Jun. 12—CHARLESTON — Daniel Reed barely missed out on one state title in Friday’s Class AA portion of the WVSSAC State Track and Field Championships.
The Westside High School senior wasn’t going to let another slip away.
Reed leaped 21 feet, 6 inches to place second in the long jump as the meet unfolded at the University of Charleston Stadium’s Laidley Field. His best effort came up just shy of Sissonville’s Braedon Murray, who logged a winning jump of 21-9 1/2.
Reed then moved over a few yards to the high jump pit, where he proceeded to claim the Class AA state championship by clearing 6-0 on his second try at that height. Reed, the lone participant to clear 6-0, unsuccessfully attempted three clearances at 6-2, but he still walked away a champion for the Renegades.
“I’m pretty excited about the high jump, not so much excited about the long jump, because if I’d have gotten my footing right, I’d have been a lot further,” said Reed, who plans to study respiratory therapy at Marshall University.
In the long jump, he explained that he moved back somewhat on his approach “to get my steps right,” but “those jumps would have been a lot further, I believe, but I scratched. But I’m okay with second (even though) I really wanted to win.”
Following the high jump victory, he said, “I missed all three at 6-2, but got my second attempt at 6-0, so I’m proud of that. I could have went a lot higher, I feel like, but it was wet and damp.”
Later in the meet, Region 3 had two other individual champions.
Bluefield junior Jacorian Green got a little redemption of his own in the 200-meter dash final. After placing third in 11.21 seconds to champion Ethan Bowens (Wayne) and runner-up Tristan Lawson (Oak Glen) in the 100 during a driving rain, Green turned the tables later in the meet by crossing the finish line first in the 200 in 23.0, leaving Bowens (23.03), Lawson (23.46) and the other finalists in his rear view mirror.
“I didn’t (expect) I would get it, or even be close,” said Green, who struggled with a sore foot as the race progressed. “I thought he (Bowens) got me at the end.”
Green just completed his first year of running track for the Beavers. “I was just so focused on football,” he said, “and I didn’t think I had the speed to run with these other people.
“I didn’t think I was going to like it, but it turns out I love track.”
Nicholas County sophomore Natalie Barr also stepped to the top of the victory podium Friday. She used a frantic push down the final stretch to overcome the leader, PikeView’s Erin O’Sullivan, and capture the 800 in 2:24.51. O’Sullivan was second in 2:25.49.
“I wasn’t sure how the race was going to go, because I didn’t start out right where I wanted to,” she told media members. “Usually I try to have the best kick I can.
“I was feeling pretty good. In my head, I was thinking let’s just try to get second and hold this position. I didn’t think I had a chance at all of getting first, honestly, the whole race.”
Being able to call herself a state champion is “crazy, unbelievable,” said Barr, who thanked those who were on hand to support her.
Also during the two-day meet, Barr placed sixth in the 400 (1:02.97) and competed in the 100 and 1600 races.
Barr’s teammate, weights specialist Taylor Winebrenner, a senior, supplemented her teammate’s efforts with a pair of runner-up finishes on the day. First, she placed second in the shot put with a best throw of 35-11 1/2, slightly off her personal best of 36-9 1/2. She followed that up with a second-place showing of 110-10 in the discus.
In both events, she finished behind Point Pleasant’s Addy Cottrill.
“I’m pretty pumped,” Winebrenner said. “I wish I could have won, but she’s a great thrower; she’s a sweetheart.”
Missing last season due to Covid-19 was a double-edged sword, said Winebrenner, who recently signed with Marshall. “It was definitely a struggle, but it was also a learning curve,” she said. “I got to spend a lot of time in the gym, and I got to spend a lot of time in the circle, a lot of extra time that helped me out with my throwing.”
The extra work helped her add several feet to her production in the shot, she said. “So that was pretty good. It (missing the 2020 season) wasn’t great but (there were) definitely good aspects to it.”
In the girls team race, the Grizzlies finished seventh with 27 points. PikeView scored 15 to place 10th. Shady Spring and Independence scored two points each.
The Winfield girls dominated the girls team competition, amassing 159 points to 55 for runner-up North Marion.
On the boys side, Point Pleasant had a winning team total of 86 points, and Winfield was runner-up with 74. Bluefield placed 10th with 20 points, and Westside was 11th with 18. Shady Spring tallied 11 to finish 13th, and Nicholas County and PikeView scored five points and one point, respectively.
Notes:
—In the boys 400 Thursday, Nicholas County’s Ethan Board and Shady Spring’s Isaiah Valentine placed fourth and sixth, respectively.
—PikeView’s Logan Keaton (2:03.81) finished sixth in the boys 800.
—Shady Spring earned third in the boys 4×800 relay (8:32.40) and fourth in the boys 4×400 (3:39.99). Bluefield got a fourth-place finish in the boys 4×100 (44.92), and Nicholas County was sixth in the boys shuttle hurdles (1:06.67).
—PikeView’s Erin O’Sullivan was sixth in the girls 1600 (5:37.24). She placed third in the 3200 (11:59.35) on Thursday.
—Shady Spring’s Lillian Hatfield gained fifth place in the girls 300 hurdles (50.69).
—The Independence girls crossed the line fifth in the shuttle hurdles (1:11.90).
—-The 400s and 3200s were contested in Class AAA on Friday night.
The Class AAA portion of the meet will conclude on Saturday.
Email: skeenan@register-herald.com or follow on Twitter @gb_scribe