Kingsway grad Ryan Magnus runs Boston qualifier at Philadelphia Marathon!!!!!!

In what appears to be his first lifetime marathon, former Kingsway runner Ryan Magnus ran 2:49.53 at the Philadelphia Marathon Sunday and qualified for Boston.

The 28-year-old Magnus, who competed collegiately for La Salle, ran well under the three-hour qualifying standard for his age group (18-34) that doesn’t guarantee admittance into Boston but gives runners the opportunity to register. But running more than 10 minutes below 3:00 should give Magnus a very good chance to get into the 2024 Boston Marathon, which is scheduled for Monday, April 15.

Magnus came through 5K in 20:43, 10K in 41:25, 15K in 1:01.37, then 30K in 2:02.31 and 40K in 2:41.24. He ran his 10,000 from 30K to 40K in 38:53, his fastest 10,000.

Magnus placed 21st in the 2012 XC Meet of Champions in 16:15 and ran 9:33.31 for 3,200 meters at Kingsway. At La Salle, he ran 5,000 meters in 15:36.25 in a meet in Lawrenceville.

Haddonfield’s Marielle Hall takes 9th in Philly Half Marathon!!!!!!

Haddonfield’s Marielle Hall, a 2016 Olympian at 10,000 meters, placed 9th in the Philadelphia Half Marathon Saturday morning.

Hall, 32, ran 1:14.51.83. She came through 5K in 16:47, 10K in 34:11, 15K in 52:14 and 20K in 1:10.40. Hall’s World Athletics page lists her with a 1:13.35 PR from Houston this past January, but she ran 1:10.19 at the Philly Half in 2022. Could be an net elevation loss disqualifies Philly from the half marathon rankings?

In any case, it was Hall’s first race since June 10, when she ran 33:13 and placed 17th in the Mastercard New York Mini10K.

Hall has track PRs of 4:32.77 in the mile, 15:02.27 for 5,000 meters and 31:05.71 in the 10,000 and road PRs of 15:08 and 32:51.

KYLIE ANICIC EARNS ALL-AMERICA HONORS WITH 12TH-PLACE FINISH AT NCAA DIVISION 2 XC CHAMPIONSHIPS!!!!!!!!

Kylie Anicic earned All-America honors Saturday with a 12th-place finish in the NCAA Division 2 cross country national championships – her final collegiate cross country race.

Anicic, a Kingsway graduate and Edinboro senior, ran a lifetime-best 20:12.2 over 6,000 meters on the Tom Rutledge Cross Country course in Joplin, Mo.

She was out in 5:19.8 for the first mile and in 29th place and gradually moved up to 22nd coming through 3,000 meters at 10:08.7, 18th at 4,000 meters in 13:30.5 and 15th at the 5K in 16:55.8 and then passed three runners in the final 1,000.

Her time is a 6,000-meter all-course PR. Her previous 6K best was a 20:13.7 in September when she won a race at Lock Haven.

Anicic placed 31st last year in her first NCAA Division 2 national championship race in University Place, Wash. Including indoor and outdoor track and XC, she’s now a six-time All-America.

She’s won the last two NCAA Atlantic Region titles and was named USTFCCCA Atlantic Region Runner of the Year.

Anicic’s 12th-place is the best by an Edinboro woman since at least 2010. Unfortunately, while Edinburg’s web site lists previous All-America performers in program history it does not list their place. And the USTCCCA web site does not list results before 2010. And I looked for a while but couldn’t find them anywhere.

Lindsay Cunningham of Winona (Minn.) State was the overall winner in 19:30.1. Grand Valley State of Allendale, Mich., won the team title with 59 points.

Clearview’s Anas Bensaoud earned All-America honors at NJCAA National Championships!!!!!!!!

Clearview’s Anas Bensaoud, a freshman at Rowan College South Jersey, earned All-America honors Saturday with a 12th-place finish in the NJCAA National Championship race.

Bensaoud, the National Junior College Athletic Association Region 19 champion ran 27:16.6 over the 8,000-meter course at John Hunt Park in Huntsville, Ala. He was only 22 seconds out of 4th place in a very close group finish.

Bensaoud was a triple All-America last spring at the NJCAA track championships in Utica, N.Y. He was 3rd in the 1,500, 2nd in the 5,000 and anchored the 6th-place 4-by-8. He spent his freshman year at Stony Brook (N.Y.), where he ran one season of indoor track.

Rowan College placed 8th in the country in team scoring in the NJCAA’s Division 3 with 222 points. Harper College of Palatine, Ill., won the team title with 53 points.

Freshman Gavin Casella from Kingsway, sophomore John Schilling from Deptford, freshman Branden Lachowicz from Delsea and sophomore Charlie Hepler from Delsea also scored for RCSJ, and freshman Darius Davis from Kinsway and sophomore Derek Wylie from Gloucester County Tech also ran for the Roadrunners.

West Deptford’s Jacob Cobb, Camden Catholic’s Matthew Denton headed for NCAA Division 3 National Championships!!!!!!!!

West Deptford’s Jacob Cobb and Camden Catholic’s Matthew Denton are headed for the NCAA Division 3 cross country championships this weekend in Central Pennsylvania.

Cobb, a sophomore at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass., and Denton, a senior at Haverford, will race Saturday at the NCAA D-3 Nationals on the 8,000-meter course Big Spring High School in Newville, about 40 miles west of Harrisburg in Cumberland County, Pa.

Both are on teams that won regional championships and received auto bids for nationals. The winners of 10 regions plus 22 at-large teams will compete in Newville. The top 10 individuals in each region who didn’t qualify as part of a team also advanced to next Saturday.

MIT, defending national champs and ranked 3rd nationally, won the East Region in Hopkinton, N.H. Haverford won the Metro Region Championship at DREAM Park in Logan Township.

The Rowan program will be represented by Jacob Riley from North Warren High School in Blairstown, who placed 4th in the Metro Region race at DREAM Park in Logan Township.

Even though Rowan placed 2nd, just six points behind Haverford, the Profs did not receive an at-large team bid.

Stockton will be represented by Eric Ackerman of West Morris Central High in Chester Township, Morris County.

The men’s race is scheduled for 11 a.m. and the women’s race at noon.

Moorestown’s Kate Inglis, Haddonfield’s Katherine Rice, Mainland’s Savannah Hodgens, Cinnaminson’s Stephanie Renouf headed to NCAA Division 3 XC Championships!!!!!!!!

Moorestown’s Kate Inglis, a junior at Catholic University in Washington, received an at-large bid to race in the NCAA Division 3 Championships and leads the South Jersey women’s contingent this weekend in Newville, Pa.

Inglis placed 6th in the NCAA South Region Championships Saturday and the top seven finishers in each of 10 regions who aren’t part of qualifying teams move on to nationals.

Inglis ran an all-course lifetime-best 22:06.1 over 6,000 meters at Berry College in Rome, Ga., and was Catholic’s top finisher.

Her previous 6K PR was 22:35.4 at Division 3 Pre-Nationals on the course adjacent to Big Spring High School in Newville, about 40 miles west of Harrisburg, the site of this weekend’s national championship race.

This will be Inglis’s first trip to NCAAs in either track or cross country. She placed 48th and 46th at XC Regionals as a freshman and sophomore before enjoying a breakthrough season this fall. She placed 2nd in the Landmark Conference Championships in Huntingdon, Pa., behind only Elizabethtown senior Kelty Oaster.

Haddonfield graduate Katherine Rice, a junior at The College of New Jersey, and sophomore Savannah Hodgens from Mainland Regional, advanced to nationals as part of TCNJ’s regional championship team. Rice placed 16th Saturday and was TCNJ’s 4th finisher in 22:57.8, a 6,000 PR for any course, and Hodgens was 37th in 23:36.9 – a minute faster than she ran at regionals last year.

Cinnaminson’s Stephanie Renouf, a freshman at Middlebury (Conn.) College, also qualified as part of Middlebury’s team, which received an at-large bid after placing 5th in the Mideast Region at Stanley Park in Westfield, Mass. Renouf ran 22:57.4, just two seconds off her 6K PR of 22:55.5 from the Connecticut College Invitational in Waterford, Conn., last month.

The Stockton women did not receive an at-large bid to nationals despite placing 2nd to The College of New Jersey in the Metro Region. The Ospreys will be represented by junior Jaelyn Barkley of Belvidere High School in Warren County and sophomore Kayla Kass of County Prep in Jersey City in the women’s race.

Williamstown graduate Anna Sasse, a Rowan junior, missed an at-large individual berth by half a second. The top seven runners in each region advance to nationals and Sasse ran 22:12.3 and was half a second out of 7th. But she ran a 6,000-meter all-course PR, finished in the top 10 at both the NJAC meet and NCAA regionals and has another chance at nationals next fall.

We’ll take a look at the South Jersey men’s contingent headed to Nationals later today,

A look at the Haddonfield boys’ remarkable Meet of Champions top-8 streak!!!!!!

The Haddonfield boys extended their remarkable streak of Meet of Champions top-8 finishes to seven in a row Saturday with their 7th-place finish in the 51st annual MoC at Holmdel.

Including the 2020 race, which was technically an exhibition, Haddonfield has placed 7th or better seven straight years, 10 of the last 11 years and 15 of the last 18 years. Overall, Haddonfield has placed in the top 10 a remarkable 21 times since 1980. Only eight times since 1980 – a span of 44 years – has Haddonfield not raced at the Meet of Champions as a full team.

This is not a parochial school that hand-picks the fastest hotshot middle school runners from a 50-mile radius. This is a small Group 2 school in a community of about 13,000 residents.

Haddonfield was led Saturday by juniors Luke Andresen and Bennett Wright, who placed 45th and 49th in 16:34 and 16:42. Sophomore Ryan Gibson ran 16:49 for 63rd, sophomore Benjamin Andrus ran 16:54 for 71st and senior Liam Dougherty 17:02 for 84th.

Soph Matt Sullivan ran 17:13, giving Haddonfield five underclassmen between 16:34 and 17:13, and junior Reid Gervasi wasn’t far behind at 17:20.

Haddonfield’s 28-second gap from 1 through 5 was smallest in the field of 15 teams. The Bulldogs averaged 16:48 over the hilly, windy 5,000-meter Holmdel County Park course

Haddonfield’s Meet of Champions finishes year-by-year:

2023: 7th
2022: 6th
2021: 3rd
2020: 4th
2019: 3rd
2018: 2nd
2017: 6th
2016: 13th
2015: 4th
2014: 5th
2013: 7th
2012: 13th
2011: —
2010: 2nd
2009: 4th
2008: 4th
2007: 3rd
2006: 3rd
2005: 13th
2004: —
2003: —
2002: 13th
2001: 1st
2000: 10th
1999: —
1998: 11th
1997: 16th
1996: 15th
1995: 10th
1994: —
1993: 18th
1992: —
1991: —
1990: 9th
1989: 5th
1988: 13th
1987: 14th
1986: 8th
1985: 11th
1984: 12th
1983: 19th
1982: 14th
1981: —
1980: 8th
1979: 13th
1978: 12th

Gateway’s Courtney O’Hara of Rowan College Gloucester County earns All-America honors at NJCAA National Championships!!!!!!

Courtney O’Hara, a freshman at Rowan College Gloucester County from Gateway, placed 13th out of nearly 100 runners Saturday at the NJCAA National Championships.

O’Hara earned All-America honors, and the Roadrunners placed 5th in the final team standings with 146 points.

O’Hara ran 20:49.4 over 5,000 meters at John Hunt Park in Huntsville, Ala., earning All-America honors.

What makes her performance so interesting is that there’s barely any record of her running in high school.

O’Hara ran two batch meets for Gateway early in the 2021 season with a PR of 23:36, and she’s listed on MileSplit with two track races, both indoors – a 400 at the Bubble in January of 2019 and an 800 at the Bubble in January 2020.

If there are any additional performances leading up to her breakthrough freshman year at RCGC, I can’t find them.

O’Hara placed 2nd in the Region XIX Championships two weeks ago at Lancaster Central Park in West Lampeter Township, Pa.

Also scoring for RCGC Saturday were sophomore Mackenzie Cochrane of Washington Township [32nd, 22 team points], freshman Alexandra Campo from Woodbury [39th, 28 team points], freshman Madison O’Donnell of Williamstown [48th, 34 team points] and sophomore Susana Serrano of Woodbury [68th, 51 team points]. Sixth runner was Grace Wahl of Washington Township.

West Deptford’s Jacob Cobb helps MIT win 3rd straight NCAA Division 3 East Regional Championship!!!!!!

West Deptford grad Jacob Cobb and the MIT Beavers easily won the NCAA Division 3 East Region Championships Saturday at the Hopkinton (N.H.) Fairgrounds.

Cobb placed 29th out of 229 runners, covering the 6,000-meter course in 25:42.0. That’s less than five seconds off his lifetime-best for any course, a 25:37.3 set at the New England Men’s and Women’s Athletic Conference Championships last month in Attleboro, Mass.

Cobb earned USTFCCCA all-region honors with a top-35 finish.

Massachusets Institiute of Technology of Cambridge, Mass., is ranked 3rd in NCAA Division 3, behind only Wisconsin-La Crosse and North Central of Naperville, Ill. The regional title was MIT’s 3rd in a row and 6th overall.

MIT outscored 2nd-place Tufts of Medford, Mass., 35-57 to win the team title and secure the one automatic berth into NCAA Division 3 nationals. Some 22 at-large berths from non-winning teams in the 10 regions will be announced on Sunday.

Cobb placed 13th late last month in the NEWMAC Championships, where he was the 1st sophomore across the line.

MIT will travel to Newville, Pa., about 40 miles west of Harrisburg, where it will defend its 2022 NCAA Division 3 championship on the course adjacent to Big Spring High School on Saturday.

MIT won last year’s title 82-129 over Wartburg College of Waverly, Iowa, in Lansing, Mich.

This past spring, Cobb was runner-up in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the NEWMAC Championships in Cambridge.

Liliah Gordon, Sofia Day, Maeve Smith, Kerry O’Day and Shaelan McNally make South Jersey history at Meet of Champions!!!!!!!!

Northern Burlington junior Liliah Gordon, Mainland junior Sofia Day, Ocean City junior Maeve Smith, Cherokee senior Kerry O’Day and Paul VI senior Shaelan McNally aren’t teammates, but they combined to make some history Saturday on the rolling hills at Holmdel County Park.

Gordon, Day, Smith, O’Day and McNally became the fastest quintet of South Jersey runners ever in the same race at Holmdel, home of the girls Meet of Champions and state meet for 51 years.

We wrote earlier about Gordon’s 5th-place finish – you can read about that here – but what made this a unique race in Meet of Champions history is that five South Jersey girls broke 19 minutes in the same race.

And they all ran well under 19 minutes.

Day placed 7th with a Holmdel PR of 18:33.64, Smith ran 18:41.37 for 9th place, O’Day took 10th with a Holmdel best of 18:43.56 and McNally ran 18:50.25 for 11th place, also a Holmdel best for her.

Day’s time is No. 2 in Atlantic County history, behind Alyssa Aldridge’s 17:55 to win the 2016 Meet of Champions. Her previous Holmdel best was an 18:49 at the 2021 Meet of Champions. Day now ranks 17th on the all-time South Jersey Holmdel list.

Smith’s 9th-place finish was the best by an Ocean City girl in nine years, since Devin Grisbaum won the 2014 race. She’s the first Ocean City underclassman with a top-10 finish since Brittany Sedberry won the 2004 race. Smith ran slightly faster at states with an 18:33, which places her in a virtual tie with Day in that No. 17 spot.

O’Day also ran slightly faster at states, but she’s now No. 2 on the all-time Cherokee list behind Megan Lacy’s 17:55 in 2010 and she’s No. 4 in Burlington County history, behind Lacy, Gordon and Shawnee’s Casey Doyle [18:38 in 2007]. O’Day is No. 23 on the all-time South Jersey list.

And McNally ran a Holmdel PR, breaking her previous best on the hilly, winding 5,000-meter Holmdel course by five seconds. She ran 18:56 at the 2021 Meet of Champions.

South Jersey came very close to having five girls under 18 minutes 14 years ago, when Chelsea Ley of Kingsway, Megan Venables of Highland and future Olympian Marielle Hall of Haddonfield swept the top three spots in the 2009 race, Ley in 17:55.16, Venables in 18:00.09 and Hall in 18:16.48. Lacy ran 18:47.84 for 7th and Lenape’s Caitlin Orr, who now coaches at Lenape, came across in 12th 19:00.18, just missing sub-19.

The first South Jersey girl to break 19 minutes at Holmdel was Woodstown’s Jamie Weisgerber, who won the state Group 2 meet in 1994 in 18:50.

It wasn’t until 2003 that two South Jersey girls broke 19 minutes in the same race. That was Sedberry – who ran 18:42 to win the race and Highland’s Arianna McKinney, who ran 18:58 for 2nd place.

One year later was the first time three South Jersey girls broke 19: Sedberry in 18:11 with another win, Wright in 18:21 for 2nd and Cherokee’s Lisa Burkholder with an 18:52 for 9th.

And then 2009, with Ley, Venables, Hall and Lacy, was the first year four girls broke 19.

Gordon, Day and Smith were the top three juniors in the race Saturday, and Cherokee’s Megan Niglio [19:17] and Schalick’s Jordan Hadfield [19:25] were the 7th- and 8th-fastest juniors.

Also under 20 Saturday: Williamstown senior Alyssa Boucher [28th in 19:32], Mainland Regional senior Gillian Lovett [30th in 19:36], Haddonfield sophomore Riley Austin [31st in 19:39], Ava Thomas [32nd in 19:40] and Sterling junior Jonalee Adames [35th in 19:43].

Here’s a look at the all-time South Jersey sub-19 list at Holmdel. Please forward corrections and omissions to me in the comment section!

17:28 … Megan Venables [Highland Reg.], 2010 Group 3
17:40 … Michelle Rowen [Washington Twp.], 1982 Meet of Champions
17:44 … Chelsea Ley [Kingsway], 2008 Shore Coaches
17:45 … Briana Gess [Haddonfield], 2013 Meet of Champions
17:55 … Megan Lacy [Cherokee], 2010 Group 4
17:55 … Alyssa Aldridge [Mainland], 2016 Meet of Champions
18:08 … Holly Bischof [Bishop Eustace], 2010 Meet of Champions
18:12 … Brittany Sedberry [Ocean City], 2004 Meet of Champions
18:14 … Liliah Gordon [Northern Burlington], 2023 Group 3
18:16 … Marielle Hall [Haddonfield], 2009 Meet of Champions
18:18 … Theresa Cattuna [Cherry Hill East], 2006 Meet of Champions
18:20 … Devin Grisbaum [Ocean City], 2014 Meet of Champions
18:22 … Vanessa Wright [Haddonfield], 2004 Meet of Champions
18:27 … Erin Donohue [Haddonfield], 1998 Meet of Champions
18:28 … Grace Yoon [Cherry Hill East], 2016 Group 4
18:29 … Rachel Vick [Kingsway], 2016 Group 4
18:33 … Maeve Smith [Ocean City], 2023 Group 3
18:34 … Sofia Day [Mainland Regional], 2023 Meet of Champions
18:38 … Casey Doyle [Shawnee], 2007 Meet of Champions
18:40 … Mindy Rowand [Sterling], 1984 Meet of Champions
18:40 … Dina Iacone [Washington Twp.], 2011 Shore Coaches
18:41 … Shelby Cain [Haddonfield], 2011 Group 2
18:41 … Kerry O’Day [Cherokee], 2023 Meet of Champions
18:43 … Amanda Goetschius [Delsea], 2006 Meet of Champions
18:43 … Nicole Clifford [Cherokee], 2021 Meet of Champions
18:44 … Arianna McKinney [Highland], 2003 Shore Coaches
18:48 … Grace Wassell [Highland], 2021 Meet of Champions
18:49 … Meghan Malloy [Haddonfield], 2011 Meet of Champions
18:49 … Mara Schiffhauer [Seneca], 2013 Meet of Champions
18:49 … Olivia Shafer [Egg Harbor Twp.], 2019 Meet of Champions
18:50 … Dawn Cody [Paul VI], 1982 Meet of Champions
18:50 … Jamie Weisgerber [Woodstown], 1994 Group 2
18:50 … Sarah Naticchia [Haddonfield], 2020 Holmdel Invitational
18:51 … Shaelan McNally [Paul VI], 2023 Meet of Champions
18:52 … Lisa Burkholder [Cherokee], 2004 Meet of Champions
18:53 … Renee Tomlin [Ocean City], 2005 Meet of Champions
18:54 … Madison Coppolino [Sterling], 2017 Meet of Champions
18:57 … Lori Watson [Cherry Hill East], 1983 Meet of Champions
18:58 … Abbey Hartman [Ocean City], 1996 Meet of Champions
18:59 … Monique Purcell [Holy Spirit], 1978 Group 3
18:59 … Wendy Westphal [Highland], 1982 Meet of Championjs
18:59 … Kara Bonner [Shawnee,], 2015 Group 4
18:59 … Alyssa Condell [Timber Creek], 2016 Meet of Champions