Hi my name is Jonathan Pattie, I run cross country and track for St. Olaf college. My favorite color is green, and a fun fact about me is that I failed lifeguard training.
With Ole runners improving 10 seconds in two years and Turlington dropping almost 50 seconds off his last 10K it may be time ask whether they’re trading any protocols with Clevenger
With Ole runners improving 10 seconds in two years and Turlington dropping almost 50 seconds off his last 10K it may be time ask whether they’re trading any protocols with Clevenger
Ten seconds in what? An 800? That seems unrealistic. Although that improvement in a 10K is also pretty absurd.
I think Cole likely runs 14:15. If Turlington does all the work and lets Cole sit in him it is possible Cole beats him, but very unlikely. Turlington has to be thinking of trying to run sub 14:10 at this point. I think 14:08 is a logical goal.
I think Cole likely runs 14:15. If Turlington does all the work and lets Cole sit in him it is possible Cole beats him, but very unlikely. Turlington has to be thinking of trying to run sub 14:10 at this point. I think 14:08 is a logical goal.
In considering transitive properties, this result suggests Mo should be able to run 28:50. Wonder if we’ll ever see him on the track again?
Looks like Cole wisely took the weekend off to train after having such a stellar indoor season. I hope Maxwell can get him in a faster heat at Platteville. Will be fun to see him use his speed versus the strength of Turlington and Gabe’s seasoning.
Really impressive javelin and 4 x 400 in some strong winds from the Johnnies today.
A relatively quiet week of MIAC action, but enough teams competed that we can select AOTW. Schreiner didn't compete this weekend and Reis is not on the Johnnies TFFRS page, so we likely won't see him this season, so long jump may not be as impressive as last year.
Men -
Sprints - Kieran Murnan of St. John's clocked a solid 10.79 100m in cold conditions with only a 2.1 wind.
Mid Distance - Jackson Bullock of St. Olaf ran a small 1500m PR of 4:01.49, but we should hope to see much faster given his strong Indoor season.
Distance - Kevin Turlington is the clear MIAC Track Athlete of the Week with his impressive 10K. Top 25 All-time in D3, 2nd in MIAC history, and only his 3rd 10K. Anyone that doesn't think he will be aiming to break 14:00 or that another MIAC athlete will beat him in a non-tactical race is plain wrong. Both his 5K's in the race were faster than most MIAC athletes can run. Hopefully Power can convince the strength coach to let him take Turlington somewhere fast and not be forced to race the MIAC athletes all season.
Jumps - Cold temps seemed to get in the way of any massive jumps, but Tyler Evans from Concordia appeared near PR form already. The AOTW award, however, goes to Soren Kastor with the outstanding 6490 Decathlon score to lead the Carleton multi crew in Cali. That score made the National Championship last year.
Throws - Trent only threw Discus and Hammer this week and now ranks 6th in the country in Discus. Mitchell Degen almost topped 200 feet to win at St. John's topping several All-MIAC throwers. He ranks 12th in the county.
Women -
Sprints - Emily Rengo enjoyed a nice meet running 12.50 and 26.42, but the real story is her massive 5.46m long jump. The Cobbers appear to be hunting more points for the Outdoor champs.
Mid Distance - It appears the Oles have another mid-distance ace with freshman Cora Denhartog running 2:12.4 at WashU. It appears she won the slow heat by quite a bit. Maybe we'll see her work into the MIAC championship conversation with Tittel, Wyatt, Sulungaine, and Nygaard.
Distance - The Carleton women had a great meet in California with Hannah Preisser running a solid early season mark of 35:45.54. That was just outside the qualifying bubble last year.
Jumps - See Rengo above.
Throws - Cobber Jav specialist threw a nice early season mark of 37.51 to secrute the MIAC lead and rank 32nd in the country.
A relatively quiet week of MIAC action, but enough teams competed that we can select AOTW. Schreiner didn't compete this weekend and Reis is not on the Johnnies TFFRS page, so we likely won't see him this season, so long jump may not be as impressive as last year.
Men -
Sprints - Kieran Murnan of St. John's clocked a solid 10.79 100m in cold conditions with only a 2.1 wind.
Mid Distance - Jackson Bullock of St. Olaf ran a small 1500m PR of 4:01.49, but we should hope to see much faster given his strong Indoor season.
Distance - Kevin Turlington is the clear MIAC Track Athlete of the Week with his impressive 10K. Top 25 All-time in D3, 2nd in MIAC history, and only his 3rd 10K. Anyone that doesn't think he will be aiming to break 14:00 or that another MIAC athlete will beat him in a non-tactical race is plain wrong. Both his 5K's in the race were faster than most MIAC athletes can run. Hopefully Power can convince the strength coach to let him take Turlington somewhere fast and not be forced to race the MIAC athletes all season.
Jumps - Cold temps seemed to get in the way of any massive jumps, but Tyler Evans from Concordia appeared near PR form already. The AOTW award, however, goes to Soren Kastor with the outstanding 6490 Decathlon score to lead the Carleton multi crew in Cali. That score made the National Championship last year.
Throws - Trent only threw Discus and Hammer this week and now ranks 6th in the country in Discus. Mitchell Degen almost topped 200 feet to win at St. John's topping several All-MIAC throwers. He ranks 12th in the county.
Women -
Sprints - Emily Rengo enjoyed a nice meet running 12.50 and 26.42, but the real story is her massive 5.46m long jump. The Cobbers appear to be hunting more points for the Outdoor champs.
Mid Distance - It appears the Oles have another mid-distance ace with freshman Cora Denhartog running 2:12.4 at WashU. It appears she won the slow heat by quite a bit. Maybe we'll see her work into the MIAC championship conversation with Tittel, Wyatt, Sulungaine, and Nygaard.
Distance - The Carleton women had a great meet in California with Hannah Preisser running a solid early season mark of 35:45.54. That was just outside the qualifying bubble last year.
Jumps - See Rengo above.
Throws - Cobber Jav specialist threw a nice early season mark of 37.51 to secrute the MIAC lead and rank 32nd in the country.
A relatively quiet week of MIAC action, but enough teams competed that we can select AOTW. Schreiner didn't compete this weekend and Reis is not on the Johnnies TFFRS page, so we likely won't see him this season, so long jump may not be as impressive as last year.
Men -
Sprints - Kieran Murnan of St. John's clocked a solid 10.79 100m in cold conditions with only a 2.1 wind.
Mid Distance - Jackson Bullock of St. Olaf ran a small 1500m PR of 4:01.49, but we should hope to see much faster given his strong Indoor season.
Distance - Kevin Turlington is the clear MIAC Track Athlete of the Week with his impressive 10K. Top 25 All-time in D3, 2nd in MIAC history, and only his 3rd 10K. Anyone that doesn't think he will be aiming to break 14:00 or that another MIAC athlete will beat him in a non-tactical race is plain wrong. Both his 5K's in the race were faster than most MIAC athletes can run. Hopefully Power can convince the strength coach to let him take Turlington somewhere fast and not be forced to race the MIAC athletes all season.
Jumps - Cold temps seemed to get in the way of any massive jumps, but Tyler Evans from Concordia appeared near PR form already. The AOTW award, however, goes to Soren Kastor with the outstanding 6490 Decathlon score to lead the Carleton multi crew in Cali. That score made the National Championship last year.
Throws - Trent only threw Discus and Hammer this week and now ranks 6th in the country in Discus. Mitchell Degen almost topped 200 feet to win at St. John's topping several All-MIAC throwers. He ranks 12th in the county.
Women -
Sprints - Emily Rengo enjoyed a nice meet running 12.50 and 26.42, but the real story is her massive 5.46m long jump. The Cobbers appear to be hunting more points for the Outdoor champs.
Mid Distance - It appears the Oles have another mid-distance ace with freshman Cora Denhartog running 2:12.4 at WashU. It appears she won the slow heat by quite a bit. Maybe we'll see her work into the MIAC championship conversation with Tittel, Wyatt, Sulungaine, and Nygaard.
Distance - The Carleton women had a great meet in California with Hannah Preisser running a solid early season mark of 35:45.54. That was just outside the qualifying bubble last year.
Jumps - See Rengo above.
Throws - Cobber Jav specialist threw a nice early season mark of 37.51 to secrute the MIAC lead and rank 32nd in the country.
Where do you find the top 25 all time list?
D3 Historians Report only has top 10.
Yeah it’s a lie. More Chunko propaganda. I also heard the WashU track is short.
Absolutely huge news out of St. Olaf and they disabled comments on their IG. That typically means the coach left under not so great terms. That’s too bad. His team seemed to like him, even if the admin and other MIAC coaches and officials did not. They definitely underperformed under his rein but he didn’t steer the ship into any icebergs - he just failed to land it in the right harbor. Not sure what the thread will talk about now.
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