The first time I stepped on a track and raced was in the Spring of my 8th grade year. I won my first meet and fell in love with the competitive nature of the sport. As a Freshman I joined the Winter Track team and found early success being the only Freshman in our league to run under 8 seconds in the 55m. I was brought up to varsity to compete on the 4 x 200 team which won the league and set our new school record. I transitioned right into Spring track and as I started to learn more about my technique my times in the 100m and 200m races improved with each event and I was given the opportunity to compete on a very talented 4 x 100 team. As the season went on I started to realize that this is something I would like to continue to pursue not only throughout high school but at the college level. I was having a very successful Freshman year that was leading toward an opportunity to be placed on a relay medley team that would be running at Nationals when I was tripped during a race and injured my knee. I have rehabbed and trained to prepare myself for the upcoming season and have worked with a private track coach to improve my starts and fine tune my technique. As a student, I work hard to maintain good grades and try to be a positive role model within the school. Although, as many young high school students do, I have made my share of poor decisions but I have learned from them, grown from them and become a much more responsible and mature person because of them. I feel that one thing that makes me different from other recruits is my toughness and my competitive nature. I have the ability to fight through pain and push myself beyond limits. On the day I was tripped and injured my knee, I somehow found the strength to run again, as I was allowed to run in another heat, which I won and qualified for the finals. I then ran in the finals and took a very close 2nd place and then ran once more in the 4x100 which our team won. The next day, I could not walk and it was identified that I had a slight tear in my MCL and that I had dislocated my kneecap and it popped back into place. I try not to focus on the injury as I want to put it behind me but I feel it demonstrates my toughness and desire to compete at the highest level.
Event | 2016 Varsity Team |
---|---|
55M | 7.94 |
100M | 13.1 |
200M | 27.2 |
NCSA College Recruiting® (NCSA) is the exclusive athletic recruiting network that educates, assists, and connects, families, coaches and companies so they can save time and money, get ahead and give back.
NCSA College Recruiting® (NCSA) is the nation’s leading collegiate recruiting source for more than 500,000 student-athletes and 42,000 college coaches. By taking advantage of this extensive network, more than 92 percent of NCSA verified athletes play at the college level. The network is available to high school student-athletes around the country through valued relationships with the NFLPA, FBU, NFCA and SPIRE. Each year, NCSA educates over 4 million athletes and their parents about the recruiting process through resources on its website, presentations of the critically-acclaimed seminar College Recruiting Simplified, and with Athletes Wanted, the book written by NCSA founder Chris Krause.
Questions?
866-495-5172
8am-6pm CST Every Day