Arria Minor ran two state records and picked up two state titles.
We'll start with Arria Minor.
Minor was sensational over the span of three days. She endured preliminary heats of the 100, 200 and 400, and nabbed two state records on the first day of competition.
The height of her meet came Thursday, where she smashed the 200 and the 400 state records. She ran the No. 2 time in the country in the 200, running 22.89, and her 51.92 400 is No. 1 in the country. The only sprint record she didn't claim was in the 100. Her 11.51 was just off the record of 11.31 - but there's always next year. She claimed two state titles - the 100 and the 200.
The only hiccup in Minor's weekend was in the 400 final, where she proved to be only human.
Clearly, her record-breaking efforts caught up to her, as Lily Williams caught her in the final strides of the 400 for an upset victory in the 400.
The sophomore finished 53.85 to beat Minor's 53.95.
Williams joined a very, very short list of competitors that have had the honor of saying they've beaten Arria Minor - and she clearly understood the rarity of such a feat.
"Arria is an amazing athlete," Williams said after the race. "She's pushed me to be better."
The distance events were close across the board, with kicks to win in each event.
The 800 was a three-way battle between Marlena Preigh, Madison Mooney, and Bryce Johansen
While Mooney had entered the meet as the favorite to take the title, Preigh was prepared to go into another gear - and she did in the final 100 meters. Preigh's 2:09.19 was the fastest time in the state this year, and it's No. 4 nationally. The junior took Mooney to the line, leading her to tie her best in 2:10.19.
Mooney's runner-up finish in the 800 was a prelude of what was to come in the 1,600, as she once again came agonizingly close to a state title.
This time it was Jenna Fitzsimmons, who claimed two state titles over the weekend. Fitzsimmons used a stellar kick to pass Mooney in the final strides for a 4:54.22-4:54.52 victory. The top four broke five minutes.
Fitzsimmons 1,600 victory was the second of her weekend, as the sophomore took the 3,200 with a kick, going away for a 10:35 victory over Brynn Siles, who ran 10:39.