Prep Sports
May 16, 2008
On track for the crown
Kanawha Valley schools among top contenders for state titles

It could be a very rewarding weekend for Kanawha Valley track teams.

Three area schools are favored to capture championships heading into today's opening round of events at Laidley Field, and a fourth is also expected to contend.

Winfield's boys and girls are each ranked No. 1 in Class AA by RunWV.com. No surprise there, considering that they've swept both titles at the state meet four times in the previous 10 years. The Generals girls are a prohibitive favorite, but the boys should face a real challenge from Weir, and possibly Point Pleasant.

Chip Ellis
As her mother Sue watches under an umbrella, Roane County pole vaulter Ashli Knotts practices the pole vault at Laidley Field Thursday in preparation for this weekend’s state meet.
Relative newcomers in the title hunt, however, are Hurricane (AAA girls) and Charleston Catholic (Class A girls). Neither has ever won a track title, girls or boys. Hurricane, in fact, owns just two state championships in any sport (baseball 2002, golf 2007).

But the Redskins are solid favorites in AAA and the Irish seem to have as good a shot as anyone in a single-A field where a razor's edge separates the top three teams - Williamstown, Charleston Catholic and St. Marys. And that doesn't even include five-time defending champ Doddridge County, which also figures to be in the mix.

Hurricane, though, does have a coach with quite a bit of championship experience in Steve Caldwell, who led Dunbar's boys to seven titles in the school's last eight years of existence (1983-90). Caldwell's best finish in 13 seasons with the Redskins girls was third last year.

"Hurricane doesn't have a history of winning state championships,'' Caldwell said, "[but] I know what to expect and everything. There's so much that can happen.''

The Redskins can get a jump on the opposition today because they're strong in some of the early final events (see schedule, Page 4B).

At 2 p.m., the girls shot put starts, with Christy Austin holding the state's best heave so far this season at 40 feet, 2 inches. The next girls AAA event is the 4x800-meter relay at 2:30, in which Hurricane, anchored by sophomore sensation Josie Crouch, sports the state's fastest time (9:47.01). At 4, it's the discus with Austin owning the third-best mark in her class.

"We can set the tone right at the beginning of the meet,'' Caldwell said. "We're ranked first in the state in both of those events - we have been all year. Those two are very important for us to start with.''

Caldwell said his team could be running at full strength today, especially if sprinter Angel Cunningham can shake off her injury. His message to his team this week is "to do what we've done all year - be solid.''

"It's not really anything different,'' Caldwell said. "We're [qualified] in 14 different events of 18. We want to try and do the best we can in each one. We stress to the girls that it might even be a tie for a place - I've seen the state meet come down to a half-point before. Everything we can do is important. Our relay handoffs are very important.''

Crouch will figure prominently into Hurricane's plans Saturday with the state's top times of 57.84 in the 400 and 2:18.62 in the 800. She's the defending champ in the 400.

Caldwell doesn't feel that the weekend's soggy forecast will put a damper on his team's chances. The forecast high temperature for Friday is 64 degrees with a 50 percent chance of showers, with Saturday's high of 71 and a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms.

"The weather, I don't think, will be a factor whatsoever,'' Caldwell said. "You don't want the girls to run in wet or rain, [but] we practice in everything.''

Boys AAA

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