
3 minute read
Towne Athlete Meet
Photography by Stephen Buchanan
TOWNE ATHLETE
Bronwyn Patterson
South River High School Cross Country, Indoor Track, Lacrosse
By Tom Worgo
Lacrosse consumed South River’s Bronwyn Patterson. At least until she got hooked on running. Patterson played lacrosse for a decade—including a stint on the top-caliber team, Chesapeake Club Lacrosse— before capping off that stretch with a Class 4A state championship win as a freshman member of the
South River varsity in 2018. Patterson, now a senior, started running cross country and track to stay in shape for lacrosse.
And it changed everything. “I realized that as much as I love the sport of lacrosse, I really wanted to pursue running throughout the rest of my high school career and beyond,” Patterson says. “It’s where my heart was ultimately. I made that hard decision. It really surprised me. I didn’t ever think I would leave lacrosse.”
It turned out that running rearranged her future. What started out merely as exercise became a lifestyle. She’s captured six Class 4A state championships in cross country and indoor track, including running a leg on the 800-meter title winning team as freshman.
The number of titles could easily have been higher if not for the pandemic and a foot injury that caused her to miss two seasons in both cross country and track. Her other five titles came in individual events: the 800 and 1,600.
The 5-foot-4 Patterson will be taking her blazing speed to the University of Pennsylvania. She’ll run cross country, indoor, and outdoor track at the Philadelphia school.
The cross-country championship she won at host Hereford High in the fall of 2018 as a sophomore means the most Patterson. She finished 12 seconds ahead of the runner-up and the race included about 150 participants.
Carroll adds: “That is the toughest courses in the nation, and she went out and dominated. She was physically prepared to win that race and I think it was the turning point in her running career.”
That crown led to her being named the 2018 Washington Post Runner of the Year. That was one of 20 overall titles (county, regional titles among them) in her career.
The 18-year-old Patterson trains like a champion. She works out two hours a day,
and her routine includes running, Pilates, and core exercises. Patterson is only one of two female runners to have trained with the boys team at South River during Carroll’s coaching career. She’ll train with her fellow women runners in college.
Patterson may be an even better student than athlete. She carries a weighted 4.81 grade-point average and has taken 15 advanced-placement classes in high school, including six as a senior. She also helps out with community service at her Church, Severna Park United Methodist, and serves as president of her school’s Wounded Warriors Club. On top of that at South River, Patterson, who wants to be an environmental lawyer, belongs to the National Science Honor Society and Seahawks Saving Shorelines Group, which aids in rebuilding Chesapeake Bay Shorelines.
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