The Bradsher Beat
Thursday, March 13, 2014
By Bethany Bradsher |
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Indoor title lifts women's
outdoor goals
ECU ladies were stars
of the show at conference meet
By
Bethany Bradsher
©2014 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
It’s an old adage that rings true in athletic competition — it’s not how
you start that counts, but how you finish.
East Carolina track and field coach Curt Kraft isn’t the only coach on
campus to adopt that principle not just for a game or a meet, but also for
the Pirates’ stint in Conference USA.
The coaches have used the idea of a memorable swan song – a conference
title to leave with a bang – as motivation for their athletes in their final
C-USA tour before departing for the American Athletic Conference.
The difference for Kraft? So far he is the only one whose team has made
that vision a reality. When the women’s indoor track and field team won the
championship trophy at the conference meet in Birmingham, AL, it was exactly
the kind of farewell Kraft and his athletes had hoped for.
“They want to leave this conference knowing that we were one of the ones
to bring a title home,” said Kraft, who is in his ninth season leading the
program.
It was the second indoor championship in three years for the women’s
squad, but they actually entered the meet this year as an underdog, Kraft
said. Top performers like sprinter Tania Minkins were recovering from
injuries, and most observers regarded Tulsa or UAB as frontrunners for the
title.
But Minkins was in top form, actually winning the 200 meters as one of
three Lady Pirates to claim individual titles, along with Kayla Padgett in
the weight throw and Aiesha Goggins in the 400 meters. Another stellar
performance came from Erin Tucker, who set a new school record and personal
record in the 60-meter hurdles.
Even if the Pirates weren’t regarded as contenders by many of their
opponents, Kraft and the women on the squad knew that they had what it took
to win the meet. The roots of that confidence go back two years, when the
women won their first-ever indoor conference title. This team includes nine
athletes who were part of that earlier championship team.
“Two concepts I stressed with them were leadership and momentum,” he
said. “We had people that had been there before and knew how to get it done.
And we had momentum. I told the ladies going into this meet that if we could
go on a roll, momentum would be in their favor.”
The team won’t compete together in any more indoor meets, but Padgett,
whose top throw of 21.95 meters earlier this year was a personal best and a
school record, qualified for the NCAA Indoor Championships this weekend in
Albuquerque, NM.
For the rest of the athletes, their focus turns abruptly to outdoor
competition and the prospect of winning another conference title in just
over two months. That’s a tall order in a sport with three distinct seasons
and an abundance of moving pieces. But Kraft feels that after this recent
triumph, the team has the confidence to try for back-to-back trophies.
“Now we have a target on our back, and they want to do it again,” he
said. “They want to be able to say, ‘We can win it outdoors too.’”
The C-USA trophy didn’t just provide a boost to the women’s team; the
men are more determined than ever now to come out on top themselves. The
men’s team placed third in Birmingham, spurred by performances like Drew
Kanz’s overall win in the high jump. But they were disappointed because they
felt they left some points on the track and they were good enough to place
at least second, Kraft said.
Kraft was in a position faced by few
coaches — being in a room with one jubilant team and one downcast team that
were both under his leadership.
“They are very happy for the women, but
this shows them that they have to get better,” he said.
E-mail Bethany Bradsher
PAGE UPDATED
03/13/14 03:44 AM.
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