This weekend's Harvard Track and Field Invitational was part meet and part fundraiser for the Harvard men's and women's track teams.
The informal meet, which was not scored for teams, brought together teams from throughout Massachusetts and surrounding areas. Among the visitors were Tufts, Bentley and Brandeis--along with men's teams from Ivy rivals Penn and Brown.
Given the relaxed nature of the event--Crimson athletes manned the concession booths, did the timing, and raked the pits--only the truly healthy runners participated.
"We only ran people that were absolutely healthy," said men's co-captain Joe Ciollo. "It is a pretty meaningless event, and only about half of our team was running."
But the highlight of the meet may have been a runner who was, surprisingly, healthy enough to run.
Saturday marked the long-awaited return to the women's lineup of senior Lee Shearer.
Shearer had been a promising performer in her freshman year but was plagued by injuries throughout her sophomore and junior seasons. After a two-year layoff, Shearer stormed back with a mid-58-second performance in the 400-meter race.
"It was a very inspirational moment," said co-captain Heather Hanson. "She ran a great time and looked strong. For those of us that had known her since freshman year, it was really special, but even for underclassmen who didn't know her very well it was inspirational."
The other momentous occurrence during the meet was the women's 4x400-relay team lapping an opposing team during its race.
The team consisted of sophomores Valerie Dixon, Myehla Reed and Marna Schutte along with Shearer running the anchor leg.
"They ran about a 4:01, which is about seven seconds slower than last weekend," Hanson said. "However, we had some injuries and not everyone was a 400 runner. To run that good of a time and to lap a team is amazing. Lapping another team is always exciting."
Schutte also took part in the closest race of the day, narrowly edging sophomore teammate Brenda Taylor by a half step for first place in the 200-meter race.
As usual, sophomore Dora Gyoffry The star on the men's side of the meet wasCiollo, who unofficially broke his own schoolrecord last weekend in the 500-meter. Saturday, healmost set the school record in the 200-and400-meter. In the 400, Ciollo ran a 48.42, missing theschool record of 48.41 by a mere one-hundredth ofa second. In the 200, the senior ran 22.00--therecord is 21.91. "I am not at all disappointed about notbreaking the marks," Ciollo said. "It is only thesecond meet of the season, and I am lookingforward to dropping my time in the future. I havemany more opportunities to run these races." Read more in Sports