Chandy sizzles
- Share via
Chris Yemma
Zach Chandy was calm, collected and as cool as he could be in the
blazing heat prior to running his main event Saturday.
Last year’s trip to the CIF Southern Section track and field
divisional finals provided him the experience he needed gain an edge
this time around at Cerritos College.
“I was a little over focused last year,” he said.
Not this year.
The Sage Hill School junior officially became the Division IV 200-
and 400-meter champion after clocking blistering personal bests in
both to qualify for Friday’s Masters meet at the same venue.
“I was sitting in the shade blocking everything out [before the
400],” said Chandy, Division IV’s runner-up in both events last
season as a sophomore. “I was focused, but I wasn’t getting too into
it.”
His new pre-race philosophy prevailed, helping him post a division
record and the third-fastest time of the day in the 400 in 47.74
seconds, behind Long Beach Poly’s Bryshon Nellum (47.28) and La
Sierra’s Ennis Jones (47.60), both of other divisions.
Chandy’s rise this season has been timed to near perfection, with
his times steadily decreasing and his best times coming at the CIF
finals. His goal entering the race was to break 48 seconds, something
he had never done before. At the Orange County championships earlier
this year, he came close, clocking 48.10 for first.
“I always like to compare his times with where he was a year ago,”
Sage Coach Nate Miller said. “And he’s gotten better and better, from
the beginning, to [the Arcadia invitational] to the [county
championships].”
And now to the CIF championships.
“I didn’t actually think I would win both,” said Chandy, whose
time of 21.49 in the event qualified him in fifth for the Masters. “I
was a little bit surprised about the 200. When I got ahead of them in
the first 100 I was pretty excited, so the last 100 I just tried to
keep with it.”
* Newport Harbor teammates Bo Taylor, a junior, and senior Trevor
Theriot paced the Sailors with a 3-4 finish in the Division II shot
put to qualify for the Masters meet.
Taylor, entering with the top preliminary mark in both the shot
and discus, tossed 58 feet, 1 1/4 inches in the shot put to finish
third. Theriot, who had an eighth-seed preliminary qualification
mark, threw 55-9 to move up to fourth.
Taylor threw 171-1 in the discus, off his qualifying mark and
personal-best 179-4, to finish fourth and barely miss the Masters.
“I was hoping for more man,” Taylor said. “I’ve been throwing like
180 all week, so that’s what I was hoping for.”
* Estancia junior Ernesto Castaneda finished fourth in the
Division III 800 in 1:56.96, a personal record, while Eagles’ senior
Bryce McKendry finished seventh in the long jump (21-3).
“The first lap was faster than what I’m used to,” he said. “They
were going so fast, I almost had to kill myself to pass one of them.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.