Muddy course turns DCXC Invite into a test of strength

Cullen Capuano, Daniel O’Brien, Luke Tewalt and Gavin McElhennon finish the first loop of the junior boys’ race at the DCXC Invitational. Photo: Ed Lull

Woodrow Wilson sophomore Vincent Kamami spends a lot of his time before races wrapped up in his nerves. This week, coaches and race directors were right with him.

As rain continued to fall on the D.C. area, the fates of weekend invitationals were once again in doubt. On Friday, Fauquier County, Va.’s Octoberfest Invitational pulled the plug, like Oatlands two weeks before and Maryland’s Track and Trail before that, driven by concerns about how courses would survive the onslaught of spikes and body weight.

But the DCXC Invitational at Northeast D.C.’s Kenilworth Park was a go, and runners would have a chance to face off and get dirty. Coaches, and Kamani, could stop fretting and start planning on actually racing. The flat, usually fast course was not immune to the rain, and long muddy stretches and iffy turns forced many races to become tactical, which as T.S. Wootton senior John Riker remarked after his third place finish, would ultimately be more beneficial in the long term for runners.

DCXC Invitational

Sept. 29, 2018

Washington, D.C.
5k

Finish line photos by Charlie Ban

Boys Teams
1. T.S. Wootton
2.Winston Churchill
3.Bethesda-Chevy Chase

Girls Teams
1. Walter Johnson
2.Bethesda-Chevy Chase
3.T.S. Wootton

Although times didn’t match historical marks, the conditions treated spectators to treats that ranged from dominant performances in a few races and a finishing kick in the senior boys’ race that closed out the meet with a thrill.

Local teams defended their turn against a fair number of visitors, and they only allowed one out-of-towner, Daniel O’Brien of the Virginia Episcopal School in Lynchburg, to snag an individual win, in the junior boys’ race.

With many Northern Virginia teams betting on Octoberfest, Montgomery County, Md. teams swept the composite team scores, with Wooton taking first among boys (over Winston Churchill) and third for girls and four-time Maryland 4A champion Walter Johnson coming away with a win over rival Bethesda-Chevy Chase, which also finished third for the boys.

Visiting team Grafton, from the Tidewater, put boys in third place in the freshman, sophomore and junior races, many inspired following then-senior, now Georgetown freshman Price Owens’ win in 2017.

The course follows two loops of Kenilworth Park, ending with a tight turn before the last 150 meters or so on an all-weather track. Eight varsity races divide runners into age classes, giving runners in grade a chance to race entirely against their peers. This was the fifth year for the DCXC Invitational, which Pacers Running envisioned to bring attention to Washington, D.C.’s running scene, which included only a few small cross country invitationals.

Read prior years’ coverage of the DCXC Invitational:

2014     2015     2016     2017

 

 

 

Katherine Slovak leads the rest of the top four in the second half of the freshman girls’ race. Photo: Ed Lull

Freshman Girls

Freshman Girls

Photos by Ed Lull

Results

1.Katherine Slovak O’Connell 20:41
2.Katherine Strong Stone Ridge 21:00
3.Grace Glade T.C Williams 21:14

If Bishop O’Connell’s girls plan to retake the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference title from St. John’s, freshman Katherine Slovak will likely play a big part. She outdistanced the rest of the freshman field to win in 20:41, 19 seconds ahead of Katherine Strong of Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart.

Slovak held off early on, in hopes of running an even pace, and moved up throughout the race.

“I saw people slowing down and knew I could go faster,” she said. “I pulled away pretty gradually.”

She’s been running competitively since fifth grade.

For Slovak, the freshman-only race might have been less crowded, but it would’t have changed her tactics to have older runners in the race.

“Upperclassmen might have been ahead of me, but I wasn’t going to change how I ran,” she said.

Strong took a lap of the course to survey the conditions.

“I just went straight through the mud,” she said. “It just seemed like the most direct way.”

Grace Glade was hoping for a top-five finish, which she achieved by finishing third in 21:14.

“I was a little exhausted at the end and I couldn’t keep up when (Strong) kicked at the end, on the track.”

 

Xavier Jemison opened up a lead early in the freshman boys’ race and never left up. Photo: Ed Lull

Freshman Boys

Freshman Boys

Photos by Ed Lull

Results

1.Xavier Jemison McLean 17:25
2.Tanner Baker Gloucester 17:50
3.Ben Madrigal Grafton 17:53

McLean’s Xavier Jemison tore through the finish line with enough momentum that the finish banner went with him, and after a few steps he figured he’d take it with him. Given the way he owned the rest of the race, he might as well have.

Jemison didn’t mess around, taking off soon after the gun and laying waste to the rest of the field, winning in 17:25 with a 25-second margin over Gloucester’s Tanner Baker.

“It’s slow for me, I was hoping to be under 16 minutes,” he said.

He’s a recent transplant from Naperville, Ill. who is riding a three-race winning streak to start his freshman year, including the freshman race at the Monroe Parker Invitational.

Jemison hurt his ankle stepping in a hole during the race, but still managed to finish the race strong.

Baker and Ben Madrigal had a little more trouble with the mud, but keying off of each other helped pull them through.

“I was wearing spikes, but that doesn’t really help if you can’t get them in solid ground,” Madrigal said.

 

First-time cross country runner Piper Dean (left) dogged Zoe Edelman for much of the sophomore girls’ race. Photo: Ed Lull

Sophomore Girls

Sophomore Girls

Photos by Ed Lull

Results

1.Zoe Edelman Latin 19:51
2.Piper Dean Yorktown 20:11
3.Tess Brinkman O’Connell 21:07

Washington Latin’s Zoe Edelman was exhausted after winning the sophomore girls’ race, which she won in 19:51.

“I felt like I was just running through water,” she said. “I weaved back and forth to try to find the dry ground, but I wanted to run the shortest route possible, and that ended up being through the mud most of the time.”

The afternoon heat – Edelman is not used to running in the middle of the day – got to her at times, but it didn’t distract from her pre-race mental preparations.

“I told myself I was going to run my best race, even with the mud,” she said.

Piper Dean hug onto her for most of the race before fading to second in 20:11, but while she was frustrated to have lost after making a bid for the lead, she struggled to find a performance that was any better.

“Oh this is my first race, I’ve never run a 5k before,” she said

Tess Brinkman is finishing up her first month or so of training, after taking the summer off to recover from tendinitis in her hips. She didn’t want to use the layoff to excuse her performance.

“There’s definitely room for improvement,” she said. “I can push myself harder.”

 

Vincent Kamani breaks the tape in his first cross country win, the DCXC sophomore boys race. Photo: Charlie Ban

Sophomore Boys

Sophomore Boys

Photos by Ed Lull

Results

1.Vincent Kamani Wilson 17:26
2.Patrick Donnelly Gonzaga 17:34
3.Alex Murphy Grafton 17:36

Vincent Kamani didn’t envision winning.

“I didn’t think it was possible,” he said, minutes after he had done just that – running 17:26 to win the sophomore boys’ race in 17:26, eight seconds ahead of Gonzaga’s Patrick Donnelly.

His pre-race routine reflected his doubt.

“I’m a nervous racer,” he said. “Before the race, I was just in the tent, shaking.”

Once he got a half-mile into the race, though, his breathing helped calm him down, and in the second loop around the course, he moved into first place for his first cross country win.

Would that confidence change his mental approach?

“I don’t know, I’ll have to see next time,” he said.

 

 

John Champe’s Bethany Graham scored the biggest margin of victory of the meet in winning the junior girls’ race – 74 seconds. Photo: Ed Lull

Junior Girls

Junior Girls

Photos by Ed Lull

Results

1.Bethany Graham Champe 19:01
2.Ellie Desmond Broad Run 20:15
3.Jenna Goldberg Walter Johnson 20:20

Bethany Graham took off in the junior girls’ race and put the “champ” in John Champe High School. He 19:01 was the fastest girls’ time of the day and her 74-second margin over Broad Run’s Ellie Desmond was also the largest victory of the afternoon.

“I tried to run my own race and not worry about anybody else,” Graham said. “I was trying to make sure I didn’t look back to see anyone else.”

Behind her, Ellie Desmond from Broad Run and Jenna Goldberg from Walter Johnson were struggling in the mud.

“I just felt awful,” Desmond said. “Every time I hit mud, I’d sink in a little. Then the second lap I was getting tired, so it never really got much better.”

Goldberg concurred. Despite the mud, her Wildcats won the girls’ overall title.

 

Daniel O’Brien leads Luke Tewalt in the junior boys’ race. Photo: Ed Lull

Junior Boys

Junior Boys

Photos by Ed Lull

Results

1.Daniel O’Brien Va. Episcopal 16:07
2.Luke Tewalt Latin 16:24
3.Zachary Sturm Grafton 16:38

Daniel O’Brien was an unknown to many local runners, heading into DCXC. He runs for Virginia Episcopal School – in Lynchburg, not Alexandria – and came up here with just one teammate. But by the time the day was over, his 16:07 junior boys’ race-winning time was the high-water mark for men.

“I could tell a mile in that it was going to be a race for place, not for time,” O’Brien said. “By the time we got on it, the course was pretty chewed up from the earlier races. There really wasn’t anywhere that wasn’t muddy in a lot of places.”

He threw in a few surges at the mile and a more decisive move after two miles to put a gap on Washington Latin’s Luke Tewalt, who was second as a sophomore. Tewalt ran a personal best time for his cross country career, despite the mud.

“My teammates told me how muddy the course was but I didn’t know for myself until I was in the race,” he said. “The puddles were all a lot deeper than they looked.”

While in  pursuit, he watched how O’Brien handled the turns and ultimately approached them by slowing down to avoid losing his footing.

“I didn’t want to slip, but slowing down on turns  killed my mojo,” Tewalt said.

Zachary Sturm was the oldest of the Grafton runners to finish in the top three of the class races, running what he called the race of his life for a 25-second personal record.

“I thought we were slow, but I was at 5:18 through the mile and I was in 16th place,” he said. “I moved up to fifth in the second mile, which everyone said was the hardest one, and my coach kept telling me I had a shot at first, so I kept fighting.”

Eva Smith-Perry closes in on the finish line of the senior girls’ race. Photo: Charlie Ban

Senior Girls

Senior Girls

Photos by Ed Lull

Results

1.Eva Smith-Perry Washington-Lee 19:15
2.Laura Webb Woodbridge 19:44
3.Nandini Satsangi Poolesville 19:49

If Daniel O’Brien thought the course was messed up when he raced, it was only worse a few minutes later, when Washington-Lee’s Eva Smith-Perry was surging along in brand new spikes.

“It would have been nice to keep them clean, but in the last mile I just went for it,” she said. “I tried going around the mud early in the race but after a while you really couldn’t.”

Smith-Perry finished third as a junior last year.

“It got hard after the second mile, and the time wasn’t what I wanted to run, but winning makes up for that,” she said.

Laura Webb, who finished second as a junior, did the same as a senior. She stood out as the only top-tier runner in any of the races to have taped her shoes, covering the laces and adding an extra measure of security to her spikes.

“There were a few times I hit mud and felt like my spike was about to come off, the heel moved a little but the spikes felt secure,” she said.

Webb took the race out hard, leading throughout the first mile. She tried to take the high ground to avoid the mud, but soon relented.

“At the end of the race, you just head through the middle of the muddy patches and hope for the best,” she said. “Everyone had to deal with it.”

Nandini Satsangi, who finished third, dealt with it a little more, slipping and falling in the last half mile and taking her out of contention for second place. As a second-place finisher as a freshman and sophomore and the winner of the junior race in 2017, she has finished in the top three each year of her high school career. DCXC was her first invitational of the year, after Oatlands was cancelled.

Max Greczyn kicks away from Theo Woods to win the senior boys’ race. Photo: Charlie Ban

Senior Boys

Senior Boys

Photos by Ed Lull

Results

1.Max Greczyn O’Connell 16:16
2.Theo Woods Glass 16:18
3.John Riker Wootton 16:34

Bishop O’Connell’s Max Greczyn and E.C. Glass’ Theo Woods saved the best show for last. The pair came surging onto the track, even with the awkward turn with roughly 150 meters to go and brought the crowd alive as Greczyn pulled away for a two-second lead and a 16:16 victory. He repeated as his class’ champion after winning the 2017 junior race in a breakout performance in his first season in the sport.

The experienced he has gained over the last year his done little to dull his enthusiasm. He wanted to repeat, but knew that regardless of how fit he was, the course was a wild card.

“With this mud, anything could happen out there,” he said. “I warmed up on the course and I found places that seemed like quicksand.”

The pair matched moves throughout the race until the approach to the track at the finish. A roar from the crowd, which hadn’t seen as many close races, preceded them

“I sat on (Woods) until about a quarter mile left and tried to outkick him, but he’s fast,” Greczyn said. “He made me work for it. I could hear my coach yelling ‘he’s right behind you,’ but I thought I had dropped him.”

Woods has run 1:52 for the 800 meters and was eyeing the last bit on the track to help him kick for the win, but after almost three miles of stabilizing himself in the mud, his’ kick was neutralized.

“I just had nothing left in my legs,” Woods said. “He ran that race really well.”

Though it was muddy, John Riker (third in 16:34) had seen worse, just this week. At a dual meet Tuesday, he ran 20:00.

As one of four meets within 11 days, the course at DCXC “added a fun challenge,” he said. “I saw those guys move up ahead of me, so I tried my best to close the gap.

“The time and place wasn’t the best, but mentally, it was an A+ race.”

He was most thrilled with his team’s overall win.

“We had guys finish in 15th and 22nd place (in the senior race),” he said. “It was a statement race. We think this is our year.”

T.C. Williams’ Esme Damico-Lassman leads Edison’s Talya Peters in the freshman girls’ race. Photo: Ed Lull

 

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