Lake Braddock's Alex Corbett, closing in on the Virginia 6A individual title. Photo: Charlie Ban
Lake Braddock’s Alex Corbett, closing in on the Virginia 6A individual title. Photo: Charlie Ban

But for some more fortuitous scheduling, Lake Braddock’s boys may have had “throwback Thursday” on their hands. A throwback to something none of the Bruins were alive to remember.

So they settled for a #sometimeagoSaturday. But that’s all the settling they did.

With an individual title by senior Alex Corbett and a dominating team victory, they put their names in the state championship history books as winners for the first time since 1987, when Brad Baker got the scoring started with one point, en route to a 48-60 win over Woodbridge.

[button-red url=”http://www.runhigh.com/2014RESULTS/R111414AA.html” target=”_self” position=”left”] Results [/button-red]The Bruins had finished a close second, 87-85, to Chantilly last year, in a 6A class team competition that saw four teams separated by four points. It wasn’t even close this year at Great Meadows, as they gapped West Springfield 41-92, placing three runners in the top seven, led by Corbett and Kevin Monogue sweeping the top two spots.

“I just wanted to be patient during the race,” he said. “I knew it would go out fast because of all the other guys out there.”

Coming in off a North Region championship and a strong senior season, with a 15:17 5k PR set in September at the DCXC Invitational, Corbett was confident his plan would play out to his liking.

Chantilly’s Ryan McGorty (fourth, 15:26), T.C. Williams’ Anteneh Girma (sixth, 15:36) and Cox’s Jonathan Lomogda (third, 15:21) led the way through the mile, and a quartet of Bruins sat in wait a little bit behind.

“Me, Kevin, Colin (Schaefer, seventh, 15:39) and Ben (Fogg, 18th in 16:10), we were just chilling back there in the chase pack,” he said. “After the second mile, I caught back up and got to work. I made my move with 1200 meters to go, and it worked. When I turned around and saw Kevin was coming in second, I couldn’t believe it.”

Monogue’s 15:19 was a PR, and put him five seconds ahead of Stoney’s winning time last year.

“I think I was able to go out faster than last year and keep it going longer,” he said. “I think I was faster in all stages of the race.”

In 2013, Monogue ran 16:16 for 31st place, so that was a bit of an understatement.

“It’s nice when your teammate is the one making the move, and you know what he’s going to do,” coach Mike Mangan said. “It gives you a great advantage. The pack moved, he held on that was enough to get him into position.”

When Schaefer moved to Northern Virginia from Nevada over the summer and joined the Bruins’ cross country team, he was introduced to a team on a mission.

“My first time meeting the guys was in July and they were running a hard workout,” he said. “They all crushed me. Really really badly. I knew these people meant business. It’s been great training with them — they’re the best in the state.”

The Bruins will see how they stack up against the rest of the Southeast and possibly the nation when they take a shot at qualifying for the Nike Cross National meet in Oregon. Mangan is used to taking runners to the Footlocker Cross Country Championships after several successful years with now-graduated girls.

“I guess I don’t get to take my December trip to San Diego this year,” he quipped.

While Lake Braddock had a year to stew over their two-point loss, their pursuers had been waiting even longer for a shot at the state title. West Springfield sent a boys’ team to the state meet for the first time since 2006, and did it in style, finishing second.

Led by Tim Ward’s 10th place finish in 15:56, the middle of the Spartans’ scoring pack came in  places 25, 26 and 27.

Coach Chris Pellegrini explained that his team, while not flashy, got the job done.

“This is going to sound like it’s not complimentary, but it is– I don’t believe that we have a bunch of blue chip individuals on our team,” he said, “Our one blue chipper (Owen Buck) moved to Seattle, over the summer, so our guys did a great job of rallying together.”

Pellegrini gave a great deal of credit to junior Andrew Lackey (27th), the only underclassman in the bunch, who was running his first season of cross country after a playing in the marching band.

“He was running 11:30 for two miles last year in JV track, today just ran 16:22 for 5k to finish in the top 30,” Pellegrini said. “He’s small, he’s skeletal, he looks like he can’t be fast, and he can’t sprint, but he can just will himself. Something clicked in his brain and he decided he was going to do that.”

As Nahom Teshome (25th, 16:21)and Evan Fabish (26th, 16:22) faded in the third mile, Lackey caught them and snapped them back into the goal at hand.

“When he caught up to me and said it was time to go, I knew he was right,” Fabish said, as Lackey came running over to the group carrying a t-shirt and yelling “I can run all day!”

Lackey deferred to his teammates when he explained his motivation.

“These guys, the seniors, have been working at this for a while,” he said. “I just wanted to help them get here.”

He’ll be the top Spartan returner in 2015.

“He’s the ‘how is he doing this, how is he running that fast’ kind of kid that a program needs to get over the top,” Pellegrini said.

McGorty led Chantilly to a third-place finish, with Oakton in fourth, led by Simon Iyob (12th, 15:58) Robinson in fifth led by Patrick Myers ( 14th, 15:59) and Hunter Jurtas (15th, 15:59) and Washington-Lee in eighth, behind Patrick Odlum (43rd, 16:42).

In the 5A race, Thomas Jefferson was the top local team in second, behind sophomore Saurav Velleleth‘s ninth place finish in 16:12. Heritage senior Joey Lightbody was the top local 4A runner in 34th place (16:57).

On Friday, Loudoun Valley junior Andrew Hunter broke Sean McGorty‘s two-year-old state meet record (14:47) with his 14:41, while Brentsville District took the team title behind junior Jack McNally in seventh place (16:11). McGorty went on to finish second in the 2012 Footlocker Cross Country Championships.

In the 2A race, George Mason finished sixth, behind senior Jackson Jost‘s 30th place finish (17:45).

West Springfield's Andrew Lackey drags along teammates Evan Fabish and Nahom Teshome in the final stretch of the 6A boys' race at the Virginia state cross country championships. Photo: Charlie Ban
West Springfield’s Andrew Lackey drags along teammates Evan Fabish and Nahom Teshome in the final stretch of the 6A boys’ race at the Virginia state cross country championships. Photo: Charlie Ban

		
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Tim Ward, Amanda Swaak, Ryan McGorty, Kevin Monogue, Ellie Leape, Alex Corbett, Tristan Colaizzi, Keirnan Keller, Amir Khaghani and Emily Murphy. Photos by Dustin Whitlow
Tim Ward, Amanda Swaak, Ryan McGorty, Kevin Monogue, Ellie Leape, Alex Corbett, Tristan Colaizzi, Keirnan Keller, Amir Khaghani and Emily Murphy. Photo by Dustin Whitlow

Simply put, last year was good for the D.C. area’s cross country runners. West Springfield’s Caroline Alcorta‘s third place was the best Footlocker Cross Country Championships race by a girl since Erin Keough won it all in 1986. Katy Kunc and Hannah Christen gave Lake Braddock two national championships qualifiers. Edison’s Louis Colson and Marshall’s Mackenzie Haight proved the 5A class’ depth by making it, and St. Albans’ Tai Dinger gave D.C. its first qualifier since Sidwell’s John McGowan.

But that was last year.

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