Freshman - Did not run
Sophomore - 4:07.8
Junior - 3:59.0
Senior - 3:55.3
Freshman - Did not run
Sophomore - 4:07.8
Junior - 3:59.0
Senior - 3:55.3
Boys become men. That is the main answer.
9th- 6:23
10th- 5:03
11th- 1500m 4:13
12th- 1500m 4:05
6:50
5:24
5:00
4:38
Freshman - Did not runSophmore - Did not runJunior - 5:06.00Senior - 4:42.58
wichita east wrote:
Freshman - Did not run
Sophomore - 4:07.8
Junior - 3:59.0
Senior - 3:55.3
Woah!! Are you really Jim Ryun?!
wichita east wrote:
Freshman - Did not run
Sophomore - 4:07.8
Junior - 3:59.0
Senior - 3:55.3
Either you're Jim Ryun or those are your 1500M times in college
Other than that... I call BS
Fr - 5:00
So - N/R (so still 5:00)
Jr - 4:51
Sr - N/R (so still 4:51)
Dropped to 4:48 about 10 years later.
Fr - 5:12
So - 4:44
Jr - 4:40
Sr - 4:29
spokanexc wrote:
Fr--4:54
So--4:43
Jr--4:36
Sr--4:27
wooooo, that's close to mine
Fr--4:52
So--4:45
Jr--4:37
Sr--4:22
(all 1600's)
....
3:39 (1500, grad school)
FR: didn't run
SO: 4:45
JR: 4:27
SR: 4:22 (focused on 2 mile, so for reference the previous years I focused mile)
7th - 5:32
8th - 5:02
9th - 4:55
10th - 4:43
11th - no XC skiing base, came into season overweight and out of shape and did not improve
12th - started smoking blunts daily, eating LSD 3x per week and doing E and raves on the weekend - did not improve
Fresh- 5:30
Soph- 4:39
Jr- 4:24
Sr- hopefully sub 4:15
Fr-6:50
So-5:24
Jr-5:00.1
Sr-4:38
Age30-4:29
Frosh - didn't run
Soph - didn't run
Junior - didn't run
Senior - 4:26.4
Fr: 6:11
So: 5:33
Jr: 4:53
Sr: hoping for 4:43
Freshman - 4:33 (only really ran it once, and the first lap was a 70. Probably would've gone sub 4:30 if I had doubled at league championships)
What I want over the next three years -
Sophomore - 4:23
Junior - 4:15
Senior - 4:10
I think this person got the idea of what they were looking for. Was there a point in bringing back this old thread?
Freshman:5:42
Sophomore:5:18
Junior:4:58
Senior:4:49
1600
fr: 448
so: 450
jr: 438
sr: 434
Well, I think these threads are a good example of self-selection bias...or LRC is hopelessly wrong.
Not sure I saw a single person who didn't break 5, and a good portion started in the 4:xx as freshman..
Contrast that to the threads about "can ANYONE break 5", where the typical value for how many could do it probably averages around 15-25% of people. And that is over a lifetime with good training, not 4 years of frequently questionable HS training.