Danielle Fisk competing at Cornell; her high jump of 1.60 meters (5' 3") currently ranks sixth nationally in Division III
ITHACA, N.Y. – The Cortland women's indoor track and field team opened its 2023-24 season Friday and Saturday at the Cornell University Greg Page Relays.
Danielle Fisk (Honeoye Falls/Honeoye Falls-Lima) finished third overall and second among collegiate entries in the high jump with a height of 1.60 meters (5' 3"). The effort is an All-Atlantic Region Track and Field Conference (AARTFC) qualifier and currently ranks sixth nationally in Division III.
Kendall Sobczyk (Wheatfield/Niagara Wheatfield) turned in an AARTFC qualifier in the 60-meter dash with a time of 7.90 seconds, placing her 12th among 47 entries.
Melissa Innocent (Elmont/Valley Stream North) won the 3,000-meter run in a field of 20 entries in 10:40.48, missing the AARTFC mark by less than half a second.
Alexa Wolcott (Wyoming/Pavilion) finished third in the 3,000 meters in 10:52.67, followed by
Adrienne Martin (Cincinnatus/Norwich) in fifth (10:56.44) and
Sydney Smith (Greenville) in sixth (10:57.17).
Anika Parnell (Corinth) placed fourth of 25 in the mile run (5:35.28) and
Avery Hebert (Stillwater) was 13th of 58 in the 300-meter dash (42.36).
Hebert,
Maris Seabury (Old Chatham/Ichabod Crane),
Izzie Bosko (Hillsdale/Taconic Hills) and
Yasmine Peralta (Monroe/Monroe-Woodbury) finished fifth of 14 in the 4x400-meter relay (4:13.17).
Jennifer Ndukwu (Queens/Metropolitan Expeditionary Learning School) placed eighth of 27 in the shot put at 10.85 meters (35' 7.25"), while
Hannah McMasters (Cortland/Homer) finished ninth at 10.58 meters (34' 8.5").
Coach's Corner - Comments from Cortland Head Coach Steve Patrick:
Wow – lots of great things happening over the past two days for Cortland Track and Field!
Generally we did a very nice job of having the right plan and preparation for how we went about our business at our season opener. It's amazing how much doing the right thing in terms of fueling, warming up, staying focused, etc. matters to performance – while we weren't perfect in these areas, we were generally pretty good about them overall across the team.
Some wonderful performances to highlight: besides the new school record in the 300 by
Evan Jensen,
Doug Knapp ran a time that is now tied for 3rd All-Time with us. Firstyear
Zion Cheatham's time was only .03 seconds behind Evan's PR from last season, so that is certainly an exciting measure of how our long sprints are doing on the men's side. For the women,
Avery Hebert run herself into our All-Time top five list as well with a pretty massive PR in the 300. That was certainly an exciting result to see!
Also on the track, our women's 3000 showed some pretty strong strength with four women breaking the 11-minute barrier – that's a pretty strong measure of where the program is right now. All four of those ladies (
Melissa Innocent,
Alexa Wolcott,
Adrienne Martin, and
Sydney Smith) also posted new college PRs for the event. More important, how they chose to run the race was a great demonstration of skilled racing in the distance events.
The men's 3k had a pretty strong result as well, as we saw a number of men that committed to run the race plan we had mapped out for them, and performed at a high level, especially in the later half of the race. We again saw a number of folks who ran PRs over the distance, which is something we're quite thrilled about especially in the first competition of the year!
As long as we are speaking of PRs, it would be remiss to not point out that
Anika Parnell (mile),
Kendall Sobczyk (60),
Faith Hoyt (pole vault), and
Matt Schaffert (60) not only were our top performers in their respective events, but also set pretty significant PRs in the process.
The field events showed some pretty strong results as well over the weekend. In the men's Long Jump,
Amarian Hughes had a nice progression and made good, consistent progress over all six of his attempts to finish with one of his better jumps ever. We're quite pleased with the adjustments he made and maturity he showed over the day.
But clearly the strongest event group over the two days was the men's weight throw – with six men breaking the 13-meter barrier, and four making into the finals led by firstyear
Evan Collette, there's a great deal to be excited about, especially considering that none of that group are seniors. They've been a very diligent group about working both in the ring and in the weight room, and it is clearly paying off.
There were so many folks that had very strong results that unfortunately I don't have time or space to discuss here. However, it's good to keep in mind that means we are doing things well and moving in the right direction as a program!
We're looking forward to bringing a good-sized chunk of the team to Utica next weekend for the 'Utica Holiday Classic' before heading into final exams.