Pottsgrove’s Hillen, Boyertown’s McComb run to Pioneer Athletic Conference titles

WORCESTER >> The first time was certainly the charm for Naomi Hillen.

Her debut in the Pioneer Athletic Conference League Championship meet will be a memorable one. The Pottsgrove sophomore won the girls’ varsity race at Heebner Park in strong fashion, outrunning the rest of the field by more than 10 seconds to become the program’s first league champ in more than 20 years.

The boys race was won by Boyertown’s Christian McComb, who crossed the finish line 13 seconds ahead of Owen J. Roberts’ Linus Blatz. Owen J. Roberts swept the team championships, in the wake of its unbeaten runs through the Liberty Division’s regular season.

Pottsgrove’s Naomi Hillen at the PAC cross country championship October 18, 2018. (Gene Walsh – Digital First Media)

“I loved it. It went by fast,” Hillen said of the race on the five-kilometer Heebner course. “I didn’t know what to expect when we walked it.”

A hamstring issue last fall prevented Hillen from competing in PACs as a freshman. But there was no stopping — or, for that matter, slowing — her succeeding Spring-Ford graduate Gabriella Bamford as the conference’s girls champ.

Hillen kicked her run into a higher gear around the four-kilometer mark, with Spring-Ford’s Emily Smith and Upper Merion’s Veronica Sanchez in the front pack. She went on to clock a 19:34, Smith following at 19:45 and Sanchez a distant third in 20:01.

Owen J. Roberts’ Mackenzie Kurtz at the PAC cross country championship October 18, 2018. (Gene Walsh – Digital First Media)

“That’s where I do it,” Hillen said. “I find it better to stay with the stronger runners. They know how to handle those behind them.”

Behind Smith and Sanchez were Perkiomen Valley’s Delaney Osullivan (fourth, 20:05) and Owen J. Roberts’ Mackenzie Kurtz (fifth, 20:08). The rest of the girls’ Top 10 was Spring-Ford’s Ahila Moorthy, OJR’s Hannah Kopec and Calista Vandruff, PV’s Jocelyn Rotay and Roberts’ Emily Glasier.

“I wanted to stay with (Hillen), and pick it up by the 4K mark,” Smith said. “But she picked it up, too. I’m happy with second.”

In the boys’ race, McComb was solid from around the first mile on. The Boyertown junior ran a 16:13 ahead of OJR’s Linus Blatz (16:26), PV’s Tyler Clifford (16:29), Spring-Ford’s John Zawislak (16:41) and Methacton’s Matt Varghese (16:44), whose third-place finish last fall made him the highest-placing returnee.

Owen J. Roberts’ Linus Blatz at the PAC cross country championship in Worcester October 18, 2018. (Gene Walsh – Digital First Media)

“I said after the first mile, I was going to pick it up,” McComb said. “I had a decent lead at the mile, so I widened it there.”

McComb became the successor to OJR graduate Liam Conway, the winner of the PAC’s previous two races. He described the experience as “so honoring.”

“I looked up to Liam the last two years,” he said. “I wanted to be a champion like him. It’s so honoring to be champion.”

Placing 6-10 for the boys were OJR’s David Brunton and Thomas Damiani, Methacton’s Thomas Chimes, Spring-Ford’s Alex Fink and Phoenixville’s Gabe Puleo.

Methacton’s Matt Varghese near the finish line the PAC cross country championship October 18, 2018. (Gene Walsh – Digital First Media)

For Blatz, the runner-up finish didn’t displace the feel of the OJR boys winning the team title. With their first five runners placing in the Top 20, the Wildcats’ 44 points surpassed the Warriors (64) and third-place Spring-Ford (82) by comfortable margins.

“We won. That’s what matters,” Blatz said. “We wanted to work as a team, and we got the title by working together nicely.”

Roberts’ “pack” focus also served the girls well. With their first four finishers in the Top 10, the ‘Cats team total of 44 bested the Rams (54) and Vikings (62).

“I’m always nervously confident,” OJR first-year head coach Tim Marcoe said. “You don’t know what’s going to happen in the race.

“Certainly, you hope to get someone at the top. But the way the race played out, that wasn’t the focus. It was more running as a team and a group.”

For next week’s District 1 meet at Lehigh University, Hillen and McComb will both carry high hopes for big showings in the Class 3A and 2A fields, respectively.

“I’m hoping to run in the 20s,” Hillen said, noting 19:17 is her personal best. “Lehigh is a fast course. Breaking 19 (minutes) is my long-term goal.”

“This (PAC) is a big confidence booster,” McComb said. “I ran a 15:48 at Lehigh for the Paul Short, and that was muddy there. We’ll see how much we can do.”

NOTES >> Pope John Paul II, the PAC’s Frontier Division leader during the regular season, was paced by Jack Phillips for the boys (16th) and Gianna Cagliola for the girls (11th). … Laree Hills, who placed 30th, was Pottsgrove’s leading runner. … Damiani and Vandruff were the highest-finishing freshmen in the races.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Leave a Reply