Gabrielle Jennings D2 3200 (10 yr old!!)

2009 LHSAA High School Indoors

Carl Maddox Field House  ⋅  Baton Rouge, LA, US  ⋅  Feb, 21 2009   |   Coverage created by kevind


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About Gabrielle Jennings 

Current School:First Baptist
Bio:
Gabrielle Jennings carved a slice of history at the 2009 State High School Indoor Championships at LSU. The diminutive distance runner hails from First Baptist of Slidell, a Class C school. At 10, Jennings…
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#97
Todd Jennings   September 6 at 11:05pm
Yes, Gabrielle will turn 11 on September 15, 2009. While this article does mention her as the youngest to win a medal at the State Indoor Meet, it fails to mention that this was her second LHSAA State Title, having won the State Cross Country Meet on November 17, 2008. At that time, she was 10 years 2 months and 2 days old, having been running for only 6 months. She then went on to capture two more State Championships in outdoor Track and Field, finishing her first year of Varsity running with 4 State Championships (Gold Medals) and a Class C State Record in the 3200 meter run.
I believe the gymnastics state meet was on May 1-2, which would make Chloe 10 years and 2 1/2 months, just a bit older than Gabrielle. In reality, grade-wise, Gabrielle should be in the same grade as your daughter. Due to a September 15 birthday, she will be 16 years old for a full month and a half of her senior year of high school...quite a disadvantage in athletics.
Best of luck to young Chloe in the future...will try to follow her accomplishments.
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#96
Craig Colwart   September 2 at 1:36am
Hey , anyone know this girl's birthdate--I understand that she was in the fifth grade when she medaled at the track meet, right?--that means she turned or will turn 11 in 2009--I'm just asking because my daughter turned 10 on February 14, 2009 which quite possibly makes her younger than Ms. Gabrielle and my daughter was the runner-up, silver medalist in the 2009 state gymnastics meet on the balance beam---if I have my facts correct, then that makes my daughter the youngest to ever medal at a Louisiana high school state championship meet. I have made several inquiries with the LHSAA about this in an attempt to confirm these facts but have never received a reply--if anyone can shed any light on this, It will be greatly appreciated--by the way, my daughter's name is Chloe Colwart--she's now a fifth grader at Catholic high school in New iberia (she was in4th grade when she competed in the 2009 state gymnastics meet in division III) Chloe has moved up to level 5 in gymnastics and intends to again compete in the 2010 state meet in division II--also, Catholic High new Iberia will be fielding a full team at the 2010 meet with the full intention to be highly competitive for all around team honors--in 2009, Catholic High New Iberia was one athlete short of a full team and yet still finished fifth overall in the team standings--had they had that one additional team member they would have easily finished in second place
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#95
Brooke D   August 22 at 9:15pm
she's one of my best friends!
GO GABBYYYYY
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#94
Keebler   March 20 at 2:15pm
golly, she is just so cute i could just spread her on a cracker and eat her up.
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#93
JamminJoe   March 20 at 11:23am
Anonymous Coward said:
dude how do you know all this and why?
Because he follows running...with passion...Mary Decker Tab-Slaney (her Real Name) was the Bomb in the Last 70"s and Early 80's. This little one has the potential to do the same....and to point out what was said previously you can not make a child run they either want it or not...She wants to win and Good luck to her, I cant wait to see her in Cross Country this fall....Jammin Joe
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#92
Wierd   March 8 at 4:03pm
her name sounds like gabe jennings
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#91
Iknow Yoursecert   March 6 at 2:51pm
i know your secret from what you did with shana (abigail) last year at the begining of the school year. you locked the door so her mom wouldnt find out wha you 2 were doing. ihope you know im telling her what you did. your gonna be in alot of trouble. enjoy life in a cage. see ya
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#90
Francisccm   March 4 at 11:07pm
"Even most of the runners dont run..."

So you read this in a book...wow nice.... I lived there for 5 months with the runners. I saw the kids running and playing everywhere. They may not run to school exactly, but they are running and playing everywhere barefoot, and doing chores / herding cows/ carrying water / wood. Providing informal posture and form building so the "Running to school" may be an analogy in some cases. But the childhood is a huge contributor to their elite prowess.
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#89
Taylor Whiteside   February 27 at 2:37pm
Francis Coral - Mellon said:
Actually its true all kenyans dont run just the ones that become runners...

Well if they dont run they walk barefoot at least and develop good running form from that.
Even most of the runners dont run... but yes they do a lot of walking which helps in the long run
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#88
JFK 50   February 26 at 1:35pm
#87
JW   February 26 at 9:35am
man, i do recall back in 2007 or 2008 their was a girl about her age that ran the JFK 50 miler and got some grief, but mostly it was just cool to see someone that young do the race. ummm....this was only two miles and you guys are flipp'n out.
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#86
BBmama   February 26 at 8:39am
So Anon, You don't trust what a pediatrician's 13+ years of schooling/fellowship/internship opinion? I feel sorry for you, it seems you don't trust anyone. I think my pediatrician knows all about diaphyseal plates and what damage ( if any ) can be done through running. DO YOU? I mean, dissing parents, GET REAL. My child did age group cross country and I saw 3 year olds running 1.25 miles in 19 degree weather ( see flowtracks coverage of cross country youth national championships in Ohio ). No child would run in that kind of weather if they didn't want to. Coming down on parents just proves you have a coach's pre- conceived nation that this is all about us and it is not.
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#85
Francis Coral - Mellon   February 25 at 9:33pm
Actually its true all kenyans dont run just the ones that become runners...

Well if they dont run they walk barefoot at least and develop good running form from that.
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#84
Anonymous Coward   February 25 at 4:23pm
Zachary Fitzgerald said:
For every example there's a counterexample. Jordan Hasay ran 4:34.02 for 1500 and 9:48.77 for 3000 at age 12 in 2004. I hear she's turned out to be a pretty decent runner. Once again, you can't take one person's experience and expect every young runner is destined to follow that path.
thankyou "Stat's"
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#83
Anonymous Coward   February 25 at 4:20pm
Zachary Fitzgerald said:
Taylor, just for your information, her dad's high school times were: 800-1:56 1500-3:54.6 2mile-9:24, college: 1:50, 3:50, 3k steeple-8:54, 5k-14:48
dude how do you know all this and why?
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#82
Nice Scoop   February 25 at 3:54pm
This is one helluva scoop. This story is everywhere ... how many days later? Nice work flotrack.
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#81
ANON   February 25 at 3:48pm
I don't have any faith in parents that push their kids to do things that the parents say the kids "love". And there are few GP Docs for adults that know anything about running much less pediatricians knowing if 2.5 miles might or might not hurt a runner who is 11 or less. As a coach for 30 years, I've seen too many "good" runners show up in high school (who are somewhat talented and whose parents have pushed them to run through middle school) and fade, get hurt or most importantly, LOSE interest! Please be careful with your young runner.
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#80
BBmama   February 24 at 10:56pm
Okay Anon, I was using gymnastics as an example of a sport that starts kids out as young as 3 and they are done by adulthood. 2.5 miles is not that intense. Having someone judge your performance, run 25 yards full speed towards an inanimate object ( vault ) ,is intense , not to mention dangerous. Alas, we are talking about running. I don't think dad is being a stage parent. You folks must think we parents don't research before we get our kids into a sport. We do and we consult the pediatrician as well. That way when the fireballs start coming our way, we have some defense..
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#79
Taylor Whiteside   February 24 at 9:06pm
If I hear another "Kenyan's run to school" I will do this

"http://www.youtube.com/v/yOIUWdJWaec&hl=en&fs=1
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#78
Taylor Whiteside   February 24 at 8:47pm
Tony said:
for every person out there criticizing letting 10 year old kids run 20 mpw (come on, that's nothing!) there is someone lamenting US distance running and how we'll never catch the kenyans because they grow up running 10 miles to school every day. What kind of double standard is that? It's great for kenyan development and hurtful to our kids?
How many times do I have to tell people... Most Kenyan kids do not run to school... maybe you guys should pick up a book once in a while...
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#77
Anonymous Coward   February 24 at 4:12pm
You killjoys! Let her have her fun.
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#76
MikeyB   February 24 at 3:16pm

Remember this 12 year?....and wasn't her first year of runner...either!

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#75
Anon   February 24 at 1:46pm
BBmama said:
As a matter of fact Mike from PA, I do know Briana's story. Hers is like many who had so-so high school careers. Let us look at things logically, how is running for 20 minutes ( for 2.5 miles ) any worse than playing on a playground for an hour. Before I took up running, I was a gymnast. You want to talk about a short - career sport, the elite gymnasts are gone by 20 usually. I think this parent is being careful. I think he knows the statistics as well as me. I am sure Ms. Jennings will be fine..I do not know what Briana's workout regimens were, but I am guessing they were much more intense than Gabrielle's. Just a hunch
I appreciate your views but I didn't read that Mike from Pa wrote anything negative about gymnastics. If you don't know what Briana's training regimen was, you don't know Briana's story. It has been at a very high level for a long time. And yes from a physical perspective running for 2 1/2 miles at a young age is worse than "playing" on the playground for an hour. Much worse. The key word is "playing". An 8, 10 or even a 12 year old running for 2 1/2 miles is NEVER going to be "playing". It is the intensity that hurts these young bodies and minds.
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#74
Anonymous Coward   February 24 at 1:28pm
Adorable! Good luck this outdoor season and in future seasons.
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#73
Nick Higgins   February 24 at 11:56am
A lot of the great African runners that dominate distance running at the Olympics run to school at this age. I don't see why people make such a big deal about her training. If she was hurting herself through overtraining, then she wouldn't have run sub 12 minutes. Overtraining comes out when you try to race and totally bonk.
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#72
Foster   February 23 at 11:48pm
It's really funny that this ten year old is really good in interviews.

A lot of high school and college runners struggle through interviews haha
the only struggle she has is knowing about the world of running outside of louisiana haha so awesome, hopefully she doesn't get worn down before she has the chance to run in high school an hopefully college!
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#71
BBmama   February 23 at 10:50pm
Well said Tony..
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#70
BBmama   February 23 at 10:37pm
"my dad was hoping I could run 11:50" pathic
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#69
Justrun   February 23 at 10:05pm
My only thought here is that every person is different. As long as she has fun and gets some balance in life and sports - go for it.

As far as Brianna goes - she just finished 3rd in a loaded Women's 3200 at a truly great NJ indoor meet of champions - that's a true state meet with all the various school divisions combined in one meet. The result had roughly 5 under 10:50 and 10 under 11:00 - very high quality race! She will attend Harvard in the fall. That's not a bad start in life...By the way her overtrained buddy from Colt's Neck Ashley Higginson is now slumming it at Princeton.
The next NJ youth phenom also entered the stage at that meet with Neptune's Agee Wilson running 2:10 for the 800 to go with a sub 5 1600 earlier in the season - both freshman class records in NJ. She'll probably burn out too, and end up at Yale.
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#68
BBmama   February 23 at 9:25pm
As a matter of fact Mike from PA, I do know Briana's story. Hers is like many who had so-so high school careers. Let us look at things logically, how is running for 20 minutes ( for 2.5 miles ) any worse than playing on a playground for an hour. Before I took up running, I was a gymnast. You want to talk about a short - career sport, the elite gymnasts are gone by 20 usually. I think this parent is being careful. I think he knows the statistics as well as me. I am sure Ms. Jennings will be fine..I do not know what Briana's workout regimens were, but I am guessing they were much more intense than Gabrielle's. Just a hunch
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#67
Flotrackperv   February 23 at 5:04pm
She's very cute and well spoken.
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#66
Anonymous Coward   February 23 at 3:54pm
Awesome. I hope she keeps having fun and does some cross training so she doesn't get injured or burned out or -- god forbid -- anorexic. Hope her love of the sport and her talent continues to develop. Big congrats to her!
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#65
Dave   February 23 at 3:45pm
Burnout on 15 miles/week - come on! I tried 4 other sports before finding T&F;- at age 10. 26 years later it's one sport I'm truly passionate about. I think I reached whatever potential I had.
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#64
Too Young.. What?   February 23 at 2:12pm
think about all those 10yr olds that run summer track and race at usatf and aau national meets during the summer. no ones saying there too young to run! just because she's beating high school kids doesn't mean she's doing too much, natural talent in my opinion. 2.5 miles a day is nothing.
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#63
Tony   February 23 at 2:07pm
for every person out there criticizing letting 10 year old kids run 20 mpw (come on, that's nothing!) there is someone lamenting US distance running and how we'll never catch the kenyans because they grow up running 10 miles to school every day. What kind of double standard is that? It's great for kenyan development and hurtful to our kids?
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#62
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 23 at 10:18am
For every example there's a counterexample. Jordan Hasay ran 4:34.02 for 1500 and 9:48.77 for 3000 at age 12 in 2004. I hear she's turned out to be a pretty decent runner. Once again, you can't take one person's experience and expect every young runner is destined to follow that path.
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#61
Mike From PA   February 23 at 10:09am
This is a very tough question. While I appreciate young Gabrielle's talent and it is her and her family's right to have her compete, in my opinion it is not wise from a physical and emotional perspective to have her competing at this level at such a young age. If you have any questions of this please see young Briana Jackucewicz story (now a senior in high school). Briana has been competing..and very well from a very young age (8?) and even set a 5K track record as an 8th grader. She has spent high school with one injury after another and I dare say significantly underperformed from where everyone thought she might. I have to believe the toll of years of training a young body has taken a significant toll.
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#60
4sstar   February 23 at 9:41am
Wow,
I see a new female phenom in the years to come. I love the fact that she is so young that she doesn't recognize any of the names of the major women on the running scene right now.
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#59
Adam Ward   February 23 at 7:02am
Ok, bear with me...NEW concept for a game show...Are You Faster Than a 10-year old????
Hosted by Mark and Ryan
-move over Jeff Foxworthy.
ha ha
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#58
Vano   February 23 at 6:25am
Gabe Jennings? Coincidence?.... I think not.
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#57
BBmama   February 23 at 2:39am
I am going to give a parent's perspective here. My 7 year old runs. She calls herself a runner and she hates taking time off ( I still make her take it though ). My husband told her soccer was out, he hates that sport. I told her I didn't think it was a good idea to start this early, but she insisted. I have taken more CRAP from other people than you will ever know. I had one person come up to me and threaten to call child protective services because I was somehow abusing my child. As a parent, I know the statistics don't lie, children that start early often quit because of burnout. This girl likes running and obviously is getting some attention ( which I am sure is fueling her desire to run ). For goodness sakes, let her and let the chips fall where they may. I do this with my child and if she wants to quit someday, oh well, glad you enjoyed it while you did.
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#56
J.R.   February 23 at 1:38am
Amazing and well spoken.
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#55
Anonymous Coward   February 22 at 11:40pm
is she the daughter of gabe jennings?
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#54
Anonymous Coward   February 22 at 10:06pm
Oh good heavens, she is the cutest little distance runner ever. And I thought Brasovan was a doll.
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#53
Taylor Whiteside   February 22 at 6:51pm
Adam Ward said:
This is not necessarily a bad thing AS LONG AS Dad isn't like softball or soccer dads I have met and he becomes way overly involved and prescribes heavy training. She should probably just be doing the 2-2.5 miles MAX/day she is already doing, IF she WANTS to do it. There is nothing wrong with letting a kid train IF they WANT to. If she played soccer she'd probably run at least that far and then some in practice and during games. The reason our sport isn't popular in middle and high school ranks like soccer and other sports is due mainly because we don't have the youth leagues or developmental systems that those other sports have. The so-called "grass roots" effort isn't as developed, nation-wide, as soccer leagues, which in my opinion don't give the kids a break either. In GA, they have soccer leagues, literally year round. That would burn me out as a kid. Or how about baseball or softball or basketball youth teams that play in tournaments year round. She will be fine and if she sticks with it, great, if not, she'll move on to something else and be phenomenal at that due to her amazing work ethic and aerobic base from this. The best thing is...she will always remember being a 10 year old state champ. :)
I totally agree. I have met parents that put on a show and fool everyone into making them think they are great parents. Its hard to so say whether she is acting like this because of her parents or because she really likes it. I hope that she does like running and will continue too. My parents had me do some 5ks as a kid and they sure sucked ass because I didnt train. Luckly I didnt have to do those often. Soon as I got to be a freshmen in high school my parents told me to do a sport... so i choose cross country and track. Now I love running. I think its ok to expose your kids to a sport as long as you don't have high expectations and force it upon them.
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#52
Taylor Whiteside   February 22 at 6:42pm
truth said:
Haven't you heard of the stories where Kenyan children run like 20km round trip to go to school, starting at the age of 2?

this is nothing, and who knows, she might be the one american to compete at the international distance level one day lol
haha you gotta be kidding me... there are a lot of myths about Kenyans and that is one of them just read the book More Fire by Toby Tanser.
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#51
Truth   February 22 at 6:27pm
Haven't you heard of the stories where Kenyan children run like 20km round trip to go to school, starting at the age of 2?

this is nothing, and who knows, she might be the one american to compete at the international distance level one day lol
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#50
Confused No More.   February 22 at 6:08pm
nevermind i just read more comments...
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#49
Confused   February 22 at 6:07pm
how is a 5th grader competing in high school meets? I have heard of middle schoolers, like 8th grade, but not 5th grade...
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#48
Gary Rowbury   February 22 at 4:27pm
Congratulations, quite an accomplishment, at any age. Great interview. Some day people will be asked if they know of you.
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#47
Madeline   February 22 at 3:46pm
It was incredible to watch her run!
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#46
Out-of-Wedlock-Danny   February 22 at 3:30pm
Cute!
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#45
Brooks Lecompte   February 22 at 3:26pm
just another runner said:
She doesnt know who Jordan Hasay is??

Rule #1 of distance running: Know who Jordan Hasay is
How does she know Rowbury so well though? Out of Goucher, Flanagan, Kastor, and Rowbury, Rowbury is the one that has been on the national scene for the shortest time...
does it matter? hell no.. she's freakin 10yrs old!! when i was ten i didn't even know what track and field was let along pro runners. to be a good runner and have fun in the sport you don't have to know who the top runners in the country are, cuz it will be at least 8-10yrs before she is in a position to race runners of that caliber.
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#44
Just Another Runner   February 22 at 3:22pm
She doesnt know who Jordan Hasay is??

Rule #1 of distance running: Know who Jordan Hasay is
How does she know Rowbury so well though? Out of Goucher, Flanagan, Kastor, and Rowbury, Rowbury is the one that has been on the national scene for the shortest time...
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#43
Jayruns   February 22 at 1:24pm
haha she's a cute little girl. she seems really smart. I hope she keeps having fun with it because she is still very young. Do you think theres a little parental pressure there?
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#42
Adam Ward   February 22 at 1:21pm
This is not necessarily a bad thing AS LONG AS Dad isn't like softball or soccer dads I have met and he becomes way overly involved and prescribes heavy training. She should probably just be doing the 2-2.5 miles MAX/day she is already doing, IF she WANTS to do it. There is nothing wrong with letting a kid train IF they WANT to. If she played soccer she'd probably run at least that far and then some in practice and during games. The reason our sport isn't popular in middle and high school ranks like soccer and other sports is due mainly because we don't have the youth leagues or developmental systems that those other sports have. The so-called "grass roots" effort isn't as developed, nation-wide, as soccer leagues, which in my opinion don't give the kids a break either. In GA, they have soccer leagues, literally year round. That would burn me out as a kid. Or how about baseball or softball or basketball youth teams that play in tournaments year round. She will be fine and if she sticks with it, great, if not, she'll move on to something else and be phenomenal at that due to her amazing work ethic and aerobic base from this. The best thing is...she will always remember being a 10 year old state champ. :)
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#41
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 22 at 12:59pm
Brooks, she did beat my indoor pr, which was 12:14.48. Outdoors I ran 11:52.18.
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#40
Bob   February 22 at 12:50pm
gabe jennings is back baby!
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#39
Brooks Lecompte   February 22 at 12:30pm
yea she goes to a k-12 school so thats why she can compete at the high school level. schools like this are small, so you'll never see a 10yr old competing in 4A or 5A or for indoor standards D1. her school is class C so unless she transfers to a bigger high school when she gets older, she most likely will never have any true competition. 11:58 is a good time for any girl in class C as u can see, but for a 10yr old thats just ridiculous! zach she almost has your pr beat right?
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#38
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 22 at 12:25pm
11:58.90
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#37
Adomas   February 22 at 12:23pm
What was her time?
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#36
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 22 at 12:21pm
The school she goes to goes up through high school. I think the LHSAA rule is if there's one principal for the entire school then there's no limit on how young an athlete can compete.
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#35
WAXC   February 22 at 11:24am
oh good ol' innocence
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#34
I Dont Get It   February 22 at 10:39am
ive never heard of a state meet with high school and 10yr olds
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#33
WHAT   February 22 at 10:30am
THIS MEET WAS AWESOME
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#32
MikeyB   February 22 at 9:43am
darn Ryan, ease up on the questions, she is only 10 yrs old, do you really expect her know everything?

I hope she has fun and you guys leave her alone for a couple of years...that's what I think
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#31
Gbones   February 22 at 9:13am
Jesus people- running 2.5 a day isnt too bad- as long as she loves it- we're talking 20' of running on her distance days-
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#30
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 22 at 9:12am
There's just one meet for all public and private schools. The divisions are broken up based on the schools' size. Classes C, B, A, 2A, and 3A are in D2 and 4A and 5A are in D1.
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#29
Mdowns   February 22 at 9:07am
Question about the LA State Meet: Are d2 all the private/independent schools and d1 all the public schools? Or is there another (or no) independent school's meet?
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#28
Trilympic   February 22 at 8:10am
In response to the post from the person who stated that they didn't even know what Track was at 10 years old. When I was 8-9, I loved to run and compete in track meets and for years I begged my parents to let me enter -I was faster than every kid at my school and I wanted to compete in larger meets (TAC). My parents held me back until 6th grade, but once I started I had them taking me every weekend to meets. I never burned out, and 20+ years later I am still competing in running and triathlon events.
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#27
??   February 22 at 8:10am
I don't think there is anything wrong with her knowing the names of runners. My 7-year-old nephew knows more football players than most adults I know, and I think that's pretty harmless. It's fun for them.
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#26
Robert Lee   February 22 at 7:50am
Where I come from if you try andget kids to learn about the sport, they and their parents act like you are from the moon.....good job Kevin and when she learns and becomes inspired..look out!!!!
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#25
Mark_in_Oly   February 22 at 7:46am
I think its just the opposite if the point is developing Olympians. The unique thing about track is that an 11:45 is the same everywhere - it's objective. We are certain how good someone is. As opposed to soccer where every parent talls their kid they played "a good game". Imagine if we had the numbers of eight to 14 year olds "playing track"!

If the point is to just have fun, then forget what I just said. (Although it is certain that this kid is having fun.) Maybe she'll be the next Mary Decker - but with out the injuries hopefully.
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#24
28minute 10k Runner   February 22 at 7:21am
Great kid, definitely a lot of talent! I'm not "dissing" her in any way, but please let the kid play soccer or crosstrain until she is 14-16 years old. It's crazy to let a kid train like a distance runner before his or hers body develops, this sport is not like soccer, iceskating or ballet.

And there is no hurry, distance runners can improve until they are 40 years old. Just look at Haile, sets a world record for the marathon and finished 6th in Beijing (10k) at age 35 or 36, and Gharib Jaouad a silver medalist in the marathon in Beijing, runs 3k in 7:39, he did his first run at age 23! Please, if you have the talent to be an olympian you don't need to start training like a distance runner befor 15 years old, it's not even too late in your early 20.
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#23
BBmama   February 22 at 4:34am
She said she just got started, and I say that's great and you all need to stop dissing her for starting too early when I see ding dong parents putting their 4 and 5 year olds in 5k's and expecting them to become olympians. I will be interested in seeing how she does when puberty hits, but I think she will manage because she started post age group bantam period. It looks like her dad is keeping her under control so lighten up.
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#22
Awww   February 22 at 3:35am
cute!
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#21
Haha Dude   February 22 at 1:18am
dude... please give it a rest. u can tell from the interview that she's doing it for the fun of it. besides she's too young to be thinking about trying to emulate pro runners, relax!
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#20
Dude   February 22 at 1:15am
I'm glad she doesn't know the pros names b/c it shows something about her. Think about it, she really may be doing this for fun and not to be "like" anybody else. From the interview with her dad, it doesn't seem like she's overtraining. Hope we'll see her again one day on flotrack.
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#19
J. A. Cisneros   February 22 at 1:02am
AT first i was thinkin' "are you kidding me!" but now that i've thought about other sports such as soccer a lot of pro's start really young and as long as she keeps having fun and keeps progressing like her dad said "the sky's the limit"
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#18
Haha Dude   February 22 at 12:58am
"dude" u sounded a lil fruity but i agree with your last sentence. why are u glad she doesn't know the "pros" names, does that matter? lol
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#17
Dude   February 22 at 12:43am
You go girl.
Glad that you DON'T know the pros names. Keep running and have fun.
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#16
Nick Higgins   February 21 at 11:16pm
Hopefully she can stay healthy and keep up her success in the upcoming years. As long as she stays dedicated and smart towards her running, she can continue to have a great running career in the future.
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#15
Roland Zech   February 21 at 11:15pm
I'm not sure what I think of this.
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#14
Everyone Is Speechless   February 21 at 11:03pm
As a coach of a new program, I would be happy with some 11:45 two mile runners on my HS boys track team.
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#13
Shamus Nally   February 21 at 10:59pm
How are 5th graders allowed to participate in High School Sports? Is there any age/grade limit?
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#12
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 21 at 10:57pm
I think she was 14 or 15 when she ran 2:01.8 indoors for the hs record that still stands today.
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#11
Anonymous Coward   February 21 at 10:54pm
We've seen prodigies work before. Wasn't Mary Decker breaking records at age 12?
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#10
Kevin Kapolnek   February 21 at 10:35pm
Wow, Gabe Jennings has really changed his look. I like it.
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#9
Brooks Lecompte   February 21 at 10:28pm
yea he seems to be holding her back with training and thats good. also the fact that she doesn't know many famous runners is a good sign too, means her dad is not flooding her brain with track info and is just letting her have fun with running in general. hopefully we'll see some great things from her for the next 7yrs of high school athletics.
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#8
Interview   February 21 at 10:23pm
There is an interview with the dad here if have not looked already. He seems like hes trying to keep it easy and keep her in the right direction.
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#7
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 21 at 10:18pm
Taylor, just for your information, her dad's high school times were: 800-1:56 1500-3:54.6 2mile-9:24, college: 1:50, 3:50, 3k steeple-8:54, 5k-14:48
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#6
Taylor Whiteside   February 21 at 10:11pm
I always wonder if kids this age really want to run... or if their parents are just attention whores... I see parents that try to live through their kids all the time... after high school they are done
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#5
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 21 at 10:06pm
What if she wants to run?
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#4
Wtf   February 21 at 9:57pm
are you kidding me. When I was 10 I didn't even know that track and field was, let alone running state championships against high schoolers, and running 20 miles a week (didn't even do that till sopre year of hs). I really hope she has continued success, but I will say the odds are against her. Let the girl play soccer, take some dance classes, join the girl scouts, etc.
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#3
Anonymous Coward   February 21 at 9:56pm
burnout
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#2
Zachary Fitzgerald   February 21 at 9:56pm
I'm not flotrack, but I think I can answer your questions about the state meet if you give me specific questions.
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#1
Andy Ponce De Leon   February 21 at 9:53pm
average of 2.5 per week ... ohh man that was funny. good thing you asked her 3 times.

flotrack ... can you explain how their state meet works?
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