XC 2014 National Championship 11/22/14 11:45 | Syracusefan.com

XC 2014 National Championship 11/22/14 11:45

Cross Country | 11/17/2014 7:20:00 PM |
Orange up to No. 2 ahead of Nationals
Syracuse boasts highest ranking in program history heading into final meet

They keep climbing.

The Syracuse men's cross country team moved up to No. 2 in this week's USTFCCCA Poll, five days ahead of Saturday's NCAA Championships.

The Orange managed to win the NCAA Northeast Regional by putting five runners inside of the top-15 last Saturday, despite resting Max Straneva and Justyn Knight, who were the second and third runners across for Syracuse at the ACC Championships.

The No. 2 ranking is the highest ever in the history of the poll for Syracuse, who were No. 3 last week. The previous peak before this season was No. 7.

The Orange won its second-straight ACC title this season, and fifth conference championship in the last six years. Syracuse also won the Wisconsin Adidas Invitational, which featured a loaded field of 19 ranked teams.

The team looks for its first National Championship since 1951 on Saturday. In addition, any finish better than last year's 10th-place finish would be the best finish since Syracuse finished fourth in 1957.

The women's team is ranked 25th in this week's poll and earned an at-large berth into Saturday's NCAA Championships, which gets underway at 11:45 a.m.
 
Wow! Incredible job by Coach Fox and the runners that have built this program from literally nothing.

And I want to add a major shout out to CuseLegacy, who is like an energizer bunny on this Olympic Board and the FB Recruiting. She just keeps going and going and going. Thanks for giving a voice to all these "minor" sports that many of us have had the privilege of participating or watching our kids participating.
 
Should be a very interesting national championship race. From a Syracuse perspective, the biggest difference between this championship and the past few years is that this race has been the focus of the entire season... all training has been geared to having the guys ready to go on 11/22.

In past years, they had to be at their best to win the Big East/ACC and had to run hard at regionals just to qualify. With the quaility of the squad and the resume building win at Wisconsin this was not a concern this year. Following the team over the course of the year:

1. 2nd to Oregon at Boston - in post race interviews Coach Fox said he hadn't had the team even run below 5 min per mile pace in practice yet, so they were clearly building a good base and training through this race.

2. Dominate/hard performances at Wisconsin and ACC's. Running these races well ensured that the Orange were all but a lock to be selected for NCAAs as an at-large even if they didn't place in the top 2 (automatic) at regionals. They were both sufficiently removed from nationals that they will not have any effect on 11/22.

3. Run as easily as possible to quailify at regionals. This involved resting 2 of the top runners. Also it was pretty apparent that Hehir and others were just tempo-ing this with teammates and were not going all out.

True contenders (Colorado, Oregon, NAU, Wisconsin, Stanford, Iona, Nova, etc...) correctly realize that it is quite taxing to "go to the well" in a race more than 3-4 times a season. It is tough to recover from these efforts and often takes away from the more important races at the end of the year.

In past seasons, Syracuse was a level just below these programs and needed an all-out effort at regionals and great performances throughout the year to ensure they would compete at nationals. Not anymore, it is pretty clear the focus has changed from simpily qualifying for nationals to national title contention and being a podium team (top 5). It will be intersting to see the results.

As I have said before, I don't see anyone beating Colorado (they return everyone from a team that won last year, and are one of the best teams in recent memory). They could have every one of their runners make All-American. Oregon will be very tough as well due to the strength of their top 2 runners (Cheserek and Jenkins). Syracuse has the strength of a lot of quaility depth. Their team is built similarly to Colorado, where their depth can offset a few runners having a bad day since they are so close together. Despite being ranked second I still see us getting third next week.

I'll predict:
1. Colorado
2. Oregon (Cheserek will likely win, and Jenkins will be top 5)
3. Syracuse (could easily beat Oregon, but will probably need some help from colorado to beat them)
4. Stanford (have a lot of talent, but have been up and down)
5. Oklahoma State (has been an awesome program of late but is tough to evaluate since I'm not sure they have run a full squad yet and didn't run Pre-Nats or Wisconsin)
 
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Great points about being able to train to peak at this meet. It is a huge advantage to only have these guys race 3/4 times as it allows for more consistent training, and avoding "dead legs" at this point in the season.

I feel the same way runningorange. I think Oregon's 1-2 guys will be the difference as I expect them both to be top 5 (top 10 at worst). Stanford's hurt by the loss of Jim Rosa this year-with him, they would be ahead of Stanford.

Maybe Oregon's 5th runner blows up this weekend, as I think that's the only way SU gets 2nd, but I just want to see them finish in the top 4 and get a podium spot.
 
Should be a very interesting national championship race. From a Syracuse perspective, the biggest difference between this championship and the past few years is that this race has been the focus of the entire season... all training has been geared to having the guys ready to go on 11/22.

In past years, they had to be at their best to win the Big East/ACC and had to run hard at regionals just to qualify. With the quaility of the squad and the resume building win at Wisconsin this was not a concern this year. Following the team over the course of the year:

1. 2nd to Oregon at Boston - in post race interviews Coach Fox said he hadn't had the team even run below 5 min per mile pace in practice yet, so they were clearly building a good base and training through this race.

2. Dominate/hard performances at Wisconsin and ACC's. Running these races well ensured that the Orange were all but a lock to be selected for NCAAs as an at-large even if they didn't place in the top 2 (automatic) at regionals. They were both sufficiently removed from nationals that they will not have any effect on 11/22.

3. Run as easily as possible to quailify at regionals. This involved resting 2 of the top runners. Also it was pretty apparent that Hehir and others were just tempo-ing this with teammates and were not going all out.

True contenders (Colorado, Oregon, NAU, Wisconsin, Stanford, Iona, Nova, etc...) correctly realize that it is quite taxing to "go to the well" in a race more than 3-4 times a season. It is tough to recover from these efforts and often takes away from the more important races at the end of the year.

In past seasons, Syracuse was a level just below these programs and needed an all-out effort at regionals and great performances throughout the year to ensure they would compete at nationals. Not anymore, it is pretty clear the focus has changed from simpily qualifying for nationals to national title contention and being a podium team (top 5). It will be intersting to see the results.

As I have said before, I don't see anyone beating Colorado (they return everyone from a team that won last year, and are one of the best teams in recent memory). They could have every one of their runners make All-American. Oregon will be very tough as well due to the strength of their top 2 runners (Cheserek and Jenkins). Syracuse has the strength of a lot of quaility depth. Their team is built similarly to Colorado, where their depth can offset a few runners having a bad day since they are so close together. Despite being ranked second I still see us getting third next week.

I'll predict:
1. Colorado
2. Oregon (Cheserek will likely win, and Jenkins will be top 5)
3. Syracuse (could easily beat Oregon, but will probably need some help from colorado to beat them)
4. Stanford (have a lot of talent, but have been up and down)
5. Oklahoma State (has been an awesome program of late but is tough to evaluate since I'm not sure they have run a full squad yet and didn't run Pre-Nats or Wisconsin)

Hey runningorange it seems that in fact next year could be a year for a National Title, is that true? 5 of the 7 top runners at cuse will be back and both Colorado and Oregon lose a little... Not to say that a Top 3 finish this year isn't fantastic but next year could be it...
 
Hey runningorange it seems that in fact next year could be a year for a National Title, is that true? 5 of the 7 top runners at cuse will be back and both Colorado and Oregon lose a little... Not to say that a Top 3 finish this year isn't fantastic but next year could be it...

there is definetly a chance! As mentioned in other threads, Mickey Burke (4th a footlocker nationals as a high schooler) is redshirting this year. Nick Ryan also is a big time talent and could step in easily (along with a bunch of talented runners). I expect next year's team to be a little better than this years team assuming the returning runners stay healthy and make typical offseason strides.

Colorado, despite losing some talent, is also redshirting some potential all-American level runners, so I don't think they drop off too much. Beating them will definetly be earned.

Oregon loses Jenkins (and maybe Cheserk if he turns pro) and some others. Thing is they recruit at a different plateau than anyone (see Nike, Prefontaine, Bowerman, Hayward field, tracktown, etc...). It is unlikely they drop off too much, but they will be more beatable.

To win, the biggest thing holding back Syracuse is a true front runner ('low stick'). Oregon, Colorado, Standford, NAU all have runners who will be in the top 10 at nationals. Having a good pack is important, but most national champions have at least 1 (but sometimes 2) elite fronrunners. Hehir is getting pretty close and maybe he is there and shows it on Saturday. Knight could also place pretty low and might be the best true freshmen this year.

Summary: It is possible for sure, but will involve all returners making improvements as well as developing 1 or 2 individuals who can challenge for the top 10-15 places.
 
there is definetly a chance! As mentioned in other threads, Mickey Burke (4th a footlocker nationals as a high schooler) is redshirting this year. Nick Ryan also is a big time talent and could step in easily (along with a bunch of talented runners). I expect next year's team to be a little better than this years team assuming the returning runners stay healthy and make typical offseason strides.

Colorado, despite losing some talent, is also redshirting some potential all-American level runners, so I don't think they drop off too much. Beating them will definetly be earned.

Oregon loses Jenkins (and maybe Cheserk if he turns pro) and some others. Thing is they recruit at a different plateau than anyone (see Nike, Prefontaine, Bowerman, Hayward field, tracktown, etc...). It is unlikely they drop off too much, but they will be more beatable.

To win, the biggest thing holding back Syracuse is a true front runner ('low stick'). Oregon, Colorado, Standford, NAU all have runners who will be in the top 10 at nationals. Having a good pack is important, but most national champions have at least 1 (but sometimes 2) elite fronrunners. Hehir is getting pretty close and maybe he is there and shows it on Saturday. Knight could also place pretty low and might be the best true freshmen this year.

Summary: It is possible for sure, but will involve all returners making improvements as well as developing 1 or 2 individuals who can challenge for the top 10-15 places.

Thanks for the great summary! Any idea what type of talent is coming in next year for Syracuse? Soon to be freshman?
 
Fox typically sits his freshmen (Knight being the exception) so, like runningorange mentioned, look to Burke and Ryan as well as the development of Erb, Lennon, and Bennie.

If Hehir and Knight can turn into top 10-15 guys next year, SU will be in the hunt and I think there chances could be better if we assume everyone will continue to improve.
 
B2vDyZgCUAAQqL3.png:large




7:53 AM - 18 Nov 2014
Matt Schneidman‏@matt_schneidman 5h5 hours ago
Martin Hehir isn't just fast. It's more than that and I broke down the ACC's best runner: http://bit.ly/14CmMVk

Hehir’s mind, body, diet fuel his, Syracuse success ahead of NCAA championship
<img src="/resize/300/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/111814_S_HehirProfile_Courtesy.jpg" alt="Martin Hehir has placed in the top three at each of his conference championships. He maintains a strict diet and mentality to lead the Orange, something his head coach said he was practically wired to do." class="article-resp-img">
111814_S_HehirProfile_Courtesy.jpg

Courtesy of SU Athletics
Martin Hehir has placed in the top three at each of his conference championships. He maintains a strict diet and mentality to lead the Orange, something his head coach said he was practically wired to do.
By Matt SchneidmanAsst. Copy Editor
16 hours ago
Martin Hehir thinks people underestimate how hard it is to be a good runner.
Runners don’t need to know how to swing a bat, kick a ball or catch a pass. Cross-country carries its own intricacies and rigors, though, and the senior has them down to a tee.
“Every run, every little thing you do in running in terms of nutrition, in terms of how you rest, in terms of how hard you go in practice, it all kind of culminates into how your body feels on race day,” Hehir said. “It all makes a big difference.”
Combine a specified diet, an unfaltering mental fortitude and attentive body management, and you have someone equipped with three qualities that define runners.
But then top it off with a bubbling personality, a natural leadership instinct and an insatiable desire to never be second, and you have Hehir, a two-time individual conference champion. He’s coming off an Atlantic Coast Conference individual title, a sixth-place overall finish at the Northeast Regionals and will now look to finish among the country’s best at the Nov. 22 NCAA national championships for No. 2 Syracuse.
Having that point be a realistic goal, though, hasn’t come easily, and certainly isn’t just about “being fast.”
“He’s a multi-faceted person that’s really bright,” SU head coach Chris Fox said of Hehir. “He doesn’t over-study, he doesn’t over-train, he doesn’t over-anything. A lot of that is just innate, his personality, he just has a good gift for keeping it all in perspective.”
Every morning, Hehir eats granola and Greek yogurt, preferring to start his day off with sources of protein. He likes to keep it simple for lunch, he said, opting for a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. For the final meal of the day, he and his housemates — other SU runners — cook ground beef, rice or chicken and are “all about” vegetables.
Sometimes, he’ll make his specialty, chocolate chip pancakes. But that’s only when he feels like treating himself.
“The sport of running, because it’s so fundamentally physical, it’s all about the kind of shape your body is in,” Hehir said. “It’s less so a skill sport, say like baseball or something. I mean you need to be physically fit but you also need the skills to bat and pitch and swing.
“In running, it’s literally all about how well you’ve maintained your body.”
Then there’s the mental component.
In baseball, there’s no pacing yourself running around the bases. Football players don’t conserve their energy when running downfield. In cross-country, it’s all about strategy and not knowing how to run fast, but when to.
“He doesn’t go out and try to dominate practice,” Fox said. “He gets what he needs. He’s just an even-keeled guy and I think they all feed off of that.”
But his SU career didn’t start off with him setting the tone for those behind him.
He was getting his “butt kicked,” he said, and felt a little bit of doubt after a couple workouts. But just a year after he second-guessed his place in Division I cross-country, Hehir won the 2012 Big East individual title in his redshirt freshman year. That’s when he said he thought he might have a shot to continue a successful career.
Fox said doubting yourself is the way a great runner thinks, and that’s exactly how Hehir was wired. But now, when he’s pulling away from the field in the final leg of a race, there’s no reason for doubt.
“He never really seems stressed out,” SU assistant coach Adam Smith said. “When Marty looks back and sees five or six Orange jerseys, the pressure’s gone.”
The oldest of four kids, Hehir is the reason his siblings, and even his cousins run, his father, Martin, said. Still today, Hehir has a knack for leading, figuratively or literally.
He challenges his teammates and holds them to high standards, and that’s not restricted to the course. Each Wednesday, the men’s and women’s cross-country teams sit down on the Manley Field House turf and Fox goes around asking runners for an interesting fact about anything in the world to challenge their creativity.
If someone states a fact that seems questionable, Hehir is the first one to argue it, Smith said. That joking personality carries over to the locker room, too, where Hehir said he and the other seniors will “roll in and get rowdy to make sure everyone knows they’re there.”
“When I think of Marty, I always think high energy,” fellow senior Max Straneva said. “He’s always one to bust a joke. He doesn’t have to have any nerves or anything. He knows what he can do.”
Hehir said keeping everyone smiling is part of his daily job. But it was Hehir smiling ear-to-ear in a post-race interview with ESPN after being crowned the best runner in the ACC.
The intense grimace, aggressive pump of his arms and vicious strides as he pulled away from the field aren’t indicative of “the nicest guy on the team” label that Smith gave Hehir, rather a culmination of the craft required to excel in a sport that is much more than what it seems on the surface.
“He’s a big part of the reason the culture is what it is here,” Smith said. “He’s just kind of taken that role and just really embraced it.”
 
B2-RQoNCYAAYciJ.jpg:large


Cross Country | 11/21/2014 9:30:00 AM |
Syracuse Races for a National Title on Saturday
No. 2 Orange men enter the race with its highest ranking in program history.

On Saturday, the No. 2 Syracuse men and No. 25 Syracuse women will head to the start line of the NCAA Championships looking for history. A top-10 finish from the men would be just the second since 1957 and a top-10 finish from the women would be their second ever. The men specifically have their sights higher, as the Orange enters the race with its highest rank in program history in search of its first National Championship since 1951.

Ranking the Orange
- The Syracuse men enter the ACC Championship with its highest ranking in program history at No. 2
- Prior to this season, the highest the men had ever been ranked was No. 7 since the USTFCCCA poll began.
- The women enter the weekend ranked No. 25. They peaked at No. 12 this season which was also its highest ranking since the start of the USTFCCCA poll.
Depth is the Key
- The Syracuse men dominated a highly-ranked field in Wisconsin at the Wisconsin Meet of Champions and earned its second-straight ACC Title by utilizing its depth.
- The Orange placed all-five of its scorers inside of the top-24 en route to winning the event by a total of 69 points at Wisconsin, and put eight runners in the top-19 at the ACC Championships last month.
- Comparing the results from Boston and Wisconsin truly showcase the Syracuse depth as senior Reed Kamyszek finished second at the Coast-to-Coast Battle in Beantown, but fell to seventh at the Wisconsin Adidas Invite and eighth at the ACC Championships.

All they Do is Win
- The Syracuse men successfully defended its ACC Crown on Halloween, completing its fifth conference title in the last six seasons.
- Syracuse rolled to the title by putting eight runners in the top-19 at the Panorama Farms Course in Charlottesville, Va.
- The Orange also won the NCAA Northeast Regional, Wisconsin Meet of Champions and Harry Lang Invitational this year.
- The only meet the Orange haven't won with its roster that will be competing this weekend was when Syracuse placed second to No. 3 Oregon at the Coast-to-Coast Battle in Beantown in September. The Orange has won its last three meets.

Malone Looking for Another Strong Performance
- Junior Margo Malone was the women's top finisher for Syracuse last season at the NCAA Championships, finishing 49th overall.
- She finished the course last season in 20:53.5.
- Malone was Syracuse's top female finisher in each race she has competed since the beginning of October.

Looking for History
- When the Syracuse men head to the starting line on Saturday, they'll be looking to do something that hasn't been done in over 60 years.
- A National Championship would be the program's first since 1951.
- In fact, last year's 10th place finish was the best finish at the NCAA Championships since the team took 4th in 1957.
- If the men run to their rank, it'll be the best finish in exactly 60 years.
- The women's team has one top-10 finish. a 10th place finish in 2010.

Can't Handle Hehir
- Junior Martin Hehir has been the Orange's top runner this season and is no stranger to the front of the pack, but after his 113th-place finish at last year's NCAA Championships, he's looking to get closer to the front in 2014.
- Hehir has been the top Syracuse runner in each race he has competed in this season.

Knight Time
- One key addition to the Orange has been freshman Justyn Knight -- who entered Syracuse coming off an eighth place finish in the 5,000-meters at the World Junior Championships -- was the second member of the Orange to cross the finish line at the Wisconsin Adidas Invitational, and first freshman overall to cross the line at the meet.
- Knight was the third 'Cuse runner across the line at the ACC Championships.
- He hasn't been running competitively for a full four years yet as he took up the sport midway through his sophomore year of high school.

Straneva Coming on Strong
- Senior Max Straneva has quietly been closing in as the second runner behind Hehir as the season has worn on.
- Straneva was the third Syracuse runner behind Hehir and Knight at Wisconsin and second (third overall) at the ACC Championships.
- He did not compete last weekend at the NCAA Northeast Regionals in preparation for the NCAA Championships.
- Senior Max Straneva has quietly been closing in as the second runner behind Hehir as the season has worn on.
- Straneva was the third Syracuse runner behind Hehir and Knight at Wisconsin and second (third overall) at the ACC Championships.
- He did not compete last weekend at the NCAA Northeast Regionals in preparation for the NCAA Championships.
 
Avery from Iona wins individual women's honors. Michigan St takes the team title. Syracuse finishes in 24th (1 spot higher than their national ranking).

Top Syracuse finisher is Malone at 63.
 
  • PosNameTimePts
  • 63Margo Malone20:58.345
  • 130Jessie Petersen21:25.898
  • 140Maura Linde21:29.9106
  • 188Rebecca Skodis21:50.1150
  • 198Sydney Leiher21:55.8160
  • 238Haley Cutright22:43.2200
  • 245Angelica Peck23:05.4207
Place
24
Points
559
Avg Time
21:32.0
 
Syracuse Athletics retweeted
Brien Bell @suxc · 8m 8 minutes ago
Margo (63rd), despite a nasty fall, leads Cuse women to 24th place after tie breaker with Washington.

Obviously, that fall cost her the chance to finish in the Top 50, and a higher team finish. That's a shame. But great job, Ladies!

Yeah that's obviously a tough break and she was in the 106 at 2k and 70s at 4k so great job to continue to battle.
 
Huge pack. I wouldn't want to be stuck in the middle there. Dangerous if there is a fall.
 
Hehir at 30th at 5k with Straneva and Knight with him and a huge pack still in the front. Very tactical which is surprising. Expect the unexpected now.
 

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