A Long Season of Waiting Comes to an End

Between the 800 and 1600, Emma Willadsen poured 12 points into the Eaton state title bucket. Photo by Alan Versaw.

Beth Jones never saw it. Mel Herl never saw it. Aimee Ledall never saw it.

The long season of waiting for a track and field state title to come to Eaton has closed. And Eaton closed it in a very convincing manner on Saturday.

Tarynn Sieg gave the shot put a ride of 43-5.25 to win that event. Bailey Schumacher went to 9-0 to claim second in the pole vault. Kortney Lockey stayed in the long jump long enough to get third at 5-2.5. The 4x200, 4x800, and SMR8 took thirds.

But, mostly it was done at places four and below. It was done by names like Jayla Jarnagin, Emma Willadsen, Caiden Rexius, Alie Hodgson, McKenzie Reiher, Ana Scott, Chelsey Lockey, and Emily Willier. This represents a level of balance Eaton has never before brought to the state meet.

By the end of the day Saturday, Eaton had endured a handful of unexpected setbacks, and had held off a hard-charging Lamar team, 95.5 to 80. And everyone associated with Eaton track and field exhaled. This one has been in the works a while.

Unlike some previous years when Eaton ended up short of a state title, only Tarynn Sieg could claim an event title. This one was very much about how much the team could produce and never leaned hard on a short list of high-profile individuals.

Individual headlines for the weekend went to people like sprinters Kayla Pinnt (12.01, -0.7; 24.52, 1.3) and Ashley Snyder (55.98), to people like distance types like Taryn Ceglowski (2:17.33, 5:14.93) and Lily Tomasula-Martin (11:27.91), to hurdlers Taylor Finn (15.04) and Sarah Yocum (44.69), to McKayla Bauer (5-6.5) and Maddie Smith (9-3), to Brenna Vallejos (17-3.25, 35-11.25), and to Courtney Clark (124-5). If you travel up and down that list a couple of times, you start to realize the quality of the marks represented there.

And, several of the individuals on the list above endured losses to another person on the list. Sometimes that meant they had to keep fighting, and eventually earn of title of their own.

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