Wyoming? Hawaii? Alaska?
Wherever, I'd just like to know.
Wyoming? Hawaii? Alaska?
Wherever, I'd just like to know.
Find the state with the most classes. Kansas has 4 or 6, Wyoming has 4. So I would guess those are pretty easy.
I'd agree, just run for the smallest class in just about any state and you won't have to run too hard.
Louisiana. They have so many classes for such a small state.
Mississippi- 2A state champ ran 17:50 on a fast flat course.
Go run on the Rez in Arizona.
Keams Canyon Hopi won its sixth consecutive team title and Christopher Holve of Tuba City took home the individual championship in the Class 3A boys cross country meet Saturday.
Hopi finished with 51 points, including three top-10 finishes. Chinle finished second with a score of 62, and Ganado was third with 65.
Matt Lamson led the way for Hopi with a time of 16 minutes and 30.25 seconds, good enough for third place. Chad Baker and Kevin Rivers finished seventh and eighth with both finishing under 17 minutes.
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The top six Hopi runners placed high enough to receive medals, with Vonn Secakuku 16th, Ronald Laban 17th and Andrew Honyaktewa was 18th.
On the individual side, Holve finished with a time of 16:23.55 to win. Holve, a junior, was 5.15 seconds ahead of John Bigwater from Ganado.
Tuba City finished the day in fourth place with 115 points.
rhode island
Illinois, their cc courses are only 2.75. And they are moving to 3 classes next year! They currently have 8 in football.
runnnnnnnnnnnn wrote:
Illinois, their cc courses are only 2.75. And they are moving to 3 classes next year! They currently have 8 in football.
Obviously not from Illinois, right? Boys course standards have been 3 miles for years. The girls courses were 2.5 miles up until 3-4 years ago, but they've been 3 miles ever since. The state meets are all 3 miles. Some of the meets and invites during the season and even some sectionals are odd lengths (2.75 miles, 5Ks, etc.) but the state meets are 3 miles, as are most of the in-season meets, and have been for years.
BTW, to win the IL state meets this year you would have had to have run faster than 14:55 in the small school class and under 14:07 in the large school (again, 3-mile courses). Personally, I'd look somewhere like Montana, with a low population, or the state with the lowest population that has two classes.
I've never understood Divisions for individual results. Why should a kid from a small school be slower than a kid from a large school.
For team results it's understandable. But for individual results, it should be one state champ.
the430miler wrote:
rhode island
????
Rhode Island is very solid for such a small state. They're not even the worst in New England, not to mention the country.
Oregon. They suck.
Because it would require two separate races on two different days...you can't just combine times from the different divisional races. Some states do the two meet thing (NY I believe, maybe others), but it certainly requires enough motivation by the organizations involved to put forth the effort of having not one but two state championship meets.
Kansas by far
Wyoming by far, 4 classes state population of just over 400000
Michigan has 4 classes for lower penninsula and 4 classes for upper penninsula. D4 UP is always pretty easy times to beat to become a state champ
Pick any state you mofo. Americans suck. Both pros and amateurs.
Anyone worth their salt would pick the state with the fastest times in previous years and run there.
Man up, you turd.
meh wrote:
Mississippi- 2A state champ ran 17:50 on a fast flat course.
Wow, that is pretty slow for the girls. How did the guys do?
Connecticut has that, and I'm actually a really big fan of it. They split it up into divisions based on school size on Saturday, get a bunch of qualifiers from the different divisions, then run one huge race the following Friday to decide who the is THE state champ, both individually and team-wise.
Michigan has a seperate state championship for it's upper peninsula, which has a population of just over 300,000. They actually have 3 divisions, which means u.p. d3 times can be a bit on the slow side. (especially when you consider it starts snowing in October).