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POST SEASON
THE FINAL ANALYSIS
City Performances Down 5.5% - The Impact of COVID
Based on 2021 City Final results, City athlete performances were down 5.4-5.7% compared to 2019. These results are an improvement from the beginning-of-year analysis from Woodbridge which showed performances down by 8.7% (boys) and 13.9% (girls). So, City athletes did make up ground over the course of the season but did not fully recover from the impact of COVID-19.
Our Approach . . .
In order to understand the ‘In-Season’ improvements over the course of the 2021 City season we rated ‘Beginning-of-Season’ City performances by looking at ‘21 and ‘19 Woodbridge results and ‘End-of-Season’ City performances by looking at ‘21 and ‘19 City Finals results. 2021 ‘Beginning-of-Season’ ratings are based on comparing ‘21 Woodbridge City results to ‘19 Woodbridge City results (down 8.7% in ‘21 versus ‘19 for boys and down 13.9% for girls). 2021 ‘End-of-Season’ ratings are based on comparing ‘21 City Finals results to ‘19 City Final results (down 5.4% in ‘21 versus ‘19 for boy, and down 5.7% for girls). The 2021 ‘In-Season' change is the difference between the ‘Beginning-of-Season’ rating and the ‘End-of-Season’ rating (improvement of 5.4% for boys and 11.4% for girls).
We compared 2021 results to 2019 because ‘19 is the nearest full-season dataset and therefore should have fewer extraneous variables such as division re-allocations or shifts in participation that might obscure the COVID-19 impact. But keep in mind that 2019 was by no means an average year. In fact 2019 was below average on many metrics compared to average City performances over the last 10 years.
Comparisons in the tables above that involve City performances from Woodbridge ‘21 do NOT include divisions 3 and 4 since these divisions did not participate in the ‘21 Woodbridge Invitational. In order to keep the analysis comparative when evaluating Woodbridge ‘21 City results to either ‘2019 Woodbridge results or ‘21 or ‘19 City Final results we chose to exclude divisions 3 and 4 from all Woodbridge AND City Final races, for 2021 AND 2019.
We focused on the ‘Scoring Runners’ (top 5 runners for each team) vs ‘All Runners’ in our analysis to eliminate some of the exaggerated outlier variability inherent in the 6th and 7th place runners, particularly in City results, and to keep comparisons consistent since some teams don’t have a 6th or 7th runner.
CITY FINALS 2009 - 2021
The tables below are a compilation of results from the Division 1 Boys races at the City Finals from 2009 through 2021. Sorry, no girls or divisions 2-5. The categories in the left column are key metrics to evaluate yearly performances. Each category has rankings for each of the 12 years, 2009-2021, which ranks a specific year’s performance against other years in that category.
Three things stand-out.
FIRST, how exceptional the 2009 division 1 boys runners were. They ranked 1st or 2nd in every performance category in ALL 12 years.
SECOND, what a phenomenal performance the Palisades boys team delivered this season. In a year in which COVID-19 obviously factored into City performances, Palisades transcended City norms with a truly outlier performance.
THIRD, City Final performances were very consistent with early season results from Woodbridge. In both cases there were exceptional performances by specific individuals and teams but on overall the times were well off City averages.
LA CITY’S RISING STARS
The tables below list the TOP 10 State performances by City 9th and 10th graders.
BOYS
Palisade’s MAX FIELDS led the State rankings, both for the underclassmen and overall. Venice’s PAUL TRANQUILLA was the only freshman to make the list. JOSEPH VARGAS (Cleveland) started off fast in his Division 1 race, clearing the first mile in 5:03.3, and then settled in to a more conservative pace that earned him a City rank of 19 overall in 17:12.8 and 3rd in our ‘Rising Star’ ranking. Verdugo’s future looks to be promising with 2 runners on our ‘Rising Star’ ranking - sophomores DUSTIN HARZMAN and EVAN ELLERSIECK. Final note: Seven of the Top-10 ranked underclassmen run for Divisions 2-5.
GIRLS
GABRIELA NASCIMENTO (New West) continued her post-season excellence with a sub-20 performance at State (19:50.3) that ranks her as the top City underclassmen. Canoga Park’s ANGELINA VALLADARES may have had the most impressive State performance, leading her team with the top time and one of only 5 City girls to break 20 minutes. Garfield’s sisters KELIA & SOPHIA NARANJO-CHAMPION have exchanged places all year and at State Kelia took the sibling honors with a time of 20:14.3. Both made our Top-10 ranking and look to be top Division 1 competitors in the coming years. MEZTLI VELAZQUEZ (Granada Hills) was the top City freshman for most of ‘21 and she continued the streak posting a time of 20:13.5 at State. Final note: CANOGA PARK has 3 girls on the ‘Rising Stars’ list; in addition to Angelina Valladares, ANGELINA LOPEZ and KARINA PEREZ also made the list - watch out for this team in the next 2 years!
CITY TOP-10 STATE PERFORMANCES
The tables below rank the Top-10 LA City BOYS and GIRLS performances, across all divisions. Scroll through the tables to see rankings by 1st, 2nd and 3rd-mile splits.
Thirty-three City schools and 125 City athletes competed in this year’s State meet. And while overall performances where a bit lackluster (it’ been 16 years since an LA section boy has not broken 16 minutes and 14 years since a girl hasn’t broken 19 minutes) there were some noteworthy City performances nonetheless.
LA CITY FINALS
WOW!
What a City Finals!
A perfect morning for racing welcomed our LA City finalists and they delivered with some remarkable performances!
Here is a rundown of the LA City Championships.
Continue to check-in, we’ll be updating the site through-out the week!
BOYS CHAMPIONSHIPS
PALISADES BOYS TURN IN A HISTORIC PERFOMANCE
You have to go back to the Belmont team of 1998, the best team in LA City cross-country history, to witness a better City Championship performance than the Palisades Boys teams delivered at the City Championships on Saturday. MAX FIELDS won the individual City title, the 1st time a Sophomore has won the Division 1 LA City title since 1997, when Belmont’s Humberto Vargas accomplished the same feat. His time ranks as the 4th fastest performance EVER by a Sophomore at the City Finals. AND, the Palisades team-time was the best in LA City in 24 years - not since the great Belmont teams of 1997-1998 has an LA City run so fast!
PALISADES CHARTER - Division 1 Boys City Champs
Max Fields’ win at City was an inspired performance. It wasn’t until the last 200 meters that he surged ahead of Austin Ledgerwood (ECR) to take the lead for good and capture the City title. David Tobin, his teammate and the 2nd Palisades runner to cross the finish line, had the race of his life posting an incredible 15:37.7 to place 3rd and take almost a minute off his best time at Pierce. Jose Sevilla (15:40.8) and Alec Schmitt (15:51.2) ran well to both post times under 16 minutes. Palisades top 5 scoring runners all placed within the top 14 in the Division 1 championship race.
In September we predicted a Palisades City Title - both individually and for the team. We also thought they could deliver 5 runners under 16 minutes - a feat only accomplished by Belmont. They were close; 4 Palisades boys ran under 16 on Saturday and their 5th was only off by 10 seconds. On the whole not a bad day of running!
Well done and congratulations to the Division 1 Champions - Max Fields (1st - 16:24.1), David Novak (3rd-15:37.7), Jose Seville (4th-15:40.8), Alec Schmidt (7th-15:51.2), Noah Wexler (14th-16:10.2), Joshua Kovacs (28th-16:55.4) and Jeremy Santiago (17:32.7). And Coach Rob Hockley!
EL CAMINO REAL - Division 1 Boys 2nd Place
If not for the impressive Palisades performance, El Camino Real would have been the story of the day. Just 2 weeks ago, at the West Valley League Finals, this team was struggling to get 5 runners under 17 minutes and only had one runner showing any promise of a sub-16 performance.
What a difference 2 weeks makes! To a person this team delivered at City Finals. Austin Ledgerwood smashed his Pierce PR by 48 seconds to post an incredible 15:25.7 - breaking 15:30.0 on Pierce is where legends are made! Max Liberman took over 30 seconds off his Pierce PR to go under 16-minutes in 15:52.8. Mateo Glass, a sophomore, was just one second off of a sub-16 minute performance; his 16:01.0 is 24 seconds faster than his previous Pierce PR. Isaac Torres, who finally showed hints of what he is capable of in Prelims, took 16 seconds off of that time to post a 16:11.0 at Finals. And finally, their 5th boy, Evan Sinnott, a runner who came into this season as one of the top returning athletes from 2019 but has been sidelined with injuries, put together an inspired performance finishing in 16:48.0 - almost a minute off of his best time at Pierce this year. Amazing performances - congratulations to the team and to Coach Colson.
BREAKING 16 MINUTES
Last week we predicted that 5 runners in Division 1 would break 16 minutes; an off year by any standard but understandable in light of COVID. Nine boys broke 16 minutes on Saturday in Division 1 with some brilliant and unexpected break-throughs. We assumed Max Fields, Austin Ledgerwood, Jose Seville, Alec Schmitt and Max Liberman would break 16 - that was our 5. The surprises were David Tobin who absolutely knocked it out of the park on Saturday with a 3rd place finish and 15:37.7 clocking. San Pedro’s Luis Sandoval (15:44.7) and Daniel Ruiz (15:47.6), who both posted huge course PR’s (Bruce Thomson would have been very proud of these boys!). Sophomore Joseph Vargas, Cleveland’s break-out star, took over 2 minutes off his Pierce course time back in September to break 16 minutes in the Finals - 15:590 - phenomenal!
ALL-CITY TEAM
Below we’ve compiled the top times from Saturday’s City Finals across all divisions to recognize the best-of-the-best. The top 14 athletes, boys and girls, that comprise our ALL-CITY TEAMS.
The Boys All-City Teams are directly below. The girls table is in the next section.
BOYS ALL-CITY TEAMS
All-City Notes - Boys
Francisco Rodriguez (Franklin) is the only non-Division 1 runner to make the All-City 1st team. He’s also the Division 3 Individual City Champion and the Northern league champion. Jude Sandridge, Reseda’s stand-out sophomore and a member of the elite sub-16, shaved 20 seconds off his Pierce Course PR to take 3rd in the Division 3 race. He is the Valley Mission league champ. James Jimenez, Division 2 champion and another elite sub-16er, continues the Venice tradition of delivering top-tier performances at the City Finals in his final race at Pierce. James posted the 2nd fastest time in Prelims to win the combined Division 1&2 Heat 1 race. And finally, Finlay Robertson, in his best performance this year and his final race at Pierce, ran a course PR of 16:00.8 to take 10th place in the division 1 race; less than a second off a sub-16 performance!
A final note on the Boys All-City team: In 2021 13 athletes broke 16 minutes; the same number of runners in 2019. So in a very difficult year LA City cross-country continues to excel and inspire!
GIRLS CHAMPSIONSHIPS
GRANADA GIRLS SOAR AT CITY FINALS
Granada placed 5 girls in the top 12 in the Division 1 City Final race to continue a City Final winning streak that goes back to 2017. They didn’t quite match the time of their legendary 2018 team but still managed to get 5 girls under 19 minutes! Isabel Castagnola, 2021’s LA City Champion, once again set a course PR taking almost 20 seconds of her Prelim time. Jocelyn Pacheco finished her City season strong (and without glasses!) with a 2nd place finish in 19:13.0. Naima Salazar (19:23.6) had a brilliant race to take 4th place, dropping almost a minute off her Prelim time and returning to her ‘19 form. And Sofia Abrego returned for her final Pierce race to place 10th in 19:50.9 after a difficult season waylaid with injuries.
DIVISION 2 GIRLS - EAGLE ROCK WINS BIG OVER BRAVO
DIVISION 3 GIRLS - CANOGA PARK WINS A THRILLER OVER RESEDA
Reseda’s YANILETTE MONTANA emerges out of the fog at the top of ‘Horseshoe’ in 4th place. Yanilette finished impressively to move up two places and finish in 2nd place in the Division 3 Championship race with a PR of 19:41.2.
GIRLS ALL-CITY TEAMS
Dulce Gonzalez’s final appearance at Pierce was an appropriate finish to a superlative season. Dulce won the Division 3 race, smashing her course PR by over 40 seconds in a time of 18:52.0 and posting the 2nd fastest time at the City Championships. In her 1st race this year at the Western League finals, unknown Venice junior Lidia Prokopovych-Shchepetkin placed 4th with an impressive 19:47.80 at Pierce. And in only 3 races, EVER, she’s claimed the Division 2 City title and risen to #3 overall in LA City with a time this past Saturday of 19:07.3. Lidia is someone to watch in 2022! Freshman Brynn Bogue (Bravo Medical) was our ‘Rising Star’ selection back in September and she definitely delivered in the championships with an impressive 2nd place finish in Division 2 and a sub-19 performance, 19:14.4. Celeste Corrigan (Eagle Rock) had been running well all year but took it to another level in post season. In the Northern league finals at Pierce she took 2nd in 20:42.0. The following week at Prelims she dropped her Pierce PR to 19:31.1 and then in the Finals to 19:17.7 to take 3rd in the Division 2 race and rank 6th overall in LA City. When you look at Ava Baak’s Woodbridge and Mt. Sac times the expectation is that she’ll run mid-19’s at City Finals. But expectations and reality are different things and Ava was able to deliver on those expectations. Her 19:20.0 at City Finals is a modest Pierce PR for her but a a very strong performance that ranks as the 7th best time at the Championships and led Palisades to a 2nd-place team finish.
Well done to all these runners. The best-of-the best!
The Sophomore Class
In case your counting, that’s 3 sophomores that broke 16 minutes at City Finals - Max Fields-Palisades-15:22.5, Jude Sandridge-Reseda-15:56.0, and Joseph Vargas-Cleveland-15:59.0. And that doesn’t include Mateo Glass who missed the mark by only one second. That’s the 1st time in the history of LA City XC that 3 sophomores have broken 16 minutes on the Pierce course in the City Finals.
Max Fields’ 15:22.5 on Saturday ranks as the 4th best sophomore time ever at City Finals behind City greats Roman Gomez (1982-Belmont-14:53.0), Martin Morales (Wilson-1988-15:04.7), and Humberto Vargas (Belmont-1997-15:21.9).
FRANKLIN
Franklin’s Francisco Rodriguez and David Martinez capped an incredible cross-country season for Franklin placing 1st and 2nd in the Division 3 Final race. They both clipped more than 4o seconds off of their Northern League final performances to reclaim the Division 3 City title from Reseda’s very talented Jude Sandridge. All 3 ran under 16 minutes in a 1st for Division 3. A really amazing race.
The Finals were bitter-sweet for Franklin though. They were attempting to win the 1st City title in any sport for Franklin High. They lost out to Verdugo Hills by 5 point in a battle that was won in the last mile. Franklin had a faster team-time but Verdugo had stronger 3-5 runners and that was he difference
In addition to Francisco and David, Franklin Gonzalez will be headed to the State meet as an individual qualifier.
Stay tuned - we’ll be updating through-out the day!
CITY PRELIMS ‘21
The City Prelims tend to be a mixed bag that has the top teams holding back and the challengers running for PR’s. The 2021 City Prelims, for the most part, held true to form. Take a look at our analysis below for specifics on team and individual performances at the City Prelims and projections for the City Final.
In this year of COVID we’d be remis if we didn’t highlight a few of the impacts to City’s XC programs in post season as a result of the pandemic:
Belmont, the most successful cross-country program in the modern history of LA City distance running, by any measure, did not have 5 runners at their League Finals. As a result, they did not participate in the City Prelims and will not be in the Finals.
Elizabeth Learning Center girl’s team, which were the City division 5 runner-up team at the 2019 City Finals did not field a team in 2021.
North Hollywood, home of one of the top City runners in the last 30 years, Natalie Stein, did not have a qualifying team, boys or girls, at Prelims.
Manual Arts, Polytechnic, and Dorsey are just a few more of the 20 City schools that did not field a qualifying team for league finals or Prelims.
As part of this issue on the ‘Post Season’ we’re including team and individual rankings, by division, based on Prelim and League Final results. Read on for the details.
LA CITY RANKINGS
Preparing cross-country rankings is far from a perfect science and using the City Prelims as the primary data set doesn’t help the cause, mostly for the reasons mentioned above. In 2021 there was an additional wrinkle in that divisions 3-4 did not run Prelims at Pierce. For these divisions we used the teams’ performances from their League Finals. This introduced further complexities in that many of these teams ran their League Finals at Elysian Park or Peck Park, NOT Pierce. For the division 3 and 4 teams that ran their league finals at Elysian or Peck Park we’ve converted the individual and team times to Pierce-equivalents. Very scientific :)
So……here are our rankings and analysis. We’ll continue to update throughout the week to cover all of the divisions.
TEAM RANKINGS
The tables below rank all teams that participated in the LA City Prelims at Pierce College (divisions 1,2&5) and League Finals at Elysian Park, Peck Park and Pierce (divisions 3&4). Overall team rankings are based on each team’s top 5 runner’s times at the Prelims or League Finals.
Click on the tables below to see TEAM RANKINGS BY DIVISION
BOYS TEAM RANKINGS - ALL DIVISIONS
GIRLS - ALL DIVISIONS
INDIVIDUAL RANKINGS - BOYS TOP 25
Click on the tables below to see INDIVIDUAL RANKINGS BY DIVISION
INDIVIUDAL RANKINGS - GIRLS TOP 25
CITY PRELIMS WINNERS CIRCLE
BOYS Division 1 - Heat 2
GIRLS Division 1 - Heat 2
BOYS Division 2 - Heat 1
GIRLS Division 2 - Heat 1
BOYS Division 1 - Heat 1
GIRLS Division 1 - Heat 1
BOYS Division 2 - Heat 2
GIRLS Division 2 - Heat 2
BOYS Division 5 - Heat 2
BOYS Division 5 - Heat 1
OTHER NOTABLE PERFORMANCES
LEAGUE FINALS
Three venues across greater Los Angeles hosted the 2021 LA City League Finals - Elysian Park, Peck Park and Pierce College. In all, 955 boys and girls competed, representing 5 divisions, 12 leagues and 35 schools.
What makes LA City’s League Finals unique is that it is often the first and last time some of the top LA City teams run against each other. In some of the best racing all year, the East Valley, Northern, and Valley Mission leagues met in a combined League Final race that was awe inspiring. The girls varsity race was absolutely packed with talent that included Freida Cedillo (race winner, Valley Mission champ), Dulce Gonzalez, Keely Miyamoto (Northern League Champ), Yanilette Montano, Celeste Corrigan, Thea Amon-Franceschi, Gabrielle Cannesson, Leyla Huerta (East Valley Champ), and Angelina Valladares to name just a few.
The boys race was equally exciting with Reseda stand-out Jude Sandridge, Franklin’s dynamic duo Francisco Gonzalez and David Martinez, and Monroe’s William Rojos all toeing the line against the venerable Marshall team that has Finlay Robertson, Panos Papadaes, and Anton Hense.
The next day, Thur Nov 4th, West Valley’s finest met at Pierce College for the final day of LA City league finals. The Granada Hill’s girls came in as the prohibitive favorites and did not disappoint. Running without 2 of their top runners the Highlanders still placed all of their runners in front of the competition to tally a perfect team score of 15. Granada’s top 3 ISABEL CASTAGNOLA, JOCELYN PACHECO and MEZTLE VELAZQUEZ joined 8 other City girls who broke 20 minutes on the Pierce course in league finals this week.
The boys varsity West Valley league finals proved to be much more competitive with El Camino Real and Granada Hills competing for valley honors. Granada led the race at 1-mile but ECR turned the tides in mile-2 with a team-wide surge that culminated in AUSTIN LEDGERWOOD and MAX LIBERMAN moving into 1st and 2nd and their 5th runner ISAAC TORRES making a big move in the last mile.
Cleveland ran well enough to take 3rd despite JAMES LOPEZ still working to get back to top form. HARRISON NYUGEN looks to be back after missing most of October and JOSEPH VARGAS continues to impress.
Fourth place went to Taft who continues to improve. EMMANUEL PALACIOS went out hard with the lead pack and was able to hold on to take 12th place and the top place for the Toreadors.
PICTURE OF THE WEEK
Runners from three of the top teams in the West Valley League sprint to the finish!
Isaac Torres (right) won this battle as part of the larger war for League Team Champion.
AROUND THE LEAGUES
CITY UPDATES
Congratulations to Sofia Abrego of Granada Hills who has verbally committed to Ivy League Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. In addition to having a rich tradition in running including Olympic qualifier Abbey Cooper the school is also one of the premier educational institutions in the US.
‘The Drive’
Is dedicated to LA City’s high school distance running community
The goal is to evangelize exceptional teams and athletes with high quality, curated content and editorial perspectives in an online periodic publication.
Each volume will include a ‘Special’ section, as well as Athletes of the Week/Month, ‘The Week in Pictures’ including a ‘Picture of the Week’, ‘The Numbers’, and ‘Heard on the Trail’.
ENJOY!