Cross country season ends at national meet

Although the Geneseo men’s and women’s cross country teams did not achieve their ultimate goal of being on the podium at the NCAA meet, the Knights’ season was by no means a failure. Winning the SUNYAC Tournaments, earning an automatic qualifying bid to the national races—these events made the Knights’ season very successful by any measure. Throughout the season, individual athletes rose above the level of the competition on multiple occasions. Senior Cassie Goodman held an excellent form for the entire season, as well as fellow senior Cohen Miles-Rath who also ran extremely well.

“Our seniors did a great job the whole year,” outgoing head coach Mike Woods said. “Cohen, Cassie, [senior] Alyssa [Knott], they did a real good job providing leadership.”

The leadership from those seniors and more led to the Knights being a very cohesive unit, allowing them to be able to run better as a whole. By being able to gel as a unit, the Knights performed well beyond their peers for the entire season.

Although neither cross country team ended up on the podium, their prospects heading into next season seem to be very bright. Some seniors who played an integral part in this season’s success will be graduating in the spring, but many of the underclassmen are poised to be as good as—if not better than—than many of those runners.

With runners like sophomore Alfredo Mazzuca––who only improved as the season went along––freshman Kristen Homeyer––who finished 84th at the NCAA Championships for the women’s team at the nationals––and freshman Isaac Garcia-Cassani––who finished 203rd for the men at nationals––the Knights should be greatly improved by next season.

One thing that the Knights excelled at during this season and in seasons past has been group identity.

“There’s a real sense of community within the teams,” senior team manager Ben Wach said. “They go out there and they support the other runners and it’s really great to watch.” Geneseo is always one of the teams at meets with the most supporters, something that I believe is a true marker of how cohesive our teams and our school is.

“We pretty much always have the most supports out there out of any team,” Woods said. “The other coaches are always asking me how I do it, and I tell them that it’s just a part of our school.”

Being able to go out there and support their fellow teammates is something that just comes naturally to the runners on both teams. With a solid team foundation and a strong class filled with talented, supportive runners coming up, the future looks extremely bright for the Knights.

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XC prepares for national meet

The Geneseo men’s and women’s cross country teams had successful outings on Saturday Nov. 15—both teams finished second at the NCAA Division III Atlantic Regionals at the University of Rochester at Genesee Valley Park. Both teams secured their spots at the national races coming up on Saturday Nov. 22 at Kings Island in Mason, Ohio. Led by senior Cohen Miles-Rath, the men’s team came into the race with high expectations. Runners like freshmen Alexander Burks and Isaac Garcia-Cassani continued their excellent campaigns by rounding out the top five runners for the Knights on the men’s side.

On the women’s side, runners such as freshman Kristen Homeyer—who recently won the SUNYAC Rookie of the Year award along with Garcia-Cassani—and sophomore Marissa Bellusci helped to give the Knights their second place finish.

Such consistent races from younger runners have been a staple of the Knights’ season. “That’s a big pressure race for [our younger runners] to step up and they certainly did it,” head coach Mike Woods said.

The Knights were able to preserve their streak of 16 straight NCAA appearances for the women and 12 consecutive appearances for the men’s team.

“We now hold the longest active streak in the country of having both the men and the women qualify for the NCAAs,” Woods said. “No one else around here is doing anything like that.” With such consistency throughout the years, it’s not hard to imagine that the Knights have some big expectations for themselves.

The Knights are in excellent position to make an impact at the NCAA Tournament. Because the teams both had top two finishes, they automatically qualified for the finals, taking just a bit of stress off of their shoulders.

When they arrive in Mason, Ohio for the NCAAs, they will just have to treat it like any other race. That’s the way that they have been treating every race this season and it is the same situation going forward.

Of course, winning the championship is the ultimate goal, but the individual runners have had some excellent seasons that would qualify as having met expectations. Having two runners sweep the Rookie of the Year awards in addition to six runners from the men’s team and eight from the women’s team named to the All-SUNYAC team is a remarkable feat.

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Cross country on the doorstep of nationals

With two victories at the SUNYAC Championships behind them, the Geneseo men’s and women’s cross country teams can look forward to a two-week break before heading to the University of Rochester for the Atlantic Regionals on Nov. 15. The Knights found success throughout the entire team. Top finishers on the men’s side were sophomore Alfredo Mazzuca and senior Cohen Miles-Rath. On the women’s side, senior Cassie Goodman and sophomore Marissa Bellusci were the top runners. The top finisher for the Knights on the men’s side was Mazzuca, a transfer student who hit his stride just as the season had started moving. “I am almost never satisfied with my performances,” Mazzuca said. “That is what motivates me to strive for further, more difficult goals.” That is exactly the attitude the Knights will need going forward if they want to continue their hot streak.

As the Knights start looking ahead to Regionals, they have a new goal in mind: finishing in the top two. If they do, the Knights will lock up a spot at Nationals on Nov. 22. A top-five finish would put them into consideration for a spot. Even though the goal is, and always will be, to finish within the top two, head coach Mike Woods said he believes a top-five finish would be considered a success.

“If we finish in the top five, our strength of a schedule will get us in,” Woods said. “We have a really strong resume.” With multiple wins throughout the season for both the men’s and women’s teams along with a top-10 national ranking for both teams, the Knights should have no worries about securing a spot in the Nationals.

Still, Geneseo needs to be looking ahead to its ultimate goal—landing a spot on the podium at Nationals.

“We try not to become complacent with our current position,” Mazzuca said. “We know there is work to be done and we know that entering the race, we are definite contenders for the bids to Nationals.” With all of the runners adopting an attitude like that, there will be very little that can stop the Knights heading into this home stretch of the season.

Now that the cross country teams have gotten this far—and in such a dominating fashion––it would be a shame for them to lose their focus in the excitement. But no one on both teams wants to feel that way, however. They all have had a singular goal in mind since the beginning of the season: to stand at the podium at Nationals.

If the Knights can continue their march through the competition, they should have little trouble reaching or even surpassing their goals.

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Nationally ranked XC shines at Letchworth

Head coach Mike Woods has led the cross country team to a high national ranking, giving the runners a chance to contend at the NCAA meet in November.
Head coach Mike Woods has led the cross country team to a high national ranking, giving the runners a chance to contend at the NCAA meet in November.

Victory on Saturday Oct. 4 was especially sweet for the Geneseo men’s and women’s cross country teams. Not only did the teams put themselves in an excellent position going forward for the rest of the season, but the win came on home turf at Letchworth State Park. Coming off great performances at the Pre-NCAA meet on Sept. 27, the Knights had a tough job ahead of them. They had a week from Sept. 27 to prepare for the Geneseo Invitational, the yearly meet held at Letchworth. Even with such a quick turnaround, both teams put up stellar performances. The men’s and the women’s teams both placed first out of 21 and 19 teams, respectively.

“I was very happy with our results,” head coach Mike Woods said. “We were able to tighten the pack. We were able to cut [our pack time] in half from last week.”

The only reason that the men’s time was so much closer at the Geneseo Invitational as opposed to the Pre-NCAA meet was that senior Cohen Miles-Rath, while still running a very good time at 25:10.4, ran the race of his life at the Pre-NCAA meet.

Transfer sophomore Alfredo Mazzuca ran a second ahead of Miles-Rath, leading the men’s team into the finish. This was Mazzuca’s first time finishing first for the Knights. Behind Mazzuca and Miles-Rath were junior Brendan Wortner and sophomore Adam Murphy with times of 25:11.1 and 25:14.4. Freshman Isaac Garcia-Cassani was the fifth finisher for the men with a time of 25:33.2.

The women also had a close cluster of finishers. Their first five in––senior Cassie Goodman, senior Alyssa Knott, senior Joanna Castrogivanni, sophomore Marissa Bellusci and junior Jacquie Huben––all finished within 45 seconds of each other. Goodman was the first finisher overall with a time of 21:29.4—beating second place by an incredible 14 seconds.

With the utter domination at Letchworth behind them, the teams now look ahead to the Inter-Regional Rumble in Oberlin, Ohio on Oct. 18. For now, however, they can put that on the back burner. The most important thing for both teams now is that they rest and recover their bodies and minds.

“I think that this break is coming at a good midpoint in the season,” Goodman said. “A weekend off to mentally revamp like this will be good for everyone.” After having four races over these past four weekends including the Pre-NCAAs, all of the athletes can recover both physically and mentally. “Your brain is a muscle too, so giving that a bit of a break is always good,” Goodman said.

With fall break on the horizon, the Knights can look back on a half season for the books. Both teams have nine total top-five finishes, with the women winning the Pre-NCAAs and the men placing second. With those finishes, the Knights look to be in excellent standing with the national polls. Both teams are currently ranked in the top 10. When the NCAA Tournament comes in mid-November, this will work in Geneseo’s favor. The men’s and women’s teams both could be poised to end up on the podium.

“I think we have a really good shot––both teams––to end up on the podium this season. It’s totally doable,” Goodman said. The seniors’ last shot for a championship looks to be in a great place heading into the break, as long as the Knights refuse to let up.

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Cross country shines heading into break

With the weekend behind them, the Geneseo men’s and women’s cross country teams can look ahead to an excellent remainder of their season thanks to their stellar finishes on Saturday Sept. 27 at the Pre-NCAA meet in Mason, Ohio. Both teams had top-two finishes, with the women winning their race and the men coming in second place. The women’s team finished with two runners placing first and second––seniors Cassie Goodman and Alyssa Knott––while also placing seven total runners in the top 20. The men’s team had one top-five finisher with senior Cohen Miles-Rath placing fifth. The team as a whole ended up with five of the top 32 runners.

The only option that the Knights have now is to maintain the level of excellence that they have had throughout the entire season. The teams are in a great position largely due to that fact that some of their runners had unbelievable race times. Miles-Rath completed the eight-kilometer race with a time of 24:02.62, helping the Knights hold on to their victory. Goodman and Knott were the first two finishers of the women’s six-kilometer competition, finishing in under 21:12.00.

“They put themselves on the map. They ran the best races of their lives and they answered the bell,” head coach Mike Woods said.

Now in good standing, the Knights can look ahead to Saturday Oct. 4 when they host the Geneseo Invitational at Letchworth State Park. The competition looks stiff; teams including Dickinson College pose a real threat to the Knights’ goal for victory.

“I don’t think that I need to stress this one as much; the athletes seem to know what’s at stake,” Woods said.

After Saturday, things start to cool down for the Knights. They will have two weeks off before going back to work on Oct. 18 at the Inter-Regional Rumble in Oberlin, Ohio. The two weeks off should be a welcome rest for both teams, who will have had six races in the past four weeks. It will give them the time that they need to recover from injuries and take a break from the mid-season grind.

Although the Geneseo cross country teams have made this season look relatively easy so far, they have had a difficult season. Anytime that you finish first or second at the Pre-NCAAs, your team is going to be a bit tired the next weekend. The Knights are going to have to overcome their fatigue if they plan on winning this coming meet, something on the top of their to-do list.

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XC prepared to compete with top teams

With the Pre-NCAA meet just ahead on Saturday Sept. 27, the Geneseo Knights men’s and women’s cross country teams are getting ready to head to Mason, Ohio. The Knights will face some of the stiffest competition they will face all year. Coming off a meet that the Knights were treating as practice, the teams should both be prepared for what is ahead of them. While both the men’s and women’s teams raced on Saturday Sept. 20, they treated it as more of a practice run, with the Knights going easier for the first few miles and then hard for the home stretch. Even with the teams not going full force at this meet, both managed to end up with top-five finishes, a good sign for upcoming meets.

The Pre-NCAAs are a precursor to the actual NCAA meet in November. It’s important that Geneseo can perform to its full potential.

“Some of the best teams in the country are going to be there and [the Knights] know that they belong, and I think that they’re excited to go,” said head coach Mike Woods.

With 30 teams competing and hundreds of racers, this meet is going to be a real test for Geneseo that the team must be prepared to take.

While the Pre-NCAAs are the teams’ main concern this weekend, some of the team will be traveling to Rochester to compete in the Harry F. Anderson Invitational. 30 teams will also be going to this meet, meaning there will be some stiff competition. It will be difficult to continue the excellent record that the Knights have maintained throughout the season so far. Luckily, the team has had a decent amount of time off from their last meets.

“That was by design,” said Woods. “I didn’t want to race three hard races in a row. Actually four, because we have the Geneseo Invitational coming up, so I just wanted to give my guys a break.”

The Geneseo men’s and women’s cross country teams really have to buckle down and put their noses to the grindstone. The competition in Ohio will be no joke, and according to Woods, the Knights are prepared to do whatever it takes to win this meet.

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Cross country looking strong after Division I meet

With both the Geneseo men’s and the women’s cross country teams finishing sixth at the Harry Groves Spike Shoe Invitational at Pennsylvania State University, the Knights came out of their respective meets with high hopes. The Knights left University Park, Pennsylvania on Saturday Sept. 13 with their heads held high, having been able to hold their own against Division I opponents Penn State, Syracuse University, Georgetown University, St. Joseph’s University and the University of Pittsburgh.

Fellow SUNYAC competitor and rival SUNY Cortland was also at the meet. The Red Dragons finished two spots behind the Knights, much to the delight of coach Mike Woods.

“I don’t care if it’s Tiddlywinks or KanJam, it always feels good to beat Cortland,” he said.

Geneseo also sent a squad of runners to the SUNY Brockport Golden Eagle Cross Country Invitational. The women’s team came in second, while the men’s team did not register for a finish because it failed to send enough athletes to the meet. The real importance of that meet lies in the fact that the Brockport course is going to be where the SUNYAC Championships are being held. The runners who went to Brockport had a sneak peak of the course and this information can only help their teammates.

These two meets are very encouraging for the Knights, who are eagerly anticipating more high profile meets later in the season.

“We still have to get to the meat of our schedule…Our racers are chomping at the bit to get going with their training and further races,” Woods said.

“The top 10 racers—I’m going to hold them back a bit, but everyone else is going to go as hard as they can, trying to get a spot for the Pre-Nationals,” Woods said. “Our team is going to go real hard for all of these meets that are coming up.”

The Knights' biggest upcoming test, Pre-Nationals, will be in Mason, Ohio.

“We’re going to race real hard. It’s going to be the first time that I tell them, ‘Look, we want to finish as high as we can’,” Woods said. The top two finishers from each region receive an automatic bid from the NCAAs, something the Knights expect to do every season.

The Geneseo men’s and women’s cross country teams are both looking forward from their successful meets. Both squads, however, are looking a little beyond their next meet—with their eyes on the Pre-Nationals. As of now, that is the big prize they are working for. And, if their results from their past meets are any indication, then they will be fully able to realize their goals. The Knights next race is the Yellowjacket Invitational at the University of Rochester on Saturday Sept. 20.

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Cross-Country starts season with top 10 finishers

In what would end up being a banner day, both the Geneseo men’s and women’s cross country teams won their respective meets on Aug. 29. Both teams ended up with seven top-10 finishers in each race, with the men’s team having three runners in the top five.Interestingly, the Knights sent their B-team to the event, giving the rest of the league a good look at their depth. Coach Mike Woods elected to send all of the team's freshmen to the event so that he could give them a taste of what’s to come in their athletic careers. “All the freshmen ran just so that they could get used to the college distance...I do this every year. I try to race the best athletes as little as possible,” Woods said. “This was a pretty low-key event, but our guys were going up against the other teams’ best.” The Knights can start looking forward to Sept. 13 when they will compete in the Harry Groves Spiked Shoe Invitational at Pennsylvania State University and in the Golden Eagle Invitational at SUNY Brockport. Geneseo will be going up against Division I opponents at Penn State, a fact not taken lightly by Coach Woods. “I’ll probably take the top 15 or so athletes on each team to Penn State and then I’ll take the other players to Brockport," Woods said. "Going up against DI competition, we’ll need to bring our best." The Knights will have to wait it out for the next week and a half until they get their chance to prove to prove themselves. With the knowledge that they will be facing formidable opponents soon, the Knights have high expectations going forward into the season. “We have two goals every season. One is the get invited to the NCAAs. That’s a big goal of ours every year. And second, we want to win the SUNYAC championship,” Woods said. “Plus, we want to be able to stay healthy so that we can do that.” This upcoming season looks to be another good year for the team, albeit a challenging one. The Knights have a tough September schedule, with five meets in just one month. They won’t get a chance to race on home turf until Oct. 4 at Letchworth State Park. The Knights will need to compete at a consistently high level all season to reach their goals, but if their performance at this past meet is any indication of the future, that shouldn’t be too much of a problem.

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Cross-country to run in 11th NCAA race

It’s business as usual for the Geneseo men’s and women’s cross-country teams as they head to their 11th consecutive national championship, an NCAA record. The Knights received at-large bids from the NCAA to attend the national race in Hanover, Ind. on Saturday Nov. 23. In the regional race on Saturday Nov. 16 at Letchworth State Park, neither team was able to earn an automatic bid, as the men came in third and the women came in fourth.

The teams came into this season unsure of what their destiny would be. The men lost many runners to graduation last year, including All-American Alex Brimstein ‘13, leaving the bulk of this year’s team in the hands of underclassmen. The women, similarly, were very inexperienced prior to this season, with runners stepping out of their comfort zones to uphold the standard.

Head coach Mike Woods saw this transition coming and decided to change things up. He said he kept the intensity of the workouts longer into the season than normal, and the runners responded surprisingly well.

“My athletes fed back to me that they felt fresher,” Woods said.

Even with the change between this year and last on both teams, the expectations never changed.

“There was no question that [we would make it],” co-captain junior Cassie Goodman said about making the NCAAs.

“It is hard to say it was sort of a goal because we kind of expected it [given the streak],” co-captain junior Cohen Miles-Rath said. Goodman came in 15th overall for the women and Miles-Rath placed third for the men in the regional race.

This mindset does not come out of nowhere, though. Woods has been at the helm of this Geneseo cross-country program for 22 years and has learned what it takes to get the best performance from his runners.

“[Woods] being really enthusiastic and motivated to get us there motivates us as a team,” Goodman said.

Now that both teams made it to nationals, they can actually relax now.

“There is not a lot of pressure,” Miles-Rath said. “It is more about the experience,” he added. “We run a little bit but we just, like, hangout,” Goodman said. She also mentioned that the girls take time to go shopping on this trip. “There’s not much more training you can really do,” she added.

The upcoming race is at a course Geneseo has been to within its streak.

“It was a pretty tough course, and the times were kind of slow,” Woods said of the last time he was at the course. He, along with his athletes, however, will not be upset if they walk away without a trophy.

“My expectations for them are to have an enjoyable trip, have fun and race as hard as they possibly can,” Woods said. “Let the chips fall where they may.”

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Cross-country finishes first and second in SUNYACs

On paper, the men’s and women’s cross-country teams had a day anyone would be proud of. The women came in first, earning the crown of SUNYAC champions, while the men were just edged out by SUNY Cortland, earning second place. While he is proud of the women for becoming SUNYAC champions, not walking away with two SUNYAC titles leaves head coach Mike Woods a little bitter.

“I’m [happy] and I’m not,” he said of the races. “Our guys ran their best race of the year … but we came up empty.”

Junior Ryan Moynihan led the Knights with a time of 25 minutes, 8 seconds, good for third place, followed by junior Cohen Miles-Rath eight seconds later with 25:16 at fifth, both earning first-team All-SUNYAC honors.

It’s not as if the men’s team underperformed, either. Nine runners broke 26 minutes, something Woods has never seen his team do, and it was the fastest pack of the year at 37 seconds.

Sophomore Brendan Wortner also earned All-SUNYAC honors on the second-team and junior Sean Fisher and freshman Alex Kramer on the third-team.

The highlight of the day happened on the women’s side, though.

Junior Keira Wood took first overall in a come-from-behind win down the last 200 meters of the race. Not only was it her best time of the year, but Woods described her race as “perfect.”

“My goal was to make the top seven,” Wood said. “I wasn’t expecting to win.”

It may not seem to be the case, but cross-country is a mental game. Without a sound mind, it is difficult to win, and it wasn’t until this race that Wood was able to hone that part.

“I was really calm before the race,” she said. “I wasn’t overthinking it.”

The team doesn’t win, however, without the performance of the other four runners, who all earned All-SUNYAC honors. Without sophomore Jacquie Huben on first-team, junior Joanna Castrogivanni, junior Cassie Goodman and freshman Sara Rosenzweig on second-team and junior Alyssa Knott on third-team, Wood said she woudn’t have earned the first-place finish.

“Running with my teammates [in the race] has been so helpful,” she said. “Looking around and just seeing all blue and gray – it’s just amazing.”

The season is not over, though. The next race is the NCAA Division III Atlantic Regional Championships on Nov. 16 at Letchworth State Park, Geneseo’s home course.

Woods says he is hopeful about this race due to the fact that both the men and women won at this course earlier in the year. Knocking on wood, he said, “We’ve got to do it again.”

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Nationally-ranked men's and women's cross-country take second at Oberlin

If there is ever a time in the cross-country season to be gearing for the playoffs, a race with over 30 Division III teams would be that time. In the Inter-Regional Rumble, hosted by Oberlin College, the Geneseo men’s and women’s cross-country team’s stepped up against and placed second against the tough field. The 34-team field represented different regions across the country and included numerous nationally ranked teams.

On the men’s side, the Knights, then ranked 19th in the nation, beat out No. 20 Allegheny College and No. 31 University of Rochester but lost to sixth-ranked New York University.

Sophomore Brendan Wortner finished first for Geneseo with a time of 25 minutes, 37.5 seconds, barely edging out co-captain junior Cohen Miles-Rath by a tenth of a second.

This was a performance by Wortner that head coach Mike Woods was excited about.

“He is establishing himself,” Woods said. “He has arrived as a runner.”

Wortner had an “up-and-down” freshman year, as Woods put it, but chalked it up to the differences between high school and college cross-country.

The last three runners among the top five seem to be transitioning into the college ranks smoothly: junior Ryan Moynihan, freshman Alex Kramer and freshman Matt Jorgensen all finished within one minute of each other.

The women fared just as well as the men, but against arguably tougher competition, seeing that every team in the top five was nationally ranked. Geneseo led the field at 10th in the nation but could not beat No. 15 NYU, as two of their runners finished top five overall.

Co-captain junior Cassie Goodman finished first for the Knights, 14th overall, with a time of 22:17.

The highlight of the day came when the fifth runner for Geneseo, senior Mary Aldridge, crossed the finish line with a time of 22:33, just 16 seconds after Goodman. This was the fastest pack Woods has seen.

“It was a historic run for us,” Woods said. “This is 22 years I’ve been coaching, and we’ve never had a pack run under 20 seconds and [finish this well].”

Both teams remained nationally ranked with the men moving up one spot to No. 18 while the women fell one spot to No. 11. Woods, who used to pay little attention to national rankings, said he believes the women should be among the top 10 teams. The women who ran in the open 6K for nonvarsity competitors stacked the top 10, finishing second through sixth and ninth.

The SUNYAC championship race is set for Nov. 2.

 

 

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Cross-country sweeps home invitational

The men’s and women’s cross-country teams are both nationally ranked, and it is no accident. On Saturday Oct. 5 the Knights hosted the 33rd annual Geneseo cross-country invitational at Letchworth State Park. The course at this race is one both teams know very well, as they practice it often, which shows in the results: Both the men and women took first place for Geneseo.

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Improvement remains cross-country goal

Much like the Harry Groves Invitational at Pennsylvania State University, the Geneseo men’s and women’s cross-country teams went into the Western Invitational on Saturday Sept. 21 with little expectation. “Well, you know, you just break it down to the bare-minimum essentials,” head coach Mike Woods said of his game plan going into the race.

In addition to the largely unknown competition heading to another country, the Knights haven’t raced at this course, nearby Western Ontario University in Canada, in six years - factors that made preparing difficult but also carefree.

“My mindset going off to that race was just to have fun,” co-captain junior Cohen Miles-Rath said. Miles-Rath came in 13th place overall, first for Geneseo, with a time of 25 minutes and 55 seconds, a whole minute faster than the week prior.

The team finished in eighth place out of 18 teams, which, on paper, may not seem like much to be proud of. Looking at the statistics, however, helps bring the true picture into focus.

The Knights’ top five finished within 42 seconds of one another, a six-second improvement from the race at Penn State. The average time in this race was 26:22. At Penn State it was 27:08. Runners three through five for Geneseo finished within 12 seconds of one another at Penn State and within five seconds of each other at this race. The course conditions were very sloppy, according to Woods, which made these improvements even more impressive.

As long as we keep moving in the right direction, all I can see is going up,” Miles-Rath said.

The end result for the women was very similar to that of the men, but the story getting there was not the same.

“The women went out real tentatively because there were hills [in the first mile],” Woods said. “We went out in the middle of the pack and there just wasn’t enough room through the first mile and a half to move up.”

Co-captain junior Cassie Goodman finished 18th overall in the 5,000-meter race with a time of 18:57.

Woods said that about halfway through the race, Goodman was “probably 55th or 56th” but was able to “make a really good move” to finish in the top 20.

The rest of the runners held their own and were able to finish within 35 seconds of Goodman, something Woods said he was excited about. Runners two through five finished within 12 seconds of one another.

“We had our best one-through-five pack of the year with 35 seconds,” Woods said. He added, “Our goal is to get under 40 seconds, and they did on a tough course.” The team finished ninth overall.

The next race for the Knights is not until the Geneseo Invitational at Letchworth State Park, right in Geneseo’s backyard. This race will include competition the Knights are used to facing on a regular basis. Geneseo runs this course frequently in practice, so the runners will not have the unknown factors facing them as in these past two races. The race is set for Oct. 5.

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Division I competition no problem for Geneseo cross-country

The Geneseo men’s and women’s cross-country teams traveled on Saturday Sept. 13 to run in the Harry Groves Spiked Shoes Invitational, hosted by Penn. State (yes, Division I Penn. State). This was a race that had runners from all three divisions competing against each other. One would think this would be intimidating to the Geneseo athletes but the results say otherwise. “It was kind of cool!” captain junior Cassie Goodman said of facing higher divisions. Goodman ran a time of 22 minutes and 10 seconds, good for 18th place overall and first for Geneseo. All but one runner finished under the 23 minute mark, and the runner that didn’t missed it by two seconds.

The Knights came in second amongst the Division III schools, losing to Johns Hopkins, the Division III national champions, and sixth overall (nine teams ran). Not stellar results but seeing that they beat two Division I programs (West Virginia, Mt. Saint Mary’s) and SUNYAC rival SUNY Cortland, which Goodman described as “insane,” the Knights had a good day.

“We held our own,” Goodman said. “It’s always cool to be up against the big schools.”

Another highlight of the race came from runners two through seven: they all finished within nine spots of one another. Most notably junior Alyssa Knott, whom head coach Mike Woods describes as “the energizer bunny” of the team, finished with a time of 22:45, good for 31st overall.

For the men, there was “good news and bad news,” Woods said. The bad being that a few of his runners were dealing with “respiratory infections” all week and weren’t able to perform as well as they hoped. The good news came from sophomore Brenden Wortner who came in 11th, officially.

Wortner had an “up and down” season last year but was able to surprise Woods, in a good way, at this race.

“That was a career race for [Wortner],” Woods said. “That was the best cross-country race he has had as a Geneseo athlete.”

The “bad news” wasn’t even all that bad. The top seven finished within a minute of one another and all had a pace below 5:20.

The Knights came in seventh overall (eight teams in the field) and third among the Division III competition.

“When I’m studying the results, it wasn’t as bad as I thought,” Woods said. “We were fairly close time wise to the guys ahead of us.”

Neither the men’s and women’s team won the race. But there were a lot of good things to gain from the day. Being a Division III school pinned against Division I and II schools should have been daunting but Goodman said, simply, “it was cool.”u

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Young cross-country team has high hopes

The Geneseo men’s and women’s cross-country teams have a combined 24 straight NCAA appearances, a tradition set by head coach Mike Woods. And after the Daniel Walker Invitational Aug. 30, it’s safe to say the winning tradition is not lost on the freshmen. Woods said he uses the invitational as a warm-up for the newcomers so they can “get their feet wet” to cross-country at the collegiate level, but it seemed more like the freshmen dove head first into their first college meet.

On the men’s side, the Knights claimed nine of the top 12 spots, including first overall. Freshman Matt Jorgensen, who took first place, posted a time of 25 minutes, 55 seconds, beating the second-place runner by 20 seconds.

“He is a legit runner,” Woods said. Jorgensen was Woods’ top recruit, and he said is already proving his worth. “[He will] certainly be in our top seven and possibly the top five before the year is over,” he said.

The spotlight doesn’t solely belong to Jorgensen, as freshman Adam Murphy came in third, just 24 seconds behind Jorgensen. Not far behind Murphy, the next nine Geneseo runners finished within a minute of one another and took seven consecutive spots.

Woods said he wasn’t surprised by the outcome of the meet.

“I knew I had a great recruiting class on the men’s side for freshmen, and now it’s starting to take shape,” he said.

The women’s team performed similarly, earning second, third and fourth in the race and having seven runners finish in the top 12.

Woods said he had nothing but praise for his women runners, most notably for freshman Marissa Bellusci. Woods said Bellusci had a “down” senior year in high school, but that did not stop him from recruiting her. Bellusci finished in second with a time of 19:43.

“Boy, did she look good Friday,” Woods said. “She was running really well.”

Freshmen Ashley Peppriell and Sara Rosenzweig were not far behind, both finishing at 19:46.

It looked as if graduating seven runners from the men’s team and six from the women’s would create a lull in this year’s season, but that does not seem to be the case. Woods said there is a lot of depth in both teams and he is hopeful for more NCAA success.

The next race is not for another two weeks, but Woods said he is not worried about the time between meets. He said the runners really buy into his philosophy of training more and competing less. It allows the team to really “go to the well,” he said, come race day

On Sept. 13, the Knights travel to Pennsylvania State University to compete against top-tier programs and Division I teams at the Harry Groves Invitational. Woods will take the top 20 runners with him, and after their first go at collegiate-level races, multiple freshmen have promising chances to make the roster.

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After a week off from competition, the men’s and women’s cross-country teams hosted the 31st annual Geneseo Cross Country Invitational on Saturday Oct. 1. Both squads came away with the team title, the men finishing ahead of SUNY Brockport and the women finishing ahead of Hamilton College, both with a score of 23 points.

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