BC High School Track Championships
Posted in Uncategorized on June 4th, 2010 by doug – Be the first to commentFab five could make 800m history
Peter Scharph’s 1:50.78 is the target for Vugteveen and those chasing 1984 mark
By Yvonne Zacharias, Vancouver Sun June 4, 2010
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/sports/five+could+make+800m+history/3110691/story.html#ixzz0ptknhIYu
Chilliwack student Travis Vugteveen admits to being nervous before running the 800-metre race, but it’s a good kind of nervous.
“It gets the adrenalin going,” said the 18-year-old athlete who attends Unity Christian School in the Fraser Valley. “As soon as the race starts, there is no more nervousness or anything. I just run as hard as I can.”
Hard indeed. In early May, he broke Graham Wells’ 10-year-old Fraser Valley high school championship record, posting a winning time of 1:51.50.
He was less than a second away from breaking the B.C. high school mark of 1:50.78 set by Peter Scharph in 1984.
Vugteveen is among the 1,200 students from 150 schools participating in the B.C. high school track and field championships at Swangard Stadium today and Saturday.
Though he won the competition last year and is the top seed in the 800 metres at this year’s event, the self-effacing student is taking nothing for granted. “I think it will be a really tough competition. There are a lot of good athletes out there.”
Vugteveen, who trains with the Valley Royals club and coach Sue Northey, will attend Simon Fraser next year as the university becomes the first Canadian institution to join the NCAA.
Bill McNulty, the B.C. meet director, said the boys’ 800 metres is one of the races to watch at the provincial championships. Five boys enter the race with sub-2:00 personal-best times. With such strong competition in the field, most of it coming from the valley, McNulty thinks it is possible Scharph’s record will fall this weekend.
This strong picture represents a resurgence of the 800 metres. With the exception of Gary Reed from Victoria, there has been a void of powerful athletes in Canada in the 800 metres since Bill Crothers tore up the field in the 1960s.
OTHERS TO WATCH
The 400-metre boys’ race will also be one to watch with four or five athletes, including Stuart Ellenwood from Langley and Brendon Restall from Oak Bay, having times that are within a second of each other. “There will be no room for error on that one,” said McNulty.
Seven girls are under a minute in qualifying times in the 400 metres with Vanessa Sjoberg from Semiahmoo secondary in Surrey having run it at the top speed of 56:40. Mike Kasprzik of St. Ann’s Academy in Kamloops is the top seed in the men’s 100 metres but again, the other runners are within four-tenths of a second of each other.
Grade 11 Langley student Jared Heldman is the guy to watch in the long jump. He is just about half a metre ahead of everyone. And David McKay out of Oak Bay on the Island has pole vaulted four metres, a quality jump in Canada for high schoolers considering the best jumps on the national team are around five metres.
Oak Bay has qualified for the largest number of spots at the championships followed by W.J. Mouat in Abbotsford, St. Georges private school in Vancouver, Brookswood in Surrey, Walnut Grove in Langley and Mount Douglas in Victoria in that order.
While high school track and field is the Plain Jane of the sports world, lacking celebrity status and attention, it’s where star athletes usually find their feet.
“Many of these athletes get their beginning here at the high school track meet and go on to represent Canada at the world championships, the Pan American Games, the Commonweath Games and the Olympics,” McNulty said. “No matter how good you are, no matter how far you go, you started somewhere.”
He credited school teachers and coaches for giving the athletes of tomorrow their start, “for identifying them, motivating them and moving them on.”
Do people know, he wondered, that former NHLers Brett Hull and Steve Tuttle once competed in the B.C. meet? That Bobby Hull used to come to the track because his sons Brett and Bart used to compete for Vancouver College.
Maybe not, but they do now.
yzacharish@vancouversun.com
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/sports/five+could+make+800m+history/3110691/story.html#ixzz0ptkdQPmt



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