Ryan Young was a ninth-grader at Princeton High
School when he started pondering the list of school records in cross-country
and track and field. Dreaming of someday seeing his own name on the board, he
did something else back in ninth grade.
He tracked down the holder of the school records in his own
specialties – cross-country in the fall and the 1,600- and 3,200-meter races in
the spring – and wrote in an October 2016 email: "I would love to hear
from you as I have some questions about your record and how you got such a fast
time."
The
record holder is Doug Burns, a 1981 Princeton graduate whose records at the 5K
cross-country distance and in the two track events have stood for nearly four
decades. Doug is the athletic director and coaches track and cross-country at
Lake Crystal-Wellcome Memorial, where he has taught math since the late 1980s.
(Ryan and Doug are pictured here at a cross-country meet when Ryan was a
freshman.)
Ryan's times have steadily improved since his freshman year
and before this spring he seemed to be on the threshold of knocking Doug's
track records into second place on Princeton’s all-time lists. Now a senior,
Young’s quest has been sideswiped by COVID-19 and the shutdown of spring sports.
“It’s pretty heartbreaking for me as a parent,” said Ryan’s
mother, Kim Young. “That’s been tough; talking about the potential of not
having a season and then this (shutdown) started, that was really his only
breakdown moment. He’s been working toward them for four years. It’s tough.”
The clear downside is that Ryan is missing out on his final
track season. But the upside is a bright ray of sunshine in a gloomy sky: the
friendship that has developed between Princeton athletes from the Class of 1981
and the Class of 2020.
Ryan’s original email began like this: “My name is Ryan
Young, and I am a freshman at Princeton High School. I just joined
cross-country this year and noticed that Doug Burns holds the boys
cross-country record for Princeton and was wondering if you are the Doug Burns
from Princeton?”
Burns quickly replied. One of the first things he told Ryan
was, “It’s about time somebody broke those records.”
Burns’ school records are 15:54 in cross-country, 4:22 in the
1,600 and 9:30 in the 3,200. Ryan’s high school cross-country career ended last
fall with a personal best of 16:44, and his best times on the track are 4:34
and 9:56.
“They were realistic goals,” Ryan said of breaking the track
marks this spring.
One of Ryan’s classmates, Lexi Duscher, broke the girls
cross-country school record back when they were in ninth grade. That had an
impact on Ryan.
“Seeing her do that was kind of inspirational,” he said. “I
put that in the back of my head and started working for it.”
Ryan and Doug have corresponded over the years and have
talked in person when both teams were at the same competition. Doug went to
state in cross-country and track and Ryan has competed at the state cross-country
meet twice.
“Ryan is one of those great kids, such a natural leader,”
said Princeton cross-country and track coach Tom Ostroot. “He can bring the
team tighter. He has goals and he gets the rest of the team to buy in and
follow along. He’s one of those perfect athletes who makes himself and others
and even the sport better.”
The Princeton boys cross-country team won the Mississippi 8
Conference championship last fall – with Ryan winning the individual title --
the first time the Tigers had done so since Doug Burns was an eighth-grader.
“There’s no way our boys team won the conference without
(Ryan) leading the way,” Ostroot said.
Burns has been careful to offer very general advice to Ryan
out of respect for the Princeton coaches.
“I’ve been thinking about him,” Burns said this week. “I
didn’t tell him about the spot where I used to jump the fence. I lived a couple
hundred meters from the track so I was over there a lot. The contact with him
has brought back so many great memories.”
Doug even sent information from his own training journals to
Ryan, offering a glimpse into how he prepared in the 1970s and 1980s.
“That was super helpful and really inspiring,” Ryan said.
“Knowing him on that level gives me a boost and motivation.”
In an email sent to Doug two days after the 2020 spring
season was put on hold, Ryan wrote: “It’s been really hard thinking my senior
year might be over and I could very likely not have a last chance to try and
run as fast as you did. Through it all, I’ve still been working just as hard if
not harder then I usually do during the season.”
Over the winter, Ryan worked especially hard to prepare for
the track season. Along with other Princeton athletes, he competed in several
USA Track and Field indoor competitions and felt confident in his conditioning
as the spring neared.
“This winter I’ve been working my butt off,” he said. “And
now I don’t have a way to show what I did this winter. We were all pretty
excited, we were dropping some decent times. But it’s so tough. One of the best
things about running in high school is running with your friends all the time.”
Even before the spring, Ryan had completed enough credits to
graduate. He is taking mostly elective classes now and will continue his
athletic career at Minnesota State University.
“That’s helped me a little bit, knowing I’m going to keep
running,” he said.
Burns is a graduate of Minnesota State and lives in Lake
Crystal, which is 14 miles from the university campus.
Even if Ryan is unable to get on the track and take aim at
Doug’s records, the Young family might not be done with that quest. Ryan’s
brother Adam is currently a ninth-grader who has shown potential as a runner.
“Having my junior times as low as they are, I hope that gives
him a push to try to get those records, too,” Ryan said. “If anyone breaks
them, it would be awesome if he did.”
--Follow John on Twitter @MSHSLjohn, listen to
"Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts and hear him on
Minnesota Public Radio
Welcome! If you love Minnesota high school sports and the people who make it special, you are in the right place. I have been the leading voice on Minnesota prep sports and activities for decades -- at the Minneapolis Star Tribune and the Minnesota State High School League -- and that work continues here. I'm always looking for story ideas so feel free to send me an email at john.millea@ymail.com
Saturday, June 27, 2020
Best Of 2019-20, Number 6: From 1981 To 2020, A Friendship That’s Right On Track
Here's story No. 6 on my list of favorites from the 2019-20 school year. It was originally published on April 16.
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