
Melding physical and mental readiness, Pembroke's Luke Lamar wins 400 hurdles at Division 4 track championship
Ludlow's Logan Walsh wins the boys' 800 in front of Melrose's Adam Caldwell.
Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff
As soon as the gun went off, Lamar went all out. He barely broke stride as he raced toward the second-fastest time in Massachusetts this season. The No. 1 spot
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
'[Kyle] kind of whooped me by two seconds, and ever since then, I saw him run a 53 and I thought, why not me?' said Lamar. 'If there's any race I'm built for, it's this one.'
Related
:
Advertisement
Lamar's first-place finish, along with his brother, Gabe, finishing second and teammate Jayden Leonard taking fourth in the boys' 200, propelled the Titans (29 points) to a tie for first with Wakefield after the first day of competition. Ludlow (26) sits close behind in third place thanks to a first-place finish from senior Logan Walsh in the 800 with a season-best time of 1 minute, 55.62 seconds.
Advertisement
Chicopee's Sophia Guzman (center) won the 200 in 25.29 seconds.
Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff
Chicopee earned back-to-back wins in the 200 as senior Sophia Guzman (25.29 seconds) followed teammate Rayzaiah Ocasio's win (22.11) in the boys' race.
'Today we were doing a ceremony at our school gym and I saw that we had a banner,' Guzman said, referring to Chicopee's track records. 'I was like 'How do I get my name up there?' If you win today you get your name up there so that was great motivation.'
Rayzaiah Ocasio (left) made it a Chicopee sweep in the 200, edging out Pembroke's Gabe Lamar (center) and Jayden Leonard I.
Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff
Guzman and Ocasio grew up together and are running buddies.
'It's crazy that now we've come here and finished first in our last year,' said Guzman, who is committed to run at Saint Anselm. 'It's nice to see how far we've come.'
Related
:
Canton junior Chloe Dubuisson won the 400 hurdles in (1:02.95), the third-fastest time in the state this season.
'I wanted it more,' Dubuisson said. 'I've been working hard for this and this is where I can show I did that.'
Chloe Dubiusson's win in the 400 hurdles helped the Canton girls finish the first day in fourth place.
Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff
Dubuisson's performance lifted the Canton girls to fourth place after day one of competition with 21 points. Amherst Pelham (26), Holliston (24), and Melrose (23) fill the top three spots.
Related
:
Burlington swept the pentathlon with Ryan Brooks (3,223 points) winning on the boys' side and Leila Gilligan (2,562) taking the girls' competition.
The Division 4 meet continues Sunday at Merrimack College.
Bedford's Zadie Buckley strides to the finish line to win the 800.
Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff
Dracut's Zoe Clarke won the discus with a throw of 127 feet, 6 inches.
Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff
Holliston's Connor Teague won the boys' triple jump.
Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff
Aiden Barker can be reached at

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
4 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Justin Slaten goes on injured list with shoulder inflammation
Righthander Related : 'Just a matter of getting ahead of it and taking care of it before something major could happen,' Slaten said. During spring training, the Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'I told him [Saturday], I appreciate you being honest,' manager Alex Cora said. Advertisement Slaten has been the primary setup man for closer Greg Weissert and Justin Wilson will likely get much of the opportunity. So far, the Sox don't think Slaten needs an MRI. 'Just general fatigue, just get ahead of it,' he said. 'Give the shoulder a little time to calm down.' Slaten had a 3.47 earned run average over 24 appearances this season. He has allowed fewer hits per nine innings than last season but his walks are up and strikeouts down. Advertisement Change of plans The Sox were planning to give Abraham Toro for the third straight game. Toro was 2 for 4 with a run scored 'Toro's pushing the envelope,' Cora said. 'He's putting good at-bats.' As to when Campbell will play first, Cora said only that the coaches will keep working with him. Campbell started at second base and was 1 for 4. Shuffling the deck The Sox switched up utility players, calling up Nate Eaton and demoting Nick Sogard . Eaton, a righthanded hitter, hit .277 with an .810 OPS at Worcester and started games at every position except first base, catcher, and pitcher. Related : With lefthanders Tyler Anderson and Yusei Kikuchi scheduled to pitch for the Angels on Monday and Tuesday at Fenway Park, Eaton could be in the lineup. Eaton, who didn't play on Sunday, appeared in 72 games for the Royals from 2022-23 hitting .201 with a .549 OPS. He was signed as a minor league free agent in November. 'They just told me to be ready with the slate of guys we face coming up,' he said. 'Definitely nice being part of the Red Sox organization.' Sogard is a switch-hitter but the Sox wanted to get a look at Eaton. The graduate Richard Fitts graduated from Auburn recently, having completed his degree in business administration. He left school after three years to sign with the Yankees after being drafted in 2021 and finished up online. Fitts is scheduled to start Monday night in the first game of a three-game series against the Angels at Fenway Park. The Sox plan to use Hunter Dobbins for multiple innings in relief. Brayan Bello and Jarren Duran is hitless in his last 16 at-bats, dropping his OPS to .718 … The Sox are 11-6 at Truist Park since 2017, and again this weekend a good percentage of fans were rooting for the visiting team … To make room for Eaton on the 40-man roster, the Sox designated Triple A catcher Blake Sabol for assignment. He was 2 for 16 in eight games with the major league team earlier this season. Advertisement Peter Abraham can be reached at
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Chicopee community holds memorial and candlelight vigil for Niklas Delisle
CHICOPEE, Mass. (WWLP) – Nick Delisle, a graduate of Chicopee Comprehensive High School is being remembered by loved ones as an incredible athlete and a man who did everything with such joy. Body of missing Chicopee kayaker recovered from Connecticut River On Saturday evening, those closest to him came together at one of his favorite places for a candlelight vigil. The 27-year-old died after his kayak flipped over in the Connecticut River. He was with his girlfriend at the time, who was rescued by a fisherman that day. On Friday, authorities recovered the body of Delisle after nearly two weeks of search and recovery efforts from agencies across the region. Loved ones gathered at Chicopee Comprehensive High School's track on Saturday evening to remember leaves a legacy there, as he set records in pole vault and returned to coach after graduation. Delisle, his brother, and his father figure were all forces to be reckoned with as they surpassed each other's personal best. Nick's family says when he returned to coach the team, he helped his teammate beat his very own record, and that's the type of person he was, caring for the ones he loved. WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Boston Globe
a day ago
- Boston Globe
Ainsley Cuthbertson took her shot and put Lexington atop the Division 1 girls' track championship for the first time
Natick (65 points) and Westford (57 points) sit in second and third place with 18 of 19 girls' events accounted for — pole vault was pushed to Sunday due to the slippery conditions. Advertisement 'It's pretty new to me to be able to score points for the team at big meets like this,' said Cuthbertson, who had never previously won an event at states. 'Before my last throw, I heard [all my teammates] cheering, and I was like, 'I just have to do it for them.' So it feels amazing.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Related : Freshman standout Amelia Whorton placed second in the 800 meter (2:10.16) and third in the mile (4:58.64), and junior Aubrey Deardorf was second in both the 100-meter (12.84) and long jump (19-04.5) for the Minutemen. 'We sort of made a statement in indoor, but we wanted to come back in outdoor and show everybody that while we're a young team, and we're not necessarily everybody's target, we're still here,' said coach Rebecca Trachsel. 'And we're here for a while because we don't have any seniors.' Advertisement Weymouth's Ainsley Weber wins the javelin with a throw of 131 feet, 7 inches. Barry Chin/Globe Staff On the boys' side, Lowell captured the team title with 87 points, narrowly edging Lexington (76) and Brookline (73). The Red Raiders were paced by junior Ethan Thevenin, who surged to victories in the triple jump (46-07.00) and 400 (49.50) before sealing the team victory with a clutch fifth-place effort in the long jump (21-10.25), the meet's final event. 'Ethan just did so much for us today, can't say enough good things about what he did winning those two events and then closing it out for us,' said Lowell coach Nick McArdle. 'It was a grind, but everyone just stepped up. A full team effort.' Brookline's Altamo Aschkenasy led from start to finish to capture the 1-mile at the Division 1 meet. Barry Chin/Globe Staff The Raiders also got boosts from senior Khai Yin, who finished third in both the 110 hurdles (14.49) and 400 hurdles (55.10), and senior Emanuel Trinidad, who was second in discus (158-05) and third in shot put (52-07.50). After missing the bulk of the cross-country and indoor track season due to a lingering illness, Westford star junior Abigail Hennessy made a triumphant return to the Division 1 stage. In one of the meet's most dominant individual efforts, Hennessy claimed the girls' mile by 15 seconds (4:43.72) on Saturday, shattering the meet record by seven seconds. She also claimed the 800 (2:07.18) by three seconds. At the D1 state championship meet, Westford junior Abigail Hennessy destroys the competition in the girls' mile, winning in 4:43.72. She won the race by 15 seconds, and set a 7-second meet record. That's her second victory of the meet. — Matty Wasserman (@Matty_Wasserman) Though Hennessy began separating within the opening lap and never faced much competition, she used the meet record as fuel. 'During the third lap, I just had to keep repeating myself, 'I can do this. I can do this,' ' Hennessy said. 'Especially with the wind in your face that last final stretch, I had to think about the meet record to make sure I'd finish strong.' Advertisement Westford Academy's Abigail Hennessy outran her closest competitors to break the meet record in the girls' mile. Barry Chin/Globe Staff Natick's Emmanuella Edozien (right) gets a hug from a teammate after winning the 100-meter hurdles. Barry Chin/Globe Staff Shrewsbury's Darius Gibbons gives it his all to win the shot put with a throw of 55 feet, 10.25 inches. Barry Chin/Globe Staff Natick's Chloe Elder had plenty of breathing room as she crossed the finish line to win the 400. Barry Chin/Globe Staff Ryan Kyle of Westford Academy leaps for joy after seeing the results of his win in the 110-meter hurdles, which came two days after he set a state record in the 400 hurdles. Barry Chin/Globe Staff Matty Wasserman can be reached at