A top ten result for the first girl home and a new record for the fastest TAS student were highlights of Sunday’s City2Surf fun run in Sydney for the 272 strong team from The Armidale School.
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The largest school team in the world’s largest fun run by a country mile, the northern students certainly made their presence felt along the 14km route.
First home for TAS was Samuel Jones of Gunnedah in 56:12, knocking more than 30 seconds off the previous record for a TAS runner and improving his time of last year by more than four minutes.
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Maintaining an average pace of four minutes for each of the 14km and finishing in the top one per cent, Samuel, in Year 10, was 38th of 1, 217 in the male 16-19 category, and 671st overall of more than 67,000 finishers.
“I was hoping to make it in 58 or 59 so to come out with that was pretty cool. I tried to push it up Heartbreak Hill as hard as I could, then paced myself to save a bit for the end,” said Sam.
“When I past a clock that just ticked the hour since the start of the first runners, I just went for it.”
Not far behind was Emerson Browning in 57:33, 14th home of the 1136 males aged 13-15 years. In a stunning race, Disa Smart, the first girl finisher for TAS in 1:00:35, was ninth of 1134 girls in the female 16-19 category, an improvement of three places from last year.
The next TAS girls, Katie Allen and Bronte Garcia, both finished in 1:27:53.
“Because I was in a faster start group I wasn’t having to weave and dodge as much as the start – it also wasn’t as hot as last year so made for betting running conditions,” Disa said.
“I’m really happy with my time but having gone so close to the hour I would have loved to have gained an extra 35 seconds somewhere, but overall I was really pleased.”
The bulk of the TAS team finished inside 1:45:00.
“Almost half of TAS students from Years 6-11 entered, and that huge interest in being part of something that is so much bigger than just themselves says something about their courage and willingness to pursue a personal challenge,” TAS organiser Jim Pennington said.
“It’s a great credit to them that a school from 600km away from the city, can end up fielding one of the largest teams in a world-recognised event.”