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After nearly 30 years of missing the NCAA championships, the Harvard women’s cross country team raced with the fastest in the nation on Saturday in Louisville, Ky., to finish its competitive season.
Although the Crimson finished last in a field of 31 teams, Harvard coach Jason Saretsky pointed to the experience his runners gained at the competition.
“I think the weekend was a great experience for our team, with the women making nationals for the first time in 29 years,” Saretsky said. “It’s a historic event. They got a great experience, and so many of them are back next year, so I think there’s a real result to learn from today’s race and be back here next year to improve and get an even better result.”
The men’s team also sent juniors Maksim Korolev and James Leakos to the NCAAs after the pair turned in stellar performances at regionals to qualify for the championships. Leakos struggled during the race and did not finish, while Korolev had a strong start that he could not maintain, leading to disappointing results for both.
“[Korolev] battled through and went for it,” Saretsky said. “He was right with the front pack for about 5k or so, and then it just got pretty tough from there.”
The rest of the men’s team traveled to New York to face off against 13 other teams in the IC4A/ECAC Championships in its final meet of the season. Despite a fifth-place finish, captain Sean Pohorence saw the race as an opportunity to prepare for the spring track season.
“[The IC4A] is definitely not the most important meet on our schedule by any means, but it’s a really nice opportunity to have another race if you’re not running at nationals, and end your season on a strong note,” Pohorence said. “We were pretty disappointed with the result in the end, overall, but you just have to look forward, look towards training for indoor track.”
NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS
After receiving an at-large bid following a fourth-place finish at the Northeast Regionals, the Harvard women’s cross country team qualified for the NCAA Championships for the first time since 1983.
“For our women’s team to [make it to NCAAs] after such a long, long drought, it’s a really important step for us as a program,” Saretsky said. “To see these young ladies competing at the national level gives inspiration for our entire team, and hopefully that will really propel us to be competing at the highest level that we can.”
The Crimson tallied 676 points at the meet from its seven runners, placing the squad at the bottom of the pack—a disappointing result even in the talented field.
“We were really set on not just being there and enjoying being there but also doing well and showing that we deserved being there,” sophomore Viviana Hanley said. “I feel like, as a team, we don’t feel like we adequately did that.”
The team took freshmen Jen Guidera and Paige Kouba to the meet.
“It’s important just having the experience of being here and having a taste of competing at the national level,” Hanley said. ”I think it’s good that we had some freshmen here with us, and I think that experience will definitely help us compete at that level and carry it with us throughout track and upcoming years. We’re definitely looking to be back [at nationals next year].”
Hanley led the way for the Harvard runners, pacing the 6k course in 20:53.7, good enough to take 118th out of 253 competitors. Junior Morgan Kelly came in just behind Hanley, placing 146th with her time of 21:04.5.
Oregon had a decisive victory in the meet following second and third-place individual finishes in the race, tallying only 114 points.
On the men’s side, Korolev, the sole Crimson runner to complete the 10k race, finished his race in 31:43.8. The junior kept up with the lead group for the first half of the race, but fell off the pace as fatigue set in, leading to a disappointing finish of 201st of 245 runners.
IC4A/ECAC CHAMPIONSHIPS
Three top-25 finishes in the five-mile race propelled the Harvard men’s cross-country team to a fifth-place finish at the IC4A/ECAC Championships.
“It was a good day with solid showings,” Pohorence said. “No one ran fantastic, but even if you’re not feeling great, to just get it done is really important.”
Junior Kurt Ruegg posted the best showing of the Crimson runners, taking 18th in the field of 124 with a time of 25:44.7, while freshman Tom Purnell continued his impressive rookie season by finishing the race in 25:46.1 to place 20th.
“It was a tougher course that we’re used to running on—much more hill—and it was definitely a tougher race because of that, but [Purnell] still ended up doing pretty well,” Pohorence said.
Led by Bobby Peavey, who crossed the finish line three seconds before any other runner, Georgetown took first.
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