Word: behinds
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Hunt added that he hoped his runners had learned from the meet how important it is not to fall too far behind the pace-setters in the early stages of a race. Meitzoff, for example, "made a tremendous finish but simply gave up too much ground at the start," the coach said...
Junior Royce Shaw romped to his fifth straight victory in a time of 26:54, only four seconds off his own course record. Shaw shared the early pace with captain Doug Hardin, who kept the pressure on for the first four miles. Dave Pottetti, never too far behind, moved with Shaw as Hardin fell back slightly over the last mile. Then with 300 yards to go, Shaw spotted the finish line and the spectators and jetted away from Pottetti to finish with a three second margin...
Hardin finished a strong third, four seconds behind Pottetti. Tom Spengler lost contact with the leaders surprisingly early, but continued on to cop fourth. Sophomore Jon Enscoe stayed with Spengler tenaciously most of the way for fifth place in his best race to date...
Keith Colburn and Erik Roth completed the sweep, with Roth holding off Cornell's Anderson over the last mile for seventh place. But Anderson's finish was only a momentary reprieve for the Big Red. Behind him, Tim McLoone, John Heyburn, Howie Foye, Pete Dennehy, and Max Schweizer paraded across the line before Cornell number two man Bill DelaRosa...
Sophomore Howie Foye has been making quiet, unspectacular progress behind the front-runners. Far from being one of the leading lights on last year's freshman squad, Foye made the jump to five miles with ease, running the best race of his career to finish fifth against Brown...