Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week, Amy Burlingham: Fast learner
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Barry Faulkner
Just six track meets into her high school sprinting career, Newport
Harbor High freshman Amy Burlingham doesn’t know much about the string of
postseason meets beyond league finals. She is also a novice when it comes
to starting blocks, race strategy and which rivals comprise her prime
competition.
But while Newport Harbor Coach Eric Tweit believes Burlingham will
eventually become familiar with all that, he knows his fleet tenderfoot
has plenty of something he can’t teach.
“Her key is, she just does not like to lose,” Tweit said. “She’s so
competitive, if she loses a race, she wants to figure out how to get
better, then come back and beat that person.”
The list of runners who can motivate Burlingham in this fashion is
growing ever shorter, however, as her coming out party at the Orange
County Championships revealed.
Burlingham, a soccer and volleyball veteran virtually new to the fast
track, finished second in the 200 meters at Trabuco Hills High. Her time
of 25.44 ranks second in the county, behind Corona del Mar senior Liz
Morse, who won the event in 24.50.
“It was her first time in a situation where everyone else in the race was
good and she was way out in lane 9,” Tweit said.
“In dual meets, she’d been staying with people, then running hard at the
end. But I told her she had to go out hard and keep going, because she
wasn’t going to be able to see anyone coming up on her from the outside
lane.
“She never saw anyone, until Liz beat her, but maybe it was good to be in
lane 9, because she ran her race and didn’t worry about anything else.
Still, it will be nice when she’s able to run the same type of race in
the middle of the track, because she’s so competitive, she may run faster
when she sees someone ahead of her.”
An exciting prep career is clearly ahead of the Daily Pilot Athlete of
the Week, who admits her sprinting success has been somewhat unexpected.
“I was really surprised with the time and the finish,” Burlingham said of
Saturday’s meet. “When I heard I was running against Liz Morse, I was
kind of scared. But I was impressed with what I did. People were coming
up to me asking ‘Are you Amy Burlingham?’ I’ve never had that before, but
it was neat to be recognized.”
Burlingham was hardly the only one impressed, though Tweit believed she
was capable of such a bust-out performance.
“I had seen her run in junior high, so I knew she had ability,” Tweit
said. “I thought she’d be among the better runners around, but to be
second in the county is a little surprising.”
Burlingham, who runs primarily the 100 and 200, will be asked to fill a
leg on the Sailors’ 1,600 relay, and also run the occasional 400,
according to Tweit.
“I think her best events will end up being the 200 and 400, because the
longer she runs, the more time she has for the competitiveness to come
out,” Tweit said.
Burlingham said she currently favors to the 200, though she is eager to
tackle new challenges.
“For now, I’m focusing on the 200 and just trying to get stronger,” she
said.
Tweit believes there is plenty of room for improvement as Burlingham
gains experience and masters the technical aspects of sprinting.
“There are a lot of little nuances she’ll pick up with experience,” Tweit
said. “For the amount of workouts she’s had and the number of races, I’d
say she’s about a five on a scale of one to 10. That doesn’t necessarily
mean she’ll get faster, but she needs a little fine tuning. I think she’s
definitely a CIF (Souther Section Division II) finalist.”
Burlingham, whose work ethic is reflected in her near-4.0 GPA, is
anxious to improve her starts and perfect her form.
“I love to work hard,” she said. “I normally don’t slack off.”
A member of the Tars’ junior varsity volleyball team and a varsity
starter in soccer, Burlingham said she enjoys the three-sport grind.
She plays club soccer for the SoCal Blues under-16 team and is also a
member of the Olympic Development Program’s West Region team.
“Soccer is probably my favorite, since I’ve been playing it the longest,”
she said. “But I like playing a lot of sports. It keeps everything
fresh.”
A fresh face on the sprinting scene, Burlingham figures to be a force for
years to come.
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