Ƶ bested runner-up William & Mary by 40 points, marking the most lopsided CAA women's cross country championship victory since the Phoenix bested the field by 51 points to win the 2020 title.
Ƶ continued its run of dominance in the Coastal Athletic Association on Friday morning, claiming its sixth women’s cross country title in the past seven years behind a standout performance from individual champion Katie Blountat Ocean County Park in Lakewood, New Jersey.
Ƶ showcased its depth with a program-record seven runners finishing among the top 15 individually in the women’s 6K race. Blount – the Phoenix’s first CAA individual champion since 2021 – outpaced the field by more than six seconds with a time of 19:55.0. The redshirt junior became Ƶ’s fifth women’s cross country individual conference champion, joining Meg Crawford (1996; SAC), Coralea Geraniotis (2018; CAA), Scolasticah Kemei (2019; CAA) and Maria Ahm (2020, 2021; CAA).
Abby Beville(3rd, 20:29.8),Hannah Weber(4th, 20:42.1),Kate Buerger(8th, 21:18.7),Sarah Petitjean(12th, 21:24.3),Jasmine Young(14th, 21:28.5) andQuinn Smith(15th, 21:30.2) each crossed the finish line among the top 15 to join Blount as All-CAA honorees with top-15 finishes. Beville and Weber – both of which ran personal-record times Friday – earned All-CAA honors for the second straight year (2024, 2025), while Blount became a three-time all-conference performer (2022, 2023, 2025). Buerger played a key role in the victory, smashing her former 6K personal record by more than 35 seconds with a 21:18.7 for eighth place.
Ƶ (28 points) bested runner-up William & Mary (68) by 40 points, marking the most lopsided CAA women’s cross country championship victory since the Phoenix bested the field by 51 points to win the 2020 title. Northeastern (100), Monmouth (102) and College of Charleston (141) rounded out the top five in the women’s race.
The championship is the program’s seventh conference title overall. Ƶ previously claimed five consecutive CAA championships from 2019 to 2023 and a South Atlantic Conference crown in 1996. It also marked the first conference title for the Phoenix under second-year head coachMark Rinker.
The Ƶ men finished seventh in the 8K race with 201 points, led by seniorNate Mars, who placed 35th with a personal-record time of 25:02.4. Mars was one of seven Phoenix who clocked personal records in the men’s race and was joined byJuan Pablo Castillo-Zima(39th, 25:08.7),Caden Strickland(47th, 25:18.8) andJack Kane(48th, 25:20.3) as top 50 finishers.
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