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Times Leader
Dallas cruises to WVC girls track and field championship
By Tom Robinson For Times Leader,
13 days ago
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HAZLE TWP. — Dallas collected gold medals and, with it, the points the Mountaineers used to run away with the girls team title at the second annual Wyoming Valley Conference Track and Field Championships Monday.
The Mountaineers had three of the meet’s top four individual performers and won one of the three relays.
Julia Natitus, Madison Hedglin and Morgan Langdon each won two individual events and Natitus was part of the 1600-meter relay victory. The seven event victories by the Mountaineers were more than any two other teams combined.
The unbeaten Division 1 regular-season champions outscored host Hazleton Area 160-111½ for the team title.
Hedglin, the established distance standout; Langdon, the vastly improved thrower; and Natitus, the freshman who has broken onto the scene as the conference’s top hurdler, combined to lead the title winning effort.
“We all did really well,” said Hedglin, the 1600 and 3200 winner. “It was great.”
The meet served as a transition between the regular season and the May 13-14 District 2 Championships. There, Dallas, the 2021 champion and last year’s runner-up, will try to take down defending champion Abington Heights, which recently completed its 17th straight unbeaten season while running its dual meet winning streak to 101.
“I think I’m pretty close to where I need to be,” Natitus said. “It kind of helped today with a lot of schools here and being able to experience the big environment.
“I’m pretty good for districts. I’m going to practice a lot this week and see how it goes.”
Natitus joined Holy Redeemer sprinter Isabella Granteed as the only girls to win three gold medals, with each getting one of the medals in a relay.
In the day’s first event, Natitus ran a time of 15.96 to win the 100 hurdles by 1.44 seconds. She won the 300 hurdles by 2.92 seconds in 46.68.
Natitus, who set the school record of 15.63 while winning the 100 hurdles in the Blue Jay Classic at Central Columbia, won all 12 of her hurdles races in the WVC after also going unbeaten in the events for the junior high team last season.
“I honestly didn’t know that I was going to be this successful in my freshman year,” she said.
Natitus also ran the third leg of the team’s win in the closing 1600 relay.
Granteed matched that effort by repeating victories in the 400 relay and 200 dash and adding a title in the 100.
“I would say my 200 is my strongest event, but I’ve really been working on my 100 and my block starts,” Granteed said.
During the 200, Granteed avenged two losses from earlier this season when she rallied to catch 400-meter gold medalist Gabriella Bredbenner of Hazleton Area and win by two-hundredths of a second in 26.06.
“I was behind most of it,” Granteed said. “I was not certain I was going to win that.”
Hedglin and Langdon were the only others with two individual golds. Wyoming Area’s Ella McKernan won individual and relay golds, repeating in the 800 run and 3200 relay.
“I didn’t focus on times today; it was just about the place,” Hedglin said. “It was a good starter for next week.”
Hedglin ran the 1600 in 5:19.70 and won the 3200 by more than 16 seconds in 11:22.74. She helped Dallas take three of the first five spots in each. Sarah Williams was third and Julianna Sobocinski fifth in the 3200. Erika Doran and Alexa Gauntlett were fourth and fifth in the 1600.
Langdon got off to a rough start in the shot put, then improved on each of her last three attempts, moving into first place on her next-to-last try and breaking a 15-year-old school record with a 37-5½ in her final effort. The discus concluded the day and Langdon hit her winning throw of 103-7 earlier and was joined by teammates Jasmin Nguyen and Jada Mason in the top five.
Second-place Hazleton Area was led by a 1-2 finish from Sophia Shults and Sophia Benyo in the triple jump.
The title was a repeat for Shults. Bredbenner and pole vaulter Alexis Reimold added the team’s other gold medals.
Aria Messner repeated as long jump champion while leading Pittston Area to third place in the team standings. She also had two second-place and one fifth-place finish.
Madi Geiger, in the javelin, had the only win for fourth-place Crestwood.
Jane Gillespie joined Granteed as the holdovers for Holy Redeemer in the 400 relay repeat. The Royals finished fifth in the team standings.
Wyoming Area was sixth with McKernan and three-fourths of the relay team repeating their golds from last year. Stoss, who was third behind McKernan’s win in the 800, and Nina Angeli were also part of the title effort last season.
Northwest’s Jordin Bowman won the high jump and took third in the 100 hurdles.
The top three in each event received medals and the top eight scored points for their teams.
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