Kayla Jumps to 15th in Mass State Open — Newton Girls and Boys Take Home Team Trophies

Across the state of Massachusetts 2052 girls contested the long jump during the 2012 indoor season. When all was said and done, only 12 athletes from other schools finished ahead of Kayla in the State Open Championship held Sunday. Kayla improved on her 19th seed to place 15th with a jump of 15’11.25″. It would taken a big PR 16’11” jump to score in the meet, and Kayla gave her all on her last attempt toward that but fouled by a hair. She completes the season with a PR of 16’8″ ranked 23th in the state and 57th in New England. Teammate Carla Forbes won the competition in a state record 20’1.25″, now ranked #3 in the USA.

Kayla organized an impromptu combined girls/boys team dinner at our house the night before, and we didn’t screw it up, as both the Newton North girls and boys team brought home team titles (photos, milesplit coverage). The boys did it in spectacular fashion, being counted out in 6th place going into the relays. First they took third in the 4x200m and then followed with a dramatic 4x400m win to tie for win with Mansfield. Jared has to fill a slot in one of these!

Kayla’s concludes her indoor track high school career next week, contesting for the National Championship in the 4x55m shuttle hurdle relay at the Armory in New York City on March 10th.

Nanny and Papa journeyed 6 hours for the 2nd meet in a row to support Kayla and see the competition.

FILE PHOTO:

File Photo:

Kayla places 6th in Mass Division 1 State Championship — Advances to State Open

Kayla soared 16′ 7″ on her first attempt — her 2nd longest all-time performance –to place 6th in the Massachusetts Division 1 state championships (photos). She came in seeded 5th based on her big PR last week of 16’8″, but would have only been seeded 12th based on her previous season best of 16’1.75″.

Carla Forbes won in a meet record, USA #4 19’9” on her final attempt.

Newton scored an amazing 20 points in the event placing athletes 1st, 4th, 6th, and 7th and taking half the slots in the 8-person final. The team jumping depth in the event became as big a news as Carla’s record, with the Globe, Herald, the Newton track blog, The Newton Tab, and Milesplit mentioning her and her teammates accomplishment in their meet summaries. That’s about as newsworthy a 6th place as they come!

Only three athletes from the other 47 schools attending got in ahead of her, with one being the #2 hurdler in New England from Somerville.

Kayla was Newton’s 6th highest point scorer, contributing 3 points to Newton’s 66-43.5 victory over Lincoln Sudbury as well as key early confidence-building momentum for team, which trailed until the final relays started running. She was one of only 6 Newton athletes to score in individual events and one of only 3 to compete in two individual events (She also ran the 55m hurdles in 9.53 for 24th, matching her incoming seed).

Note that without Carla’s point contribution (winning LJ, 55m, and anchoring 4x400m), Newton would still have barely won, with Kayla’s hypothetical 4 points moving up to 5th providing the margin over Lincoln-Sudbury.

Kayla gets her “Metal”

Kayla performance qualified to return to the State Open next week as 19th seed in the state-wide meet which brings together the top 24 competitors from the divisional meets. Nanny and Papa made the long trek to Boston to support Kayla and see her compete (sorry no photo). Thanks Nanny and Papa!’

The metal-ists:

From the globe:

Junior standout Carla Forbes won the long jump with a meet record of 19 feet 9 inches, and teammates Kayla Wong (16-10 3/4) and Kayla Prior (16-7) took fourth and sixth place, respectively.

From the Herald:

Almost as stunning as Forbes’ effort was Newton North putting four jumpers on the medal stand in a thorough domination of the event.

From Milesplit:

As impressive as Forbes’ jump was, it was almost overshadowed by the fact that Newton North put four athletes in scoring positions. In addition to Forbes and Wong, Kayla Prior finished 6th (16’7”) and Maeve Larkin was 7th (16’5.75”). All totaled, Newton North walked away with 20 points in the event!

From the Tab:

The win was the second of the day for Forbes, who also defended her long jump title with a meet-record leap of 19 feet, 9 inches. That effort erased Arantxa King’s 2007 mark of 19-6½. The Tigers were thoroughly dominant in the event with four athletes taking home medals.
Senior Kayla Wong was a strong fourth in 16-10¾, while senior Kayla Prior took sixth (16-7) and junior Maeve Larkin was seventh (16-5¾). Newton South junior Kyra Visnick was eighth with a 16-2-¾ leap.
North picked up a whopping 20 points with that one event and the Tigers never let up as they captured their third consecutive team title with 66 points. Joe Tranchita’s squad scored in eight of 12 events to easily defeat Lincoln-Sudbury (43.5) and Acton-Boxboro (36).

Here is a slideshow of the long jump competition:

The winning seniors:

The winning team:

Kayla was featured in a photo gallery on the Boston Globe website on State Champions:

From a photographer friend. I bought the original as a download.

Kayla makes finals and hits 2 personal bests in Bay State Championships

Kayla had a great Bay State Championship meet Wednesday (Tab Article, photos, jump sequences, results). She came in ranked 9th in the league in the long jump. After an opening foul, she soared 16′ 8″ for an all-time PR, raising her indoor PR by over a half a foot. She followed up with a 16’7″ and advanced to the finals. She placed 5th in the competition behind teammates Carla Forbes and Kayla Wong, with just 2 athletes from the remaining 11 schools getting in ahead of her. Maeve Larkin placed 7th to put 4 Newton athletes in the top 7. Kayla now ranks 20th state-wide in the long jump and 49th in New England.

In the 55m hurdles, she hit her 5th straight personal best, dropping her time from 9.47 to 9.32 for a surprise advance to the finals where she placed 8th with a 9.35. She came in seeded 14th in the league and upset several athletes with faster times. Newton advanced 4 athletes to the 8-person hurdle final! See the picture sequence of the hurdle race.

As far as I can tell, Kayla was one of only 4 athletes to place in top 8 in two events, with the other three being Carla, Kayla W, and Melissa Darling of Weymouth.

From a Connecticut perspective, she ranks 11th in Long jump and would place 4th in Class LL meet and be 4th seed in the Class L meet.The hurdle mark would rank her 22nd in CT. Both long jump and 55m hurdles performance would win the NVL meet in each event.

Her next meet on the schedule is the division 1 championship on Sunday the 19th, where she comes in ranked 5th in the long jump and 28th in the hurdles.

We spent this evening at Boston University watching the Ithaca College team compete in the Valentine Classic and talking with her future coach.

Trifecta

“Three” was the title I was hoping would be appropriate for the sports.priorfamily.org entry for Saturday’s MSTCA Division 1 State Relays (photos, Milesplit coverage, Results, Team Scores, Boston Globe article, Boston Herald article, Newton Track Blog, Newton Tab, Scans of articles).

As it turned out, the title worked, but I changed it to “Trifecta” as that was what the Boston Globe called Kayla’s accomplishments.

Why three?

Kayla for the first time competed in 3 events. The 3xLong Jump relay (where each jumper only gets 2 attempts and the total distance is added), the 4x50m shuttle hurdle relay, and the 4x50m dash. The expectations on her and her relays teammates were enormous. The message from J.T was they needed to take 1st or 2nd in all her 3 events to have a chance to win the meet — and they delivered — in style.

How did it turn out:

Not only was “Three” the sports.priorfamily title, its the Boston Globe’s headline! (“trifecta” being the 3xmeet records) :

Newton North Girls hit Trifecta

Each winter, the Newton North girls’ track team circles the MSTCA Relays on the schedule. The focus leading up to the ultimate team event on the schedule has often paid off, as it did yesterday at the Reggie Lewis Track Center, with the Tigers rolling to their third straight Division 1 championship.

“I’m ecstatic, to break three state records is absolutely phenomenal,’’ said Tigers coach Joe Tranchita of his team’s performance. “To come here and get the win and set records speaks volumes for their execution.’’

Newton North finished with 59 points, far ahead of Andover (36) and Weymouth (30).

The Tigers won five of the 10 events, three in record fashion. Junior Carla Forbes was prominently involved in three of those wins and two of the meet records. Forbes, Kayla Prior, and Kayla Wong set one in the long jump, combining to cover 49 feet 4 1/4 inches.

That same trio teamed up with Stephanie Brown to win the 4 x 50-yard shuttle dash in a meet-record 24.52 seconds.

“We knew we would have a good chance to win,’’ said Forbes, who also ran the anchor of the victorious 4 x 400 (4:03.74). “We didn’t come here with the mind-set to break records, we just wanted to try and do our best and hopefully take first.’’

The Tigers’ other record run came in the 4 x 50 shuttle hurdles, which was run in 29.11 by Wong, Brown, Prior, and Sonja Lehman.

“This is a huge meet for us every year because it is the one pure team meet and you really have to have a full range of depth, not just one or two superstars,’’ Tranchita said. “This is really about the team talent.’’

From the Boston Herald: Forbes Gives Newton N Highest Rating:

Newton North capped a thoroughly dominant team performance yesterday with its biggest star bringing down the Reggie Lewis Center in the final event of the Division 1 Relays.

Carla Forbes clocked a sterling anchor leg of 58.6 seconds in the 4×400 to give the squad a meet-closing victory. The team of Forbes, Meghan Bellerose, Maddie Nadeau and Isabella Reilly tore up the swift oval in 4:03.74, more than three seconds in front of runner-up Wachusett (4:06.94).

The Tigers captured their third consecutive team title with 59 points. Andover (36 points) was a distant second, followed by Weymouth (30).
Newton North set three meet records in the process. Stephanie Brown, Forbes, Kayla Prior and Kayla Wong combined to clock a 24.52 in the 4×50. Brown, Wong, Prior and Sonja Lehman took the 4×50 hurdles in 29.11. Forbes led the long jump crew with a mark of 18 feet, 3 inches, on the way to a relays-record 15.04 meters.

“I’m ecstatic, absolutely ecstatic,” Newton North coach Joe Tranchita said. “It was the seniors who really got the bulk of those records. This is a huge meet on our schedule every year.”

From http://ma.milesplit.com: MSTCA Division 1 Highlights

It was a record breaking day as the Newton North girls took home the team title and set three meet records in the process. The Tigers surpassed the previous best marks in the 4×50 Yard Relay (24.52), the 4×50 Yard Hurdles Relay (29.11), and the Long Jump (49’4.25) with Kayla Wong and Kayla Prior as part of all three record breaking teams. Steph Brown competed on the 4x50y dash relay and the 4x50y hurdles relay; both of which are new state records. Carla Forbes also competed on the dash relay and led the team in the long jump relay. She ended the day by anchoring the winning 4x400m relay, and the building erupted with cheers as Forbes received the baton and broke open a significant lead with her 58.6 split.


So back to the “Three”

  • 3 Newton North School Records (3xLJ, 3×50 hurdles, 3×50 dash)
  • 3 Gold Medals
  • 30 of Newton’s 59 points
  • 3rd consecutive team indoor title for the seniors (2010, 2011, 2012)
  • 3 Meet Records
  • 2 State Records (3×50 hurdles, 3×50 dash)

Newton won the meet with 59 points, with over half coming from Kayla’s relays. Several state records in this meet date back to the early 1980’s. The hurdle record was 10 years old. Breaking meet records in 3 of the meets 10 events in the span of 2 hours is just off the charts and a great way to close out her last high school indoor relay meet. Even Carla Forbes only has 2 meet records! I don’t think there is enough returning talent at North to threaten these next year, and once Carla is gone, they will stick at North if not the state for quite some time.

Here a youtube video of the races. Use this link to share with others rather than sending to sports.priorfamily:

http://youtu.be/hJkZBEiTM38

Long Jump
The relay format only allows for 2 jumps instead of the normal 3 so jumpers need to be on. The girls, jumping in the first of 4 flights, all hit good marks on their first attempts and locked down the gold before most jumper even started and drew within 10cm of the record. The amazing thing is that they bested the field by over 4 feet and accomplished this record all this while jumping over a foot short of their personal bests. Kayla actually jumped the closest of the three to her PR. Kayla and Co were disappointed about the last “2”, as their 49’4″ was just 2″ off the all-division state record. Kayla jumped 15′ 3.25″ for 6th of 45 jumpers and was only beaten by jumpers with 17’5+ PRs. Even though Carla Forbes’ 18′ jump powered the record, 3x Kayla’s jump would have still won the event by over a foot. Kayla Wong and Carla jumping last year with senior captain Amy Ren only totaled 47’5″, which yielded 2nd place. As a sophomore, she jumped with Carla and Amy to 45’9″ for the win, so this is almost a 4 ft improvement for the team from then.

Hurdles
Kayla only got her 3-step down in last two meets and the 4th hurdler only competed in the event for the first time last week. It wasn’t totally clear they would even enter the event seriously until then, with the potential to divert runners to the 4x200m relay.

Kayla took off on the 3rd leg in 2nd place with a safe start and charged forward into 1st and for Kayla Wong to power home on the final leg for the 29.11 record, 1.41 ahead of 2nd team. Kayla’s split of 7.27 was a half second faster than last year when they won in 29.88 and made the difference this year.

Similarly to the long jump, while Kayla Wong powered the record, assuming a 0.7s reaction time on the first leg, 4 “KPs” would run 7.97+3×7.27=29.78, which would beat last year’s winning North time and win this year by over half a second.

Dash
In the 4×50 Kayla took hand-off from Carla Forbes about even and held North in a tie for 1st on her leg and then Kayla Wong powered home again to a 24.52 time. This same team took third when Kayla was a sophomore to set the previous school record of 25.34. They went a full .8 seconds faster this time. Kayla didn’t run last year when the team DQed on a start. Kayla split 6.17 — the “4 Kayla” time here would be 25.38, just outside the previous school record from 2010 and good for a respectable 7th out of 38 teams in this meet.

It’s easy to for Kayla (and the press) to see the records as all about Carla and Kayla W, but these three records would not have happened without Kayla on her game.

With one state relay meet to go, Kayla’s cummulative relay title total rises to 8 (2010 indoor 3xLJ, outdoor 4x100hurdles, 2011 indoor 4×50 hurdles, outdoor 3xLJ, 3xTJ) and total points to 87, with the remaining 7 points coming from a 2009 4×50 hurdle B-team 6th and the 2010 4×50 bronze.

This meet provides the big upside of the Newton North situation. In the last two dual meets Kayla competed in 6 events, shutting out brookline in 3, Weymouth in 1, and only losing to 1 Weymouth athlete in the other 2 events, yet only took home 4 points for a 2nd and a 3rd in LJ due to the great teammates she has.

Go Tigers!

Newton defeats league rival Weymouth 64-31

In what was projected to be a close meet, Newton blew out Weymouth 64-31 on the strength of team energy (results, newton track blog). Kayla ran a PR 9.70 in the 55m hurdles and and an 8.05 in the 55m dash. Only Weymouth star Melissa Darling beat her in these events from Weymouth. She placed third in the long jump (15’5.25″), defeating Darling who fouled out and swinging a potentially pivotal 2 points to Newton if the meet had gone according to form.

Kayla PRs in 2 events — shuts out Brookline in 3

Kayla jumped to 2nd place in the long jump (16′ 3/4″) and ran personal bests in the 55m hurdles (9.71) and 55m dash (7.97) — defeating all Brookline competitors in all 3 of her events. That translated to a 2nd, 4th, and a 4th in Newton’s 83-9 victory over Brookline (results, photos). Uncle Paul made a cameo!

Newton ties for 2nd in Dartmouth Relays

Kayla came in seeded 18th of 21 in a very competitive field at the Dartmouth Relays from across the Northeast and Canada in the long jump on Saturday and moved up to 12th. She wasn’t satisfied with her mark (15′ 5 3/4″), but only 9 competitors from other schools bested her. Newton placed 2nd in the meet (photos, milesplit coverage, results).

This was the feature photo of the meet on http://ma.milesplit.com:

This photo was featured in the Week #3 Top 50 in New England article, which had KP in 48th in the long jump of 2300 competitors.

From milesplit: Carla Forbes (Newton North, MA) opened up the long jump competition with a 19’4” (US#3) bomb. To prove it was not a fluke, she launched two more jumps over 19 feet to win the competition by over five inches. Forbes also won the triple jump with a US#1 mark of 40”10”. She leads the country in that event by almost nine inches.

Kayla ordered and picked up JT’s birthday cake:

The drivers:

KP opens 2012 Track Season with 4th Place PR at MSTCA Winter Festival

Kayla opened her 2012 Season with an indoor personal best 16’1.75″ at the Mass State Track Coaches Association Winter Festival (results, photos, milesplit coverage, Newton Tab). Newton took 1st, 3rd, and 4th with only 1 athlete from the other 45 other competitors sneaking in for 2nd. Kayla currently ranks 10th in the state. She placed 17th in the open last year indoors and ranked 25th among returning athletes.

http://ma.milesplit.com cited Kayla and Newton’s long jump dominance and choose a photo Newtonsportsphotography.com to lead their story with!

Ithaca 2016!

The news went out by email, but merits a sports.priorfamily entry for posterity and to organize some useful links. Kayla was accepted to her first choice major and school in the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in the Strategic Communication department‘s communication management and design program! She has been hoping to attend Ithaca since she was a sophmore and saw it as a match to her background and interests. She was accepted “early decision” and has already sent in her deposit. According to the academic calendar, classes start Wednesday, August 29th, 2012 (not that we are counting down or anything).

She will compete for the Ithaca Bombers (media guide). Her first meet will be sometime in early December at the Cornell Relays. Ithaca is 5:45 from Newton and 4.5hrs from Woodbury. Her teammate Kayla Wong was accepted at Cornell, so there will be some opportunities for car pools and ongoing competitions. They will have a meet in Boston sometime in February. She would be 4th on their long jump depth chart today.

Mom and Dad and Jared and the other Kayla are so proud!