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Posts Tagged ‘Edward Cheserek’

Tyler King

Tyler King, national treasure.

This, then, is how it ends.

One of the most accomplished athletes in Coupeville High School history brought his equally stellar five-year run as a scholarship D-1 college athlete to an end Wednesday night.

Running at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon, University of Washington senior Tyler King finished 23rd in the 10,000 meter race.

Rambling across the finish line at Heyward Field in 32 minutes, 13.48 seconds, King earned Honorable Mention All-American honors.

He was previously an All-American in cross country during the 2014 season.

Edward Cheserek of Oregon won Wednesday’s race, capturing his 11th NCAA track title and 14th overall (he’s a three-time national champ in cross country).

Making his first appearance at college track’s biggest blowout, a four-day affair in the heart of Nike land which runs through Saturday, King was one of 16 Huskies to advance to nationals.

That’s the second-biggest total in school history for U-Dub.

King entered the night coming off of his two best college track performances.

He finished 3rd at the Pac-12 championships in the 10,000 and 9th at the Western Region prelims.

During his time at CHS, the younger brother of Wolf stars Brianne and Kyle King won two 1A state track titles and amassed 11 state meet medals, winning at least two in every one of his four seasons.

Tyler was also a state champ in cross country as a senior, joining Natasha Bamberger as the only Wolves to achieve that feat in the 116-year history of their high school.

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"When I run fast, the wind blows my hair back like this. I like it."

“When I run fast, the wind blows my hair back like this. I like it.”

Tyler King is in the top 16% of all Division 1 male college cross country runners at the moment.

Running at the NCAA D-1 Championships in Terra Haute, Indiana Saturday, the former Coupeville High School supernova finished 40th in the nation (out of 246 runners).

He covered the 10,000 meter LaVern Gibson Cross Country Course in 20 minutes, 56.7 seconds, the second-fastest of any University of Washington runner.

King, a redshirt junior for the Dawgs, was 14 seconds off U-Dub senior All-American Aaron Nelson.

A state champ during his days as a Wolf, King was in 167th place after 3,000 meters Saturday, then made a run for the front.

He climbed to 91st at the 5,000 meter mark, zoomed to 29th at 8,000 meters, then fell back just a bit at the end.

Edward Cheserek, a sophomore from the University of Oregon, won the individual race, clocking in at 30:19.4

Washington finished 20th as a team, in a field of 31 schools, while #1 ranked Colorado easily won the team title.

Stanford, Portland, Northern Arizona and Syracuse rounded out the top five.

In the womens’ race, Washington junior Maddie Meyers finished 27th, covering 6,000 meters in 20:32.6.

The Huskies placed 23rd as a team, with Michigan State taking the team title.

Kate Avery of Iona won the individual title.

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Eat big, run big. (Haley Jacobson photo)

Eat big, run big. (Haley Jacobson photo)

Tyler King ran fast Friday, but now he’ll have to sit and wait to see if he gets to run again.

The Coupeville High School grad, currently a redshirt junior at the University of Washington, finished 33rd out of 192 runners at the NCAA Division I West Regional cross country meet in California.

King covered the 10,000 meter course at Stanford in 30 minutes, 11.6 seconds, the fourth fastest time by a Husky man.

The 33rd place finish, on his birthday, was seven slots better than his career best at the event (40th as a freshman).

The top two teams at the regional — Oregon and Portland — move on as a group to the NCAA Championships in Terra Haute, Indiana Nov. 22.

The Dawgs, who entered the 29-team regional ranked #11 in the nation, finished fifth in the team battle.

Washington now has to wait and see if it receives one of 13 “at-large” berths into the 31-team championships. If it does, it would be the first time the U-Dub mens’ team had advanced to nationals since 2009.

In the individual standings Friday, Maxim Korolev of Stanford (29:33.5) edged out Oregon’s Edward Cheserek (29:35) for the title.

Aaron Nelson was the top Husky, finishing seventh in 29:45.2, while Izaaic Yorks (24th) and Meron Simons (32nd) were between him and King.

The Washington women finished fourth as a team, led by Maddie Meyers, who finished 7th, covering a 6,000 meter course in 20:17.1.

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