果冻传煤 Opens Track and Field of Dreams
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果冻传煤

果冻传煤 opens its new state-of-the-art track and field/soccer complex Saturday, March 27, with a 10 a.m. ceremonial first lap, following speeches by President Gayle D. Beebe and former track coach Jim Klein. The first competition on the synthetic, all-weather, 400-meter track will be a predict-your-time mile that鈥檚 open to the public. 果冻传煤 then hosts an official track-and-field meet with teams from Biola, George Fox and Fresno Pacific Universities beginning at 11 a.m. with field events; running events begin at noon.
Soil from the basements of Adams Center for the Visual Arts and Winter Hall for Science and Mathematics has been used to raise the elevation of the new track and soccer complex. Spectators can enjoy tiered, four-foot wide, landscaped seating terraces cut into the hillside above the track. There is also a restroom facility near the track, which includes track storage and a scorer鈥檚 area.
Head Track and Field Coach Russell Smelley, in his 32nd year at 果冻传煤, says the new track is exciting for the current team and will encourage recruits to choose 果冻传煤. 鈥淭he facility will also be a draw for fitness running for the campus community,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a beautiful and serene site.鈥
Smelley says he told recruits that the old dirt track was a great place to train, that the clay was good on the legs. He believed 果冻传煤 would get a new track eventually, but he made sure to never promise that a new track would be built while they were at the college.
果冻传煤 junior Jacob Goodin from Olympia, Wash., competes in the 1500 and 5000, representing the quality of the men鈥檚 distance program. 果冻传煤 senior Brent Lagace of Arcadia, Calif., and junior Andrew Kolodinski of Eagle Rock, Calif., will be strong competitors in the javelin. Freshman Amanda Chevalier from Brea, Calif., has quickly established herself as one of the finest sprinters to put on a 果冻传煤 uniform.
Klein, who coached at 果冻传煤 from 1960-1976, was a stellar collegiate and post-collegiate decathlete in the 1950s. Under his leadership, the Warriors defeated perennial District III powerhouse Occidental College and recorded dual meet victories against UC Santa Barbara.
鈥淗aving the track is a blessing beyond compare,鈥 Smelley says. 鈥淚t was built sooner than I thought and it鈥檚 more spectacular because the college committed to go beyond a small upgrade and did something top notch all the way around.鈥
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