With the two biggest meets of the indoor season looming over the next three weeks, the Harvard track and field teams placed second in the Greater Boston Championships with a number of its top athletes resting.
The meet—which took place at Gordon Track and Field Center—fielded a number of regional teams, including MIT, Brandeis and Bentley.
On the women’s side, strong performances from freshman Chelsae Smith and the shot put and weight throw athletes led Harvard to an 140-point team performance, 36 behind the meet’s winner, Northeastern.
Co-captain Beverly Whelan, sophomore Laura Maludzinski and junior Alasdair McLean-Foreman—all of whom have been some of Harvard’s best runners since cross country season—were absent for a more intense meet at Notre Dame this weekend.
Next week the team will have its toughest competition of the season to date when it faces Yale and Princeton. Two weeks later, the Crimson will follow up this rivalry with the Heptagonal Championships—the climax of the season.
“We have our most important part of the season ahead of us with the Yale meet and Heps to follow,” co-captain Adam Gelardi said.
Women
Despite not having three of its strongest long-distance runners on Saturday, the women’s team put together one of their best performances of the year in beating MIT, Brandeis and Bentley.
The absence of Maludzinski and Whelan and a “did not finish” for senior Mairead O’Callaghan left the three top runners on the sidelines for the Greater Boston Championships. In their absence, however, the sprinters on the team, led by Smith, helped spark a strong team finish.
“In the past, the distance events have been our weakness,” Whelan said, “and as a member of the mid-distance squad, I’m obviously proud that we’ve been contributing to this year’s scoring. But it’s also great to see the sprinters—especially some of the freshmen—contributing.”
Smith won the 200m dash in a time of 25.71, right on the heels of her second place time of 7.98 in the 60m race, contributing 18 points to the team’s total.
“We have had great sprinters like Brenda Taylor and Marna Schutte in my time here but have struggled with injuries in the last year,” co-captain BreeAnna Gibson said. “[Smith] has been able to stay healthy, you combine that with her hard work and dedication and you get great results.”
But more important than the individual performances for the team was the overall score, lifting its spirits and fostering hope amongst the team members leading up to the Heptagonals.
“It is exciting to see the team building momentum going into the two biggest meets of the year,” Gibson said.
Gibson won both the shot put (13 meters) and the weight throw (15.38 meters). She was followed closely in both by freshman Shawna Strayhorn, who earned two second-place finishes on the day. The race between the two Crimson athletes for first place was close, with Gibson’s victory in the weight throw coming on her last attempt.
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