MJ Richards OFSAA XC web

Lions Top 10 OFSAA XC Performers: #3 Mary Jane Richards (1990-1995)

Coming in at number three on our list of the top OFSAA XC performers in Club history is Bell High School’s Mary Jane Richards. The Bruin runner was a dominant force on the high school running scene in the early 90’s, highlighted by three consecutive OFSAA gold medals.

With little competitive running under her belt before high school, Richards success was not immediate. In fact, the future national team member didn’t even run cross country in grade nine. However, by the time grade ten had rolled around she had become a force to be reckoned with. She would claim her first OFSAA gold medal in the midget girls race by a comfortable 50 metre margin over Laura Martin of Waterloo.

Over the next two years, Richards would dominate the high school cross country scene, winning back to back junior girls titles. As an example of her strength over the field, the Bell High School student defeated training partner Imogen Murphy by a minute at the National Capital meet on the way to her third straight gold and a week later, Murphy would finish two spots behind Richards with a bronze medal at OFSAA.

By the time Richards had entered the senior girls rank, she was not just known as a strong runner in the province, but had had considerable success at the national level (two time defending junior cross country champion) and even the international level, coming off a 17th place finish the spring prior. All was primed for a fourth successive OFSAA title when an inflamed Achilles tendon slowed things down.

There was no running for Richards for 10 weeks, but she tried to keep fit with water training and lifting weights. She returned just in time for the high school season but went easy on the training. Despite the lower volume of work, Richards posted an impressive fourth place finish behind winner Julie Froud. After a further three weeks of training, the perpetual motion machine, as she was known by the Ottawa Citizen, enacted a little bit of revenge by winning her third straight Canadian junior title with Froud following behind in second.

After another fourth place finish in her final year of high school, Richards accepted a scholarship to the University of Wisconsin where she was second team All-Big 10 in her freshman year and helped the Bagders to an eighth place finish at the NCAA Championships. She would transfer to the University of Victoria the following year where she would earn a degree in psychology and go on to graduate from law school. She currently works as associate general counsel at Shopify’s head office here in Ottawa.

Allan Brett OFSAA XC (2)

Lions Top OFSAA XC Performers: #4 Allan Brett (2002-2005)

Number four on our list of the top OFSAA XC performers in Club history is an athlete, who by his own admission was not a runner when his high school career starter, but he certainly graduated as one – Allan Brett.  The Hillcrest High School graduate may have started slow, but he certainly finished with a bang, running away with bronze and gold medals in his final two years of school.

Brett’s freshman year of high school was not what one would typically associate with a future senior boys OFSAA champion. He didn’t make it to the finish line of his first race in high school – pulling out with abdominal cramps. However, that moment gave him a desire to never pull out of another race again. Running solely on the fitness gained from playing competitive soccer, Brett managed a second place finish at the city meet and would go on to a 42nd place finish at the OFSAA Championships. It would be the worst finish of his high school career and mark the start of his ascension to the podium.

A year later, the influence of Hillcrest upperclassman, and number six on our list, Mike Woods took hold. “It’s what you want to be. It’s what you want to attain,” Brett told The Citizen of Woods’ words on running. Those words worked. Brett’s sky-rocketed up 37 spots on the final leader board at OFSAA that year to finish fifth in the junior boys race, 22 seconds off the podium.

The 22 second deficit would turn into a 5 second surplus the following year in the senior boys race as Brett would capture his first OFSAA cross country medal. “I was really happy. It was a perfect race,” the Hillcrest student said of his bronze medal.

By the time Brett toed the start line in Odessa for his fourth and final OFSAA cross country run in grade 12 he had finally become the favourite. Coming off a summer that saw him finish 12th at the World Youth Championships at 1500 metres behind two eventual Olympic finalists and winning the pre-OFSAA race on the same course, he was well positioned for victory and did not disappoint. An eight second victory over Brantford Collegiate’s Cory Currie was a fitting end to a well peaked high school career.

After graduation Brett accepted a scholarship to Villanova University to study electrical engineering and run for the Wildcats. After a year in Philadelphia, Brett transferred to the University of Guelph where he would go on to earn a master’s degree in biomedical engineering. Running for the Gryphons, Brett was a two time OUA champion in cross country, a four time first team All-Canadian and helped lead his school to four consecutive CIS team titles. Brett works as a research technician at the Running Injury Clinic in Calgary.

Shona McCulloch of Longfields-Davidson Heights SS runs to victory in the Junior Girls race at the OFSAA Cross Country Championships in Waterloo Ontario, Saturday, November 1, 2014.
Mundo Sport Images/ Geoff Robins

Lions Top 10 OFSAA XC Performers: #5 Shona McCulloch (2013-2016)

The top half of our countdown continues with number five, Shona McCulloch of Longfields Davidson Heights Secondary School. The Barrhaven native was a dominate force during her four year high school career, twice capturing the provincial title and picking up a bronze as good measure.

Undefeated all four years at the city level, McCulloch captured her first gold medal in quite dramatic fashion at the 2013 Championship in Sudbury. McCulloch quickly surged to the front of the wet and muddy course, running with a pack of four other pre-race favourites through the first half of the three kilometre course. Near the halfway mark, Shona and Kylee Raftis of Bishop Strachan pulled away, running stride for stride right to the finish line. A surge in the final meters gave McCulloch the gold even as the pair of runners shared the same finishing time.

McCulloch would make it back to back titles a year later in Waterloo winning the four-kilometre race in 14 minutes and 43.5 seconds. Despite the narrow five second margin of victory, Coach Kirk Dillabaugh said the race was never really in question. “Shona won the junior girls’ race about a mile into it,” Dillabaugh told the Ottawa Sports Page at the time. “She was the favourite going in and a little nervous. Then she found herself alone for most of the race.”

Unfortunately for McCulloch, the quest for a three peat ended about 600 metres from the finish line of the senior girls race the following season. The grade 11 student, who had yet to be defeated in her high school cross country career, had been in a tight battle with eventual champion Maddie Ghazarian, but unfortunately  encountered some difficulties and collapsed in the final kilometre of the race and would not finish.

A determined McCulloch returned a year later primed for another run for gold. Coming off a nearly 50 second victory over training partner Mei Mei Weston to capture the city title, McCulloch was looking in top form. Again, the Longfields Davidson student found herself at the front of the pack at the end of the five-kilometre race, this time running side by side with Havergal’s Martha MacDonald. However, McCulloch once more ran into difficulties in the home stretch and stumbled 150 metres from the finish line. With next to nothing left in the tank, the two time champion willed her way to the line, but was nipped just before crossing and settled for bronze.

Following graduation, Shona accepted a scholarship to the University of Washington to run for the Huskies. After red-shirting her freshman year, she has helped Washington qualify for back-to-back NCAA Championships in cross country, where the Huskies have finished 9th and 11th respectively. In addition to her contributions to the cross country program, McCulloch has also ran well on the track, taking up the 3000 metre steeplechase where she was an NCAA West Regional qualifier in 2019 and has posted the seventh fastest time in school history.

Mike Woods 2003 OFSAA XC Renfrew (2)

Lions Top 10 OFSAA XC Performers: #6 Mike Woods (2000-2003)

Number six on our list of top OFSAA cross country performers goes to Mike Woods of Hillcrest High School – one of only two men in Club history to come home from the provincial championships with a medal every time.

While a “work to rule” occurrence in Mike’s first year of high school prevented a run in the high school championships, a gold that fall at the Ontario club championships hinted at he would be a force to reckon with.

After having sat dormant for a number of years, Woods was the driving force behind the revival of Hillcrest’s cross country program in his grade 10 year. Personally leading the recruiting efforts, Woods corralled five teammates to join him on the Hawks team and he began his push to OFSAA gold. The 15 year old Woods was a comfortable winner over the five-kilometre midget boys race at the Hornet’s Nest in 17 minutes and 56.2 seconds, nearly 10 seconds ahead of  second place Lucas McAneny and almost 40 seconds ahead future Pan Am Junior teammate Mark Steeds in third.

Returning a year later in search of another gold medal, Woods was part of the lead pack that broke away early on, creating a more than 30 second gap on the rest of the field. However, it was Braden Novakowski of Kingston Collegiate and Vocational Institute, an individual Woods would battle countless times on the track, that would emerge victorious on the day. Woods would take bronze, 28 seconds clear of fourth.

It would be bronze again for Woods a year later in his final year of high school cross country race. In a tough battle with Henok Lechebo of West Toronto Collegiate Institute for gold, Woods went with Lechebo as the pair broke free of the field early on. However, near the halfway mark of the seven-kilometre race Woods was over taken by Club mate Joshua Karanja while Lechebo continued to expand his lead.  Lechebo would win by a minute over Karanja while Woods would cross another 21 seconds later.

At the conclusion of his high school career, Woods accepted a scholarship to run for the University of Michigan where he would study English. After his freshman year he would set Canadian U20 records on the track in the mile and 3000 metres that still stand. After his senior season at Michigan was cut short by injury, Woods would spend the next four years trying to find a way back to top form and reaching his goal of representing Canada at the Olympic Games. During successive setbacks Woods’s cycling rehab evolved into a labour of love, and the rest, they say, is history. Since joining the professional cycling circuit, Woods has represented Canada at the Rio Olympics, taken home bronze from the 2018 World Championships and last season became the first person in history to have run a sub four minute mile and compete in the Tour de France.

Danelle Woods in the senior girls 3000m at the 2007 OFSAA Ontario High School Track and Field Championships in Ottawa.

Lions Top 10 OFSAA XC Performers: #7 Danelle Woods (2003-2006)

Ranking in at number seven on our list is the first of three Hillcrest High School graduates to make the grade, Danelle Woods. The owner of one OFSAA crown, Woods was always fighting for the podium in the fall championship, never finishing lower than seventh.

After being recruited to join the Hillcrest team by her older brother Mike in grade nine, Woods would win her first of four straight NCSSAA championships to qualify for the provincial championships where she would place seventh in the midget girls event.

With a year of training under her belt, Woods would return to OFSAA and find a spot on the podium, taking the bronze on the 4km course, just four seconds behind future Olympian Sheila Reid. A year later, it would be Reid in front of Woods again on the podium. However, in their first year in the senior ranks it was Reid’s Sacred Heart team that would best Woods’ Hawks of Hillcrest by a mere point – 198 to 199. The difference, Reid’s silver medal run put her three spots ahead of Woods in 5th.

In her final OFSAA run, would get the one title that had eluded both runners – OFSAA cross country champion. Woods was the class of the field that day in Thunder Bay as she would run to victory over the five-kilometre course in 19 minutes and 7.15 seconds – more than 10 seconds ahead of Reid in second.

After graduating from Hillcrest, Woods accepted a scholarship to the University of Illinois where she would run for the Illini and study economics. During her time in Urbana-Champaign, Woods won Big 10 Freshman of the Year in cross country and helped the Illini twice qualify for the NCAA Championships. She also garnered All-America honours indoors as part of the distance medley relay. Following graduation, Woods tried her hand at the marathon, posting a lifetime best of 2 hours 49 minutes and 33 seconds. She currently works as a customer management manager in Chicago.

(Ottawa, Canada---13 October 2017) Joe Fast of Ridgemont High School (winner) clears the hay bales at the end of the beach during the boys Junior Varsity High School Capital Challenge Cross Country Race in Ottawa, Canada. (Photo by Sean Burges / Mundo Sport Images)

Lions Top 10 OFSAA XC Performers: #8 Joe Fast (2016-2019)

Clocking at number eight on our countdown off the top ten Lions performers at the OFSAA Cross Country Championships is the most aptly named runner in the sport – Joe Fast. The recent graduate of Ridgemont High School was a always a threat to be on the podium and ended his high school career with two gold medals from the provincial championship.

Fast burst on the scene in grade nine, running his way to victory in every competition he entered that fall. After a dominating 25 second victory over club mate Zachary Meredith at the city championship, Fast entered OFSAA as a favourite to walk away with a medal. After sitting on the early race leader past the half way mark of the 4km race, Fast used his trademark kick to pull away from the field and strike out on his own. He would cruise to a comfortable 11 second victory over Meredith.

They say history has a way of repeating itself and a year later in Petawawa, the junior boys race at OFSAA certainly had a familiar feel about it. While the crowd around him was different, Fast again held in with the lead back through the bulk of the race before making his move away from the field. Although one runner did attempt to stay with him, the best he could hope for was keeping Fast in eyesight as Joe picked up his second gold in as many years, winning by 12 seconds.

It wasn’t all sunshine and lollipops for Fast though. After encountering the effects of some over training at the start of the grade 11 season, Fast and his coaches made the decision he would drastically cut back on his training. However, Fast maintained his desire to run cross country with his Ridgemont teammates. So, on his grit and speed, he helped lead his team back to OFSAA for a third straight year where he finished 49th overall.

After allowing his body to recover, Fast made one final run for the OFSAA podium last fall in Sudbury. Turns out when he got there, he may have been better prepared had he brought his skis than his spikes. Nonetheless, Fast ended his high school running career with a top five finish, 19 seconds off the podium.

Fast is currently in his first year of studies at Princeton University. While COVID-19 has meant virtual learning for the Ivy League school, we hear Fast is doing his online schooling from London where he is training with fellow Princeton Tiger Josh Zelek and Stanford’s Evan Burke in preparation for his eventual return to competition.

Sean Kaley Brookfield Track

Lions Top 10 OFSAA XC Performers: #9 Sean Kaley (1989-1993)

At number nine on our list of the top ten all-time Lions performers at the OFSAA Cross Country Championships we have Brookfield’s Sean Kaley. After spending his first two years running for Lo Ellen Park High School in Sudbury, Kaley’s family moved south to Ottawa and he joined the Blues of Brookfield.

It didn’t take the 16 year old Kaley long to make a name for himself as he bested Club mate and defending midget boys OFSAA Champion Chris McGregor by 0.62 seconds in the first elimination race of the 1991 season to capture the junior boy’s title at the Ottawa Board Championship. Kaley would capture his first OFSAA medal less than three weeks later, finishing second to Alex Hutchinson to take silver.

A year later in grade 12, Kaley was again engaged in a close battle with a local runner on the path to OFSAA. This time it was Club mate Kevin Lee of St. Paul’s who put up the fight and relegated Kaley to silver at the National Capital championship. A week later at OFSAA, Kaley was bested again by Lee (who took bronze) but did manage to finish 10th in a strong field topped by Kevin Sullivan.

In his final year of high school competition, Kaley again kicked the season off with another narrow victory over Chris McGregor at the Ottawa Board championship before besting him again a week later at the National Capital championships to secure his OFSAA berth. A week later in Woodbridge, Kaley would again find himself on the OFSAA podium taking bronze, a mere one second behind silver.

Following high school, Kaley would accept a scholarship to attend the University of Arkansas where he would earn All-American honours three times in cross country and help the Razorbacks to two NCAA team Championships. While Kaley would represent Canada six times at the World Cross Country Championships, he is best known for his exploits on the track where he is the Club record holder at both 5,000 and 10,000 metres and was a member of Team Canada at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney. Kaley currently resides in Arkansas where he is a practicing psychiatrist. He was inducted into the Lions Hall of Fame in 2013.

Claire Smith of Glebe CI competes at the OFSAA Cross Country Championships in Waterloo Ontario, Saturday, November 1, 2014.
Mundo Sport Images/ Geoff Robins

Lions Top 10 OFSAA XC Performers: #10 Claire Smith (2011-2014)

Ten days from now high school runners from across the province were supposed to be toeing the line at the OFSAA Cross Country Championships in London. However, with this year’s championship cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Club has decided to put together a top ten list of the best OFSAA harriers in Club history. Since its inception, Lions athletes have captured more than 50 medals from one of the most competitive championships in North America.

Kicking off our list at number ten is Claire Smith of Glebe Collegiate Institute, who ran for the Gryphons from 2011 to 2014. During her career at Glebe, Smith was the top scorer on her team all four years, leading them to team titles in the junior and senior girls’ races and never finishing worse than fourth overall.

Smith opened her high school career with a modest 19th place finish in her first year of competitive running. However, a year older and with a year’s worth of training under her belt, we began to see what the future may hold for Smith as she ascended up to 5th on the leaderboard in the junior girls race.

As a first-year senior, Smith continued her ascension up the results with a silver medal after a tough battle with Charlotte Prouse of London Central. The pair had separated themselves from the field early on and played out a game of cat and mouse through to the finish where Smith fell nine seconds short of victory on the five-kilometre course in Sudbury.

Smith capped off her high school cross country career with an individual sixth-place finish behind multiple teammates from the Canadian U20 Cross Country team. However, she led her Gryphons to one of the most dominating performances in OFSAA cross country history as they amassed a paltry 68 points – the lowest total by a senior girl’s team in more than a decade. Furthermore, the win also set a record for the largest margin of victory in the team event as Westdale of Hamilton finished 207 points behind Glebe in second.

After graduating from Glebe, Claire Smith accepted a scholarship to study international relations and run for the Cardinals of Stanford University in California. After graduating from Stanford in 2019, pursued graduate studies in Global Governance and Diplomacy from the University of Oxford where she graduated from earlier this year.

PHOTO - Phil Hughes Ottawa Indoor Relays - Newspapers.com

Lions Top 10 OFSAA Performers: #2 Phillip Hughes (1982-1986)

On the penultimate day of our Top 10 OFSAA Performers countdown, we have chosen to recognize Phillip Hughes of Earl of March Secondary School. If you’ve flipped through the OFSAA record book you will undoubtedly recognize the name. Hughes was a two time OFSAA Champion in the 400 metre hurdles and still holds the record the OFSAA and Interscholastic Record 35 years after setting the standard.

Many may be surprised that a two time champion and national record holder does not in fact possess more hardware from the high school championships, but prior to 1990 there was no opportunity for younger high school students to hone their intermediate hurdle craft in the 300 metre event. Rather it was a situation much like today’s steeplechase where the 400 metre hurdles drew participants from grades 9 through 13.

Hughes’ first step on the OFSAA podium was a big one. Lined up against two time defending champion in the event and reigning Interscholastic Record Holder Douglas Neville of Eastwood Collegiate, Hughes would best the veteran, who would finish in third, by two and a half seconds. Hughes time of 51.68 seconds was so impressive that even silver medalist Shaun McAlmont, who equaled Neville’s previous record, was over a second back of the victor.

Heading into his final OFSAA Championships, on his hometown track, Hughes was focused on gold. Unfortunately for the Carp native, an aching hamstring left him at less than full speed and forced him to pull out of the 400 metres and focus solely on the hurdles. “My hamstrings are really tight and if I ran the 400 metres and it’s a really tough race, I probably wouldn’t be able to run the 400 metre hurdles,” he told the Ottawa Citizen at the start of the Championship. “The 400 hurdles is more important to me as an athlete.”

Despite being slowed by his hamstring, Hughes still managed to come within a few tenths of his record, crossing the line in 51.96 seconds. As evidence of his dominance in the event, the silver medalist was more than two seconds back of Hughes.

In fact, in the 34 years since Hughes graduated high school, only one other runner has even broken 52 seconds at OFSAA, 2001 World Championship team member Monte Raymond, and Hughes two gold medal performances still remain the two fastest in provincial championship history.

Outside of high school, Hughes set a Canada Games Record of 51.13 seconds in the 400 metre hurdles in 1985 and followed that up four years later with a pair of silvers in the flat 400 and the 4×4. Hughes is unique in that he is the only athlete in Club history to ever participate in two Canada Summer Games, let alone medal. Hughes’ Canada Games record remains as the second best performance in Club history.

Cheryl Coker sitting web

Lions Top 10 OFSAA Performers: #3 Cheryl Coker (1980-1984)

Today would have marked the start of this year’s OFSAA Track and Field Championships at Toronto’s Varsity Stadium and signifies the start of our top three countdown of OFSAA performers. At number three on our all-time list we have Carleton Place High School’s greatest javelin thrower, Cheryl Coker.

Coker kicked off her OFSAA career with a fourth place finish in the midget girls event in 1980 and would build from there with her first medal coming in her grade 11 year when she took bronze in the junior girls event at 37.78 metres.

Coker would continue to hone her craft over the next couple years, throwing a couple hours a day in the fields at the high school and venturing in to Ottawa twice a week to work with javelin guru, Bill Heikkila.

Come grade 12, the work continued to pay off as she would move up to a silver medal in her first year in the senior competition behind Fay Roblin of Prince Edward County. Coker’s improvements continued through the summer where she won the Canadian junior title and represented Canada internationally, giving a glimpse of what was in store for her final high school season.

Coker’s final year of high school competition brought along even further distances. Before even reaching the east regional competition, Coker had already disposed of the Canadian Interscholastic record with a massive toss of 51.94 metres. The mark has been one for the ages, alluding all who have followed, including the likes of Canadian senior record holder Elizabeth Gleadle. In fact, there are only four Interscholastic marks that are older.

In a 1983 interview with the Ottawa Citizen, Coker explained that it was not the distances that she was focused on, but rather the technique. “The distance will come if the technique is right,” she said. “Strength is important, but to me, how you get ready for the throw and carry through is more important.”

Coker’s technique was certainly on point as she would qualify for OFSAA with another 50+ metre throw to break the east regional record by more than five metres. A week later at OFSAA, Coker would finally gain that elusive gold medal, and with it, she added a new senior girls record of 48.28 metres. The record would stand for two years until training partner Louise Perrault (#6 on our list) would increase it to the still standing 49.48 metres, but in the past 36 years only Perrault and Valerie Tulloch (1991) have managed to throw further at OFSAA than Coker.

Following her high school career, Coker spent a year at Florida State University throwing for the Seminoles before transferring to Louisiana State University where she would win a bronze medal at the NCAA Championships and earn All-American accolades . Coker would also represent Canada internationally at the Commonwealth Games, Pan American Games, Francophone Games and World Student Games.

Following her time in Louisiana, Coker pursued graduate work at the University of Virginia where she obtained her Ph.D. She currently teaches motor learning at Plymouth State University in New Hampshire and has also authored a book on the subject. Coker was was inducted into the Lions Hall of Fame in 2016.