Dylan Hasty, Molly Mills, Madison Kelsey lead Haddonfield girls to huge team victory at Bowdoin Park Classic!!!!!!!!

Freshman Dylan Hasty, junior Molly Mills and junior Madison Kelsey finished in the top 10 and the Haddonfield girls romped to the team title in the Varsity I race Saturday morning at the Bowdoin Park Classic in Wappingers Falls, N.Y.

Hasty placed 5th in 20:04 over 5,000 meters at Bowdoin Park, Mills ran 20:11 for 7th and Kelsey ran 20:17 for 1.0th.

Haddonfield, ranked 9th in New Jersey, went 1-3-6-8-9-(11) in team scoring and defeated Washingtonville High of Blooming Grove, Orange County, N.Y., 27-112.

Junior Dylan Gervasi, freshman Tatum Russo and junior Harper Benjamin ran 13th, 14th and 16th in 21:00, 21:05 and 21:16, giving Haddonfield six in the top 14 in a 72-second span.

In the boys Varsity II race, Haddonfield senior Ryan Gibson ran 16:13 and placed 5th and Haddonfield was 4th as as team.

Haddon Township’s Jimmy Clauson breaks 17 for 1st time to win Colonial Conference batch meet at Pennypacker!!!!!!

Haddon Township seniors Jimmy Clauson and Shaun Maloney broke up a Haddonfield pack by placing 1st and 4th in a Colonial Conference batch meet Wednesday at Pennypacker Park in Haddonfield and Cherry Hill.

Haddonfield went 2-3-5-6-7-8-9-11-14-15-16-17, but Clauson was 1st across the line of 84 finishers in 16:44 and Maloney was 4th in 16:51.

It was Clauson’s first 5,000 on any course under 17 minutes. His previous all-course PR was a 17:19 in October 2023 on the same course. Maloney has run 16:47 – that was from DREAM Park in Logan Township last November, when he was 2nd in the South Jersey Group 1 race.

Seniors Peter Simpson and Ryan Gibson from No. 2-ranked Haddonfield placed 2nd and 3rd in 16:50.

In 5th through 9th for the Bulldogs were senior Michael Sinnes [16:53], junior Luke Patterson [17:16], senior Luke Andresen [17:17], senior Brandon Stoner [17:18] and junior Owen Snyder [17:19].

Also in the top 10 was Gloucester senior Vincent Kelly, 10th in 17:20.

Audubon senior Riley Fayer won the girls race in 19:50, followed by four Haddonfield runners: senior Sofia Conroy [20:24], junior Saya Sood [20:42], senior Elizabeth Pappas [20:45] and senior Chloe Rusc [21:22].

The rest of the top 10 looked like this: Haddon Township junior Tanner Lajoie [21:32], Haddonfield junior Grace McCool [21:42] and Audubon’s junior Lydia Gravante [21:52], junior Isabella Legatie [21:52] and freshman Emma Camm [21:52].

Hammonton’s Ava Salita leads the pack in tri-meet with Cedar Creek and Millville!!!!!!

Hammonton junior Ava Salita edged Cedar Creek junior Lisette Echevarria by three seconds to win a tri-meet with Millville.

Salita ran 22:26 and finished 10 meters ahead of Echevarria, who was 2nd in 22:29.

The versatile Salita has run 62.66 for 400 meters, long jumped 16-2 ½ and high jumped 5-0 in addition to running XC.

Junior Lacie Denmead and freshman Maya Kelley placed 3rd and 4th for Cedar Creek, and sophomore Jenny Rae, senior Sabrine Ghazaz and seniorKailey Wagner ran 6th, 7th and 8th.

Also in the top 10 were Hammonton’s sophomore Riley Raffensperger in 5th, senior Lillian Reigel in 9th and sophomoreAdriella Santos in 10th.

Millville’s top finishers were sophomore Jamya Rhett and junior Yamilet Carrasco-Soriano in 13th and 14th.

West Deptford’s Jacob Cobb helps No. 16 MIT win Wesleyan Cardinal Invite!!!!!!

Senior Jacob Cobb from West Deptford was MIT’s 5th man at the Wesleyan Cardinal Invitational Saturday in Middleton, Ct.

MIT, ranked 16th nationally in NCAA Division 3, packed its five scorers in 22 seconds and won the team title 44-44 on a 6th-man tiebreaker with host Wesleyan. MIT’s 6th runner beat No. 20 Wesleyan’s by 24 seconds and finished 11 places ahead.

Cobb ran 25:05 over 8,000 meters at Long Lane Farm and placed 13th of 100 finishers but only 28 seconds behind overall winner Dylan Cote, a Wesleyan sophomore.

Click to access wesfuhrman8kxccoursemap_men.pdf

Cobb, an 8:53.62 steeplechaser last spring, ran just three seconds off his 8,000 all-course PR of 25:02, set last November at the Division 3 Championships in Terre Haute, Ind., where he was MIT’s second finisher.

MIT’s top five Saturday ran between 24:43 and 25:05. MIT is ranked No. 2 in the USTFCCCA NCAA Division 3 East Region, behind Tufts.

Rutgers-Camden’s Jacob Dinerman from Haddon Township wins Osprey Invite, Washington Twp.’s Ally Wernik helps Rowan win women’s race!!!!!!

Rutgers-Camden’s Jacob Dinerman from Haddon Township outraced TCNJ’s Brandon Chen to win the Osprey Open Saturday in Galloway Township.

Dinerman ran 25:07 on Stockton University’s 8,000-meter course, only 10 seconds off his all-course PR of 24:57 set last October at a meet at DREAM Park in Logan Township. There were over 160 starters in the race.

Dinerman, also the Haddon Township coach, edged Chen, the NJAC 5,000 runner-up last spring, by five meters. Chen finished 2nd in 25:08.

Dinerman last year was the NJAC mile champion indoors and 1,500 champ outdoors.

TCNJ edged Moravian 35-44 to win the team title, with Rowan 3rd with 75 points.

Moravian and Rowan were ranked No. 1 and No. 2 in this week’s United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association NCAA Division 3 Metro Region poll, with TCNJ 5th.

Rowan’s No. 1 runner was Haddon Heights graduate Colin Patterson, who placed 6thin 25:16, and their No. 2 runner was Haddon Township’s Matthew Conway, who ran 25:27 for 9th.

Rowan seniors Sean Hice from Washington Township, Scott Hubbard from Audubon and Anthony Faust from Bishop Eustace ran 19th, 20th and 21st in 26:33, 26:34 and 26:47 and were the Profs’ 3rd, 4th and 5th runners.

In the women’s race, Rowan junior Ally Wernik from Washington Township placed 7th in 23:10 over 6,000 meters, helping the Profs win the team title, 43-65, over TCNJ. Rowan and TCNJ are ranked 2nd and 3rd in the Metro Region behind Swarthmore.

Stockton junior Maddy Valesek from Shawnee took 11th in 23:38 and TCNJ senior Savannah Hodgens of Mainland Regional was 15th in 23:47.

Also, Stockton sophomore Paige McCabe from Moorestown finished 31st, TCNJ sophomore Taylor Rooney from Egg Harbor Township was 32nd, Jefferson’s 6thrunner was freshman Kylee Black of Vineland, who placed 33rd, Stockton freshman Madison Pratt from Absegami took 34th and Stockton junior Sarah Rutledge from Egg Harbor placed 37th.

Overall winner was Rowan’s Gabriella Pagano from Pope John XXIII in Sparta, who ran 22:26.

There were over 150 runners in the women’s race.

Boston University’s Abby Waddington runs huge all-course 6,000 PR, takes 2nd out of nearly 300 runners at Corsair Invite!!!!!!

Clearview’s Abby Waddington ran a huge 6,000-meter all-course PR Saturday morning when she placed 2nd out of nearly 300 runners at the UMass Dartmouth Corsair Invitational.

Waddington, a junior at Boston University, ran 21:15 on Dartmouth’s course in Hanover, N.H.

Her previous 6,000 PR was a 21:47 in November2023 at NCAA Northeast Regionals at Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx.

Waddington took 2nd to Brown senior Nimrit Ahuja, who ran 21:03.

East Stroudsburg’s 1st finisher was junior Payton Falkenstein from Burlington Township High School, who placed 14th overall in 21:53.

Villanova’s Maeve Smith from Ocean City finishes in top 10 at Main Line Invite in her 1st college race!!!!!!

Terrific college debut Friday for Villanova freshman Maeve Smith from Ocean City at the Main Line Invitational at Haverford.

In her 1st race as a Wildcat, Smith placed 10th out of nearly 100 runners in 18:16 and was Villanova’s 5th finisher.

This was Smith’s 1st race since she ran a 4:53.27 full mile [equivalent of 4:51.57 for 1,600 meters] at West Philly Nationals on June 21, 10th-fastest in South Jersey.

Smith also ran 10:32.54 slast spring, also 10th-fastest in South Jersey history. She ran 17:08.01 for 5,000 meters, 4th-fastest in South Jersey history and 12th-fastest in state history. She’s the only girl from South Jersey [and one of only four from New Jersey] to run that fast for all three races.

Villanova won the team title 38-41 over Penn.

Next for Villanova is the Paul Short Run on Lehigh’s 6,000-meter course in Bethlehem and partially in Lower Saucon Township.

Villanova is ranked 6th in the most recent USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Region poll and 2nd among Big East schools. The USTFCCCA is the United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association.

Sterling graduate Cara Coppolino, a sophomore at La Salle, placed 25th in 19:12 and was the Explorers’ 3rd finisher.

Lehigh’s 3rd finisher in the men’s race was Derek Coceano, a junior from Cinnaminson. He placed 40th overall in 20:53 over four miles.

Williamstown’s Dominic Burgio, Logan Pavelik top South Jersey runners at Stockton’s Osprey Invitational!!!!!!

Williamstown seniors Dominic Burgio and Logan Pavelik were the top South Jersey placers Friday afternoon at the Osprey High School Invitational in Galloway Township.

Burgio covered the flat, fast 5,000-meter Stockton University course in 15:56 and Pavelik ran 16:07.

Gavin Oliver of Donovan Catholic in Toms River ran 15:44.56, just off the course record of 15:39.71 set at the 2021 Cape Atlantic Championships by Mainland’s Linden Wineland.

Other South Jersey runners in the top 10 were Washington Township sophomore Trevor Szilier [5thin 16:15], Cherry Hill West senior Rex Takakjy [6th in 16:23], Cherokee junior Gavin Danielewicz [8th in 16:32] and Eastern junior Timothy Shack [10th in 16:38].

Also under 17 minutes: Egg Harbor senior Matthew Reed [11th, 16:40], Cherokee junior Leo Vyvyan [13th, 16:44], Egg Harbor sophomore Liam Aspenberg [14th, 16:45], Woodstown senior Karson Chew [17th, 16:49] and Egg Harbor junior Daniel Svec [18th, 16:50].

‘It means the world:’ Curtis Thompson talks bronze medal, breakthrough 2025 season and the future

Curtis Thompson bombed that 284-4 on his first throw at the World Championships and that put the rest of the field in chase mode.

And when it began raining halfway through the competition, that made chose mode miuch more difficult.

Thompson’s 284-4 hung on for third place, a bronze medal and made the 2014 Florence graduate the first American in 18 years to reach the podium at an international championship meet.

As the conditions grew worse, Thompson’s 284-4 had a better and better chance to hold up for third. Nobody in the field had their best throw in the 5th or 6th round.

“It did feel like, man, that’s gonna maybe help me a little bit with these guys chasing me,” Thompson said in an interview that appears on RunnersPace.

“I got a little excited because I looked up and I was like, it feels like a day in practice throwing in the rain, trying to figure out where the lightning’s hitting to make sure I either go inside or don’t. But it’s all part of sports.”

Thompson generally hasn’t had his best throws on his first attempts. His previous best 1st throw was a 274-11 in Lausanne, Switzerland, in 2022.

“I expected 90 [meters, 295-3] to take the medal,” he said. “So expectations are really high to try and get a medal. So was I satisfied with that (first throw)? Of course. It was a great start.”

Thompson is only the third American ever to medal at Worlds and the first since Breaux Greer took 3rd in 2007. His 284-4 is the 2nd-best throw ever by an American at the World Championships.

“It means the world,” Thompson said in an interview on the athletics web site of his alma mater, Mississippi State. “I’m extremely happy to have been able to throw well and bring home the world bronze.

“I was not the favorite, but I always believed in myself. I always try to win, no matter what, no matter who’s there. I came here to get a medal, and I made it. I had ups and downs during my preparation, but I kept trusting the process and I knew I was ready for this moment.”

Thompson had thrown 275 feet just twice before this year, a 276-4 in the Bahamas in August 2022 and 287-9 in East Stroudsburg in July 2022. He surpassed 275 feet eight times this year, including three times in Tokyo – 277-11 in Tuesday’s qualifying and a 279-10 on his 3rd throw Wednesday.

Thompson had 10 of the 14-best throws by an American this year and now owns three of the top 11 throws ever by Americans.

“For the past, I don’t know how many years, every meet I go into, I expect to try and get a medal, no matter who’s there,” he said. “And to be able to execute this year, very, very happy with the way we put together, me and my team, put everything together.”

Worlds capped a remarkable year for Thompson, who won his 5th U.S. title and had six of the eight-best throws of his life,

“We changed a couple of things technically, focused on consistency, to be able to be confident in what we’re doing in training, so that when we get into a meet, we don’t have to think or second guess what we’re doing,” he said. “So it just became second nature.”

The list of Americans who’ve medaled either in a World Championships or Olympics is very short.

Eugene Oberst won bronze at the 1924 Paris Olympics, with the javelin actually held in nearby Colombes, Cy Young Jr. won gold at the 1952 Games in Helsinki, Tom Petranoff won silver at the 1983 Worlds, also in Helsinki, and Greer was 3rd in 2007 in Osaka.

Thompson is trying to single-handedly jumpstart American javelin throwing.

“It means a lot,” he said of being the first U.S. international medalist in 18 years. “I’m hoping this continues to change the kind of standard that’s here in the U.S. for javelin. I’m excited for the future of U.S. javelin because this is just going to continue to grow over the years.”

This was Thompson’s final meet until next spring and if anything is going to get him a sponsor it’s getting to the podium at a major international championship meet.

“Hopefully this changes something,” he said. “But either way, continue to do what we’re doing and make it happen.

“I just know we’ll continue to focus on what we need to focus on to be able to continue to improve and maintain a certain standard or level of consistency that we’ve built over the past few years.”

INCREDIBLE!!! UNBELIEVABLE!!! UNREAL!!! CURTIS THOMPSON BECOMES 3RD AMERICAN TO MEDAL IN JAVELIN AT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Curtis Thompson etched his name among the greatest javelin throwers in U.S. hsitory Thursday morning in Tokyo when he became just the 3rd American ever to medal in the javelin at the World Championships.

Thompson threw 284-4 on his 1st attempt and that held up for third place behind an Olympic gold medalist and a two-time Worlds gold medalist.

Thompson, a 2014 Florence graduate, equalled the 2nd-highest podium finish ever by an American. In 1983, Tom Petranoff placed 2nd in Helsinki with a 280-11 throw. And in 2007, Breaux Greer placed 3rdin Osaka with a 284-8. The only other American ever to place in the javelin in an international championship meet was 1952 Olympic gold medalist Cy Young Jr.

It was the 4th-best throw of his life and his best throw ever in a championship meet.

Thompson, a five-time U.S. champion, clinched a podium finish when Julius Yego of Kenya, the final thrower outside the top three, fouled on his 6th attempt.

Thompson’s 284-5 is the 2nd-best throw ever by an American at Worlds. In 2001, Greer threw 285-5 when he placed 4th in Edmonton, Alberta.

Thompson added a 279-10 on his 3rd throw after hitting 277-11 Wednesday in qualifying. So this trip to Tokyo produced three of the seven-best throws of his life. They’re his three-best throws ever in an international championship event. Thompson fouled on his 4th and 5th attempts.

Thompson is a five-time U.S. champion and is 3rd in U.S. history with his PR 287-11. Seven of his eight-farthest lifetime throws have come since March.

With that 277-11 on Wednesday, Thompson became one of 12 finalists who advanced to Thursday. It was his 1st international final after falling short at the 2021 Olympics – also at Japan National Stadium in Tokyo – 2023 Worlds in Budapest and the Paris Olympics last summer.

He was the first American to reach the finals at Worlds since 2009, when Sean Furey placed 12th

Olympic gold medalist Keshorn Walcott of Trinidad and Tobago won the competition with a 288-1 on his 2nd throw. Anderson Peters of Grenada, Thompson’s teammate at Mississippi State, placed 2nd with a 286-8 on his 2nd throw.

Thompson’s 284-4 is his best throw ever on his 1st attempt of any competition. His previous best 1stthrow was a 274-11 at Athletissima at La Pontaise in Lausanne, Switzerland, in August 2022.

He hit 266-11 on his 2nd attempt before throwing 279-10 on his 3rd. That’s his 6th-best throw ever. He fouled on his last three attempts.

Curtis Thompson all-time 270-foot throws
287-11 … Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, March 28, 2025 [2nd throw]
287-9 … American JavFest, East Stroudsburg [Pa.] South High School, July 9, 2022 [2nd throw]
286-2 … NACAC, Freeport Stadium, Grand Bahamas, Freeport, Bahamas, Aug. 17, 2025 [2nd throw]
284-4 … World Championships, Tokyo, Sept. 18, 2025 [1st throw]
282-8 … NACAC, Freeport Stadium, Grand Bahamas, Bahamas, Aug. 20, 2025 [3rd throw]
279-10 … World Championships, Tokyo, Sept. 18, 2025 [3rd throw]
277-11 … World Championships qualifying, Tokyo, Japan, Sept. 17, 2025 [2nd throw]
276-11 … Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, March 28, 2025 [3rd throw]
276-4 … NACAC, Freeport Stadium, Grand Bahamas, Bahamas, Aug. 20, 2022 [3rd throw]
275-2 … USATC Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 31, 2025 [4th throw]
274-11 … Athletissima, La Pontaise, Lausanne, Switzerland, Aug. 26, 2022 [1st throw]
273-4 … American JavFest, East Stroudsburg [Pa.] South High School, July 9, 2022 [1st throw]
272-5 … Olympic Trials, Hayward Field, Eugene, June 23, 2024 [1st throw]
271-11… Olympic Trials, Hayward Field, Eugene, July 4, 2016 [1st throw]
271-10 … Spitzen Leichtathletik, Luzern, Switzerland, Aug. 30, 2022 [3rd throw]
271-9 … Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, March 28, 2025 [4th throw]
271-7 … Olympic Trials, Hayward Field, Eugene, June 21, 2021 [6th throw]
271-0 … American JavFest, East Stroudsburg [Pa.] South High School, July 13, 2024 [1st throw]
270-6 … USATF Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 31, 2025 [6th throw]
270-3 … Kamila Skolimowska Memorial Invitational, Silesian Stadium, Chorzów, Poland, Aug. 6, 2022 [2nd throw]