Natural ability ridden to state
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Chris Yemma
Sarah Cummings has been figure skating since she was 5.
But this week she will be going to the state championships in a
completely different sport than the one on ice.
The Corona del Mar High sophomore performed a double axel to vault
her way from the second alternate spot of the CIF Southern Section
track and field Masters Meet, to the CIF State preliminary race
Friday, with a chance to compete for a state championship in the
1,600 meters.
But she has been figure skating since she was 5. And more
surprisingly, she has only been competitively running since the fall.
Don’t call it beginner’s luck, though, because at CdM, running
just comes natural for many athletes.
“Using my brain and her talent, she does exactly what she needs to
do,” Sea Kings’ Coach Bill Sumner said. “And she keeps getting
results week after week. She comes to meets and always has a few
questions. She’s trying to get to the next page.”
Cummings’ brief, pre-meet question-and-answer sessions with Sumner
have transformed the natural figure skater into a natural runner.
According to Cummings, Sumner noticed her running abilities at the
Newport Coast Adventure race in the fall, and asked her to try out
for the cross country team. She competed on junior varsity during her
first race and won the Pacific Coast League title. After being moved
up to varsity, she finished third for the team in her first race --
the Southern Section Division III preliminaries.
“Her first race, she was pretty natural,” Sumner said. “She needed
very little coaching.”
And now Cummings has another new passion.
“After the [cross country] season progressed I got more and more
involved,” she said. “I really love it now. [Skating and running] are
both my main focus.”
Cummings skates under the guidance of renown instructor Ken
Congemi at the HealthSouth Center in El Segundo three days a week.
She then comes home and does distance running as part of her workout
regiment. She trains with Sumner twice a week on the track at CdM,
she said.
The training has all been building up to Friday, when Cummings
will be running in the state championship 1,600 qualifying race,
along with teammate Annie St. Geme. It marks the second straight year
CdM has sent two girls in the same race to the state meet -- last
season it was Hilary May with St. Geme in the 1,600.
This season, Cummings is taking the spot left behind by May, the
fastest freshman in the state last year in the 1,600. May was ailed
with the flu during the CIF finals, Sumner said, and did not qualify
for the Masters Meet, the event which serves as the state qualifier.
“She fits right in there with the rest of them,” Sumner said of
Cummings. “It’s kind of funny -- you look around and see all the good
[running] genes. We have very gifted athletes and we have very
hard-working ones. [Cummings] falls somewhere in the middle -- half
hard work and half talent.”
In her postseason rise to track and field elite status, Cummings’
times have been consistently dropping. She clocked 5 minutes, 13.20
seconds at league finals; 5:06.48 at the Southern Section Division
III preliminaries; 5:02.37 at the divisional finals; and 4:59.59 at
the Masters Meet to qualify for the trip to Sacramento.
And now she could have one, or even two races left this season to
improve her time even more. The top nine qualifiers advance to the
championship race.
“She’s been inching along all season,” Sumner said. “She’s a very
coachable kid.”
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