For the seniors on , the path to the 2023 NCAA Division III National Championship began four years ago鈥攊n Oregon, Denver, Northern California and Pennsylvania.
As first-year Sagehens in fall 2020, when colleges and universities nationwide transitioned to distance learning due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the student athletes spent their would-be maiden season scattered across the country, looking for places to race independently.
Most of the class of 2024 lived together in Oregon that fall鈥攁way from home for the first time鈥攚here they learned how to balance schoolwork and training with no coaching staff around to keep them honest.
Weekly Zoom sessions that first semester of college kept the dispersed classmates connected virtually, but it wasn鈥檛 until they moved into a house in North Carolina the following spring that they truly began to bond.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I realized we had a really strong team culture,鈥 says Derek Fearon 鈥24. 鈥淚 realized then we had something special.鈥
After competing sporadically in independent races during their nomadic first year of college, the teammates arrived on campus in fall 2021 as sophomores.
With the one-year hiatus from NCAA competition behind them, Fearon, Colin Kirkpatrick 鈥24 and Lucas Florsheim 鈥24 had outstanding debut seasons in 2021, and the Sagehens鈥攚ho鈥檇 won the 2019 NCAA Division III championship with a different core鈥攔epeated as national titlists.
鈥淎 perfect year,鈥 Fearon calls his sophomore season. 鈥淥ur annus mirabilis.鈥
鈥淲e started thinking, 鈥楾his is easy. That wasn鈥檛 so hard,鈥欌 Kirkpatrick says. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 until the next year we learned humility. We realized, 鈥楾his isn鈥檛 as easy as we thought.鈥欌
With several key returning juniors, Pomona-Pitzer was heavily favored to win a third straight Division III championship in 2022.
So much so, Fearon recalls, that many on the team started believing the title was theirs to lose instead of theirs to win.
The Sagehens breezed to conference and regional championships with Fearon, Kirkpatrick and Florsheim leading the charge and entered the title race as the consensus top team in the country.
But they finished 5th at nationals, off the podium.
鈥淚t was really hard to handle the pressure of being the best team,鈥 Fearon says.
Disappointing result aside, Kirkpatrick and his classmates found a silver lining in the journey.
鈥淓very guy on that team had put in a solid six months of running a lot of miles and you hope to get something concrete out of it,鈥 Kirkpatrick says. 鈥淚n the moment, you鈥檙e frustrated, until you look around and see your friends there and you remember the good times. Once we started reflecting, everyone was happy with the year.鈥
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Pomona-Pitzer Coach 鈥 path to the 2023 NCAA Division III National Championship began a decade ago in Indiana, at her alma mater, Ball State University.
There, the former Division I student-athlete cut her teeth as a track and field coach after a gilded collegiate career. Williams spent four years at Ball State before successive stops at fellow Division I programs Colgate University, Cleveland State University and Columbia University.
This June, Pomona-Pitzer hired her to coach men鈥檚 cross country and track and field.
鈥淚鈥檇 been lucky enough to know about the program here through other coaching friends, so I had the pleasure of knowing the kind of place Pomona-Pitzer is,鈥 Williams says. 鈥淚鈥檇 heard nothing but good things and glowing reviews.鈥
鈥淵ou feel at times you never get a utopia,鈥 she adds, 鈥渂ut here felt pretty doggone close.鈥
While not her first time taking over a men鈥檚 athletics program, Williams still wondered how a female head coach would be received at Pomona-Pitzer鈥攅ven with Emma DeLira, the team鈥檚 longtime direct training coach and an invaluable piece of the program, on staff.
鈥淵ou never know how a men鈥檚 team will react鈥 to having a female coach, Williams says, 鈥渂ut they were so warm and so open to the opportunity. It speaks volumes to who they are as people. 鈥 When it comes to those guys, they knew at the end of the day, the mission was to try to get another championship.鈥
Introductions behind them, Williams and the Sagehens set out on a bounce back season.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a good tradition of competitiveness and a winning culture here,鈥 Williams says. 鈥淵ou feel that prestige when you come through the doors. After what happened last year, we hoped we could bring it back.鈥
Despite coming up short last fall, Pomona-Pitzer returned five of seven athletes who competed in the national meet and began the campaign ranked highly in Division III. But injuries, illnesses and lackluster performances in the latter part of the year tanked the Sagehens鈥 rank heading into the postseason.
With adversity, however, came perspective.
鈥淏eing the underdogs, you wonder how a team will take that, how it鈥檒l react when something doesn鈥檛 go their way,鈥 Williams says. 鈥淪ome athletes feel the path has to be perfect, and if it isn鈥檛, nationals is out of reach. These guys figured it out every week, every meet. You saw them believe the good races were coming and uplift each other, care about each other.鈥
鈥淭hat affirmation can bring someone who鈥檚 the most down, back up,鈥 Williams added, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 how you know great things can happen.鈥
As they had the year before, the Sagehens captured conference and regional championships on their way to nationals. Typically, teams ranked outside the top 3 heading into the title race have little chance to win, Fearon says.
Pomona-Pitzer was ranked 8th.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 wake up in the morning thinking we were going to win,鈥 Fearon says. 鈥淎ll I knew is we had to run the best race.鈥
Despite their ranking, the by a single point鈥攖he narrowest margin of victory in Division III history. And in this season of surprises, Fearon says, Jack Stein 鈥26鈥攖he team鈥檚 5th and final scoring runner at nationals鈥攃aptured the points needed to secure the win.
Also making history in victory was Williams, becoming the first female head coach to win a Division III men鈥檚 cross country championship.
鈥淔or a lot of the guys, there鈥檚 more ownership of this championship鈥 compared to 2021, Kirkpatrick says. 鈥淭wo years ago, we didn鈥檛 really know what it would take to win. But this year, we knew exactly what it would take, how hard it would be and how unlikely it was.鈥
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Pomona-Pitzer now is one of five Division III men鈥檚 cross country programs with at least three national championships.
The third trophy is expected to join the other two forevermore on the top shelf of the Wall of Champions inside the at Pomona.
While the titles are nice, Fearon hopes the graduating seniors leave behind something more.
鈥淲inning is really awesome and certainly a goal we had, but more than winning, we wanted to create a culture of support and love and gratitude,鈥 Fearon says. 鈥淐ollege is really hard, and what makes a successful college experience is having a community that you can go to every day and have that be the best part of your day. I feel we created that.鈥
Kirkpatrick echoes that sentiment.
鈥淥ne thing we hope Pomona-Pitzer continues to be in the future is a team that, from the fastest guy to the slowest guy, is all spiritually aligned on the same mission,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ot just the top guys are chasing after our mission, everyone鈥檚 along for the ride, because everyone is an instrumental part of what we do.鈥
In the days following the team鈥檚 historic win, Fearon, Florsheim, Kirkpatrick and Cameron Hatler 鈥25 earned All-America honors. For Fearon and Florsheim, the distinctions were the third of their careers鈥攕omething only Crosby Freeman 鈥06 had accomplished as a Sagehen distance runner.
Additionally, Williams was named the National Men鈥檚 Coach of the Year鈥攖he first female and third Pomona-Pitzer coach to receive the honor.
While an individual coaching award, Williams is effusive in her praise of DeLira, a tireless leader.
鈥淚鈥檓 working with great people, in a great space, in a great environment,鈥 Williams says. 鈥淚 feel a great culture here. I鈥檝e done my fair share of bouncing around during my Division I times, so I鈥檓 ready to find that space I can call home, with people I hope want to call it home as well.鈥
鈥淚 hope we can continue to do great things for a long time.鈥