Ashley and Amanda Overgaauw.
At Thursday’s Red Rock Conference track and field championships on
the Murray County Central track in Slayton, Amanda and Ashley Overgaauw did
exactly what they are famous for. They outran everyone.
The senior twins from Murray County Central took part in five
events and won all five. Ashley won the 800 and 1,600 meters, Amanda won the
3,200 meters, they both were part of the winning 4x400 relay team and Amanda
ran on the championship 4x800 team.
They run and they win, and that’s been the theme for years, during the
fall cross-country season and on the track in the spring ever since they were
in seventh grade. It’s a rare category, but the Overgaauws may be the top pair
of twins in Minnesota high school running history.
“They're going to run with everything
they have. That shows every time they run,” said Dominick Damm, who coaches the Murray County Central girls and boys cross-country teams and the girls track team.
The twins' final conference championship meet marked another point in a
series of career-wrapping high school competitions. Next is a subsection meet in Pipestone on
Friday, the Section 3A finals in Montevideo on June 1 and the state track meet June
8-10 at St. Michael-Albertville High School.
After that, the twins will become college cross-country and track
athletes at Augustana University in Sioux Falls, S.D., which is 80 miles from
Slayton.
“I'm excited
to take the next step after high school, to compete collegiately,” Ashley said.
“That'll be so much fun and see how I
can improve and how much I can bring my times down and have fun.”
For the next few weeks, however, they will be working hard in the
hopes of winning state titles. Their list of accomplishments is already lengthy
…
The twins made their Class A state cross-country debut as
ninth-graders in 2019, placing 51st (Ashley) and 53rd
(Amanda); teammate Morgan Gehl, a then-junior, placed second. After the
pandemic wiped out the 2020 state cross-country meet, Amanda won the state
title in 2021 and Ashley was sixth. In 2022 Amanda and Ashley finished second
and third behind Jade Rypkema of Nevis.
On the track, Amanda finished third in the
3,200 meters at state in 2021 and both twins were part of the Rebels’
fifth-place 4x800 relay team.
At last year’s state track meet, Amanda was second behind Rypkema
in the 3,200 and Amanda and Ashley were members of Murray County Central’s runner-up
4x800 unit.
Asked about their personal goals for the remainder of
this season, Amanda said she looks forward to a final high school meeting with
Rypkema (who will run collegiately at Gonzaga).
“I would
love to finish high in the two-mile again, I'd love to get first or second. I'd
have to race Jade, which will be a fun battle. We're thinking I might do the
open 800 this year and possibly try to get a state championship in that.”
Ashley said
she also may compete in the 800.
“I'm thinking
for the mile I've been trying to bring my time down, and under five flat would
be really cool. And then I'm thinking about doing the 800.”
If they both
compete in the 800 in the postseason, it would be fitting to see them running
side by side for high stakes. They have done so many times, especially in
cross-country, and they had some sisterly fun this spring during a meet in
Windom.
Running the 800 together, they decided beforehand that they would absolutely run together. In
fact, they wanted to finish in a dead heat.
“We decided
just to do it for fun and see if we could tie, and we were only .01 apart.
Ashley won with a lean,” Amanda said. “That was a really fun race. We played
rock-paper-scissors down the homestretch. It was an awesome memory.”
Damm said the Overgaauw
sisters have shown growth and maturity over the years, beginning when they
joined the cross-country and track teams as seventh-graders.
“How
different are they now? Well, in the first year I don't think they talked,”
Damm said. “They don't say much now, but they've been kind of thrust into the
spotlight and people talk to them so they talk back. They're much more
outgoing. A great thing about a sport like this is how it's changed their
personalities, talking with people all the time. They've been hard workers
their entire careers. They've never been rah-rah-type teammates, but they've
been just like, ‘All right, that's next. We'll do that.’ ”
The twins are known for
their work ethic, something that has carried over to the rest of the team over
the years, and not just female athletes.
“They definitely have instilled a
culture,” Damm said. “What they do has crossed over from the girls to the boys
team. My boys cross-country team spent a bunch of time trying to beat the girls.
That was a practice goal, “We're gonna beat the twins today. We're gonna beat
the twins in this run.’ That just kind of trickles down. And now, next year I
think we’re going to have a really good boys team because of it.”
In September 2020, as several small meets were held during the regular
season, Murray County Central hosted teams from Heron Lake-Okabena and
Southwest Minnesota Christian/Edgerton at Slayton Country Club.
The fact that there was no state meet was tough to swallow for the Rebels,
because Gehl was a senior that year who hoped to repeat as the 1A cross-country
champion. The Rebels were also coming off a fourth-place team finish at state, with
every runner returning, including the Overgaauws.
The top three female runners that day on the golf course were named Overgaauw,
Overgaauw and Gehl (who was working through an injury). The twins were
sophomores then, and after the race Gehl made a statement that could come true this
season, more than three years later.
“Their work
ethic is super,” Morgan said of Amanda and Ashley. “And they're really super
nice, they're great people. And I hope they get to go to state one year and
hopefully finish one and two.”
--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of
Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn
and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts.
Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org
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