December 16, 2002
"The
leaders were right in front of me, and suddenly I realized I could
run with them, and qualify."
Jon Pastore, Scranton Prep, December 19, 2002,
five days after his 30th place at Foot Lockers in San Diego, California
(Photo by Photo Run)
Jon Pastore, Scranton PrepThe Scranton Prep boys' cross country team
has made a big impression in AA in recent years. Overlooked by many
in 2000, they won a state championship. Under appreciated in 2001
when Andy Weilacher was leading a great Eisenhower team, they captured
the title again by a mere point. Then, with the pressure on, they
three-peated in 2002 by taking a very strong Harbor Creek team by
13. And leading that squad those three years has been Jon Pastore.
Pastore was happy with an 8th place finish as a sophomore. He wasn't
entirely disappointed with an 8th place finish as a junior. But he
wasn't at all happy with a 7th place finish in 2002. "I had a
bad day. But the hard part was that I didnt know if was just
a bad day, or if I had actually run well."
Whether it was a good race or not, the performance earned him an invitation
to join the state's top seniors on the team that represented the state
at the Mid East Regional Championships in Kettering, Ohio, two weeks
after states, and two weeks prior to the regional Foot Locker race.
"I had no doubts about going to Ohio, but I thought I could compete"
When he arrived, he saw two of the country's best, Nef Araia of Indiana,
and Wesley Smith of Ohio. "Nef was intimidating. And so was Smith.
The pair went one-two. "But after them, I figured I could run
with most who were there." As it turns out, Araia and Smith were
not the only future Foot Locker finalists. West Virginia's Justin
Simpson would finish 3rd. Justin's brother Joshua was 10th at the
South Regional, and Illinois' Trent Hoerr, who was 7th in Ohio, would
finish 10th in the Midwest. So Pastore's 11th place finish still put
him in some very good company. "It was a boost being the top
PA guy and almost top ten. Running in that atmosphere was a big help."
The journey from frosh to Finalist.
But it had been a long road from a freshman who simply ran for fun
to become one of the top 32 guys in the country in 2002. "As
a freshman, it was all having fun, not necessarily competing."
Pastore says his best race before this year was his sophomore Districts
race. "The varsity race was stacked with four top guys. I was
the underdog." He went 15:58 and won the District 2 Championship.
"That was the most fun I've ever had racing. But my regional
race at Van Cortlandt this year was probably by best overall race."
As a junior, Pastore said he realized he had more than just average
talent and started focusing and working harder. He says the team and
the quality of the coaching is a tremendous help. "My junior
year, it became about competing." That's also the year he finally
realized there was such a thing as Foot Lockers. "I saw Andy
Weilacher made it. After that, my teammates and I started thinking
about racing it." They approached their coaches, who gave their
support and laid out a plan to help Pastore work toward the goal.
His opening 15:48 in September at the Spiked Shoe at Penn State University
in September made him realize the dream could be achievable. "My
coaches really helped after my bad race at States. They were very
supportive, told me it was just a bad race, described my mistakes
and helped me get refocused." But Pastore says that level of
attention and care from his coaches extends to developing the best
for each athlete on the entire team. "Our guy who was 16th at
States was losing to girls in 8th and 10th grade. And they take kids
who have never run and win championships. They're amazing!"
Buoyed
by his 11th place finish in Ohio, Pastore made his way to New York's
storied cross country shrine of Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx. He
knew he wanted to be near the front, but not in the front entering
the woods. To avoid getting caught around the first sharp turn at
the Foot Locker balloon, his teammates got him his spot on the starting
line on the outside. "The whole pack slowed down to the left,
and I was on the right, so I picked people off." He pulled up
to about 25th entering the woods. Sensing that the start had been
extraordinarily fast (word was the half was 2:08), Pastore ignored
the mile split. "I didn't want it to break my confidence."
His race plan unfolded perfectly early, and then got even better.
He crossed the bridge heading deeper into the wood and could see the
leaders right in front of him. "I got them within a half mile
and suddenly realized I could run with them. I felt good and knew
I could hold it. I realized I could qualify." He even led the
race briefly after the two-mile mark. He would finish 3rd, passing
AAA state champ Ian Gottesfeld on the final straight, and matching
Andy Weilacher's 3rd place finish in 2001.
Pastore salutes his traveling band of supporters (coaches, family
and teammates) at the Northeast Foot Lockers awards ceremony.
Just getting there is great, but Pastore wanted to just do better
than get there. His home course of McDade Park matches the Balboa
Park course profile in San Diego with its uphill start and hill at
the mile. At McDade, he has run 15:43 by himself. "On a good
day, I should have finished 12th to 18th. I don't think I could have
gotten top ten, but I may have been able to hang in there."
His 30th place showing had much less to do with having a bad race,
and more to do with the two weeks between regionals and nationals.
On the Tuesday after Van Cortlandt, he joined classmates on an annual
retreat for five days. They got a foot of snow, and he only ran a
little two days. Sleep was at a premium. He returned home Saturday,
was greeted by ice on Sunday, but went out anyway. "I fell on
my face and gave up." He took to the pool on Monday and did what
he could.
"I was not as focused as I should as been. Right after the gun,
everything started going wrong. We went out in 2:20. It felt faster
than the clock said." They came through the mile 4:40. "
and
Im dying. Two weeks of spot training was not helping. I tried
to hang on. I was in 26th or 27th, even dead last for a bit. But overall,
I really enjoyed the experience."
Celebrating in NYC with family and
one of his coaches.
Hangin' with Suzie, Bob, Alan and Bernard.
On reflection, Pastore probably wasn't surprised that the heroes of
his sport are more approachable than those in other sports. He got
to meet Alan Webb, Bob Kennedy, Suzie Favor-Hamilton, Bernard Lagat
and others. He listened intently as each spoke and offered advice
and wisdom on the mental and physical aspects of their events and
disparate roads to excellence. But what he didn't expect was how down
to earth they were. "Suzy tried to get us to dance. Alan Webb
was buying pizza for everyone because all we had was room service.
Bernard Lagat invited a bunch of us to go to Sea World with him. And
you'd ask them to take a picture with them and they'd jump at the
chance. Other pro athletes don't even acknowledge your existence.
It makes you not even want their autograph. But our sports' pro athletes
are amazing. I'd choose to model myself after any of them."
In addition to his coaches, (head coach Bill Burk accompanied him
to San Diego, while assistant Jim Kilker helped Jon in New York),
Pastore had remarkable support from family and friends. Four teammates
even made the trip to San Diego. Six or seven also went to New York.
"The celebration in New York was the greatest. My teammates are
incredible."
Prior to becoming a Foot Locker Finalist, Pastore had narrowed his
college choices to Duquesne, St. Joseph's, LaSalle and Penn State.
Needless to say, that list has grown substantially since November
30th.
But no more than Jon, who finally realized he "can run with these
guys."
Jon Pastore's training for 2002 XC: More workouts, up to
three to four a week geared toward fartleks and surging. Trained to
get out fast and get rid of lactate. Also to be able to hit hills
hard, did a lot of hill fartleks and 1200s.