Season Update

Hello. I apologize for not writing more often. I cite two reasons. First, I need to dumb down my blogging expectations of myself. That is, I need to remind myself I am not trying to write the perfect letter of recommendation for a graduate school applicant. Nor the perfect poem. I read Neil Young’s biography of a few years ago, Waging Heavy Peace, in which he unapologetically admits to having written a lot of lousy songs. Which makes it easier for me to accept having written a lot of lousy poems. And I will ride that horse as I write these blogs.

Second, there has not been much to report. We have under-performed our first three times out (Luther, Carleton, and Eau Claire) largely because I have over-coached, too often telling stories of past teams running an even pace and running their intemperate competitors down. But times have changed. For some time now, fields have been running much more intelligent races than in the past. So far this fall, we have been starting too slow and too far back and not getting engaged in the race. Never more so than our last effort at Eau Claire.

I like our team. As ever, terrific people. And we can run a little bit. Trey Collins (Senior, Royalton, Minn.), off a 1200 mile summer, leads the way. Trey has placed third in both the 5000 and 10,000 at MIAC Outdoors, and he was 7th at the Carleton Invitational. Dillon Diekmann (Sophomore, Cretin-Derham Hall, St. Paul, Minn.) performed well at Carleton, too, in 20th place with his best race ever. And Freshman Tom Nemanich (Red Wing, Minn.) is off to a good start, having run 26:11 at Eau Claire. Noah Webb (junior, Tech, St. Cloud, Minn.) also had a very good summer. Noah was 45th at the Central Regional last fall in 25:58. We have a lot of candidates to flush out our top seven creditably, once we begin racing well. Our next meet is the UW La Crosse Invitational which is now run at the Ettrick Country Club in Ettrick, Wisconsin. We race at 10:30 on Saturday, October 19.

COACHING POSITIONS

Every now and then, I am made aware of college cross country and/or track and field coaching openings near and far. Please let me know if you would like such information forwarded your way.

FINISH THE RUN

It was great to see so many Saint John’s and Saint Ben’s alums remembering David Forster (2011) at the 4th annual Finish the Run 5K on Boom Island on September 8. A great event which reminds us to “live with intention”. See you next year. And next time, hang around until I finish.

HALL OF HONOR

And it was great to see a good number of our storied alums at the Hall of Honor event in Guild Hall this past Saturday. Photo below. John Cragg was unable to accept his award in person, but his teammate, Chuck Ceronsky (1970) and my teammate, Andy Cragg (1978) stood in for him.

SAINT MICHAEL’S GAMES

After four events (Home Run Derby, Egg Toss, Wheelbarrow Relay, Somersault Relay), the score is as follows:

Uncle Moneybags 13

Saloon Girls 12

Mister Rogers 12

Big Red Rock Eaters 7

Very exciting.

John Cragg Induction and Season Kickoff

JOHN CRAGG

We celebrate the college career of our all-time cross country and track and field great when John Cragg is inducted as a charter member of our Saint John’s Hall of Honor on Saturday, October 5.

Saint John’s had a cross country team in 1938, 1947-1950, and 1952-1956. In fact, Macalester was the only MIAC school with a program in 1962 and 1963. Saint John’s resurrected our sport in 1965 with Jim Smith coaching the team. In 1967, freshmen John Cragg (St. Paul Cretin) and Jeff Brain (Seattle Prep) and sophomore transfer Chuck Ceronsky (Minneapolis De La Salle) arrived on campus. Add freshman Joe Skaja (St. Cloud Tech) one year later, and Saint John’s quickly became one of the top small college teams in the nation with 8th place team finishes at the 1968 NAIA Championship and again 8th place finishes at the 1969 and 1970 NCAA College Division Championships. College Division at that time was all teams that would be Division II or Division III today. Pretty good.

My brother, Bill, graduated from Cretin in 1969, and so he and John were teammates for two years. In 1972, the spring of my senior year at Cretin, I asked Bill, who was enrolled at Minnesota and already the Cretin cross country and track and field coach, where he thought I should go to college. His answer was short: “if you are looking for great a place to study and run, you should go to Saint John’s.”

Cragg, Ceronsky, Brain, Skaja and their teammates had made Saint John’s “a great place to run”. Every serious runner knew it, and I am confident that many of us, had it not been for them, would have landed somewhere other than Collegeville.

Beyond his running, my brother admired John so much in every other way, as did my Saint John’s teammate Dave Lyndgaard (SJU ’74) who got to run with him during his freshman year. Dave told me that John had once told him that, while being recruited by the University of Minnesota, Coach Roy Griak had put his arm around his shoulders and told him “If you go up there (Saint John’s), you’ll never do anything”. (John’s high school bests were 4:29 and 9:43.)

Given Saint John’s spotty history theretofore, Coach Griak may have been justified in that estimation. But John would go on to finish second individually at the NCAA College Division Cross Country Championships as a junior in 1969 and as a senior in 1970. By virtue of those finishes he qualified to run in the University Division Championship (today’s Division I race) both years.

As a junior, in a race won by Gerry Lindgren at New York City’s Van Cortland Park, he finished 49th. Five Big Ten runners beat John that day, including two from Minnesota.

As a senior, the six-mile race was run at Williamsburg, Virginia. Oregon’s Steve Prefontaine won in 28:00. Michigan State’s Ken Popejoy was the first Big Ten finisher in 20th place at 28:05. John finished 21st in 28:56. Pretty good.

Come and help us celebrate John Cragg at the Hall of Honor awards banquet on Saturday, October 5. The event will be in Guild Hall (The Old Gym) at 5 PM. The link to register is below. $75 if you register by September 21. $100. Thereafter. We hope to see you there! http://sjualum.csbsju.edu/s/1433/gid3/interior.aspx?sid=1433&pgid=5188&gid=3&cid=8048&ecid=8048&post_id=0

SEPTEMBER 7 LUTHER ALL-AMERICAN INVIATONAL

We kicked off our 2019 season without a bang at Luther’s All-American Invitational last Saturday. Some raced well, but we finished a distant third of nine behind Luther and Augustana of Rock Island. Our team had a very good summer of training, but when I examined the results on our long drive home, I saw that runners from other schools who also raced last year averaged 32 seconds faster while our Saint John’s runners averaged 7 seconds slower. At that point, I quit examining results. We had a very flat race and underperformed. Next! We are Carleton on Saturday at 10:30 AM. A great field on a great 8000 meter course. The MIAC Championship will also be there on November 2