
Long-lived friends, LBJ Relay team in Ali Scott, Tre’awn Young-Henderson, Anthony “Sticks” Baker and Ladainian Green know something around the angles.
Thus, on Saturday, on the final day of the Texas Rille, it was as follows. In a half-class noon when there was no drop of rain at the Mayres stadium, Jaguars found gold in the 800-meter race in the first round.
Backer’s result was unsured to say the team’s brotherhood stems from playing sports for more than ten years.
“Everything is about trust,” Baker said. “We’re doing everything together. Football, basketball, track. It’s just something we know.
The rilla was a confused ending. The L-Sereto (Califf) actually crossed the first final line at the finest line at 1:24.88, which broke 1:25.17, which LBJ had set on Friday. However, LBJ was introduced as the winner because L-Sireto had to participate in the second round of the Great School.
Relief’s head, Allen Dioz, confirmed the reversal and said a vegetarian mistake before the meeting had led to mixing. LBJ didn’t know they won for 30 minutes after the race.
“They were upset (for the second end), but when I told them they won first place and kept the record of the meeting, their faces overturned,” LBJ coach Justin Bimani said. “It was not a celebration because we understand that the ultimate goal of winning the state was a moment to think about the process and the value of heavy work.
further: Texas athletes shine in Friday activities
Green, who has run the LBJ’s leg, said winning was with his old friends.
“I know everything about them, they know everything about me,” Green said. “I know how they feel, how they run and the signals we give to each other. We have a tradition (in LBJ) that we do everything together.
LBJ, which had the chance to win three relief medals on Saturday, fell in fourth place in the 400 race. The Jaguars finished seventh place in seventh in 1,600 rillas.
Three consecutive for Lago Vista Sprinter
Lago Vista’s Swayede Griffin won the 110-meter games in 13:46 seconds. It was his third consecutive victory at Texas Releas.
“I will compete with Arizona in the autumn,” said Griffin, a first-player who plays football in the autumn. Uill has won twice before.
Lily Muzi grew up in Georgetown when it was very important, winning 41 feet and 9.25 inches. His winning jumped was in his sixth and final attempt. He was in sixth place before that. He beat Samantha Enin to Plano John Paul II, who finished second with 40-8.25th.
Will Relea: Medals won in the last day
First for the region: Vandegrift’s first midfielder Kai McColi was the first midfielder to reach the podium. At 8:30 am he spent 3,200 meters, winning the silver medal, ending at 9:09
Badgers Relay Winning Silver: Lampasas arrived at the medal stand, second in the 1,600-relate competition. Sean Smith, Aaron Evertz, Dakoda Fray and Tae Johnson ended at 3:17.42 pm, half of which were after Lindil, which reached the tape at 3:17.22 pm.
Dragons Relay Third: Rawand rock won the bronze medal by ending a third of 3,200 girls. Eve Parada, Lola Copen, Mary Mor and Mert Wolf ended in 9 minutes and 13.40 seconds, about 13 seconds after the Long Beach Wilson race.
further: Fat Moore in Anderson between regional rivals for watching Releas
Return home to the rolls: Chessen Scott, a former Vista Rich Discos player, is currently a first-year student in a red shirt in Oklahoma, returns to the tournament to finish seventh in the tournament. In Ou, he also in the Hammer Throw, a field event that was not punished by Uil.