2016 Women's Cross Country - Year In Review | |
Coaching Staff Kelly Phillips, Head Coach Michael Barbee, Director of Operations Emma Reed, Graduate Assistant Remy Tamer, Volunteer Assistant Click here to see individual mug shots |
Elizabeth Cobb, Winter Springs
Ginelle DeMone, Leduc, Alberta, Canada
Emily Ferron, Temple Terrace
Hailey Hendry, Brentwood, Tenn.
Claire Hooker, Fort Collins, Colo.
Gabby Jaromin, Chesterfield, Va.
Katarina Jernberg, Rockledge
Katie Kuhn, Winter Park
Militsa Mircheva, Dobrich, Bulgaria
Megan Mooney, Broomfield, Colo.
Katherine Patrick, Bartow
Julianna Zagra, Orlando
2016 Roster - By Name
L
T PY
R Name Cl Ltr Hometown (Prior School)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Marianne Aguilar Jr Davie (Archbishop McCarthy)
Julia Anzano So Mahwah, N.J. (Mahwah)
Kelly Aponte Fr Saint Augustine (Saint Augustine)
Mackenzie Baysinger So Rockledge (Rockledge)
* Bridget Blake Jr-R ** Orlando (Doctor Phillips)
* Catherine Blaney Sr Ocala (Belleview/South Florida)
* Sarah Candiano So * Fort Myers (Evangelical Christian)
* Carmela Cardama Baez So * Vigo, Spain (Universidade de Vigo)
Kali Cilli Jr Pembroke Pines (Pembroke Pines Charter)
Elizabeth Cobb Fr-R Winter Springs (Winter Springs)
Ginelle DeMone Fr Leduc, Alberta, Canada (Leduc Composite)
Shaquania Dorsett So Freeport, Bahamas (Sunland Baptist Academy)
Emily Ferron Fr Temple Terrace (Tampa Catholic)
Darien Halliday So Palm Coast (Flager-Palm Coast)
* Madison Harris So-R Ochlockonee Bay (Wakulla)
Kellie Hays Jr Tallahassee (Lincoln)
* Hailey Hendry Fr Brentwood, Tenn. (Brentwood)
Althea Hewitt So Cocoa Beach (Cocoa Beach)
Claire Hooker Fr Fort Collins, Colo. (Fort Collins)
Claire Igoe Jr Crofton, Md. (South River)
* Fatema Jaffer So * Longwood (Lake Mary)
Gabby Jaromin Fr Chesterfield, Va. (Manchester)
Narinah Jean-Baptiste So Fort Lauderdale (Saint Thomas Aquinas)
Katarina Jernberg Fr Rockledge (Rockledge)
Annie Kennedy Jr Jacksonville (Bishop Kenny)
Katie Kuhn Fr Winter Park (Winter Park)
Daniella Lauriello Jr Fort Pierce (Lincoln Park Academy)
Jessica Lonas So * Sarasota (Riverview)
Militsa Mircheva So Dobrich, Bulgaria (FSG Vasil Levski)
* Megan Mooney Fr Broomfield, Colo. (Horizon)
Katherine Patrick Fr Bartow (Bartow)
Bella Poole Jr Ponte Vedra Beach (Ponte Vedra)
* Tara Rooney Jr Vernon Hills, Ill. (Vernon Hills)
Kayla Thomas Jr Jacksonville (Stanton)
Courteney West Sr * Great Falls, Va. (Langley)
Forever Young Jr Daytona Beach (Seabreeze)
Julianna Zagra Fr Orlando (Olympia)
Melissa Zyla So Fairfield, N.J. (West Essex)
2016 Conference Awards
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Carmela Cardama Baez Atlantic Coast Conference - All-Conference
All-Conference - 1
2016 Schedule and Results
GAME |
SCORE |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Covered Bridge Open Boone, N.C. |
|||||
Adidas XC Challenge Cary, N.C. |
|||||
Mountain Dew Invitational Gainesville, Fla. |
|||||
Notre Dame Invitational Notre Dame, Ind. |
|||||
FSU Invitational | |||||
Wisconsin Invitational Madison, Wis. |
|||||
Crimson Classic Tuscaloosa, Ala. |
|||||
ACC Championship Cary, N.C. |
|||||
NCAA South Region Championship | |||||
NCAA Championship Terre Haute, Ind. |
EOY StatsRef Overall Home Away Neutral ------------------------------------------------ FSU record is 0- 0 0- 0 0- 0 0- 0
2016 Atlantic Coast Conference Results 1 North Carolina State 53 2 Notre Dame 74 3 Virginia Tech 153 4 Louisville 157 5 Syracuse 184 6 Clemson 207 7 Pittsburgh 207 8 Wake Forest 207 9 Florida State 213 10 Virginia 220 11 Duke 245 12 Boston College 247 13 North Carolina 299 14 Georgia Tech 347 15 Miami 446
2016 EOY Stats
Team Overall Name Races Top 7 Top 10 Wins =============================================== Tara Rooney 7 7 0 0 Carmela Cardama Baez 7 6 4 1 Fatema Jaffer 7 6 0 0 Hailey Hendry 7 5 0 0 Bridget Blake 6 6 2 0 Megan Mooney 6 6 1 0 Catherine Blaney 6 6 0 0 Madison Harris 5 3 0 0 Marianne Aguilar 4 2 0 0 Sarah Candiano 4 2 0 0 Jessica Lonas 3 3 0 0 Claire Hooker 3 2 0 0 Althea Hewitt 3 2 0 0 Courteney West 3 1 0 0 Katie Kuhn 3 1 0 0 Kelly Aponte 3 1 0 0 Mackenzie Baysinger 3 1 0 0 Katherine Patrick 3 0 0 0 Kayla Thomas 3 0 0 0 Katarina Jernberg 3 0 0 0 Claire Igoe 2 2 0 0 Bella Poole 2 1 0 0 Kellie Hays 2 0 0 0 Annie Kennedy 2 0 0 0 Melissa Zyla 2 0 0 0 Gabby Jaromin 2 0 0 0 Kali Cilli 1 0 0 0 Julianna Zagra 1 0 0 0 Narinah Jean-Baptiste 1 0 0 0 Daniella Lauriello 1 0 0 0
Baez, Mulenga Score Season-Opening Individual Victories.
FSU men second, women third at Covered Bridge Open.
BOONE, NC - Carmela Cardama Baez and Harry Mulenga gave the Florida State cross country teams a sweep of the individual race titles at Friday's season-opening Covered Bridge Invitational and the Seminole coaching staff came away from the debut performance encouraged about the season ahead.
As an encore to her breakout 2015 freshman season, Baez scored her first collegiate victory in 18:10.78 over the 5000-meter State Farm Fields/Kennedy Trails course, edging Florida senior Taylor Tubbs.
"It was nice to see Carmela win against some talented runners from Florida," said FSU women's coach Kelly Phillips, who happily welcomed back the sophomore Spaniard who missed the track & field season with an injury.
Mulenga, a senior, wheeled his was to a seven-second victory over the next closest competitor in 20:04.44 over 6400 meters.
"It was a year and a day ago that Harry had heart surgery and he looks like a champion again," FSU men's coach Bob Braman said. "He's going to have a monster year for us."
With Mulenga the lone runner in the lineup who was a part of last year's NCAA South Region championship team, FSU finished second to in-state rival Florida by a six-point margin and edged third-place host Appalachian State by two points.
"We did exactly what we came to do - open the season with a hard effort and train our tails off," Braman said. "I always want to win but we have to stick to the plan, and that means being ready to roll in November, not Labor Day weekend. I feel really good about this group."
A trio of transfer graduate students - Michael Callegari, Ibrahim Ahmed and Brandon Shemonia - followed Mulenga to the finish line. A transfer from St. Mary's University in the UK, Callegari was fourth in 20:15.93. Ahmed and Shemonia, who starred at Southern Utah and Southern Illinois last season, were 10th and 11th in 20:37.08 and 20:37.15, respectively.
"I thought the three grad students opened well and they all ran in their training flats," Braman said.
Redshirt freshman Tyson Murray, who was running alongside Ahmed and Shemonia late in the race, rounded out the fifth scoring spot in 26th place (20:55.52).
Abdin Fator (41st, 21:29.36), Matt Magee (53rd, 21:41.18) and Hunter Scott (67th, 22:11.88) also opened the season in the lineup for the Noles.
Much like Braman, Phillips was eager to see how her women's team would perform with a limited amount of experience. Five Seminoles were making their first appearances among the top seven.
"We came to get some racing experience for our young runners and they all did really well," said Phillips, whose team finished third behind Florida (28 points) and Appalachian State (49) with 86 points.
Freshman Hailey Hendry was the first Seminole behind Baez, placing 18th in her debut in 19:13.82. Sophomore Fatema Jaffer, the only other runner who was on last year's postseason roster, was a close 20th (19:16.40).
Junior Tara Rooney (23rd, 19:30.94) and redshirt sophomore Madison Harris (27th, 19:35.65) completed the scoring positions for the Noles, followed by Marianne Aguilar (31st, 19:41.71) and Claire Igoe (49th, 20:34.51).
WOMEN 5K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 1 Carmela Cardama Baez 1 18:10.78 18 Hailey Hendry 18 19:13.82 20 Fatema Jaffer 20 19:16.40 23 Tara Rooney 23 19:30.94 27 Madison Harris 24 19:35.65 31 Marianne Aguilar 26 19:41.71 49 Claire Igoe 34 20:34.51
Seminole Men Win; Mulenga, Baez Post Runner-Up Finishes.
Coaches pleased with performance in ACC course preview.
CARY, NC - Competitive efforts on the course that will host the ACC Championships in late October was what Florida State cross country coaches Bob Braman and Kelly Phillips hoped to see at Friday's Adidas XC Challenge.
The Seminoles delivered on those expectations - and then some - with the FSU men carving out an impressive victory and the women finishing third, each against quality competition at the rolling WakeMed Course.
Race runner-up Harry Mulenga led a quartet of top 10 finishers for the Florida State men, who registered just 34 points to easily outdistance nationally-ranked Virginia and host NC State, who shared second with 66 points in a field of 12 NCAA Division I team.
A senior, Mulenga made a late push to catch Campbell's Lawrence Kipkoech over the 6000-meter course, but came up three seconds shy of a second consecutive title in 17:45.7. He was followed across the finish line by a trio of FSU newcomers - junior Michael Callegari, freshman Steven Cross and senior Ibrahim Ahmed - who occupied the fifth-seventh finishing positions to all but seal the deal. Senior Grant Nykaza's 16th-place finish did just that.
"I'm happy with my performance today," Mulenga said. "Our game plan was to run the first two miles and [based on] how you feel, then you can make your move or stay with the pack. I was feeling very comfortable, but that last one-[kilometer], 'OK, I'm going to kick up and see what I can do.'…
"I'm definitely excited about the team's performance. I'm so happy with everybody. We did a very good job. We did exactly what we came here to do…What we have right now is a strong team and we are capable of doing this late in the season."
Braman called the effort a "B-plus performance" but was careful not to over-hype the win, especially with a trip to the loaded Notre Dame Invitational looming on the horizon.
"I felt really, really good about it," Braman said. "What we don't want to do overrate the result, because it doesn't count for points…How do we match up for the middle September? Pretty good for a team that was ranked behind all those folks, but we can't say we had an easy win because they chose not to run it hard like we did, but I felt like that was the right thing for us to do."
Transfer veterans Callegari and Ahmed provided the kind of solid performances the Seminoles will need down the stretch, the most pleasant surprise came from Cross, who was competing in his first collegiate meet. The Florida high school standout from Merritt Island was sixth overall in 18:14.7.
"Cross did a great job," Braman said. "We've seen signs of this in practice and all summer, training with Harry. He has unusual strength for a freshman, to handle those collegiate requirements you don't get in high school - longer distances, hills, faster pace, higher competition. He's handling it really well. I just have to be smart with him."
While the men were packing up to secure the win behind Mulenga, the Seminole women were slightly more strung out behind their race runner-up, Carmela Cardama Baez. The sophomore from Spain, coming off a season-opening win at the Covered Bridge Open, cruised home in 16:53.7 over the 5000-meter course to finish 11 seconds behind individual champion Caroline Alcorta from North Carolina.
Running in a pack that included Alcorta and a trio of runners from fifth-ranked NC State, Baez was at the back end of the top 10 early before she found her competitive groove.
"I just focused on running to catch the girls in the next group and the next group," Baez said. "[The result] gives me confidence that I'm in good shape, but at the same time looking back at it, I could have run better."
Junior Bridget Blake, led a trio of Seminoles competing for the first time this season in ninth place (17:43.6), followed by freshman Megan Mooney (15th, 17:57.9) and senior transfer Catherine Blaney (20th, 18:01.0). Sophomore Fatema Jaffer finished 30th (18:29.5) to round out the FSU scoring with 76 points. Fifth-ranked NC State won on its home course with 40 points, followed by North Carolina (54).
"Carmela did a great job, and I thought the whole group ran well," second-year FSU coach Kelly Phillips said. "Having that many people being their first race, it could have been a catastrophe. I think they all see they raced well but they have a big job still ahead of them. That's kind of where their fitness is right now. We're still building."
Behind the scoring five, Hailey Hendry, Tara Rooney and Courteney West, who finished 34-36, followed by Marianne Aguilar in 40th. For Rooney and Aguilar, the race saw them take nearly 50 and 40 seconds, respectively, over their previous best 5000-meter cross country bests.
"I think they all came out of it with something to learn before ACC's," Phillips added. "We need to bring our 2-5 closer to No. 1, which I think is going to happen. Bridget Blake did a great job today, but she knows she is a lot better than that…
"Blaney, I would say overall, had the best race except Carmela. She's new to us and we're still not sure what she is going to bring to the table. I think they all did a nice job competing the second half of the race because they went out a little conservative. As they get stronger and we stay healthy, I think we'll be a pretty good team come the regional."
WOMEN 5K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 2 Carmela Cardama Baez 2 16:53.7 9 Bridget Blake 9 17:43.6 15 Megan Mooney 15 17:57.9 20 Catherine Blaney 20 18:01.0 30 Fatema Jaffer 30 18:29.5 34 Hailey Hendry 33 18:44.2 35 Tara Rooney 34 18:44.8 36 Courteney West 18:46.1 40 Marianne Aguilar 18:50.1 64 Sarah Candiano 19:39.7
Youngest Noles Open Up At Mountain Dew.
GAINESVILLE, FL – A contingent of 13 Florida State women’s cross country runners, 12 of whom were racing for the first time this season, competed in Saturday morning’s Mountain Dew Invitational at the Mark Bostick Golf Course.
Sophomore Jessica Lonas led the Seminole youngsters in action, placing 40th against a field of 121 NCAA Division I runners, in 19:27.69 over the 5000-meter course.
The Seminoles packed up nicely behind Lonas, with freshmen Katie Kuhn (43rd, 19:30.13) and Claire Hooker (47th, 19:42.10) in close pursuit. Kuhn and Hooker were among five freshmen in the lineup for the Noles.
Junior Claire Igoe shaved 52 seconds off her season-opening performance at Covered Bridge for the fourth scoring position (47th, 19:42.93) and sophomore Althea Hewitt rounded out the scorers with a collegiate 5000-meter best of nearly two minutes (49th, 19:45.68).
With the Seminole veterans at home preparing for next Friday’s Joe Piane Notre Dame Invitational, FSU’s youngsters finished ninth in the field of 13 NCAA Division I teams.
Also competing for the Noles were freshmen Kelly Aponte (75th, 20:55.10), Katherine Patrick (92nd, 21:35.72) and Katarina Jernberg (102nd, 22:02.76). Sophomores Mackenzie Baysinger (82nd, 21:11.70), Kellie Hays (96th, 21:46.15), Kayla Thomas (97th, 21:53.09), Annie Kennedy (109th, 22:39.49) and Melissa Zyla (111th, 22:47.69) rounded out the field.
Competing unattached, Bulgarian Olympian and FSU newcomer Militsa Mircheva, was 24th overall and seventh among those not among the NCAA Division I competitors in 18:42.30).
WOMEN 5K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 40 Jessica Lonas 39 19:27.69 43 Katie Kuhn 42 19:30.13 47 Claire Hooker 46 19:42.10 48 Claire Igoe 47 19:42.93 49 Althea Hewitt 48 19:45.68 75 Kelly Aponte 72 20:55.10 82 Mackenzie Baysinger 74 21:11.10 92 Katherine Patrick 21:35.72 96 Kellie Hays 21:46.15 97 Kayla Thomas 21:53.09 102 Katarina Jernberg 22:02.76 109 Annie Kennedy 22:39.49 111 Melissa Zyla 22:47.69
Cardama Baez, Mulenga Lead Way At Notre Dame.
XC Noles have work to do after mid-pack finishes on Friday.
NOTRE DAME, IN - Florida State's cross country teams hoped to come away from Friday's Joe Piane Notre Dame Invitational with a few wins over nationally-ranked competition in the first of four major regular season meets on the 2016 schedule.
Aside from a handful of encouraging individual performances, the Seminole women and men came away with a better understanding that there is still much work to be done before the championship portion of the season begins in late October.
Sophomore Carmela Cardama Baez finished 17th and freshman Megan Mooney used a lifetime-best 5000-meter cross country performance to edge junior Bridget Blake for the number two spot on the squad, placing 72nd and 74th, respectively.
The Seminoles finished 14th in the field of 24 with 396 points - well off coach Kelly Phillips' target - but still managed to defeat two-time NCAA South Region champion Vanderbilt (18th, 429), which is ranked 24th nationally and first in the region.
Ranked sixth in the South Region, the Noles edged No. 4 Alabama (15th, 402). Ole Miss, the No. 3 team in the South, led all region teams with a seventh-place finish (187). Providence, ranked No. 1 in the nation, edged No. 5 NC State for the team title.
On the week where the FSU men cracked the nationally rankings for the first time this season, the No. 30 Noles staggered home in 15th-place with a whopping 400 points.
Harry Mulenga continued his strong senior season, finishing 13th in the five-mile race (24:00.4). Graduate transfer Brandon Shemonia, who was sixth for the Seminoles at the Adidas XC Challenge two weeks ago, was the second FSU runner across the line in 59th-place (24:35.5).
Ole Miss, the Seminoles' chief rival in the South Region, ran away with the team title. Led by race winner Sean Tobin (23:31.9) the 20th-ranked Rebels scored 83 points to edge No. 18 UTEP (99). Ninth-ranked Eastern Kentucky was a distant third (168).
"We're a tired and banged up team right now, but I know we'll get better as the season progresses," FSU men's coach Bob Braman said. "Losing out No. 3 man [Ibrahim Ahmed} to an Achilles injury spread us thin, but then we were really behind the eight-ball when Steven Cross fell."
With things falling apart in mid-race the Noles were left to count scoring performances from Cross (102nd, 24:56.6), Michael Callegari (111th, 25:01.7) and Grant Nykaza (131st, 25:15.9) toward the team total.
"I liked our fight," Braman said. "It would've been easy to pack it in and make excuses but we kept fighting and that's a good sign. It's a tough sport. No one's going to feel sorry for you on tough days."
For the third consecutive race, Cardama Baez led the Seminoles. Despite not getting out quickly on the fast Burke Golf Course track, she finished in 16:45.3. Mooney shaved roughly 10 seconds off her previous 5000-meter best (17:23.3) and edged Blake (17:24.8) in the closing few meters.
Like the men, the women were forced to count some high sticks in the field of 184 finishers. Catherine Blaney (99th, 17:43.9) and Hailey Hendry (148th, 18:14.5) rounded out the Seminole scorers.
The Seminoles will return to action in some capacity at Friday's FSU Invitational, with the men's 8000-meter race set for 7:40 a.m. and the women to follow at 8:20 a.m. The meet will serve as a an interlude before the high-stakes Wisconsin Invitational in two weeks.
WOMEN 5K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 17 Carmela Cardama Baez 17 16:45.3 72 Megan Mooney 72 17:23.3 74 Bridget Blake 74 17:24.8 99 Catherine Blaney 96 17:43.9 148 Hailey Hendry 137 18:14.5 154 Courteney West 143 18:18.5 159 Tara Rooney 148 18:26.2 173 Fatema Jaffer 18:36.9 183 Madison Harris 19:09.7
Sweeping Success At FSU Invitational.
TALLAHASSEE, FL – The Florida State men’s and women’s cross country teams swept the university division team titles Friday morning with strong showings despite controlled efforts at Apalachee Regional Park.
The Seminole men sent the first four runners across the finish line, with Harry Mulenga and Michael Callegari finishing 1-2 with identical 8000-meter times of 25:22.9, followed by Steven Cross (25:23.6) and Ibrahim Ahmed (25:24.5).
A pair of non-scoring unattached runners were the only thing standing in the way of the Noles claiming the first eight spots in the race as Brandon Shemonia (25:43.4), Grant Nykaza (25:46.1), Will Simons (25:54.9) and Michael Hall (25:59.2) claimed spots 7-10.
FSU’s men finished with a perfect score of 15 points, easily outdistancing South Florida (56) and Florida Atlantic (81) in the six-team field of NCAA Division I teams. It was the third consecutive team title for the Seminole men at the meet, which has been contested since 1972.
The Seminole women had a much more challenging time in wrestling the title away from defending champion Jacksonville and UCF. Bridget Blake was second overall (17:47.8) behind UCF’s Anne-Marie Blaney, who won her third consecutive meet title in a course-best 17:14.6.
Blake was backed by freshman Megan Mooney (eighth, 18:09.9), but the tightly-packed trio of Madison Harris (16th, 18:40.8), Catherine Blaney (17th, 18:42.7) and Fatema Jaffer (19th, 18:43.1) allowed the Seminoles to prevail.
FSU finished with 51 points, with UCF and Jacksonville taking second and third with matching 56-point totals.
Tara Rooney (28th, 19:03.2) and Jessica Lonas (29th, 19:03.2) rounded out FSU’s top seven, sealing the victory by displacing the fourth- and fifth-place runners from UCF and Jacksonville.
It was a solid performance given the goals of men’s coach Bob Braman and women’s counterpart Kelly Phillips, who have the Seminoles pointing toward next Friday’s Wisconsin Invitational, where strong finishes can enhance FSU’s NCAA Championships at-large resume.
WOMEN 5K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 2 Bridget Blake 2 17:47.8 8 Megan Mooney 7 18:09.9 16 Madison Harris 14 18:40.8 17 Catherine Blaney 15 18:42.7 19 Fatema Jaffer 17 18:43.1 28 Tara Rooney 25 19:03.2 29 Jessica Lonas 26 19:03.2 32 Hailey Hendry 19:06.5 39 Marianne Aguilar 19:18.9 43 Sarah Candiano 19:27.5 52 Althea Hewitt 19:34.4 58 Bella Poole 19:47.1 64 Claire Hooker 19:51.2 86 Kelly Aponte 20:31.7 94 Mackenzie Baysinger 20:43.8 98 Katie Kuhn 20:50.7 120 Courteney West 21:30.6 125 Katherine Patrick 21:40.7 130 Kayla Thomas 21:51.4 133 Gabby Jaromin 21:53.2 135 Katarina Jernberg 22:04.5 138 Annie Kennedy 22:15.9 142 Kali Cilli 22:33.3 146 Kellie Hays 22:54.8 147 Julianna Zagra 23:00.0 156 Melissa Zyla 23:32.8 157 Narinah Jean-Baptiste 23:46.0 173 Daniella Lauriello 26:48.1
Mulenga, Cardama Baez Post Elite Finishes At Wisco.
Top 25 finishes for front-runners facing nation's best.
MADISON, WI - Squaring off against the finest collection of NCAA Division I cross country runners at a single meet this season, Florida State's Harry Mulenga and Carmela Cardama Baez established themselves as All-American candidates with strong finishes at Friday's Nuttycombe Wisconsin Invitational.
Racing at the front of a field from the start, Mulenga finished 16th in the field of 209 runners to lead the Seminole men over the 8000-meter Thomas Zimmer Championship Course on a clear, breezy day. The senior from Zambia closed in 24:13.0, dramatically improving on his 66th-place finish at the same meet a year ago.
"It's so amazing seeing myself in the front pack," Mulenga said. "It's better than two weeks ago [at Notre Dame] and it's better than last year here, because last year when I came here at the three-mile mark, I was done. But this one, only with the last 800 to go, that's when the elite guys like Justyn Knight from Syracuse were trying to push the pace. I'm proud of what I did today. Sixteenth position is not that good…I'm just so happy to see myself there and put the Seminoles there and shine on us."
Cardama Baez was equally impressed in the women's championship race field, placing 23rd in her first 6000-meter race of the season. The sophomore from Spain was in the top 25 from the mile mark on the way to her best collegiate finish in the invitation-only field, crossing the finish in 20:39.6.
Like Mulenga, Cardama Baez's place was significantly better than a year ago on the same course, where she placed 62nd. Her breakthrough came as a result of her committing to a face early pace, which is a stark contrast from her preferred approach of building off a conservative start.
"I'm really happy with the start," she said. "I'm not really good at starting big races where you have to get out really fast, so having Bridget [Blaek] there really guiding me, gave me a lot of confidence toward the rest of the race. I felt fine until the 3k, 4k and 5k. That's where the race got really rough…You get out really fast and you really try to keep your place.
"It's not the way I usually run. It's a totally different perspective. I usually get motivated by passing people, so it's hard to be there and get confidence…I got a punch-back with 1k to go."
FSU coaches Bob Braman and Kelly Phillips could not have been more happy with the performances from their front-running leaders.
"This was a real gut-check for Harry," Braman said. "He was in that big lead pack of 20 and a couple of times he was getting toward the back of that pack and he fought his way back in. He was in that 13-14 spot the whole last 2k or so. I think the finishing part is going to come for him, but when you look at the people, there is nobody in front of him that is not an All-American.
"I was really proud of him. He competed well, he focused well and put himself in a good spot. That bodes well for nationals."
Phillips was equally excited about Cardama Baez's showing.
"She has been really, really focused this whole week," Phillips said. "She knew she had to get out and she and Bridget got out really, really well, and [Tara] Rooney, too. At probably 3k you could tell it really hurt and she knew she had to just tuck in and hang on and she did it. She was fine the last 600 meters.
"She finally has realized what that pain feels like and the next time it's going to be so much easier. She just raced phenomenally."
Aside from a handful of individual bright spots, it was not a banner day for team finishes for Noles while facing fields of 19 nationally-ranked men's teams and 18 on the women's side.
The Seminole men placed 23rd overall, falling well short of where Braman and the team had hoped to finish.
"We're a tired team," Braman said. "I could see it. We're not out there bouncing. We're grinding, which is okay because you've got a ways to go. You've got four weeks to regions and that's an eternity in cross country.
"Mike Hall had a good day - 112 is a nice finish here. Our goal was to get everybody in the top 100 and while that's not great it would have got us in the top 13-14 teams today. We felt like if got in the top 15 we would have got a whole lot of at-large points."
Hall (25:08.1), a junior, registered the best career individual finish among teammates. He was followed by Michael Callegari (120th, 25:13.2). Brandon Shemonia (123, 25:14.1) and Ibrahim Ahmed (153, 25:31.6), rounding out the scorers.
"We missed our goal, but we didn't strike out," Braman said. "We popped out and grounded out… Seconds-wise, maybe if we're 10-15 seconds better we're in the 80s and 90s and now you're feeling better about yourself. We've got to get fresh. There's no more training for the end of the year. We've got an ACC Championship that we need to be fresh for. That's on me to get them ready to do what they're capable of doing."
The results were eerily similar on for the women, who finished 26th in the 31-team field.
Freshman Megan Mooney (121st, 21:40.7) and senior Catherine Blaney (133, 21:48.4) were FSU's second and third finishers, followed by Blake (145, 21:51.5) and Rooney (184, 22:38.7).
"I thought Mooney did a really good job," Phillips said. "The goal for her was to be top 100 and she was just shy of it. I think she could be up there the next time with a little experience. It didn't take everything out of her. She raced really well; moved through the group really well. I have to remind myself that she's just a freshman.
"Blaney also did a really nice job, and even though she's a senior, she has never been to these kind of meets. Experience-wise she's almost like a freshman and really stepped up. She's on a mission and knows she is going to be even better in a couple weeks. Each week she's getting better."
While the team showing was disappointing, Phillips is confident her group has what it takes to rebound in time for the postseason, which begins in two weeks at the ACC Championships.
"It's exciting to see those three run really well," Phillips said. "The rest of the group, I know we're a good team, we just have to put it all together at the same time.
"If we can put it together we can have a great conference and region team, but we just haven't figured it out yet."
WOMEN 6K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 23 Carmela Cardama Baez 23 20:39.6 121 Megan Mooney 121 21:40.7 133 Catherine Blaney 133 21:48.4 145 Bridget Blake 145 21:51.5 184 Tara Rooney 184 22:38.7 197 Fatema Jaffer 197 23:03.9 202 Hailey Hendry 202 23:25.9
Noles Also Compete At Crimson Classic.
TUSCALOOSA, AL - Abdin Fator, Tyson Murray and Will Simons led the Seminole men, while Sarah Candiano, Madison Harris and Marianne Aguilar paced the women at Friday morning's Alabama Crimson Classic.
Fator finished 62nd overall on the 8,067-meter course in 25:55.2, followed by Murray (74th, 26:03.7) and Simons (94th, 26:19.2) in the field of 217 finishers as the men placed 22nd in the university division while chasing spots on the ACC lineup.
The Seminole women were 20th overall, as Candiano (22:44.1) and Harris (22:44.2), finished 104th and 105th. Aguilar (23:08.3) was 124th in a field of 251 finishers in the first 6000-meter race of the season.
WOMEN 6K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 93 Sarah Candiano 81 22:44.1 94 Madison Harris 82 22:44.2 124 Marianne Aguilar 103 23:08.3 130 Bella Poole 107 23:12.8 147 Jessica Lonas 119 23:31.3 175 Claire Hooker 136 23:58.3 186 Althea Hewitt 142 24:15.2 197 Katie Kuhn 24:32.5 218 Kelly Aponte 25:26.1 219 Mackenzie Baysinger 25:31.7 225 Katherine Patrick 25:55.4 228 Gabby Jaromin 26:02.4 233 Katarina Jernberg 26:22.5 236 Kayla Thomas 27:04.0
Cardama Baez, Mulenga Shine At ACC Championships.
Men overcome issues for fifth place; women were ninth.
CARY, NC - Harry Mulenga and Carmela Cardama Baez arrived at Friday's ACC Cross Country Championships on a mission: Improve on their All-ACC performances from 2015 and further establish themselves among the elite.
Mission accomplished.
Battling back from a somewhat conservative start on the fast 6000-meter WakeMed Course, Cardama Baez came racing home with a seventh-place finish (20:09.6), leading the Seminole women, who were ninth overall and just seven points out of sixth place.
Methodically picking off runners, Cardama Baez climbed from 14th-place after 2000 meters to 11th at the 4000-meter mark.
"I had a plan in the race and knew exactly what I had to do in every part of the race, so that really helped me get through and the race went by really fast," said the sophomore Spaniard. "At the same time I don't think I'm in my best peak of the season yet. I still need to work. I didn't feel as good as I was expecting to.
"I have two weeks to regionals and I'm definitely looking forward to getting that speed that I need and that start that I need to be in the place that I want to be. I'm happy with the seventh place. I think it was a good race overall. I think I ran good, but I don't think it's enough. I think I can run better."
"She did a fantastic job the second half and like the rest of our team, she didn't get out," FSU coach Kelly Phillips said. "If she had gone out a little faster I think she would have been in contention for the top three and that was definitely in her ability. She still ran a tremendous race considering the competition she raced against."
Building off a monster summer of training, Mulenga had designs on a big improvement from last season's 11th-place ACC Championship finish. The junior college transfer from Central Arizona, via Zambia, wasted no time establishing himself as a contender.
Running in the lead pack from the start, Mulenga came charging home in fourth-place, completing the 8000-meter course in 23:04.1 to pace the fifth-place Florida State men.
"Honestly I'm so, so happy with my performance today," Mulenga said. "This is what I wanted to do…It wasn't an easy course. We tried to do our best as we could as a team and I tried to fight from the first mile through to the end. Seeing myself in the top five with those elite guys in the NCAA it's an amazing thing in my life. I'm proud of what I've done today and proud to put FSU in the top five."
Cardama Baez and Mulenga were the lone All-ACC performers for the Seminoles on a day that had a smattering of highs and lows.
The Seminole women came into the meet with designs on a top-five finish, but never quite recovered from a slow start from the pack.
Third-ranked NC State ran off with the team title (53 points) with Notre Dame (74) second. Virginia Tech (153), Louisville (157) and Syracuse (184) rounded out the top five. Clemson, Pitt and Wake Forest followed with matching scores of 207, followed by the Seminoles (213).
Senior transfer Catherine Blaney (40th, 21:09.5), junior Bridget Blake (44th, 21:15.6) and freshman Megan Mooney (49th, 21:23.8) formed the kind of pack Phillips was hoping for, albeit a little bit further back in the field than she desired.
"Blaney has been so consistent all season long," Phillips said. "She did a tremendous job. She's a newbie for us and this is the first time that she has been at this level, at the conference level, and she handled it really well."
Still the team finish did not sit well with the second-year coach.
"Sixth I could swallow and be a little disappointed," Phillips said. "Ninth, even if it is just six points, we gave it up. The freshmen did a great job, even if it didn't really pan out the way they wanted to. They did the race plan. They got out hard. They went after it and paid for it a little bit, but that's what is going to make them great two years from now. We'll get there."
The Seminole men came into the meet with designs on a spot in the top three, but those hopes took a turn for the worse when Michael Callegari and Ibrahim Ahmed - two of the team's top runners all season - were carted back to the team area after dropping out due to nagging injuries at mid-race.
Fortunately, FSU coach Bob Braman could lean on one of his deepest teams in years to avert a potential disaster behind Mulenga's big day.
"Harry ran incredible," Braman said. "He beat a ton of All-Americans. He put himself in position at four miles to win the race and they took off on him, but he matched them and fought like crazy. I was real, real proud of Harry.
"Overall we ran really tough. We've just got to get healthy. Bryce Kelley has only been running four or five days a week and he gets 42nd place and puts his nose in it the whole way to give us the chance. Grant Nykaza has been injured and we didn't even know if he was going to run for us and finished 40th for us. Our pack did a great job."
The Seminoles placed six runners in the top 42 overall, with graduate transfer Brandon Shemonia continuing his penchant for clutch performances, placing 26th (23:59.0). Freshman Steven Cross (31st, 24:10.1), junior Michael Hall (33rd, 24:11.9) and Nykaza (40th, 24:20.2) rounded out the scorers, with Kelley (42nd, 24:21.7) displacing several others.
"Once again we lost Ibrahim [Ahmed] and Michael Callegari, two guys in our top three, and the guys stepped up and didn't let it bother them," Braman said. "They got the thing done. It may not show totally on the stat sheet … but I think it bodes well for where we're trying to go. Today is the first day since we were here six weeks ago that we got a glimpse of the team we can be and that's what we came here to do. Mission accomplished. Now we've got to be better in two weeks."
WOMEN 6K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 7 Carmela Cardama Baez 7 20:09.6 40 Catherine Blaney 37 21:09.5 44 Bridget Blake 41 21:15.6 49 Megan Mooney 46 21:23.8 92 Tara Rooney 82 22:09.3 94 Fatema Jaffer 83 22:10.4 106 Sarah Candiano 89 22:32.3 110 Hailey Hendry 22:39.2 120 Madison Harris 23:04.0
Cardama Baez, Mulenga Qualify For NCAA XC Championships.
Seminole men fifth, women seventh at NCAA South Region.
TALLAHASSEE, FL - Carmela Cardama Baez and Harry Mulenga have been at the front of the pack every race this cross country season. The second-year Florida State standouts will get a chance to do it again - on the grandest stage of all - at next week's NCAA Championships.
Cardama Baez finished third and Mulenga fifth at Friday's NCAA South Region Championships, contested on FSU's home Apalachee Regional Park Course, securing automatic individual qualifying berths to the NCAA Championships for the first times.
The day began with Cardama Baez, a sophomore from Spain, putting herself in position from the starting gun. Racing in the top 10 early, she climbed to fourth-place at the midway point of the 6000-meter race and picked off one last position in the final 200 meters. She finished in 20:13.1; far and away her fastest effort as a collegian.
"It makes me really happy to see all things finally came together," she said. "Last year at this time, I could have [qualified] but I didn't have the race to make it. If you just keep working and trying, everything is going to come together. I'm here! I'll be in Indiana next week!"
UCF's Anne-Marie Blaney won the individual title (20:07.2) - her fourth career win on the FSU course - and Auburn's Veronica Eder (20:08.6) was second.
The Seminole women finished seventh overall - four spots better than their region ranking - but well behind South Region champion Mississippi State, which edged runner-up Ole Miss 66-67 for the title. Those teams automatically qualified for the NCAA Championships. FSU finished with 208 points and trailed Vanderbilt (138), Alabama (177), Georgia (195) and Florida (208) in the final tally.
Mulenga, like Cardama Baez, thrust himself in the middle of the lead pack from the start and stayed there throughout the first 10,000-meter race of the season. The senior spent the final 7,000 meters in a lead group of five with Middle Tennessee's Jacob Choge and Kigen Chemadi, Samford Arse'ne Guillorel and Alabama's Robbie Farnham-Rose.
When it all shuffled out the Zambian native came home in 30:28.2, which was good enough to collect the third of four automatic individually qualifying spots.
Choge (30:19.8) and Chemadi (30:22.7) finished 1-2 for MTSU, followed by Farnham-Rose (30:24.1) and Guillorel (30:24.6). The fourth and final individual berth went to Alabama's Antibahs Kosgei (30:33.1), a longtime junior college rival of Mulenga's.
"Harry's been good the whole year and I think today he makes that next step in development where he comes in with a big crowd of very talented runners - individually we have a great top 10 in this region - and he's at risk of not making nationals because he's not having a perfect day," FSU men's coach Bob Braman said. "He learned how to be good even not on his best day…He's good enough to be All-American even if he's not perfect, but he's got to fight like he did today."
The Seminole men had plenty of fight, but not nearly enough healthy bodies to secure a 13th trip to the NCAA Championships in the last 14 years. The Noles finished fifth with 127 points, well behind auto qualifiers Ole Miss (46) and MTSU (61), but also trailing Georgia (105) and Alabama (122).
An exhausted Mulenga, who was spiked badly in the ankle during the race, fought hard to earn a spot in Terre Haute and extend FSU's streak of sending at least one runner to the NCAA Championships for the 16th consecutive year.
"That was probably my best because 10k is not an easy distance," Mulenga said. "You have to be focused and give everything you can to make it, so overall I'm so happy with my performance today, to find myself in the top 10 and placing well enough to go to nationals.
"I'll go there and represent everybody as a good ambassador for Florida State."
Besieged by injury late in the season the Noles were forced to race without Michael Callegari, while Ibrahim Ahmed was unable to finish the race. That left freshman Steven Cross to lead the charge and the first-year Nole missed earning All-Region honors by the narrowest of margins, placing 26th (31:17.2).
Bryce Kelley (29th, 31:24.8) and Michael Hall (30th, 31:30.0) were followed by Brandon Shemonia (45th, 31:50.8), to round out the scorers.
"Steven Cross, for a freshman, was fantastic," Braman said. "Bryce Kelley, who has been hurt and didn't run all summer, cross-trained his way to a top 30 finish. Then Mike Hall did what Mike Hall always does. He's a miler on the track and 10k is not his favorite thing, but he's always in that 29-30-31 zone.
"It has been the most trying year for them, because it's their team, and I still believe we're still a top 20 team (nationally) when healthy. We've seen that for a couple months this season, but here at the end there have been so many injuries. We've not been a team that gets hurt and unravels. We've been a team that rallies, hence we've made 12 of 13 NCAA Championships before today."
FSU women's coach Kelly Phillips couldn't have been more pleased with Cardama Baez, who missed both the indoor and outdoor track & field seasons with a serious injury after narrowly failing to qualify individually for last year's NCAA Cross Country Championships.
"I definitely feel like Wisconsin helped her, to know what it feels like," Phillips said, who watched her sophomore standout race with the nation's best that day and two weeks later with an All-ACC performance. "It was easier to go fast out today. She felt really comfortable the whole race, which was great. The big thing for Carmela is from the time of the last regional, where she was disappointed, she has really been working on this regional. She has been planning for this - mentally and physically - for a year and she executed perfectly.
"She was very stressed because she felt like she owed it to her team to be a qualifier and she didn't want to let anyone down. It was just awesome."
Senior Catherine Blaney was the next Nole across the finish, placing 40th in 21:17.1, followed by junior Bridget Blake (55th, 21:32.4), freshman Megan Mooney (61st, 21:37.3) and junior Tara Rooney (62nd, 21:39.7). Freshman Hailey Hendry (90th, 22:14.5) rounded out the Seminole scorers.
"It's not where I wanted to be place-wise," Phillips said. "We were fifth with a kilometer to go and just didn't finish. Our freshmen are on board and are going to be great. We just need a little age…We should have been better as a whole group, but we ran consistent to what we've run all year.
"You lick your wounds, you move on and you keep growing and training harder. They now know what it takes to get here."
WOMEN 6K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 3 Carmela Cardama Baez 2 20:13.1 40 Catherine Blaney 37 21:17.1 55 Bridget Blake 52 21:32.4 61 Megan Mooney 58 21:37.3 62 Tara Rooney 59 21:39.7 90 Hailey Hendry 86 22:14.5 110 Fatema Jaffer 105 22:31.7
Cardama Baez, Mulenga Close Season At NCAA XC Championships.
Different strategies, tough conditions factor in outcomes. TERRE HAUTE, IN - On a
cold, blustery race day against the top collegians in the country, Florida State's Carmela Cardama Baez and Harry Mulenga took opposite approaches to Saturday's NCAA Cross Country Championship races
at the LaVern Gibson Championship Course.
Cardama Baez was battling uphill after a conservative start in the field of 250 finishers, but came on like gang-busters over the final 4000 meters of the 6000-meter race. The sophomore from Spain roared past 84 runners in that span and finished 73rd (20:41.79) in her NCAA Championships debut.
Mulenga, a senior, was front-and-center in a huge lead pack from the outset. The Zambia native was 11th at 3000 meters and 32nd - but very much in the thick of things - at the 5000-meter midway point, but was unable to hang on. Despite a dramatic improvement from last year's finish (153rd), he came home 82nd overall in 30:45.8.
The end results weren't what either had hoped for, but then, neither were the conditions. A cold front came through the area Friday night and while the course was dry despite heavy rain, the temperature was 37 degrees at the start of women's race and the wind chill made it feel like 25.
"It took a lot of moxy for our kids to take on a 50-degree weather change and still compete their tails off," Florida State men's coach Bob Braman said.
Cardama Baez was the first to go in the conditions with the 11 a.m. start.
"She was great; got out a little slow and was stuck a bit but she looked great and kept her composure and worked the entire way passing people," FSU women's coach Kelly Phillips said of her two-time All-ACC, All-Region performer.
The tightly packed field and the winding course made it difficult to move up until the middle stages of the race, where Cardama Baez made her charge.
"She had a fantastic race and a great season and next year she will be here with her team and go for All-American honors," Phillips said.
The men's race followed at noon, with temperatures rising ever-so slightly. Mulenga heated up quickly and near the front of a giant lead pack, in the company of three-time defending champion Edward Cheserek, eventual champion Patrick Tiernan (Villanova) and runner-up and ACC champion Justyn Knight of Syracuse.
"Harry went for the big race and paid the price," said Braman, who watched Mulenga slide pack through the pack beginning shortly after the 5000-meter mark. "I'm proud of him for going for a top-10 finish, but a more controlled approach would've worked better."
WOMEN 6K RACE Place Name Points Time ===== ========================= ====== ======== 73 Carmela Cardama Baez 20:41.79