
Birmingham's Antrell Harris captures City Section titles in 100 and 200 meters
Competing in the same stadium he trains at every day, Antrell Harris sought to defend his home turf Thursday at the City Section Track and Field Championships.
And did he ever.
The Birmingham senior won the boys 100 meters and went on to win the 200 meters about 90 minutes later. Harris won the 100 in 10.92 seconds and took the lead on the backstretch to win the 200 in 21.66, holding off Granada Hills' Justin Hart by nine hundredths of a second.
'I especially wanted to win the 200 because it's my best race and I had to prove it,' said Harris, who ran his personal best in that event (21.32) at the Simi Valley Invitational. 'My goal for state is to make the second day.'
The boys 400 meters, one of the most anticipated races of the meet, proved to be one of the closest. Hart took the lead around the final turn and held off a late kick by Venice's Nathan Santa Cruz to prevail by three hundredths of a second in 47.45.
'I had to keep pumping my arms and hold my form the last 50 meters,' Hart said. 'I knew it would be a tough race. My goals for state would be 46.6 in the 400 and 21.10 or lower for the 200.'
Carson sprinter Christina Gray defended both of her titles in the 100 and 200 meters.
'I was happy how I ran in both races,' the junior said after she finished in 12.07 in the 100 and 24.62 in the 200 while also running anchor on the Colts' first-place 4x100 relay team. 'Negative wind stopped me from getting PRs, especially in the 200 because it's longer. I like the state meet and I've PR'd up there the last two years so hopefully I can do it again.'
GALA senior DeAuna Louis also repeated as champion in both the 100 hurdles (14.87) and 300 hurdles (46.12) after posting the fastest times in preliminaries.
'I'm definitely faster this year ... my PR is 14.46 and I was going for the City record in the 100 but came up short,' said Louis, who is headed to Hampton University in Virginia for academics but plans to walk-on in track. 'I was seventh in the 300 and 10th in the 100 at state last spring. My goal is to make the finals in both.'
Granada Hills' Savannah Williams won the girls 400 in 57.22 and North Hollywood's Ananya Balaraman won the 1,600 meters in 5 minutes 3.75 seconds and later took the lead in the last 40 meters to win the 800 in 2:16.90.
Santee's Angeles Feliciano won the girls 3,200 in 11:25.75 and Charles Simon won the boys 3,200 in 9:38.77. Carson took the 4x400 girls race in 4:02.77 and Palisades (3:23.98) barely edged Granada Hills (3:24.15) in the boys' race.
Lawrence Kensinger won shot put with a throw of 55 feet on his second attempt. He has high hopes for the state meet in Clovis.
'I quit football to concentrate on shot,' he said. 'I love this sport. It's you versus you. If you make a mistake it's on you, when you win that's on you too.'
Kensinger was on the football team in ninth and 10th grade, playing defensive end as a freshman and defensive tackle as a sophomore.
'My goal at state is to make the second day,' added Kensinger, whose best throw was 55-9 at City prelims last year. 'Sixty feet for my junior year would be a dream. That's when you know you're with the top dogs.'
Birmingham's Mandell Anthony won the boys long jump with a leap of 21 feet, 9¾ inches and Marshall's Oleana Taalman Koch cleared 5-2 to win the girls high jump.
Granada Hills swept the team titles, the girls ending Carson's record streak of nine straight.
Longtime race starter Saul Pacheco was honored for working his 43rd City finals meet. A 1956 graduate of Banning, where he was a half-miler, and a 1961 UCLA graduate, he served as a paratrooper in the 82nd Airborne Division from 1962-65 and was the track and field and offensive line coach at Carson for 25 years.
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Dominion Post
6 hours ago
- Dominion Post
COLUMN: Avoiding disaster in the national spotlight, unfortunately, hasn't worked out for WVU athletics
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Newsweek
2 days ago
- Newsweek
Spire Boss Takes Parental Tone with Carson Hocevar After Nashville Clash
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New York Times
2 days ago
- New York Times
Old friends Scott Harris, Jed Hoyer find themselves in first place again
CHICAGO — Last season, when the Chicago Cubs hosted the Detroit Tigers, it wasn't exactly a stress test for the friendship of the teams' respective presidents of baseball operations, Jed Hoyer and Scott Harris. The two friends, former co-workers and now professional equals, could instead commiserate over their sub-.500 teams. Advertisement After losing two of three at Wrigley Field on Aug. 22, Harris' Tigers were 62-66 and in front of just the lowly White Sox in the AL Central. Meanwhile, Hoyer's Cubs were treading water at 63-65. It was a long way from 2016, but one of their teams was about to take off. After the series, the Tigers traveled crosstown to play those aforementioned lowly White Sox, and they swept them to start an unexpected 24-10 run to the playoffs, where they won a wild-card series against Houston before losing to Cleveland in five games in the divisional round. Detroit sold at the trade deadline and somehow found itself a game away from the ALCS. 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'I'm actually two stops beyond working for him at this point. But he's obsessed with making the Cubs better, and that's the way his mind works. I think that's one of the reasons why they're successful.' Harris grew up in the business emulating Theo Epstein and Hoyer, so his approach to the job is not dissimilar. That is why he got a president of baseball operations gig before he turned 40. He was hired at 25 by the Cubs in the fall of 2012 to be their director of baseball operations. Seven years and one World Series ring later, he was an assistant GM when the San Francisco Giants hired him as their general manager. Three years after that, Detroit made him its president of baseball operations at 36. He brought along former Cubs assistant GM Jeff Greenberg, who was working for the Chicago Blackhawks. Advertisement Harris became nationally known during the Cubs' World Series run when ESPN's Wright Thompson profiled savior-in-chief Theo Epstein and included a scene from the front office suite where Harris was force-feeding himself bread at Epstein's behest for rallying purposes. 'I'm an easy target,' Harris said at a 'Pitch Talks' event in 2017. 'Just being the young guy, you can't really say no to anything. But I think the best part about Theo and Jed is they really create a fun and inclusive environment.' In reality, Harris wasn't just the kid in the room. He was an important part of the team's baseball operations department. Hoyer said they hired him knowing he'd be a GM one day soon and wanted to benefit from his services. 'It wasn't that Scott was just learning from us,' Hoyer said. 'I think he was contributing a ton as well. He's super curious, and I think that's probably one of his greatest strengths. He was always asking questions, always trying to advance and broaden his skill set. That's served him incredibly well, because I think he certainly learned a lot in his time in Chicago, but I think he learned a lot (in) his time in San Francisco from Farhan (Zaidi) as well. I think he's combined what he's learned at an exceptional level.' Reporters could never get much out of Harris in Chicago. He was friendly, sarcastic and was game to talk about anything … except the secrets we tried to pry out of him. His loyalty was with his bosses. 'I had two of the best mentors anyone could ask for in Theo and Jed,' he said. 'I learned about leadership and how to build a whole organization, as opposed to just a major-league team that's winning baseball games. I think Theo and Jed were both hyper-focused on that. I also really benefited from the experience of seeing the whole cycle in Chicago. Advertisement 'When I first started, I think we lost 96 games that year, and a few years later, we were on buses in a parade down Michigan Ave. And so seeing that whole cycle, you know, play out helps me collect a set of experiences that allow me to use some pattern recognition, like 'I've seen this before.' I've seen this player get to this level before. I've seen what it can do if you challenge a player to elevate a certain aspect of this game.' Whatever he's doing is working. The Tigers broke a nine-year playoff drought last season. This year, they are second in the AL in runs scored and are in the top 10 in most pitching stats. PECOTA projected them fourth in the AL Central before the season and now they're atop the entire AL. In March, the MLB Pipeline crew ranked Detroit as having the top farm system in the game. The Athletic's Keith Law ranked it seventh in January, which was down a spot from the year before. These are the prospects drafted and developed by Harris, Greenberg and their front office. Law ranked the Tigers' system 30th going into Harris' first season in charge, but the team's big-league roster is now full of players drafted in the Al Avila regime, led by the best pitcher in baseball in Tarik Skubal (who starts Friday against the Cubs) and hitters like Riley Greene, Spencer Torkelson, Dillon Dingler and Kerry Carpenter. What the Tigers seem to be doing well now, as opposed to before, is player development, the secret sauce to any successful organization. The young Tigers are improving and thriving. The farm system, headlined by A-ball hitters Max Clark and Kevin McGonigle, has time to mature. 'We set out to build a team full of young players that can win big-league games in different ways,' Harris said. 'I think that's the team that we have right now. This is a really fun team to watch, and it's a team that is just scratching the surface.' Meanwhile, Hoyer's vision for the Cubs is finally taking shape. He has a mix of veterans and young players, powered by a pair of MVP candidates in Kyle Tucker and Pete Crow-Armstrong. Like the Tigers, the Cubs are just a fun watch. They score a lot of runs in a variety of ways. Advertisement 'I think the longer I do this, the more I root for people as opposed to teams,' Harris said. 'There's a lot of good people in that organization. Jed is certainly one of them. When we're playing each other this weekend, I'm not going to pull for them. But I pull for a lot of these guys because I want them to be successful, and they built a hell of a team this year.' I joked with Hoyer that the Tigers are his 'AL team,' like when kids have a second-favorite team to root for. 'You don't spend that much time with people over a 10-year period and you develop real friendship,' Hoyer said. 'I've spent more time with Jeff and with Scott than probably any two people other than my wife during that period. I love how hard they work there, and obviously, watching their success at the end of last year and then this year, they deserve all of the credit.' Hoyer is also close friends with Detroit manager A.J. Hinch from their San Diego days, and the Cubs' former media relations guy, Peter Chase, landed in Detroit this season. And of course, there's Javy Báez, who has reinvigorated his career this season after hip surgery last year. Báez's last game of 2024 was that Aug. 22 loss in Chicago. He finished the season with a .184/.221/.294 slash line, and it looked like a DFA could be in his future. He had 'sunk cost' written all over him. That the team took off when he went on the shelf didn't go unnoticed. Much like his former star teammate in Chicago, Kris Bryant, Báez hadn't done much since signing a six-year, $140 million contract in Detroit before the 2022 season (and before Harris got there), making Hoyer look prescient, if not a little late, for his 2021 dismantling of the World Series core. In 216 total games in 2023-24, Baez hit just 15 homers and slugged .315. He came into spring training and said he'd play wherever Hinch wanted, but who would've thought he'd play such a big role on a first-place team again? Advertisement When Parker Meadows got hurt, Báez moved to center field. He thrived. 'A.J. knows I like playing outfield and I shag good in BP out there,' Báez said. 'With so many injuries that we had in spring training, he came to me and mentioned it, and I started smiling. So he knew it was a yes from me.' With Meadows back, Báez returned to the infield during the White Sox series and reminded people he's still El Mago. #JavierBáez — Javier Báez Page (@ElMagoJavy28) June 4, 2025 'For me, the best version of Javy is the one that's playing free and loose, the one that is just finding ways to help a team win,' Harris said. 'He's such a gifted athlete with elite baseball instincts, and when you surround him with a good baseball team, I think he finds ways to enhance the overall position playing group.' Báez was always one of Hoyer's favorite players, and if not for the pandemic, they might have nailed down a deal to keep him in Chicago. But Hoyer is doing more than fine with the guy Báez was traded for, Crow-Armstrong. It's looking like one of the best trades in Cubs history. Watching both on the same field this weekend should be a treat for baseball fans and executives. While Harris traveled to the North Side last season for the series, Hoyer won't be able to make the trip. 'Tell him I'll get him a signed Javy jersey if he comes,' Harris said. The message was passed along. But maybe Hoyer and Harris could find themselves in the same stadium again this fall with the biggest stakes imaginable. (Photo collage of Scott Harris and Jed Hoyer: Allison Farrand / Detroit Tigers; Griffin Quinn / Getty Images)