Pine Ridge Golf Club
Springfield OR
SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — The BYU women’s cross country team claimed first at the Bill Dellinger Invitational while the men’s team took second Saturday at Pine Ridge Golf Club.
Two Cougars took home the individual meet titles in Conner Mantz and Whittni Orton. Mantz ran 23:24.7 in the men’s 8k and Orton finished with a time of 19:25.8 in the women’s 6k.
The women placed first with a score of 35 — 46 points lower than the second-place team, Boise State. The women had three of the top four finishers in the race in Orton, Erica Birk-Jarvis and Courtney Wayment. The men narrowly missed first-place with a score of 60, while No. 11 Oregon grabbed the top spot with 54 points.
“We’re pleased with the result,” BYU associate director of cross country and track and field Diljeet Taylor said. “The main focus of today was being in a competitive mindset and getting tougher and we were able to do that. We still have some things to work on, but it’s still September, and we have three weeks ahead of pre-nationals to get some good training in. Always nice to compete and get tougher and come away with a win.”
In their third race of the season, the women posted a dominant showing with the first-place finish by Orton (19:25.8) and Birk-Jarvis who followed close behind to pick up second with a time of 19:30.8. Wayment followed in fourth (19:42.7), as Olivia Hoj came in 12th (20:11.3) and Aubrey Frentheway came in 18th (20:24.5) to put five Cougars in the top-20. Sara Musselman (20:26.5), Anna Camp (20:31.5), Anastaysia Davis (20:36.1), Alissa Fielding (20:36.2), Maddie Cannon (20:42.6) and Sadie Sargent (20:46.8) placed 21st, 24th, 30th, 31st, 37th and 40th, respectively, to round out the top-40. Ember Stratton (20:47.5), Kate Hunter (20:48.5), McKenna Lee (20:53.7), Rachel Morrin (21:13.8) and Amanda Erickson (21:21.0) finished 41st, 42nd, 49th, 77th and 84th, respectively, to round out the Cougars’ finish.
Taylor also commented on the depth of the team, saying that she thought the women ran well together and finished strong, which has been a point of emphasis in practice this season.
Women’s Team Notables
- The women’s squad has won their first three meets of the season in three of the last four years.
- BYU earned five of the top 20 spots
- Orton, Birk-Jarvis, Frentheway, Davis, Fielding, Sargent, Stratten and Morrin posted career-bests in the 6k today
For the men, Mantz took home first with a time of 23:24.7 and Jacob Heslington placed eighth in 23:39.2 for the Cougars. The next two to finish for BYU were Michael Ottesen (23:55.3) and Brandon Garnica (23:57.0) who placed 15th and 16th, respectively.
“We’re feeling pretty good, we ran well as a team,” BYU head coach Ed Eyestone said. “Conner did a great job leading the pack, our guys ran really hard. We didn’t have a great last mile, Oregon sort of slipped in during that last mile. I’m still pleased with our depth, though, our three through seven guys were very close to each other. We know we have a few things to work on before the championship meets, so we’ll see get back to working harder.”
Zac Jacklin (23:58.4, 20th) made five Cougars in the top-20 as Matt Owens (24:00.1), Kramer Morton (24:06.4), Garrett Marsing (24:09.7), Daniel Carney (24:09.9) and Connor Weaver (24:14.8) all followed close behind to finish 23rd, 26th, 27th, 28th, and 30th, respectively. Talem Franco (24:20.4), Ethan Cannon (24:38.4), Brayden McLelland (25:29.0) and Will Handley (26:27.8) placed 38th, 60th, 107th and 136th for BYU as well.
Eyestone also mentioned the need to close the gap between the three through seven runners and their top-two, saying that they want them to finish closer to Mantz than they did today. He was also optimistic that they would be able to work and improve in the coming weeks as they prepare for the conference, regional and national championship meets ahead.
Men’s Team Notables
- Mantz has not finished outside of the top-10 in any cross country race that he’s competed in at BYU, including last year’s NCAA Championship meet
- The men earned five of the top-20 spots
- Heslington, Ottesen, Garnica, Jacklin, Owens, Marsing, Weaver and Franco all ran career-bests in the 8k
Both the men’s and women’s team take a three-week break before returning to action at the Pre-Nationals Invitational in Terre Haute, Indiana, on Saturday, Oct. 19.
PROVO, Utah – The BYU cross country teams will compete at the Bill Dellinger Invitational in Springfield, Oregon, on Saturday, Sept. 28.
Competition begins with the men’s 8K at 10:30 a.m. PDT. The No. 2 BYU men’s team will face several squads headlined by No. 6 Portland, No. 11 Oregon, No. 23 UCLA, No. 25 Villanova and No. 26 (tied) Air Force.
The No. 6 BYU women’s team will compete in the 6K starting at 11:30 a.m. PDT. The Cougars’ ranked competition will include No. 10 Oregon, No. 13 Boise State, No. 14 Furman and No. 24 UCLA.
“This will be a nice race for us,” BYU head coach Ed Eyestone said. “We’ll be traveling with a squad of 14 men this week and will continue to see how the team is progressing. We will be battling against several strong, ranked teams. It’s a fairly large early-season invitational.”
Following a sweep at the Autumn Classic to start the season, Eyestone is ready for the men’s team to be tested against major competition. Led by Conner Mantz, last week’s West Coast Conference runner of the week, BYU will suit up a squad of 14 men. Eyestone noted that this meet is a good indicator of the team’s current ranked position and will help with considering who will compete at Nationals.
“I want to see our men be tested. It is a fairly young team,” Eyestone said. “After this weekend we have three weeks of hard training and then we go to the Pre-National meet. We will see if our No. 2 ranking is just a result of respect from last year and the years before or if we really deserve it. I think we do. We’re looking for that second-tier group of men that worked hard this summer and are ready to step up.”
Men’s Team Notables:
- The Cougars last competed at Oregon in 2017 and took first place
- In 2017, the men’s team was led by Clayton Young in first and Rory Linkletter, Connor McMillan and Casey Clinger in spots 2-4
- BYU took first at the Bill Dellinger Invitational in 2012 and second place in 2009 and 2006
“This will be a good test for us because there will be some nationally ranked teams racing,” BYU associate director of cross country and track and field Diljeet Taylor said. “I’m looking forward to giving our top runners a chance to see where they’re at. We’re in a pretty heavy block of training right now so I know we’re going into this race tired but I’m excited to see how we pack up and compete.”
The No. 6 women’s team earned their second win of the season at the Autumn Classic. Led by Aubrey Frentheway, the Cougars finished with seven women in the top 10. After resting the top runners from the Autumn Classic, Taylor is looking forward to the power that a full squad can bring to Oregon.
Taylor will use this meet as an opportunity to evaluate the women in a competition setting after an intensive period of training in preparation for the Pre-National meet.
“I want to work on our competition mentality during this race,” Taylor said. “I’m not too concerned about times, but more concerned about how they get into that competition mindset.”
Women’s Team Notables
- BYU last competed at the Bill Dellinger Invitational in 2017 and took third place
- In 2017, Laura Young finished first for the Cougars and 11th overall
- Courtney Wayment and Olivia Hoj competed at Oregon in 2017 placing 11th and 17th, respectively
- The BYU women’s team previously finished fifth overall for three years straight at the Bill Dellinger Invitational (2006, 2007, 2008)
The Bill Dellinger Invitational will be hosted at the Pine Ridge Golf Club on Saturday, Sept. 28, beginning at 10:30 a.m. PDT. Live results can be found on athletictiming.net. Follow the BYU cross country Instagram and Twitter accounts for live updates on the race.