[Printer Friendly]
Nov 7, 2009 Columbus State & Two Individuals Advance to Men's Cross Country Nationals Columbus State placed two runners in the top 10 and three in the
top 20 as they finished second at the NCAA Southeast Regional
championships on Saturday in Wingate, N.C. CSU will advance to the
National Championships along with Queens, who won the event. Also
advancing are UNC Pembroke's Pardon Ndhlovu and Clayton State's
Fidelis Mutiso, who were the top finishers on teams that will not
advance.
Columbus State's Meshack Koyiaki entered the event having won every
meet he had started in 2009. He very nearly kept that perfect
record in-tact. Koyiaki and reigning Southeast Champion Oscar
Ogwaro of Queens reached the finish line at exactly the same time
and the winner was determined in a photo finish. Koyiaki
misunderstood the rules and thrust his legs across the finish line,
but Ogwaro stretched his upper torso at the line and was declared
the winner. Both runners were credited with a time of 31:14, a full
20 seconds ahead of Futsum Mebrahtu of Queens.
Nicholas Kering gave CSU two runners in the top four, finishing
fourth at 31:43. Nathan Prickett was the next finisher for CSU in
19th place (18 points) at 33:44, followed by John Neill in 23rd (22
points) at 33:55 and Stewart Helton in 25th (24 points) at 33:57.
Those five runners compiled the team score for CSU. Andrew
Henderson (48, 35:10) and David Marley (49, 35:14) rounded out the
CSU team.
Queens easily claimed the team title with 28 points, followed by 70
from CSU. Mars Hill was the third and final team to qualify for
nationals by finishing in third place with 96 points. Lees-McRae
was fourth, and Peach Belt teams Clayton State and UNC Pembroke
tied for fifth.
Ndhlovu finished fifth overall in 32:14 and will represent UNC
Pembroke at the national championships. Clayton State's Fidelis
Mutiso was seventh overall in 32:22 and will also go to the
nationals.
The NCAA National Championships will be run on Saturday, Nov. 21 in
Evansville, Ind., and hosted by the University of Southern Indiana.
Results
|