St. Augustine’s Julian Onesti runs 3rd-fastest 100 in New Jersey this year with huge PR at Atlantic County Championships!!!!!!

St. Augustine senior Julian Onesti ran within 4-100ths of a second of the Atlantic County 100-meter dash record Tuesday at the Atlantic County Championships.

Onesti ran 10.58 in the 100 trials at Egg Harbor.

There is no wind reading listed in the results, so the performance isn’t eligible for record purposes, but regardless of conditions it’s tied for No. 15 in South Jersey history and just 4-100ths out of the top 10.

Fabian Santiago of Oakcrest set the Atlantic County record of 10.54 at 2012 South Jersey Group 3 Sectionals, also at Egg Harbor. The fastest wind-legal time in county history is Santiago’s 10.59 at 2012 Meet of Champions at Old Bridge.

Onesti’s previous PR was 10.79 from FAT Wednesday at Cherokee in April. Indoors, he ran 6.42 and placed 4th at the Meet of Champions in the 55. That’s 12th-fastest in South Jersey history and fastest ever by any Cape-Atlantic Conference sprinter.

Onesti’s 10.58 is No. 3 in New Jersey this year and fastest by any South Jersey sprinter.

I have no clue when the final is coming up (thanks, “Elitefeats”), and I don’t know if I’ll be around to write about it if and when it does happen. Hopefully, he runs faster and we can write about it late tonight or tomorrow!

South Jersey All-Time 100-Meter Dash List
10.18 … Malachi James [Burlington City], 2024
10.22 … Ajani Dwyer [Washington Twp.], 2024
10.35 … Jamar Ervin [Camden], 2000
10.36 … Damiere Byrd [Timber Creek], 2010
10.45 … James Townsend [Holy Cross], 2003
10.47 … Dennis Mitchell [Edgewood], 1983
10.47 … James Brown [Glassboro], 2009
10.49 … Jonathan Taylor [Salem], 2017
10.53 … Todd Dutch [Washington Twp.], 2001
10.54 … Fabian Santiago [Oakrest], 2010
10.55 … Todd Dutch [Washington Twp.], 2002
10.56 … Yashahya Brown [Washington Twp.], 2025
10.57 … Jamil Benjamin [Cumberland Regional], 2006
10.57 … Geoff Navaro [Absegami], 2008
10.58 … Anthony Miles [Winslow Twp.], 2003
10.58 … James Burris [Moorestown], 2022
10.58 … Julian Onesti [St. Augustine], 2025
10.59 … Lloyd Shambry [Gateway], 2025
10.60 … Robert Page [Kingsway], 2008
10.60 … Marquis Bonds [Millville], 2007
10.60 … Shawney Kersey [Woodbury], 2009
10.60 … Thomas Hampton [Clayton], 2019

In just her second lifetime multi, TCNJ’s Samantha Magin from Cinnaminson records SEVEN PRs on way to 2nd place in heptathlon at NJAC Championships!!!!!!

She never placed in a sectional meet. She never placed in the Burlington County Open. She never broke 28 seconds in the 200, long jumped 15 feet or threw the shot put 23 feet. She never even picked up a javelin and never ran the high hurdles.

Samantha Magin’s track career at Cinnaminson may not have been the best ever, but she had one thing a lot of other athletes don’t have. The determination to keep going.

Magin is now a sophomore at The College of New Jersey and this weekend she placed 2nd in the heptathlon at the New Jersey Athletic Conference Championships at her home facility in Ewing.

Magin scored 3,757 points in her 2nd lifetime attempt at a multi and placed 2nd to teammate Sarah Scepkowski, who won the event with 4,048 points. Magin’s score is 6th-highest in TCNJ history.

How important was Magin to TCNJ this weekend? She scored eight points in the heptathlon, and TCNJ won the team title by 3 ½ points.

This is all new for Magin, who didn’t even enter the pentathlon at the NJAC Indoor Championships in February at the Ott Center.

But she gave multis a chance a couple weeks ago and scored 3,332 in her first try at a home meet. She tried again this weekend and PR’d by more than 400 points.

Magin had the top marks in the competition in the 200 [25.75] and concluding 800 [2:27.97] and also ran 17.80 in the hurdles, high jumped 4-4 ¼, threw the shot 28-8 ¼, long jumped 15-3 ½ and threw the javelin 77-3.

She recorded six PRs along the way, setting lifetime bests in every event but the hurdles. She ran 2-100ths of a second faster in her first multi last month. Considering her total score is also a PR, that’s seven PRs in two days.

That’s not all. Magin also anchored TCNJ’s winning 400-meter relay team, which ran a season-best 48.54. Mackenzie Burke from Bergen Tech, Rukky Daranijo from Trenton and Petra Doherty from Lawrence ran the first three legs.

Other TCNJ scorers from South Jersey:

 Sophomore Maya Scannell from Absegami placed 2nd in the pole vault with a 10-11 ¾ clearance. Stockton junior Eva Morrison from Mainland Regional won at 11-1 ¾, making it a 1-2 Atlantic County finish.

 Freshman Ella Feehan from Brigantine and Atlantic County Tech placed 8th in the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 13:34.70.

Hot 800s from Hope Edwards, Grace Gutowski, Payton Derer at Haddonfield Distance Night!!!!!!

Freshmen Hope Edwards and Payton Derer ran the fastest 800s by Moorestown girls in 38 years Monday evening at Haddonfield Distance Night. And Paul VI sophomore Grace Gutowski finished in between them.

Edwards won the 800 in 2:15.00 and Derer was 3rd in 2:15.92, the two fastest Moorestown times since Becky Wells ran 2:14.3 when she placed 2nd to Jasmin Jones of Hackensack in the 1987 Meet of Champions. Wells went on to run for Princeton.

Edwards broke the Burlington County freshman record by 1-100th of a second. Shawnee’s Julia Despirito ran 2:15.01 at the 2011 state Group 4 meet at Old Bridge. Derer’s time is 3rd-fastest all-time among Burlington County freshmen.

They’re the two-fastest freshman times in New Jersey this year and fastest by any freshman from South Jersey since Washington Township’s Kami Joi Hickson – now competing for Maryland – ran 2:12.04 at the 2017 Meet of Champions at Northern Burlington.

Gutowski  finished in between the two Quakers, taking second in 2:15.39, a big lifetime best for her as well.

Edwards’ previous PR was 2:20.38 from South Jersey Elite last week at Delsea. Derer’s previous PR was 2:18.39 at FAT Wednesday at Cherokee last month. And Gutowski’s was 2:17.58 indoors in March in Boston.

All three negative-split the race. Edwards was out in 68.15 and came back in 66.85, Gutowski ws out in 68.03 and back in 67.36 and Derer was out in 68.24 and back in 67.68.

Edwards, Gutowski and Derer are now No. 2, 3 and 4 in South Jersey this year, behind only Eastern junior Natalie Dumas, who ran 2:14.47 at Delsea last week.

THREE WINS, A MEET RECORD, A ROWAN SCHOOL RECORD AND A TOP-3 DIVISION 3 MARK FOR TIMBER CREEK’S NYLA JONES AT NJAC CHAMPIONSHIPS!!!!!!!!!!!!

It was quite a weekend at the New Jersey Athletic Conference Championships for Rowan freshman Nyla Jones from Timber Creek, with three wins, a meet record, a school record and a top-3 national ranking.

On a breezy, rainy day at The College of New Jersey in Ewing, Jones won the 100-meter hurdles in 14.35 and came back to win the 400-meter intermediates in a meet-record 1:00.42 and then lead off Rowan’s winning 4-by-4.

We’ll start with the intermediates because this was a remarkable performance, especially considering the conditions when she raced Sunday afternoon.

Jones ran her first collegiate intermediates race just two weeks ago and ran 1:02.93 in Baltimore. Her 2nd was the trials on Saturday, and she led all qualifiers with a 1:01.40, just below her high school PR of 1:01.44 from South Jersey Group 3 Sectionals last spring at Delsea.

In the final, she ran away from a very good field, and her 1:00.42 broke the meet record of 1:01.23 set in 2023 by TCNJ’s Eliza Bruncaj in Mahwah.

It’s No. 3 in NCAA Division 3 this year, behind only Ren Brown of the University of Chicago, who ran 59.25 last month in Wheaton, Ill., and Fiona Mejico of Colby, who ran 59.79 in March in Atlanta.

Jones broke the Rowan record of 1:01.33 set by Woodstown’s Molly Lodge last May in Cortland, N.Y.

Lodge won the 200 Sunday in 24.19 (No. 11 in Division 3 this year) and was 2nd in the 400 in this year’s meet and ran the second leg on that winning 4-by-4. She didn’t run the intermediates but she is No. 8 nationally at 1:01.69 from a meet in Daytona Beach, Fla., last month. There’s a chance both will line up for the intermediates at NCAAs later this month in Geneva, Ohio.

There were no trials in the highs because only seven runners entered, and one less race probably didn’t hurt Jones’ bid for a triple win. She ran away with the final, winning by five meters over Mackenzie Burke of TCNJ, who was 2nd in 15.11. Her 14.35 isn’t far off her 14.27 PR in much better conditions in Daytona Beach last month. And well under her 14.55 high school PR. She’s No. 1 in D-3 in the highs and 3rd-fastest freshman.

In the 4-by-4, Jones, Lodge, Rowan freshman Paige Franklin from Williamstown and senior Nevaeh Lorjuste from Triton won in 3:49.32, with Lorjuste anchoring in 55.07. That’s the fastest time at the NJAC meet since the 2015 Rowan team with Jessalynn Wright from Cherokee, Shailah Williams from Pemberton, Tashay Wilson from Hillside and Melirah Searcy from Edison ran 3:48.70.

Rowan is No. 13 nationally this year with its 3:48.10 with Jones, senior Jasmine Broadway from Burlington Township, Ava Reilly from Toms River East and Lodge at Penn.

As for Jones, she’s already a four-time conference champion. She won the 60-meter highs indoors at the Ott Center in 8.95.

She’s also the fastest NJAC freshman in either hurdles race as far back as TFRRS records go, which is the 2013 season.

Natalie Dumas runs a rare 200 and records the 11th-fastest time in South Jersey history!!!!!!!!!!!!

Eastern junior Natalie Dumas took advantage of the South Jersey Open Saturday to run a rare 200, and she turned in the 11th-fastest time in South Jersey history.

In her first outdoor non-dual-meet 200 in a year, Dumas ran 24.06, missing Olympic gold medalist English Gardner’s school record by only 2-100ths of a second. Gardner ran 24.04 when she won the state Group 4 title at Egg Harbor in 2010.

Dumas’s previous 200 PR was 24.41 indoors at the Ott Center in January. Her outdoor PR was 25.29 at last year’s Camden County Championships at Haddon Township. Her 24.06 is 3rd-fastest in New Jersey this year, behind South Jersey sprinters Ryan Jennings of Timber Creek [23.46 in Walnut, Calif.] and Sianni Wynn [23.57 at Delsea].

She also won the 100 in 12.23 in her first venture ever at that distance. That’s No. 5 in South Jersey this year.

Dumas has quite possibly the greatest elite range of any athlete in South Jersey history. Who else has ever run flat races from 100 to 1,600 in 12.23, 24.06, 53.16, 2:07.68 and 5:05.92? In addition to 58.32 and a national title in the 400 hurdles?

Dumas is now No. 8 in state history in the outdoor 400, 9th-fastest in the indoor 800, 4th-fastest in the indoor 400 and 4th-fastest in state history in the intermediate hurdles.

Izzy Deal from Washington Twp. bombs No. 9 shot put in NCAA Division 3 this year, smashes Rowan school record at NJAC meet!!!!!!

Washington Township’s Izzy Deal, a senior at Rowan, moved into the NCAA Division 3 top 10 in the shot put Sunday at the New Jersey Athletic Conference Championships at The College of New Jersey in Ewing.

Deal threw a lifetime-best and school-record 46-4 for her 2nd win of the weekend. She won the javelin on Saturday.

Deal came into the meet with a PR of 45-8, which she had hit twice – once at last year’s NJAC meet in Galloway Township and again last month in Collegeville. That was the previous Rowan record as well.

She surpassed that with a 46-2 on her 3rd attempt Sunday and then topped that with a 46-4 on her 4ththrow. She added a 45-8 ½ on her 5th attempt, which means she recorded the three best throws of her life on Sunday.

Her 46-4 is No. 9 in NCAA Division 3 this year and the best throw in the NJAC in 16 years, since Monique Riddick of Montclair State and Bishop Ahr High School in Edison set the meet record of 48-9 ½ in 2009 before transferring to Indiana.

Deal also won the javelin on Saturday for the second year in a row with a 128-6 throw.She’s now won eight conference titles – three at Ursinus and five at Rowan.

2021 Centennial Conference outdoors: 1st shot put [38-4], 1st javelin [136-6]
2023 Centennial Conference outdoors : 1st javelin [140-5]
2024 NJAC indoors: 1st shot put [44-0 ½]
2024 NJAC outdoors; 1st shot put [45-8], 1st javelin [133-9]
2025 NJAC outdoors: 1st shot put [46-4], 1st javelin [128-6]

Isaiah Shockley becomes Pemberton’s first BCSL 800 winner in 40 years with huge PR!!!!!!!

Big 800 PR for Pemberton junior Isaaiah Shockley Saturday at the Burlington County League Championships at Pennsauken.

Shockley won the Patriot Division 800 in 1:56.82, dropping his PR from 1:58.73 from last year’s South Jersey Group 3 Sectionals at Delsea. He ran 1:58.79 indoors when he placed 2nd at Group 2 Sectionals at the Bubble.

Shockley’s time is 3rd-fastest in South Jersey this year, behind only Brandon Lyons of Cherry Hill East [1:53.77] and Kingsway soph Ryan Duffy [1:56.03], both at South Jersey Elite on Thursday at Delsea. It’s also 3rd-fastest in New Jersey Group 3, behind two Bernards runners – junior Brody Watt [1:55.14] and senior Michael Dooley [1:55.17].

It looks like Shockley’s time is fastest by a Pemberton half-miler since Bryant Walker ran 1:53.54 when he placed 5th at the 1983 Meet of Champions. That was the same race Willingboro’s Vance Watkins ran 1:50.8, placing 2nd to John Carlotti of Bernards.

He’s the first Pemberton runner to win a BCSL title since Ira Joseph ran 1:58.90 won the Liberty 800 in 1985.

Shockley was out in 57.56 and came back in 59.26. He finished 45 meters ahead of the field.

Rowan freshman Nyla Jones from Timber Creek runs 7th-fastest 400 hurdles time in Division 3 at NJAC Championships!!!!!!

In her second collegiate intermediate hurdles race, Rowan freshman Nyla Jones from Timber Creek ran a PR and the 7th-fastest time in NCAA Division 3 this year on Saturday.

Jones ran 1:01.40 in the prelims of the 400 hurdles at the New Jersey Athletic Conference Championships at The College of New Jersey in Ewing. That’s the 2nd-fastest time in meet history, behind the meet-record 1:01.23 by TCNJ’s Eliza Bruncaj in the 2023 final. Bruncaj was one of two other hurdlers to run sub 63 in the trials. Emma Petrolia of Stockton ran 1:02.36 and Bruncaj 1:02.88.

That 1:01.40 is fastest in NCAA Division 3 this year by a freshman.

Jones’ ran her previous intermediate hurdles PR of 1:01.44 at South Jersey Group 3 sectionals at Delsea last May. In her only previous college 400IH race she ran 1:02.93 in Baltimore two weeks ago.

Jones also isn’t far off the Rowan school record of 1:01.33 run last year by Woodstown’s Molly Lodge in Cortland, N.Y., last May. She ran 1:01.69 in Daytona Beach, Fla., last month but did not run the intermediates Friday, instead advancing in both the 200 [25.00] and 400 [58.49].

On the 2025 NCAA Division 3 list, Jones is No. 7, one spot ahead of Lodge, who’s No. 8. Jones is also No. 20 in the 100-meter highs at 14.27 from last month in Daytona Beach. She won the highs at the indoor NJAC meet at the Ott Center in February and is scheduled to race in the final on Sunday (there were no women’s 100 hurdles trials). She’s No. 3 among freshmen in D-3.

Jones’ times are both fastest by an NJAC freshman since at least 2012, or as far back as the TFRRS database goes.

Weather permitting, the highs final will be at 2:30 p.m. and the intermediates final at 4:05 p.m.

BRIDGETON’S SHAMAR LOVE GOES WILD AS ROWAN SPRINTERS TAKE OVER AT NJAC CHAMPIONSHIPS!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rowan senior Shamar Love from Bridgeton turned in a historic sprint double Saturday.

Love led all qualifiers in both the 100- and 200-meter dashes at the New Jersey Athletic Conference Championships at The College of New Jersey in Ewing.

Love ran 10.46 in the 100 trials with a legal 1.1 meters-per-second tailwind, breaking the Rowan school record of 10.56 set by Sterling graduate Jah’mere Beasley at the 2023 NJAC Championships in Mahwah. His time is No. 18 in NCAA Division 3 this year and just 4-100ths outside the top 10.

He led all qualifiers in the 200 with a 21.18, which is No. 14 in Division 3 athis year and No. 2 in Rowan history behind Beasley’s 20.91at NCAA Division 3 Nationals in Geneva, Ohio, in 2022.

Love is now one of only six sprinters in NCAA Division 3 who has run sub-10.50 and sub-21.20 this year. The others are Sam Blaskowski of Wisconsin-La Crosse [10.09, 20.33], Dylan Doss of Illinois College [10.44, 20.85], Kevin Arthur of St. John’s Minnesota [10.32, 21.04], Lucas Fadden of Grinnell [10.42, 21.10] and Jahmal Jones of Ferrum [10.27, 21.11].

Love never broke 11 or 24 seconds in high school. He began his college career at Westminster before arriving in Glassboro in time for the 2023 indoor season. That spring he won his 1st All-America honor on Rowan’s 2nd-place 4-by-1 team at NCAA Division 3 nationals in Rochester and last spring he won his 2nd when Rowan took 5th at nationals in Myrtle Beach.

Rowan has had 10 sprinters run sub-10.80 with legal wind, and six of them are currently on the team. Similarly, they’ve had 15 sprinters run sub-21.80 and six of them are currently on the team. Some 16 of 25 qualifiers in the 100, 200 and 400 are from Rowan.

Love is one of a bottomless well of Rowan sprinters from South Jersey who had huge days Saturday on Day 1 of the NJAC meet:

➡️ Evan Corcoran, Jr. [Kingsway]: Corcoran ran 21.39 to qualify for the 100 final. That’s 5th-fastest in Rowan history and drops his PR from 21.59 from last spring in Waco, Texas. He also advanced in the 100 with a PR 10.61, 3rd-fastest in school history behind Love and Beasley. His previous PR was 10.63 from last spring at Selinsgrove, Pa.

➡️ Robert McKinney, Sr. [Highland]: McKinney won his 200 heat in 21.45. He’s No. 3 in Rowan history with his 21.29 from a meet last month in Atlanta. He also ran 10.72, just off his PR of 10.71 from Atlanta.

➡️ Dominic George, Sr. [Cheltenham, Pa.]: George ran two PRs and advanced to both finals with a 21.56 and a 10.79. His previous PRs were 21.74 from last weekend and 10.85 from last month. He didn’t run sub-22 until March and he didn’t run sub-11 until two weeks ago.

➡️ Julian Conigliarto, Fr. [Delsea]: PR’d with an 10.84 to advance to the 100 final and ran sub-22 in the 200 at 21.92 but missed advancing by 8-100ths of a second.

➡️ James Coleman, Sr. [Audubon]: Advanced in both the 200 [21.74] and 400 [48.90]. Also qualifying for the final in the 400: Freshman Luke Halbruner from Ocean City [48.43], freshman Lowrentzky Ambroise [48.49], junior Jarquil Young from Sterling [49.05] and senior Samael Milevoix [49.21].

➡️ A few other top Rowan sprinters didn’t compete Saturday. Freshman Rajahn Dixon from Eastern, coming off an injury layoff, was up the road at Princeton and ran 21.62 in the 200 at the Larry Ellis Invitational, Rancocas Valley’s Masai Byrd [10.77, 22.01] didn’t compete and sophomore Eli Hendricks from Penns Grove [10.63, 21.34] was also out Saturday.

ROWAN’S JAMIR BROWN FROM RIVERSIDE DESTROYS NCAA DIVISION 3 110 HURDLES RECORD, POSTS FASTEST TIME BY ANY COLLEGE FRESHMAN IN ANY DIVISION THIS YEAR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Jamir Brown, who ran the fastest indoor hurdles race in NCAA Division 3 history in December, is now the fastest outdoor hurdler in Division 3 history.

Brown, a Rowan freshman from Riverside, ran a wind-legal 13.60 in the 110-meter hurdles trials on Day 1 of the New Jersey Athletic Conference Championships at The College of New Jersey in Ewing Saturday.

That broke the D-3 record of 13.72 set in 2021 by Taylor Rooney of Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Paul, Minn., at the 2021 NCAA Division 3 Championships in Greensboro, N.C.

Brown’s previous PR was a 13.79 two weeks ago in Atlanta. The wind reading was +1.2 on his record-setting race.

Indoors, Brown ran 7.72 at Ocean Breeze, breaking the Division 3 record 7.75 set by Salisbury’s Luke Campbell in 2014 in Lincoln, Neb.

Brown’s time is fastest by any college freshman this year, including all divisions. Previous fastest was a 13.66 by Matthew Sullivan of Hinds Community College in Raymond, Miss., at a meet last month in Ruston, La.

His time is No. 25 among all U.S. men this year and 7th-fastest ever run by a South Jersey native. It’s 2nd-fastest ever by a Burlington County hurdler behind Willingboro’s Isaac Williams, who ran 13.43 at the 2016 Mt. SAC Relays in Norwalk, Calif.

Rowan had the four-fastest hurdles qualifiers for Saturday’s final. Junior Jason Agyemang ran 13.77, which would have been 3rd-fastest in D-3 history if it wasn’t wind-aided (and is 5th-fastest in any conditions), and junior Kwaku Nkrumah ran 14.17. Willingboro’s Anaias Williams tied his PR with a 14.29 with legal wind.

Brown, Agyemang, Nkrumah and Williams are currently No. 1, No. 2, No. 5 and No. 11 in NCAA Division 3 this year.

All-Time South Jersey 110-Meter Hurdles List
12.94 … Jack Pierce [Woodbury], June 22, 1996, Atlanta
13.12 … Anwar Moore [Camden], May 5, 2007, Modesto, Calif.
13.43 … Isaac Williams [Willingboro], April 16, 2016, Walnut, Calif.
13.48 … Sincere Rhea [St. Augustine], May 12, 2023, Raleigh, N.C. [+1.2]
13.51 … Martin Booker [Camden], June 7, 1986, Indianapolis
13.54 … Sultan Tucker [Delsea], May 22, 2004, St-Martin, France
13.60 … Jamir Brown [Riverside], May 3, 2025, Ewing
13.77 … Jeffrey Young [Camden], May 11, 2022, Bloomington, Ind.
13.81 … Anthony Acklin [Triton], May 13, 2005, Cedar Falls, Iowa [+2.0]
13.82 … John Sease [Willingboro], March 26, 1982, El Paso, Texas
13.82 … Yashahya Brown [Washington Twp.], April 12, 2025, Tampa

All-Time Rowan Wind-Legal 110 Hurdles List
13.60 … Jamir Brown, May 3, 2025, Ewing [+1.2]
13.77 … Kwaku Nkrumah , May 25, 2024, Myrtle Beach [+1.2]
13.80 … Jason Agyemang, Myrtle Beach, S.C., May 25, 2004 [+1.2]
13.90 … Garry Moore, N/A, May 27, 1982
14.01 … Marquise Young Galloway, May 5, 2024 [+0.8]
14.01 … Stanley Moore, May 28, 1983
14.22 … Leon Devero, May 30, 1981
14.23 … David Benjamin, Philadelphia, May 26, 2017 [+2.0]
14.24 … Bobby Cooks, La Crosse, Wisc., May 26, 2018 [+1.0]
14.27 … Chase Toliver, Alliance, Ohio, May 26, 2017 [+2.0]
14.28 … Tyler Garland, Cortland, N.Y., May 16, 2019 [+1.0]
14.29 … Anaias Hughes, NJAC, May 3, Ewing [+1.2]