2011 Zion Benton Preseason Book

Page 1

Zion Benton Men’s Cross Country 2011 official preseason book


ZBXC Captains 2011

Head
Captains
–
Tim
Athans
and
Trevor
DuBois
 Assistant
Captains
–
Philip
Meyer
and
Eric
Miller

Job
Description:
 1) Captains
are
lead
members
of
the
team
who
demonstrate
the
ethics
and
responsibility
of
a
 model
ZBXC
athlete.

 2) Captains
assist
in
recruitment
of
incoming
freshmen
by
signing
up
athletes,
encouraging
 others
to
join,
and
providing
new
members
assistance
in
getting
to
practice.


 3) Lead
team
in
all
stretches
and
workouts
(not
necessarily
by
being
first
in
a
workout),
by
 ensuring
that
everyone
does
what
is
expected.

 4) Provide
rides
to
team
members
when
necessary.

 5) Seek
to
make
all
members
of
the
team
feel
included.


 
 Good
captains
are
more
interested
in
building
a
great
TEAM
rather
than
drawing
attention
to
 themselves.

 
 Leaders
exhibit
intense
commitment
to
doing
what
matters
most
for
their
TEAM,
regardless
of
 difficulties.

 
 When
things
go
wrong,
leaders
look
inward
as
opposed
to
ascribing
blame
to
external
forces.

 
 Leaders
are:
 1) Respectful
–Leaders
support
all
team
members
by
acknowledging
their
unique
strengths
and
 weaknesses.

 2) Humble
–
Leaders
lead
by
example
but
are
not
cocky
and
arrogant.
Leaders
must
never
ask
 anyone
to
do
anything
that
they
aren’t
doing
themselves.

 3) Responsible
–
Leaders
follow
through
on
promises.
They
are
dependable
and
reliable.

 4) Trustworthy
–
Leaders
are
men
of
integrity.
They
keep
team
affairs
within
the
team.
They
 don’t
gossip
or
slander
other
members
of
the
team.

 5) Communicators
–
Leaders
explain
their
decisions
and
garner
consensus
for
their
actions.

 
 
 ****
Past
ZBXC
Captains
****
 
 2007
‐
Victor
Reyes
 2008
‐
Austin
Sears
 2009
‐
Keith
Hamilton,
Travis
Sims
 2010
‐
Christian
Gordon,
Noel
Gonzalez
 2011
‐
Tim
Athans,
Trevor
DuBois


2011 Mission - To the top of the mountain!

This season, our team mantra will be “TO THE TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN!” As we all know, a cross country season is challenging and also incredibly rewarding. Currently, we are at the base of the mountain. Let’s engage in a climb TOGETHER and work towards that peak! We will put 100% into EVERYTHING we do. From stretches, to meetings, to workouts, and nutrition. If a mountain climber was always worried about whether or not they would reach the peak or EVER looked down at how far they had come, they would NEVER make it! A good climber knows that they are only as good as the members of their expedition. If one climber falters, the entire group is at risk. Climbers have to give their full attention to the next move and the next action. If we can get a group of like minded individuals to operate as a unit, we are on our way! Let’s climb to the peak together! TEAM glory is far sweeter than any individual accolades! Let’s do this!


Sectionals

“Success is uncommon. Therefore, not to be enjoyed by the

S

common man. I’m looking for uncommon men.” - Cal Stoll, University of Minnesota Football coach 1972 - 1978 This season we are embarking on our most strenuous, challenging, and rewarding adventure yet! We will persevere through hardships. We will experience joys more precious than anything in the world. Ultimately, we will grow as we’ve never grown before. Join us in the journey! Welcome to the 2011 Cross Country campaign! You have made one of the best decisions you will ever make in deciding to do Cross Country. In order to be the best in October, though, we must begin training in June. Distance training requires months of committed dedication. The picture above is of Busse Woods in Schaumburg, IL. It is the site of our IHSA Sectional Cross Country meet. We have NEVER qualified a team to IHSA Sectionals! Until NOW! :) Let’s approach the coming season with the intention to make history. Our summer program of training will commence on June 1st and run through September 1st. I have mileage goals for each of you. For our incoming freshmen and first year runners - we will run 300 miles this summer. I realize how far this seems, especially to those of you who are new to running. Here’s what I can guarantee to you, though, if you complete this task. 1) A free t-shirt :) 2) Increased endurance and speed, 3) New Friends, 4) A tan. :) Cross Country is a unique sport in that you can make a Varsity level impact during your Freshman year if you put in the time and effort. Help make this the best Cross Country team Zion Benton has ever had! Veterans - Run 700 - 1000 miles this summer. Those of you who have run for more than one year are up to this challenge. To maintain injury free training, we will be incorporating some hill and grass running to develop total lower leg strength. We will also be utilizing weight training to further evolve as total athletes. If you are ready to lead our team, we can go as far as you can imagine! Let’s take ZBXC to the next level this year! I have three questions for you, as we begin this season. If we can all answer yes to each one, we will have something very special. 1) Are you committed to excellence? Because I’m committed to excellence. 2) Can I trust you? Because you can trust me. 3) Do you care about me? Because I LOVE you. Sincerely, Coach McPherson


Mileage Men 2011 Varsity Mileage Goal - 700 Miles Freshmen and New Runners Goal - 300 Miles Summer training lays the foundation for a successful cross country season. To be a top runner, distance running requires 365 days per year commitment. Consistency is vital to perform at your peak level. This summer, we are going to train consistently and we are going to enjoy ourselves while doing it! Last summer, our team had Noel Gonzalez at 700+ miles, Trevor DuBois, Tim Athans, Christian Gordon, Philip Meyer, and Eric Miller at 500+ miles, and a plethora of guys at 300+. This summer, in order to take our team to the next level, we must take our training to the next level. I am challenging all returning runners to shoot for at least 700 miles this summer and a select few to shoot for over 1000 miles. TLast summer, Lake Zurich had 14 boys over 400 miles with 9 over 690 miles. This dedication resulted in a second place finish at state. Of those 14, 6 were Sophomores. You don’t have to be an upperclassman to shoot for high mileage! Let’s ATTACK this summer! The two most important principles this summer are: Consistency and Health. Let’s maintain each of these traits as we SEEK GREATNESS this summer! It is no longer OK to be mediocre, we are shooting for EXCELLENCE!


Training Log Summer 2011 Please log all of your mileage for the summer on this calendar. This will be your record keeping for the mileage clubs. There will be shirts for both mileage clubs! June 1st - September 1st. You will submit them on September 1st. New Runners - 300 Miles Varsity Mileage Club - 700 Miles ~ June 2011 ~

◄ May

Sun

Mon

Tue

July ►

Wed

1

Thu

Fri

Sat

2

3

4

First Day of Summer Training

5

6 7 First day of Endurance Camp - 7am

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

Notes:

Oshkosh

Oshkosh

Oshkosh

Oshkosh


Training Log Summer 2011 ~ July 2011 ~

◄ June

Sun

Mon

Tue

August ►

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30 Bee Linked 5k

31

Notes:


Training Log Summer 2011

~ August 2011 ~

◄ July

Sun

Mon

Tue

Wed

September ►

Thu

Fri

Sat

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20 Pre Season Time Trial

21

22

23

24

25

28

29

30

31

Notes:

26

27


Second Annual Oshkosh Trip 2011 From June 26th - June 29th, we will be taking our second annual trip to the University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh! The top 10 Boys and top 10 Girls will be invited to attend this incredible experience. This trip is one of the most important things we do all summer, because it solidifies the dynamics on our team and gives us an opportunity to train hard and have an absolute blast! The cost for the trip is $50 and this fee includes transportation to Oshkosh, lodging for three nights, and all meals provided by the university cafeteria. We will give you more information on this trip as it approaches. BUT! If you want to be there, make sure you train hard during the first month of the season and get in that top 10!!!


Zion-Benton Cross Country 2011 Welcome
to
ZBXC
2011!

Congratulations
on
making
the
choice
to
be
part
of
special
group
of
committed
student‐ athletes.

In
order
to
have
a
successful
season,
please
read
and
understand
this
important
team
document.
 Team Rules: 1. Choose
to
be
on
time
and
prepared
for
school,
class,
practice
and
meets…every
single
day—please
take
care
 of
you
class
work
and
ask
for
help
if
necessary.
Missing
school,
a
class,
practices
or
meets
will
result
in
missing
 future
competitions
or
being
removed
from
the
team.
Stay
off
the
eligibility
list
because
study
sessions
must
 be
completed
before
school.
 2. Choose
to
be
a
good
person,
student
and
teammate—get
caught
doing
the
right
thing:

be
respectful
to
your
 peers,
teachers,
coaches
and
competitors,
even
if
no
one
is
watching.

Absolutely
no
drinking,
smoking,
or
 using
drugs,
and
no
using
electronic
devices
in
an
improper
way

(inappropriate
texts,
pictures
on
Facebook,
 etc.).

Feel
free
to
use
your
coaches
as
an
excuse
to
avoid
these
problems.
 3. Choose
to
make
a
commitment
to
yourself
and
your
team
to
be
the
best
runner
you
can
be—prioritize
so
 that
you
can
give
your
all
at
practice
and
meets.

Set
high
expectations
for
yourself
and
your
teammates.
 4. Choose
“Safety
First!”—run
in
groups,
use
sidewalks
when
possible,
run
facing
traffic,
and
look
out
for
your
 teammates
so
that
we
can
continue
to
go
off
campus
for
practice.
 General Information about the team: 1. Practices
  We
practice
after
school,
Monday‐Friday
from
3:00‐5:15
pm,
rain
or
shine.


  There
will
be
some
Saturday
practices—TBA
  On
School
Improvement
Days
(12:40—Wednesdays),
we
will
practice
at
3:00.
  On
shortened
days
(12:51
or
1:51—usually
Thursdays
and
Fridays),
we
will
practice
right
after
school.
  If
you
have
a
valid
reason
to
miss
practice,
it
is
your
responsibility
to
communicate
that
to
your
coach
 prior
to
the
absence.

2. Conditioning
&
Health
  You
must
be
able
to
run
three
miles
without
stopping
before
you
can
race.
  You
need
to
get
plenty
of
sleep
each
night,
especially
two
days
before
races.
  You
need
to
eat
early
and
often.

Be
sure
to
hit
all
of
the
food
groups
daily.
 o Try
to
make
your
plate
as
colorful
as
possible

 o Runners
need
at
least
2500‐3500
calories
a
day
(you
will
burn
over
800
in
an
easy
practice)
 o Drink
plenty
of
water
throughout
the
day
and
bring
a
water
bottle
to
practice
 o Bring
a
good
snack
for
immediately
after
practice
to
help
your
recovery
  protein
and
carbs:

PB&J,
nutrition
bars,
chocolate
milk,
etc.
 3. Gear
  Good
running
shoes
can
help
prevent
injury
and
should
last
one
season
(300‐500
miles)
 o Pick
a
comfortable
training
shoe—not
a
cute
shoe!
 o Runners
Edge
in
Libertyville
offers
specialized
fittings
for
your
foot/running
style
 o Rogan’s
offers
a
wide
variety
of
shoes
if
you
already
know
what
you
are
looking
for
  Each
of
these
stores
will
give
a
team
discount—ask!
  Spikes
are
for
racing
only
and
are
optional
(but
helpful)
 o A
good
pair
of
spikes
can
last
all
through
high
school
if
your
foot
does
not
grow
 o Be
sure
to
purchase
distance
or
XC
spikes
(more
cushion
than
sprinting/jumping
spikes)
  Good
socks
can
prevent
blisters
and
protect
feet
 o Avoid
cotton!

Look
for
“moisture
wicking”
technology


o Look
for
sales—most
brands
offer
the
same
protection
 ü Lock
your
belongings
EVERY
DAY
in
the
locker
room.

There
have
been
some
significant
theft
issues
 recently,
so
please
protect
your
gear.

4.

Meets
and
Invitationals
 ü There’s
no
bench
in
Cross
Country,
so
everyone
competes
in
and
attends
all
meets
on
the
schedule.
 ü Home
meets
are
at
Van
Patten
Woods
on
173
and
41—Shelter
B.

 o Weekday
races
start
around
4:45;
Saturday
races
start
around
8:00
am.

 ü Saturday
Invitationals
are
longer
meets
where
athletes
compete
in
different
class
races.


 o Ask
your
runner
what
time
s/he
will
compete.
 ü Only
IHSA‐sanctioned
meets
(races
on
our
team
schedule)
are
permitted
during
the
season
 o No
road
races,
etc—it
can
jeopardize
your
eligibility
for
the
season.
 ü Check
in
the
Athletic
Handbook
or
our
team
websites
for
directions
to
meets.

 ü Athletes
must
ride
the
bus
to
and
from
meets.

If
you
absolutely
must
take
an
athlete
home
by
car,
you
 must
have
a
signed
letter
from
the
Athletic
Director
in
advance.
 ü Bring
the
following
to
meets:

uniform,
shoes,
spikes,
extra
clothes,
healthy
snacks
and
water
or
 Gatorade,
homework.

Be
careful
about
bringing
valuables!
 ü Once
you
are
at
the
meet,
turn
your
cell
phone
OFF,
and
be
in
the
moment.

Mentally
prepare
for
your
 competition,
cheer
for
your
teammates,
and
observe
the
races
with
a
keen
eye—you
can
become
a
 better
runner
by
watching
others!

5.

Uniforms

  You
will
be
issued
a
singlet,
shorts
and
a
warm‐up;
you
must
return
them
at
the
conclusion
of
the
season
 or
risk
paying
a
fine.
  You
are
expected
to
wear
ZB
Gear
to
all
competitions—let’s
look
like
a
team!
  In
case
of
cold
conditions,
you
are
permitted
to
wear
a
solid
colored
“base
layer”
under
your
uniform.


 o It
cannot
have
any
writing,
and
the
team
must
all
wear
the
same
color.
  Please
take
good
care
of
these
items
throughout
the
season
(soap!)
 
 6.

Letters
and
Scoring
  Varsity
consists
of
the
top
seven
individuals
who
are
committed
to
the
team
goals.
  In
a
race,
the
first
five
finishers
for
the
team
count
in
the
team
scoring.

Their
individual
places
are
added
 up
to
create
the
team
score
(lowest
score
wins).

The
sixth
and
seventh
runners
are
“pushers;”
they
can
 “push
up”
the
score
of
another
team
should
they
finish
ahead
of
a
top
five
runner
from
another
school.

 
 Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions or concerns. Let’s have a great season! Coach Jay Bee Davis davisja@zbths.org (847) 731-9401

Coach Chris Di Grazia digrazic@zbths.org (847) 731-9371

Coach Nate McPherson mcphersn@ntzb.org (224) 558-9865

For more information, check us out on the web: www.zbxc.org and http://web.me.com/christinedigrazia/www.zbdc.org/Home.html


ZION
BENTON
CROSS
COUNTRY
‐
MOTIVATIONS
FOR
LIFE

1. We
don’t
want
excuses,
we
want
results
 2. Nothing
is
successful
until
it
is
accomplished.
 3. Loyalty
–
if
you
work
for
a
man,
in
heaven’s
name,
work
for
him,
speak
well
of
him
and
stand
by
 the
institution
he
represents.
 4. It
is
so
easy
for
all
of
us
to
more
or
less
justify
our
own
inefficiencies
by
criticizing
others.
 5. The
first
characteristic
a
boy
must
have
is
a
tremendous
desire
to
excel.
He
must
have
the
belief
 and
desire
to
do
something
better
than
anyone
else
–
to
be
the
best
who
ever
lived.
 6. It
is
very
easy
to
be
ordinary,
but
it
takes
courage
to
excel,
and
we
must
excel.
 7. Nothing
great
was
ever
achieved
without
enthusiasm.
 8. A
winner
never
quits
and
a
quitter
never
wins.
 9. He
who
knows
and
knows
he
knows,
is
wise
–
follow
him.
 10. It
is
better
to
wear
out
than
rust
out.

 11. Genius
is
one
percent
inspiration
and
ninety
nice
percent
perspiration.

 12. Give
me
a
team
of
men
who
hate
to
lose,
and
I’ll
give
you
a
winner.

 13. Associate
yourself
with
men
of
good
quality
if
you
esteem
your
own
reputation;
for
it
is
better
to
 be
alone
than
in
bad
company.

 14. Have
ideals
and
live
them.
 15. Many
narrow‐chested,
spindly‐legged
runners
who
are
built
of
wire
and
possess
real
fire
are
 greater
runners
than
the
perfect
physical
specimens.
 16. Strong
men
criticize
themselves.
 17. When
you’re
through
improving,
you’re
through.

 18. A
good
competitor
never
underestimates
his
opponent.

 19. There
is
no
defense
for
the
unexpected.

 20. A
runner
may
be
more
clever
than
one,
but
no
more
clever
than
all.
 21. The
cheers
of
athletic
contests
soon
pass
away,
but
sincere
friendships
live
forever.
 22. Knowledge
makes
for
confidence.

 23. If
you
did
your
best,
then
you
won.
 24. The
team
that
won’t
be
beaten
can’t
be
beaten.
 25. Persistent
people
begin
and
succeed
where
others
fail.
 26. Give
the
game
the
best
you
have
and
the
best
will
come
back
to
you.
 27. Think.
 28. Mediocrity
is
excellence
to
the
mediocre.
 29. The
right
angle
to
approach
any
problem
is
the
try‐angle.
 30. We
are
never
so
good
or
so
bad
as
we
imagine.
 31. The
boy
who
never
is
criticized
is
the
one
who
should
worry.
 32. Anything
green
grows;
even
athletes.

 33. What
you
eat
today
runs,
hits
and
throws
tomorrow.
 34. No
price
is
too
high
to
pay
for
a
good
reputation.
 35. Nature
gives
us
talent
but
it
is
for
man
to
make
it
work.

 36. If
it
is
worth
doing
at
all,
it
is
worth
doing
well.
 37. Hard
work
can
be
fun.
 38. Sleep
is
a
priceless
treasure.
 39. A
job
poorly
done
stands
as
a
witness
against
the
man
who
did
it.
 40. Doing
a
thing
nearly
right
and
doing
it
exactly
right
is
usually
the
difference
between
success
and
 failure.
 41. Sow
early
and
you
will
reap
early.
 42. A
team
is
only
as
strong
as
its
weakest
runner.
 43. You
don’t
put
morale
on
like
a
coat.
You
build
it
day
by
day.
 44. Fight
fairly
but
furiously.
 45. We
will
for
Zion
Benton
High
School.
 46. Don’t
tell
me
how
good
you
are
–
let
me
find
out.


46. 47. 48.

Don’t
tell
me
how
good
you
are
–
let
me
find
out.
 When
a
boy
does
make
a
mistake
he
should
feel
it
is
a
kind
of
a
tragedy.
 A
fellow
teammate
may
be
faster
than
you.
He
may
have
more
skill,
and
he
might
be
stronger
and
 have
more
endurance;
but
he
should
not
be
your
superior
in
team
spirit,
fight,
determination,
 ambition,
and
character.

 49. Keep
on
your
toes
and
you
won’t
get
caught
flat‐footed.
 50. If
what
you
did
yesterday
still
looks
big
to
you
today,
then
you
haven’t
done
much
today.
 51. It
is
not
so
much
what
we
know
as
how
well
we
use
what
we
know.
 52. The
infinitely
little
have
a
pride
infinitely
great.
 53. It
requires
a
strong
constitution
to
withstand
repeated
attacks
of
prosperity.

 54. I
believe
the
first
test
of
a
truly
great
man
is
his
humility.
 55. I
desire
to
conduct
the
affairs
of
this
administration
so
that
if
at
the
end,
when
I
come
to
lay
down
 the
reins
of
power,
I
have
lost
every
other
friend
on
earth,
I
shall
at
least
have
one
friend
left,
and
 that
friend
shall
be
down
inside
of
me.

 56. Monuments!
What
are
they?
The
very
pyramids
have
forgotten
their
builders,
or
to
whom
they
 were
dedicated.
Deeds,
not
stones,
are
the
true
monuments
of
the
great.
 57. It
is
defeat
that
turns
bones
to
flint,
it
is
defeat
that
turns
muscle
to
gristle,
it
is
defeat
that
makes
 men
invincible.
 58. No
personal
consideration
should
stand
in
the
way
of
performing
your
duty.

 59. Imitation
is
the
sincerest
form
of
flattery.
 60. Luck
is
when
preparation
meats
opportunity.
 61. The
greatest
honor
this
nation
can
bestow
upon
the
“unknown
hero”
would
be
to
live
for
the
things
 for
which
he
died.
 62. When
you
get
kicked
from
the
rear,
it
means
you
are
in
front.
 63. When
a
man
feels
that
the
world
owes
him
a
living,
he
is
usually
too
lazy
to
collect
it.

 64. When
you
call
on
a
thoroughbred,
he
gives
you
all
the
speed,
heart
and
sinew
in
him.
When
you
call
 on
a
jackass,
he
kicks.
 65. The
team
that
makes
the
fewer
mistakes
wins.

 66. If
a
break
goes
against
you,
turn
on
the
steam.
 67. “Fight
on,
my
men,”
Sir
Andrews
says,
“A
little
I’m
hurt,
but
yet
not
slaine;
I’ll
but
lye
downe
and
 bleede
awhile,
and
then
I’ll
raise
and
fight
againe.”
–Sir
Andrew
Barton
 68. Winning
is
not
everything,
but
it
sure
beats
anything
that
comes
in
second.
 69. You
can
soon
determine
the
caliber
of
a
man
by
ascertaining
the
amount
of
opposition
it
takes
to
 discourage
him.
 70. The
rest
of
your
days
depend
on
the
rest
of
your
nights.
 71. The
harder
I
work,
the
luckier
I
get.
  A
moral
victory
is
like
kissing
your
sister.
 73. If
better
is
even
possible,
good
is
not
enough.
 74. Success
is
the
result
of
hard
work
and
honest
effort.
 75. Be
a
champion
in
practice,
that’s
where
champions
are
made.
 76. The
All‐American
and
All‐State
runner
is
the
one
who
can
run
until
he
is
dead
tired,
then
he
can
 run
some
more.
 77. Don’t
save
yourself
–
we
have
capable
boys
to
replace
you.
 78. It’s
a
funny
thing
that
the
“wise
guys”
always
seem
to
be
working
for
the
“dumb
guys”.
 79. Don’t
count
the
days
–
make
the
days
count.
 80. When
you
are
behind,
don’t
give
up;
when
you
are
ahead,
don’t
let
up.
 81. A
house
divided
will
fall,
let’s
all
pull
together.
 82. The
daily
degree
of
recovery
from
injury
depends
a
lot
on
the
fierce
desire
of
the
individual
to
fight
 on
and
get
well.
 83. You
get
out
of
any
sport
what
you
put
into
it.
 84. Give
100%
all
of
the
time.


85. It
is
better
to
have
fought
and
lost
than
to
never
have
fought
at
all.
 86. Run
hard,
run
tough,
run
rough,
but
run
clean.
 87. Success
is
measure
in
what
the
team
accomplished,
not
how
you
look.

 88. The
day
of
the
meet
is
the
day
to
make
good.
The
day
after
is
too
late.

 89. We
must
taste
our
own
words
as
they
go
out,
as
taste
food
that
goes
in.
 90. There
are
only
three
things
in
life
that
you
can
NEVER
get
back
–
Opportunities,
spoken
words,
and
time.
 91. Think
like
men
of
action
–
act
like
men
of
thought.
 92. Go
into
a
meet
believing
you
are
going
to
do
your
best
–
then
do
it.
 93. Champions
are
MADE
–
not
born!
 94. There
isn’t
any
substitute
for
a
boy
who
will
practice.
 95. Don’t
get
beat
–
it’s
an
awful
feeling.
 96. Defeat
is
your
punishment.

 97. Take
an
interest
in
your
teammates,
they
will
take
an
interest
in
you.

 98. The
more
honor
and
respect
among
runners,
the
greater
the
team.

 99. The
best
runners
help
others;
be
best
runners.

 100. Leadership
is
accepting
responsibility.
 101. Why
gripe?
FIGHT!
 102. If
you
don’t
run
to
win,
why
keep
running?
 103. Don’t
let
failure
get
you
down.
Babe
Ruth
struck
out
1300
times.
 104. Opponents
will
come
nearer
doing
their
worst
if
you
are
doing
your
best.
 105. In
union
there
is
strength.
 106. Were
you
meant
to
be
a
champion?
Then
WORK.
 107. Enter
the
meet
a
gentleman
and
leave
the
same
way.
 108. Fight
every
second
of
every
minute
of
every
race.
 109. Run
your
own
best
race,
don’t
defeat
yourself.
 110. Set
your
goals
high.
If
you
aim
for
the
gutter
that’s
where
you’ll
end
up.
 111. You
make
your
own
breaks
by
being
alert
to
opponent’s
mistakes.
 112. Obey
training
rules
for
condition,
race
rules
for
honor
and
respect.
 113. Concentrate
on
what
you’re
doing
–
then
you
won’t
have
time
to
tense
up
and
worry.
 114. Confidence,
like
disease,
is
contagious.
 115. Act
like
a
heel
toward
teammates
and
you’ll
get
walked
on.
 116. Every
boy
has
more
talent
than
he
will
ever
develop.
 117. Can
you
travel
at
top
speed
at
the
close
of
the
race?
 118. Leaders
are
ordinary
people
–
with
extraordinary
determination
 119. Hustle
is
the
only
indispensible
quality
of
a
champion.
 120. Losing
can
be
habit
forming
–
let’s
not
get
into
the
habit.
 121. The
real
test
of
a
runner
comes
when
things
don’t
go
to
suit
him.
 122. Cross
Country
is
no
fun
when
you
lose
–
run
to
win.
 123. There
is
no
secret
to
success
–
it’s
just
DIG,
DIG,
DIG.
 124. Your
opponent
may
not
be
speedy,
but
he
went
by
you
when
you
were
asleep.
 125. It’s
the
size
of
the
fight
in
the
man,
not
the
size
of
the
man
in
the
fight
 126. Behind
all
upsets
–
a
great
desire
to
win.
 127. An
optimist:
“
A
man
fell
from
a
hotel
roof,
and
from
each
window
bar
he
shouted
to
his
friends
above,
 ‘I’m
doing
alright
so
far.”
 128. Egotism
is
an
anesthetic
provided
by
nature
to
relieve
the
pain
of
being
a
fool.
 129. A
person’s
real
size
is
determined
by
the
size
of
the
thing
it
takes
to
get
his
goat.
 130. One
good
idea
put
into
action
is
worth
a
volume
stored
away
in
daydreams.
 131. Courtesy
is
a
habit
with
real
sportsmen.
 132. What
is
an
ideal
without
a
life?
What
is
a
life
without
an
ideal?
 133. If
you
would
be
a
great
runner,
you
must
live
in
a
cross
country
climate.



CHAPTER 15: SELFLESS - Suggested Reading by Christian Gordon - Class of 2011 - Captain ZBXC There Is No I in Team This chapter begins with the story of an amazing man named Philip Toosey, who joined the British Territorial Army in 1927 because he wanted to develop aspects of himself other than his career in banking and commodities trading. In 1939, when war broke out in Europe, now Major Toosey and his unit were called to active service, fighting first in France, then fight to defend Singapore from the Japanese. When it was obvious that the British would have to surrender Singapore, he was ordered to leave his men and ship out, so that his expertise could be used elsewhere. Toosey, as a Territorial rather than a regular army officer, was allowed to refuse on that ground. He knew that leaving his men would have a demoralizing effect on them, and he chose to stay with them. In 1942, he became a Japanese prisoner, alone with the rest of his men. They were assigned to a POW camp near the Kwae River. There he was given an assignment by the Japanese to build first a wooden and then steel and concrete bridges across the river. Although he wanted to refuse the assignment, Toosey knew that the reprisals would be "immediate, physical, and severe." Facing this terrible reality, he chose to ask his fellow prisoners to do as their captors asked. But Toosey "risked his life daily by standing up for his men and arguing for increased rations, regular working house, and a day off each week." In taking responsibility as he did, though, he suffered regular beatings, and other tortures, yet he caused the Japanese to improve conditions for the prisoners. In ten months, the Japanese had their bridges, and only nine prisoners lost their lives in the process. Later, as the commander of a POW camp hospital, Toosey showed the same courage and selflessness in serving the men in his care. The men were always his first concern, and he took responsibility for infractions whenever possible. When the war ended, he traveled over three hundred miles to find the scattered men of his regiment and to determine that they were safe. After a three weeks vacation, he resumed his prewar work at the merchant bank Barings. Fleshing It Out Poet W. H. Auden said, "We're here on earth to do good for others. What the others are here for, I don't know." Putting others ahead of ourselves isn't easy, but it is the way to progress. 1. Be Generous St. Francis of Assissi stated, "All getting separates you from others, all giving unites to others." Maxwell says, "The heart of selflessness is generosity." A team whose members act by these rules will succeed. 2. Display Loyalty Just as Colonel Toosey was loyal to his men, they repaid him in kind. Loyalty not only fosters loyalty, it fosters unity, and unity breeds team success. 3. Value Interdependence Over Independence In this country, we tend to value independence because it often brings with it innovation, diligence, and a sense of justice. But too much independence can result in selfishness and self-centeredness. Reflecting On It What kind of team player are you? Do you put others ahead of yourself? Do you celebrate the success of others when they are in the limelight? If you are bumped off the starting line-up, how do handle it? Bringing It Home Promote someone other than yourself. If you are in the habit of often talking about your own


Bringing It Home Promote someone other than yourself. If you are in the habit of often talking about your own successes, turn that praises on someone else for a few weeks. Practice saying positive things about the actions and qualities of other, especially to your superiors, family and close friends. Take a subordinate role. For a day, be the servant. Let others go first. Be the one who serves for a week and see if your attitude changes. Give secretly. Think about why you give to others. "If you give to others on your team without their knowing it, they cannot repay you." This may be a radical idea for some, but everyone should try it just to see how good it feels. Daily Take-Away The chapter ends with a sad and funny story about a football massacre back in 1916. Near the end of the game the ball was snapped, but the quarterback fumbled it and he cried out to the others, "Pick it up! Pick it up!" The fullback, tired of being slammed to the ground by the opponents, yelled back to the quarterback, "Pick it up yourself - you dropped it." That team lost the 222 to 0. To be on the winning team, look for opportunities to pick up the ball if someone fumbles . . . and quietly hand it back to them. Phyllis Rambin, School of the 21st Century Coordinator Cedar Ridge School District (Newark), Newark, AR --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The
Flight
of
the
Bumble
BEE!

According to the greatest minds of science, it cannot fly. Its wings aren't big enough. Aerodynamics says it is impossible. The biggest computers in the world all come to the same conclusion, it can't fly. But what does the bumblebee do? It ignores the great minds, the skeptics, the computers... and it just goes ahead and flies!!!!

GO
BEES!!!!!!


The Star Thrower  There was a man who was walking along a sandy beach where thousands of starfish had been washed up on the shore. He noticed a boy picking the starfish one by one and throwing them back into the ocean. The man observed the boy for a few minutes and then asked what he was doing. The boy replied that he was returning the starfish to the sea, otherwise they would die. The man asked how saving a few, when so many were doomed, would make any difference whatsoever? The boy picked up a starfish and threw it back into the ocean and said "Made a difference to that one..." The man left the boy and went home, deep in thought of what the boy had said. He soon returned to the beach and spent the rest of the day helping the boy throw starfish in to the sea.... Who will YOU make a difference for today? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Your ATTITUDE creates your REALITY! Zion Benton Cross Country =

P M A

ositive

ental

ttitude



Words
to
Live
By!



­



Zion
Benton
Distance
Crew
 Adapted
from
a
list
created
by
Harry
Schneider
–
Centereach
High
School,
New
York
 1.Compliment
three
people
every
day.
 2.Watch
a
sunrise
at
least
once
a
year.
 3.Have
a
firm
handshake.
 4.Look
people
in
the
eye.
 5.Say
“Thank
You”
a
lot.
 6.Listen
to
your
favorite
music
all
alone
every
week.
 7.Sing
along
with
songs
that
you
like.
 8.Stand
at
attention
and
put
your
had
over
your
heart
when
singing
the
National
Anthem.
 9.Be
the
first
to
say
“hello”.
 10.Return
all
things
you
borrow.
 11.Treat
everyone
you
meet
like
you
want
to
be
treated.
 12.Keep
secrets.
 13.Never
give
up
on
anyone.
 14.Remember
that
miracles
happen
every
day.
 15.Show
respect
for
your
teachers,
the
police,
and
for
your
elders.
 16.Don’t
waste
time
learning
the
“tricks
of
the
trade”;
instead,
learn
the
trade.
 17.Control
your
temper.
 18.Put
the
cap
back
on
the
toothpaste.

 19.Take
out
the
garbage
without
being
told.
 20.Smile
a
lot.
Smile
at
one
person
at
least
once
each
hour
for
a
day.
 21.Take
responsibility
for
every
thing
that
you
do,
or
fail
to
do.
 22.Accept
a
compliment
with
a
simple
“thank
you”.
 23.Live
so
that
when
others
think
of
integrity,
fairness,
and
kindness,
they
think
of
you.
 24.Use
your
sense
of
humor
to
amuse,
not
abuse.
 25.Dot
your
“i’s”
and
cross
your
“t’s”.
 26.Be
brave;
even
if
you’re
not,
pretend
to
be,
because
no
one
can
tell
the
difference.
 27.Don’t
take
good
health
and
your
body
for
granted.
 28.Don’t
mess
with
drugs,
alcohol,
or
smoking;
enjoying
life
will
give
you
everything
the
drugs
could
 give
you.
 29.Avoid
sarcastic
remarks.
 30.Earn
trust,
and
learn
to
trust
 31.Refill
ice
cube
trays.
 32.Choose
your
friends
carefully;
you
will
influence
each
other
greatly.

 33.Make
it
a
habit
to
do
nice
things
for
people
who’ll
never
find
out.
 34.Don’t
miss
late.
 35.Think
big
thoughts,
but
relish
small
pleasures.
 36.Never
cheat.
 37.Learn
CPR.
 38.Learn
to
listen;
opportunity
sometimes
knocks
very
softly.
 39.Know
how
to
tie
a
tie.
 40.Remember
people’s
names.
 41.When
people
are
relating
an
important
even
that
happened
to
them,
don’t
try
to
top
them
with
a
 story
of
your
own;
let
them
have
the
stage.

 42.Be
on
time.
 43.Never
deprive
someone
of
hope;
it
might
be
all
they
have.
 44.Strive
for
excellence,
not
perfection.
 45.Avoid
negative
people.
 46.Be
neat.
 47.Realize
that
the
person
with
big
dreams
is
more
powerful
than
one
with
all
the
facts.
 48.Be
kinder
than
necessary.
 49.Give
people
a
second
chance,
but
not
a
third.
 50.Never
take
action
when
you’re
angry.


50. Never
take
action
when
you’re
angry.
 51. Battle
against
prejudice
or
discrimination
wherever
you
find
it.
 52. Let
people
know
what
you
stand
for,
and
what
you
won’t
stand
for.
 53. Ask
Why
 54. Measure
people
by
the
size
of
their
heart.
 55. Become
the
most
positive
and
enthusiastic
person
you
know.
 56. Have
good
posture.
 57. Enter
a
room
with
purpose
and
confidence.
 58. Don’t
forget,
a
person’s
greatest
emotional
need
is
to
feel
appreciated.
 59. Show
respect
for
all
living
things.
 60. Loosen
up,
relax.
 61. Commit
yourself
to
constant
self
improvement.
 62. Remember
that
being
a
good
loser
is
different
than
not
caring
about
losing.
 63. Don’t
major
in
minor
things.
 64. Praise
in
public,
criticize
in
private.
 65. When
someone
hugs
you,
let
him
or
her
be
the
first
to
let
go.
 66. Know
that
good
manners
matter.
 67. Keep
your
promises;
promise
and
deliver.
 68. Save
some
money
each
week.
 69. Recognize
that
you
only
have
one
chance
to
make
a
first
impression.
 70. Respect
tradition.
 71. Hang
out
with
people
smarter
than
yourself.
 72. Be
modest;
a
lot
was
accomplished
before
you
arrived.
 73. Lie
on
your
back
and
watch
the
clouds
or
the
stars.

 74. Remember
that
overnight
success
takes
about
three
years.
 75. Leave
everything
a
little
better
than
you
found
it.
 76. Think
of
what
you
would
change
in
yourself,
and
then
change
it.
 77. Realize
how
you
affect
others.
 78. Practice
empathy;
try
to
see
things
from
other
people’s
point
of
view.
 79. Never
criticize
others’
family.
 80. Don’t
say
you
don’t
have
enough
time;
you
have
exactly
the
same
number
of
hours
as
the
rest
of
us
do.
 81. Remember
that
winners
do
what
losers
don’t
want
to
do.
 82. Live
your
life
with
an
exclamation,
not
an
explanation.
 83. Live
so
that
when
you
look
back
on
your
life,
you’ll
regret
the
things
you
didn’t
do
more
than
those
you
 did.
 84. Never
waste
an
opportunity
to
tell
someone
you
love
them.
 85. Keep
a
dictionary
on
your
desk
at
home.
 86. Never
eat
the
last
cookie.
 87. Be
grateful
and
acknowledge
those
who
help
you.
 88. Take
charge
of
your
attitude.
Don’t
let
someone
else
choose
it
for
you.
 89. Pay
attention
to
details.
 90. Be
a
self‐starter.
 91. Pay
your
fair
share.
 92. Remain
curious
about
your
ability.
 93. Don’t
litter.
 94. Don’t
flaunt
your
success,
but
don’t
apologize
for
it
either.
 95. Don’t
procrastinate;
do
it
now.
 96. Waste
no
opportunities,
because
they
can
never
be
regained.

 97. Become
someone’s
hero.
 98. Remember
that
quitters
never
win
and
winners
never
quit.
 99. Believe
that
the
future
belongs
to
those
who
prepare
for
it.
 100. Assure
success
through
persistence
and
determination!


Zion Benton Cross Country ‘All Time Greats!’

***Notice the team avg. improvement year to year!***






-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Pre
–
Season
Time
Trial
at
Van
Patten
Woods
–
5k
 80
degrees
and
Sunny
 
 8/19/10


At Zion, we run for HONOR. We run for those who have run before us and those who will run after us. We are part of a TRADITION. Leave the ZBXC PROGRAM better than you found it.


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