 and became the first Millville hurdler to win the Cape Atlantic 110 highs since Millville’s Tyreck Newman won the 2017 meet at Bridgeton in 14.52.

Roberts has improved dramatically since his junior year, when his fastest hurdles race was a 15.83 at the Cape Atlantic Championships, also at Bridgeton.

He PR’d in his opener with a 15.20 at Fast Times at Cherokee and then dropped to 14.70 in the prelims of South Jersey Elite at Delsea. So he lowered his PR from 15.83 to 14.70 – more than a second – in the span of 2 ½ weeks.

Wednesday was a final by time with no prelims and Roberts dropped another chunk of time down to 14.58, which makes him 7th-fastest in South Jersey this year.

Oakcrest senior Clayton Husta ran 14.99 for 2nd place, and Mainland junior Josiah Williams PR’d with a 15.08 for 3rd. Husta is No. 9 in New Jersey with his 14.33 from South Jersey Elite. Husta is No. 2 in New Jersey Group 2 behind Willingboro senior Eric Foster, who ran 13.99 at South Jersey Elite. Williams, whose previous PR was a 15.14 at the Atlantic County Championships last week at Buena, is now the No. 5 junior in South Jersey this year.

Clayton’s Alexander Osayemi wins Tri-County 400-meter hurdles in insanely close 4-way finish!!!!!!

There are close finishes, and then there’s this.

I’ve been around track and field forever and I’ve never seen anything like it.

In the boys 400-meter hurdles at the Tri-County Conference Championships at Delsea, the first four runners all finished within 11-100ths of a second.

That means a total of 30 inches separated Clayton junior Alexander Osayemi, Salem junior
Anthony Parker, Highland senior Cortland Webb and Triton senior Angel Gonzalez at the end of a race that’s about a quarter of a mile long.

Osayemi won the race in 55.20, finishing 6-100ths of a second (about 15 inches) ahead of Parker, who ran 55.26. He finished 1-100th of a second – about 2 ½ inches – ahead of Webb, who ran 55.27 and finished 4-100ths of a second – about 10 inches – ahead of Gonzalez, who ran 55.31.

All four PR’d.

Osayemi dropped his PR more than 1 ½ seconds from 56.79, Parker dropped from 56.09, Webb’s previous PR was 56.26 so he took a second off, and Gonzalez dropped from 56.01.

Their times are No. 6, No. 8, No. 9 and No. 10 in South Jersey this year.

Incredibly, the six-fastest Group 1 intermediate hurdlers in the state are all from South Jersey: Riverside senior Jamir Brown [53.69], Glassboro senior Cartrell Moore [54.11], Palmyra senior Abdulazeez Iyiola [54.32], Gloucester’s Jaden Garris [54.35], and then Osayemi and Parker.

Premier Wynn advances to 2nd round in NCAA Championships 400-meter hurdles!!!!!!

Norfolk State freshman Premier Wynn from Pennsauken advanced to the 2nd round of the NCAA Division 1 Championships in the 400-meter hurdles Wednesday.

Wynn ran 51.43 at the NCAA East First Round in Lexington, Ky., and advanced to the quarterfinals, which are scheduled for 7:25 p.m. Friday. The top 12 finishers there and the top 12 in the West Regional in Fayetteville, Ark., advance to the NCAA Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore., June 5-8.

Wynn’s 51.43 is off his PR of 50.72 that he ran at the MEAC Championships earlier this month in Norfolk, but it was a slow race in general run in humid and rainy conditions. Only four of the 47 starters PR’d.

Wynn’s high school teammate, Rutgers freshman Bryce Tucker, missed qualifying as did Rutgers senior Micah Wood of Rancocas Valley, who ran 51.79 and came up just 7-100ths of a second short of advancing to the next round.

Wynn and Tucker are both eligible for the USATF Under 20 Championships, which determines the U.S. team for the World Under-20 Championships in Lima, Peru, in August.

TIMBER CREEK’S RYAN JENNINGS RUNS 5TH-FASTEST 100 IN STATE HISTORY!!!!!!!!!!!!

Timber Creek junior Ryan Jennings ran one of the fastest 100-meter dash times in state history Wednesday at the Tri-County Championships at Delsea.

Jennings won the race in 11.56, fastest in New Jersey this year – 1-100th of a second faster than the 11.57 her teammate, Naylah Jones, ran at the Camden County Championships at Haddon Township last week.

Jennings’ time is 5th-fastest in state history and No. 3 in South Jersey history behind legendary Michele Glover of Willingboro, who ran 11.42 at the 1981 TAC Junior Nationals at UCLA, and Olympic gold medalist English Gardner of Eastern, who ran 11.49 at the 2008 state Group 4 meet at South Plainfield.

It’s fastest by a New Jersey sprinter in 14 years, since Paramus Catholic’s Myasia Jacobs ran 11.44 to place 2nd at 2010 Greensboro Nationals.

The only other New Jersey who’s run faster than Jennings is Trenton’s Wendy Vereen, who ran 11.50 in the semifinals of the 1984 U.S. Olympic Trials at Los Angeles Coliseum [just ahead of Glover, who ran 11.61].

Timber Creek becomes the first school in New Jersey history with two girls under 11.60 at any point. And they did it about a week apart.

Montclair came close with M’elisa Barber [11.57 in 1998] and Aleah Williams [11.65 in 1999], who were part of Montclair’s 1998 Penn Relays Championship of America 400-meter relay 2nd-place finish and state-record 45.50.

Jennings broke the meet record of a hand-timed 11.6 set by Deptford’s Audrey Wilson at Delsea in 2008.

With Pennsauken sophomore Sianni Wynn at 11.65 from South Jersey Elite at Delsea, more South Jersey girls have run 11.65 or faster in the past three weeks than in the previous 23 years.

Jennings also won the 200 in 24.36. Jones didn’t run the 100 or 200 Tuesday but won the 400 in 56.36, with teammate Chloe Jones 2nd in 57.16.

Although Jennings’ time won’t be eligible for some record lists because there wasn’t a wind guage being used, on the all-time South Jersey alumni list it’s 9th-fastest all-time:

10.74 … English Gardner [Eastern], July 3, 2016, Eugene, Ore. [+1.0]
11.10 … Dennisha Page [Wilson], May 11, 2024, Gainesville, Fla.
11.21 … Nia Ali [Pleasantville], April 13, 2024, Gainesville, Fla. [+1.2]
11.29 … Amandi Rhett [Moorestown], April 17, 2005, Walnut, Calif. [+0.4]
11.31 … Torie Robinson [Winslow Twp.], May 14, 2017, Atlanta [+0.8]
11.32 … Gabrielle Farquharson [Williamstown], May 14, 2016, Lincoln, Neb. [+1.6]
11.36 … Michele Glover [Willingboro], May 6, 1984, Houston [+1.7]
11.52 … Bria Mack [Williamstown], May 12, 2018, Knoxville, Tenn. [+0.5]
11.56 … Ryan Jennings [Timber Creek], May 22, 2024, Franklinville [NWI]
11.57 … Naylah Jones [Timber Creek], April 12, 2024, Marlton [NWI]

ALL-TIME NEW JERSEY 100-METER DASH LIST
11.42 … Michele Glover [Willingboro], 1981
11.44 … Myasia Jacobs [Paramus Catholic], 2010
11.49 … English Gardner [Eastern], 2008
11.50 … Wendy Vereen [Trenton], 1984
11.56 … Ryan Jennings [Timber Creek], 2024
11.57 … Patti Dunlap [Camden], 1979
11.57 … M’elisa Barber [Montclair], 1998
11.57 … Jada Ellis [Manchster Twp.], 2021
11.57 … Naylah Jones [Timber Creek], 2024
11.58 … Bria Mack [Williamstown], 2017

ALL-TIME SOUTH JERSEY 100-METER DASH LIST
11.42 … Michele Glover [Willingboro], 1981
11.49 … English Gardner [Eastern], 2008
11.56 … Ryan Jennings [Timber Creek], 2024
11.57 … Patti Dunlap [Camden], 1979
11.57 … Naylah Jones [Timber Creek], 2024
11.58 … Bria Mack [Williamstown], 2017
11.61 … Amandi Rhett [Moorestown], 2000
11.63 … Dennisha Page [Woodrow Wilson], 2019
11.65 … Sianni Wynn [Pennsauken], 2024
11.66 … Lauren Princz [Egg Harbor Twp.], 2021

RANCOCAS VALLEY’S KEVIN BURR OF TENNESSEE QUALIFIES FOR NCAA’S WITH HUGE PR AND #1 THROW BY A COLLEGE FRESHMAN THIS YEAR!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rancocas Valley graduate Kevin Burr, who never picked up a javelin until 13 months ago, qualified for the NCAA Championships on Wednesday with a nine-foot PR.

Burr, a true freshman at Tenneessee, had the 6th-best throw at the NCAA East First Round in Lexington, Ky., Wednesday with a 234-6. The top 12 in each of two regions advance to the NCAA Championships. Of 96 qualifiers in the two regions, Burr’s 234-6 was 13th-best.

The 102nd annual NCAA Division 1 Championships are scheduled for June 5-8 at Hayward Field on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene.

Burr’s previous PR was 225-0, which he threw at both the University of Central Florida Black & Gold Invite in Orlando in his first college meet and again at the Desert Heat Classic in Tucson late last month.

He opened with a PR 228-0 and then hit 234-6 on his 2nd attempt and 226-4 on his 3rd, so he had the three-best throws of his life back-to-back-to-back. Any of the three would have qualified him for NCAAs. The cutoff in the East First Round was 223-7 and 226-0 in the West.

Burr broke Tennessee’s freshman javelin record of 232-10 set in 2001 by Leigh Smith in Columbia, S.C. Overall, his throw is No. 7 in Volunteers history and the best throw since Kyle Quinn’s 240-0 in a meet at Conway, S.C., in 2016.

Burr didn’t throw 150 feet last year until the Burlington County Open in mid-May and PR’d with a 204-4 when he placed 2nd at the Meet of Champions.

His throw is No. 7 in South Jersey history and No. 11 on the all-time New Jersey performance list. He’s just short of the Rancocas Valley alumni record of 236-5 set in Austin in 2019 by Nick Mirabelli.

His 234-6 ranks 31st among U.S. men this year and is the best throw by a freshman in NCAA Division 1 this year. He was the only freshman in either region to advance to NCAAs.

It’s not clear whether Burr has Under-20 eligibility, but if his 20th birthday is after midnight on Dec. 31, he would instantly become among the favorites at the U.S. Under-20 Championships next month in Eugene. The meet selects the U.S. team for World Under-20s in Lima, Peru, in August.

Burr has surpassed the B standard for Olympic Trials qualifying, which means he’d qualify if he’s among the top 24 entries even without the A stanadard of 246-0 ¾.

287-9 … Curtis Thompson [Florence], July 4, 2016, Eugene, Ore.
261-2 … Vince Labosky [Holy Cross], June 15, 1990, Norwalk, Calif.
261-2 … Tim VanLiew [Deptford], May 21, 2016, Tucson, Ariz.
251-6 … Chris Mirabelli [Holy Cross], April 29, 2017, Philadelphia
249-9 … Cade Antonucci [Holy Spirit], June 9, 2021, Eugene, Ore.
236-5 … Nick Mirabelli [Rancocas Valley], March 27-30, 2019, Austin, Texas
234-6 … Kevin Burr [Rancocas Valley], March 15, Orlando, Fla.
214-6 … Sean Biehn [Burlington City], May 8, 2010, Ewing, N.J.
213-2 … Edgar Rosa [Paulsboro], April 8, 2023, Glassboro, N.J.
212-2 … Alexander Georgiou [Timber Creek], 2017

Washington Township boys open Tri-County meet with fastest 400-meter relay in New Jersey this year!!!!!!!!!

Washington Township seiors Ajani Dwyer and Yashahya Brown, junior John Santos and senior Aidan Ellis ran the fastest 400-meter relay in New Jersey this year to open the Tri-County Conference Championships Wednesday at Delsea.

The Minutemen won a very fast race in 41.77 – 17th-fastest in South Jersey history – with Deptford 2nd in 42.14 and Glassboro 3rd in 42.27. Williamstown also ran sub-43 with a 42.89 for 4th place.

The only faster times in Gloucdester County history belong to Deptford, with a 41.47 to win the 2018 Meet of Champions at Northern Burlington and a 41.55 to place 3rd at 2017 Greensboro Nationals.

Washington Township’s previous school record was a 42.11 in the prelims of West Philly Nationals with only Brown, Santos and graduated seniors Quasir Robinson and John Williams.

Washington Township, Deptford and Glassboro recorded the fastest, 4th-fastest and 7th-fastest times in New Jersey this year and No. 3, No. 8 and No. 16 in Gloucester County history. Glassboro’s time is fastest this year by any New Jersey Group 1 school.

Senior Darryl Wayman, sophomore Kareem Brown, senior Ryan Gore and junior Tyaire Randells ran for Deptford, senior Brysheen Ferguson, freshman Xavier Sabb, sophomore Amari Sabb and senior Cartrell Moore for Glassboro and sophomore Jasiah Gibbons, freshman Ian Israel, senior Gordon Pinnock and senior Alex Hollimon.

All-Time Gloucester County 400-Meter Relay List
41.47 … Deptford, 2018
41.55 … Deptford, 2017
41.77 … Washington Twp., 2024
42.01 … Deptford, 2019
42.11 … Washington Twp., 2023
42.12 … Deptford, 2016
42.14 … Deptford, 2024
42.15 … Delsea, 2013
42.15 … Delsea, 2010
42.17 … Deptford, 2013
42.19 … Delsea, 2024
42.20 … Washington Twp., 2022
42.23 … Delsea, 2019
42.25 … Clayton, 2019
42.27 … Glassboro, 2024

All-time South Jersey List
40.92 … Winslow, 2003
41.09 … Camden, 2000
41.25 … Camden, 2004
41.25 … Camden, 2001
41.45 … Timber Creek, 2014
41.47 … Deptford, 2018
41.50 … Timber Creek, 2013
41.54 … Camden, 2002
41.57 … Pennsauken, 2017
41.55 … Deptford, 2017
41.62 … Camden, 2003
41.64 … Winslow Twp., 2004
41.69 … Willingboro, 1982
41.71 … Edgewood, 2000
41.71 … Salem, 2017
41.72 … Deptford, 2018
41.77 … Washington Twp., 2024
41.80 … Oakcrest, 2012
41.83 … Camden, 1997
41.83 … Oakcrest, 2011
41.83 … Camden, 1997
41.7h … Camden, 1996
41.7h … Edgewood, 2001
41.85 … Pennsauken, 2016
41.86 … Pennsauken, 2017
41.87 … Pennsauken, 2023
41.7h … Camden, 1996
41.7h … Edgewood, 2001
41.96 … Paul VI, 2018
41.99 … Rancocas Valley, 2021
42.00 … Rancocas Valley, 2024

Glassboro’s Damere Lassiter posts top N.J. Group 1 shot and discus throws this year at Crusader Field Meet!!!!!!!!

Glassboro senior Damere Lassiter had a monster double at the Delsea Crusader Field Meet Tuesday night, PR’ing with a 60-11 ¼ in the shot put and winning the discus with a season-best 180-3. Both throws came on his final attempt.

Lassiter became the 7th thrower in South Jersey history to hit 60 feet in the shot and 180 feet in the discus in the same meet and the first ever in Group 1.

Lassiter is now No. 5 in New Jersey this year in the shot and No. 3 in the discus and No. 1 in both events in Group 1. He’s the first Group 1 thrower in New Jersey to hit 60 and 180 since Saddle Brook’s Giovanni Gutierrez in 2017 [62-8 ¾, 187-8].

He has a 184-8 to his credit from last year’s South Jersey Group 1 sectionals at Pennsauken. He did hit 60 feet indoors with a 60-1 to win Easterns at the Armory in February, but the 60-11 ¼ is a PR.

His 184-8 is the best throw by a South Jersey Group 1 athlete since Penns Grove’s Russell Willitt threw 185-10 at the 1985 Bridgeton Relays [held that year at Cumberland Regional in Upper Deerfield Township], and his 60-11 ¼ is best in South Jersey Group 1 since Paulsboro’s Jon Kalnas hit 64-10 ¼ at the 1997 Meet of Champions.

Lassiter is the 4th South Jersey thrower to hit 60 feet this year, joining Hammonton junior Anthony Liakhnovich [62-10 at the South Jersey Open], Pennsauken senior Jayden Farmer [61-3 at the Camden County Championships] and Delsea junior Jonathan Harris [60-9 ½ at Woodbury]. That’s the most ever in a single year.

Harris was 2nd in the shot Tuesday with a 60-3 ½ Delsea senior Greg Masso got within a few inches of 60 feet with a PR 59-8 ¾ – on his final throw.

In the disc, Willingboro senior Derrick Swain PR’d with a 163-8, and Paulsboro senior Javion Payne made it three over 160 feet with a lifetime-best 161-0, which is No. 2 in New Jersey Group 1 behind Lassiter.

Ron Dayne [Overbrook], 1996 Meet of Champions [63-10 ¼, 215-3]
Braheme Days Jr. [Bridgeton], 2013 Nationals [68-6 ½, 186-2]
Josh Awotunde [Delsea], 2013 Meet of Champions [61-1, 188-10]
Kamron Kobolak [Cinnaminson], 2018 Meet of Champions [61-11 ¾, 185-6]
Damere Lassiter [Glassboro], 2024 Crusader Field Meet [60-11 ¼, 180-3]
Jason Nwosu [Delsea], 2022 Crusader Field Meet [61-7, 183-9]
Ray Wilks [Bridgeton], 1995 Meet of Champions [64-5, 184-3]

68-8 ½ … Braheme Days Jr. [Bridgeton] 2012
64-10 ½ … Jon Kalnas [Paulsboro], 1997
64-6 ¼ … Ron Dayne [Overbook], 1996
64-5 … Ray Wilks [Bridgeton], 1995
64-4 ¼ … Chris Robinson [Penns Grove], 1990
62-10 ¼ … Nick Pulli [West Deptford], 2014
63-0 … Lou Gordon [Bridgeton], 1995
61-11 ¾ … Kamron Kobolak [Cinnaminson], 2018
61-10 ½ … Harry Dilks [Pitman], 1971
61-6 … Josh Awotunde [Delsea], 2013
61-4 ½ … Bubba Green [Millville], 1976
61-4 … Kofi Yamoah [Egg Harbor Twp.], 2013
61-2 ½ … Matthew Huckabee, [Timber Creek], 2010
60-11 ½ … Ryan Knight [Delsea], 1996
60-11 ¼ … Damere Lassiter [Glassboro], 2024
60-11 ……. Lucciano Pizarro [Cherokee], 2019
60-7 1/2 … Ell Ash [Willingboro], 2004
60-6 ½ … Tati White [Willingboro], 1994
60-5 ¼ … Chris Bolden [Edgewood], 1990
60-3 … Dontaye Rivera [Pleasantville], 2012
60-1 … Bill Banks [Wilson], 1973

Rancocas Valley’s Cecilia King runs #5 hurdles time in New Jersey this year, #9 in Burlington County history, at Olympic Conference Championships!!!!!!

Rancocas Valley junior Cecilia King, who just broke 15 seconds in the 100-meter hurdles for the first time less than two weeks ago, moved into the all-time Burlington County top-10 Tuesday night at the Olympic Conference Championships on her home track.

King had a PR of 15.12 from last year’s Meet of Champions until she ran 15.03 in the Burlington County Open trials at Northern Burlington on May 11. She won the final in 14.89, her first sub-15 race, and then on Tuesday PR’d at 14.59 in the trials and 14.51 in the final.

That’s an improvement of 61-100ths of a second in under two weeks.

King is now No. 5 this year in New Jersey and No. 1 in South Jersey. She has the fastest time in New Jersey Group 4 and is No. 3 all-time at R.V., behind Anabella Chin’s 14.39 at the 2022 Meet of Champions in Somerset and Tonya Lee’s 14.42 at the 1987 TAC Junior Nationals at Rincon Vista Stadium in Tucson, Ariz. (now known as Roy P. Drachman Stadium.)

The top four finishers Tuesday ran sub-15 and all four PR’d. Winslow senior Dominique Clement was 2nd in 14.77 after a PR 14.61 in the trials, Lenape senior Keira Gibbons placed 3rd in 14.91 after a PR 15.02 in the trials and Winslow sophomore Ma’Syiah Brawner took 4th in 14.93 after a PR 15.11 in the trials. Brawner also won the triple jump [37-9], long jump [18-1] and high jump [5-4]. Those four girls now rank 1st, 4th, 6th and 7th in South Jersey, and Brawner is the No. 2 sophomore in New Jersey (by 4-100ths of a second).

All-Time Burlington County Hurdles List
13.85 … Carol Lewis [Willingboro], 1980
14.04 … Jasmine Staten [Lenape], 2016
14.34 … Evann Thompson [Lenape], 2012
14.38 … Vanessa Arientyl [Willingboro], 2010
14.39 … Anabella Chin [Rancocas Valley], 2022
14.42 … Tonya Lee [Rancocas Valley], 1987
14.43 … Ashley Edwards [Northern Burlington], 2014
14.49 … Kim Allen [Willingboro], 2003
14.51 … Cecilia King [Rancocas Valley], 2024
14.54 … Meredith Updike [Cinnaminson], 2019
14.59 … Drew Bristol-Andrews [Florence], 2013