ITHACA, N.Y. – The Cortland women's indoor track and field team finished in third place at a quad meet hosted by Ithaca College.
Ithaca finished first with 78 points, followed by TCNJ (50), Cortland (29) and Oneonta (7). First place finishes earned five points, followed by three points for second, two points for third, and one point for fourth (except for relays, where only the top three places scored and schools were limited to one scoring team).
Autumn Pittman (Spring Valley/Ramapo) placed second in two events. She recorded an All-Atlantic Region Track and Field Conference (AARTFC) time of 7.93 seconds and a time of 26.76 seconds in the 200-meter dash.
Hannah McMasters (Homer) and
Jennifer Ndukwu (Queens/Metropolitan Expeditionary Learning School) both hit AARTFC mark with second-place finishes - McMasters in the shot put (11.93 meters/39' 1.75") and Ndukwu in the weight throw (14.83 meters/48' 8").
Melissa Innocent (Elmont/Valley Stream North) was the runner-up in the mile run (5:25.12) and
Reilly Quinn (Morrisonville/Beekmantown) finished second in the high jump (1.53 meters/5' 0.25").
Kendall Sobczyk (Wheatfield/Niagara Wheatfield) also met AARTFC standards with her prelim time of 7.97 seconds in the 60-meter dash; she was third in the finals at 8.02 seconds.
Other Red Dragon top-four finishers included:
3rd place:
4x400 relay (
Izzie Bosko (Hillsdale/Taconic Hills),
Matty Lucey (Freeville/Groton),
Faith Nelson (Rensselaer/Columbia),
Yasmine Peralta (Monroe/Monroe-Woodbury)), 4:14.27
Bosko, 400-meter dash, 1:02.44
4th place:
Faith Hoyt (Pittsford/Pittsford Mendon), Pole Vault, 3.00 meters (9' 10")
Kristin Ieva (North Babylon), 800 meters, 2:35.23
McMasters, Weight Throw, 14.49 meters (47' 6.5")
Cheyenne McPeek (Johnson City), Shot Put, 11.36 meters (37' 3.25")
Lillian Swyers (Peru), Long Jump, 5.03 meters (16' 6")
Coach's Corner - Comments from Cortland Head Coach Steve Patrick:
It's nice to be back in action, especially after some hard training sessions back in Cortland! The folks that have been back early for training have been doing an excellent job not just with efforts in practice, but on the details in general. There's a lot for us to be proud of!
This first meet is always a significant challenge, especially as we usually enter it feeling a bit tired and flat. The benefits from the hard work don't tend to show up physically until there has been some time to rest and recover, so we aren't always feeling at our 'peak' this time of year.
Some notable highlights on the women's side would be
Izzie Bosko running solid races in both the open 400 and as our leadoff for the 4x400 relay,
Melissa Innocent returning to action in the mile, and
Lilly Swyers and
AnJalyna Talmadge in both the long jump and the high hurdles.
Faith Hoyt had a wonderful start to 2025 in the pole vault, building a great foundation for the upcoming meets. Across the day, we didn't have many instances where we were disappointed with the effort or focus – things we can control – even if all the pieces for performance weren't in place yet.
For the men,
Roland Zanger had a very strong day in both the hurdles and in his first long jump competition of the year.
Matt Mullen had a great opener in the 800 to set a new personal best, while
Cabe Hogue and
Luke Chamberlain had big PRs in the shot put and weight throw respectively.
Daniel Cruz followed up a strong performance in the 60 with a big PR in the 200, and
Andrew Farnsworth made big progress in the men's high jump.
But it's hard to ignore what the men's long sprints group did today. In the 500, we saw a new school record (
Josh Jeffes), a new all-time #3 (
Evan Jensen), and a performance that was faster than the school record when I started coaching here (
Aidan Garafola). It's nice to see things like that happening! Evan and Josh were joined by
Zion Cheatham and
Harrison Gavalas to run quite a strong 4 x 400 relay, earning the #3 all-time spot at Cortland.
Some additional folks return to Cortland this week for training before classes resume on the 27th; we are looking forward to getting to Nazareth in Rochester this upcoming weekend to compete and the Conference Cup at the site of the 2025 NCAA Championships.