Amy O’Sullivan, Jamie Day and Courtney Danielsen finished second through fourth and Greenfield High School edged Mohawk Trail Regional High School, 25-30, in a Pioneer North girls’ cross country meet Tuesday in Buckland.
Mohawk earned a split on the day with a 15-47 victory over McCann Technical High School.
Mohawk’s Meghan Davis won the 2.55-mile race in 17 minutes, but Greenfield’s O’Sullivan (17:21), Day (17:59) and Danielsen (18:59) were the next three runners across the line. Mohawk came back with Erica Szewczyk (19:42) and Hollin Keyser-Parker (19:43) in fifth and sixth, but Greenfield’s Jenna Silk took seventh in 20:17. Carli Cusamano finished eighth for Mohawk in 20:36, but again Greenfield responded as Eva Heath took ninth in 21:03 to seal the Wave victory.
Mohawk’s Caitlin Upton finished 10th overall in 21:23.
Greenfield is now 10-0 on the season. Mohawk moved to 6-2.
Frontier 15, Pioneer 50
Pioneer 15, Smith Voc 50
Frontier 15, Smith Voc 50— The first seven finishers were from Frontier Regional School Tuesday en route to the Hawks’ 15-50 wins over Pioneer Valley Regional School and Smith Vocational & Agricultural High School in a girls’ tri-meet in Northfield.
Greyson Young won the 2.79-mile race in 21:15, while Fiona Ferry came in second in 21:34. Emily Laus took third in 21:49, Fiona Howes was fourth in 23:45, and Angelina Egland was fifth in 23:56. Adrienne Josephs was sixth in 23:57, and Skyler Dennie took seventh in 24:27.
Pioneer’s Chloe Cutting was eighth in 24:28, and teammate Bridget Kenney was ninth in 24:33. Frontier’s Lia Vichi took 10th in 24:47.
Greenfield 24, Mohawk 35
Mohawk 27, McCann Tech 29 — Greenfield had five runners place in the top eight to get past Mohawk, 24-35, in a Pioneer North boys’ cross country meet Tuesday in Buckland.
Mohawk earned a split on the day with a 27-29 win over McCann Tech.
Mohawk’s Dennis Simmons won the 2.55-mile race in 15:56, and Guy Rice-Lesure took third in 17:17. The next Mohawk runner did not come in until ninth overall, as Sean O’Dea crossed the line in 18:19. The reason was because Greenfield had five runners finish between second and seventh place with Tyssen LaBombard leading the way with a second-place finish in 16:08. Dylan Badillo finished fourth in 17:39, and Dylan Roy was fifth overall at 17:54. Iggy Passiglia took seventh overall in 18:12, Marco Balan was eighth at 18:17, and Kris Bostrom was 10th in 18:24.
Frontier 16, Pioneer 47
Smith Voc 25, Pioneer 31
Frontier 20 Smith Voc 41 — Seven Frontier Regional School runners finished in the top 10 Tuesday and the Red Hawks defeated both Pioneer Valley Regional School (16-47) and Smith Vocational & Agricultural High School (20-41) in a Pioneer North boys’ cross country meet in Northfield.
Carsten Carey won the 2.79-mile meet in 17:07 to pace the Red Hawks, and Ben Litskoski took second in 17:25. Dan Dejnak was fourth overall in 17:40, and George Balis was sixth at 18:01. Phaelon Koski was eighth in 18:20, George Tsaplin was ninth in 18:35, and Brandyn Robinson was 10th in 18:40.
Pioneer also lost to Smith Voke on the day, 25-31. Alex Wahlstrom came in seventh overall to pace the Panthers at 18:01.
Granby 24, Mahar 31
Mahar 24, St. Mary’s 31
Mahar 15, FC Tech 50 — Sohan Tyner captured another victory but Franklin County Technical School did not have enough boys to score as a team during a boys’ five-team meet Tuesday at Mahar Regional School in Orange.
The Eagles lost to Mahar, Hampshire Regional High School, Granby High School and St. Mary’s Parrish School by forfeit. Mahar defeated St. Mary’s (24-31), but fell to Granby (24-31) and did not score against Hampshire due to facing the Raiders earlier in the year.
Tyner won the 5K race in 19:19 and was the only Eagle in the top 10. Mahar did not have a runner crack the top 10 but Thor Mead finished 14th in 21:23 to help the Senators to the pair of wins.
For the first time this season the Senators had enough runners to score in the girls’ meet that day, but Mahar fell to both Granby (18-41) and St. Mary’s (27-28). Shey-Anne Gadwa-Alonso finished 13th in 26:05 to lead the Mahar girls.
