Athletics News

Champs Sports HS Boys XC — Top Returner Mathison Takes It

Champs Sports HS Boys XC — Top Returner Mathison Takes It

Acknowledging “extra adrenaline in the tank,” Indianan Kole Mathison dropped the hammer on the final climb and made his victory a runaway. (DON GOSNEY)

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, December 10 — Being the only returner toeing the line from last year’s top 28 finishers at this meet, Kole Mathison (5th in ’21) knew the newly renamed Champs Sports National Championships title was there for his taking.

Placing 4th at the prior weekend’s loaded Nike Cross Nationals gala — and with the NXN top 3 bypassing this meet— the Colorado-bound prep from Indiana even enjoyed a most peculiar home-crowd advantage.

Among the dignitaries performing meet functions were former Buffaloes Emma Coburn, Jorge and Eduardo Torres, Danielle Jones, Steve Slattery and several others.

“Having so many great runners with ties to Colorado… That was a big plus,” Mathison admitted. “There was definitely extra adrenaline in the tank.”

Altogether, the shaggy-blonde 6-foot, 4-inch Mathison (pronounced muh-Thee-sen) wasn’t about to fold on his stacked deck, delivering a decisive surge just past race’s midpoint to whittle the 39-runner field down to him and North Carolinian Rocky Hansen of Christ School.

Mathison then scaled the big hill a final time along the double loop course in impressive fashion to gap eventual 11th-placer Hansen just inside the final kilometer, bursting to an 11-second victory over runner-up Noah Breker of Minnesota (Armstrong HS).

Mathison, Breker and South Dakota’s Simeon Birnbaum were the only entrants in the boys’ races at both meets to finish as First-Team All-Americans at NXN and here.

Mathison’s winning time of 14:56.6 also was the fastest since Drew Hunter’s 2015 triumph in 14:55.

“I knew the time would be fast… Everyone is taking down course records everywhere it seems,” said Mathison, the latest in a long line of talents from the Carmel HS program recognized as among the sport’s blueblood teams nationally over the years.

“Once the race got out pretty quick (4:37 for the opening mile), I felt that played to my advantage. I’m a strength runner and the hill here is where I could take advantage of anyone that was already having any trouble.”

According to Mathison, the cornerstones to victory here would be taking a calculated gamble and riding on his course experience: “My plan was to stick with the leaders until it felt right to make a move, but I wanted to be sure my move would keep me in the lead for…

CLICK HERE to Read the Full Original Article at Track & Field News…