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Cross Country 101

For the rookies out there, we thought it might be nice to dedicate a section of the newsletter to the race day basics of XC. Were you at the Bronco Round-up wondering what a singlet is? Then this section is for you!


Definitions:

Bib - a piece of paper safety-pinned to a runner's singlet; it has a unique number assigned to that runner.


Chip - an electronic device laced into a runner's shoes that tracks a runner's place and time; very important to return to a coach in a timely manner as we get fined for missing chips.


Chute - a roped or flagged-off funnel immediately following the finish line that herds runners into a single file line in finishing order.


PR/PB - personal record/best; a runner's fastest time for a specific distance and/or course.


Singlet - the upper piece of a runner's uniform, typically made of a lightweight fabric in the style of a tank top.


Team Boxes - sprayed or chalked boxes at the starting line within which teams must stay.


Now that you know the most important terms, let's look at how teams are scored.


Scoring:

The lowest score wins in cross country. The top five runners for each team score for their team. Points are based on place. For instance, a runner who places 7th overall earns 7 points for the team. A perfect score is 15 (1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5).


Does this mean that runners that don't finish in the top five don't count? NO WAY! Each time runners pass an opponent, it potentially adds a point to the other team's score. It's called displacing. This is a team sport, so runners should pass every last person they can for the team!



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