The Union Catholic girls delivered the most jaw-dropping collection of performances in meet history, and UC’s Jimmy Wischusen and Rahway’s Micah Lawson scored huge victories at Sunday’s 54th NJSIAA Track and Field Meet of Champions at Ocean Breeze on Staten Island.

UC’s girls flexed their depth and talent to rack up a meet record five victories!!! Included in the unprecedented haul of gold medals, was a 1-2-3 sweep in the 800, and a meet record by Alexandra Bonn in the triple jump, and a relay sweep as the Vikings became the first team to ever win both the 4×400 and 4×800 at the same M of C.

The final medal count for the Vikings was 14,10 for the girls and four for the boys.

On the boys side, Wischusen, who missed nearly the entire indoor season last year and most of the cross-country season past fall with injuries, won the boys 3,200, and Lawson captured the 1,600.

Union Catholic’s epic day got rolling right away when the Vikings won the meet-opening 4×800 relay in 9:28.77, nine second ahead of runner-up Westfield. But that doesn’t begin to tell the whole story.

UC won the 4×800 without their three fastest half milers. They went with Jimmiea King (2:19.98), Victoria Urbaez (2:22.42), Alexandra Moore (2:24.21), and Leilani Gibson (2:22.18). There’s that depth and talent pool that is unprecedented.

Next up for UC was Alexandra Bonn in the triple jump.

The senior not only successfully defended her title, but she soared to a meet record 39-6.25, which placed her No. 10 in state history. Bonn broke the meet record of 38-2, set by Pope John’s Teja Brown at the 2020 indoor Meet of Champions.

The Yale-bound Bonn, who also won the TJ at the M of C last spring, missed winning her fourth M of C title by an inch and half when she placed second in the long jump with an 18-0. Lia Malave of Toms River North went 18-1.25 on her final jump to win.

Then it was Taylor Cox’s turn.

Cox, a sophomore at UC, scored one of the mot dramatic wins of the meet when she outleaned Quaycian Davis of East Orange, 7.88 to 7.90. The time by Cox, who leaned so hard that she did a summersault after she crossed the line,  is No. 3 in meet history, tied for No. 5 in state history, and it’s No. 4 in the nation this season. The 7.90 by Davis is No. 4 in meet history, and No. 8 in NJ history.

On the track next for the Vikings were Peyton HollisKaleigh Gunsiorowski, and Maameyaa Nyinah, who pulled of the 1-2-3 sweep, the second time a girls team has ever done that in any event in the 44 year history of the girls M of C. The North Hunterdon girls went 1-2-3 in the 3,200 in 1987.

Hollis, a junior, won in a school record 2:11.92 as she edged Gunsiorowski, second  with a PR of 2:11.95, and Nyinah was third in 2:14.24, just ahead of Kelsey Niglio of Cherokee, fourth in 2:14.27. The victory for Hollis was especially satisfying because she has been building back up after missing the end of the cross-country season with an injury.

Nyinah, Cox, Gunsiorowski, and Hollis returned the track to run the 4×400, and put the finishing touches on Union Catholic’s dominating day by finishing first in 3:52.16, the No. 1 time in the state this season,  No. 7 in meet history, and No. 5 in the country this season.

The 4×400 splits for UC were 58.57 for the North Carolina-bound Nyinah, 57.54 for Cox, 58.03 for the Notre Dame-bound Gunsiorowski, and 58.03 for Hollis.

The other two medals for the girls came from sophomore sprinter Taylor Aska, who was second in the 55 dash in a school record 7.04, the second fastest in the state this season, and she was fifth in the 200 in 25.07.

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In the boys competition, right after Wischusen came charging across the line to win the 3,200 in a Union County record 9:05.80, he was immediately overcome with emotion.

The junior at Union Catholic started thinking about everything he’s had to overcome to fulfill his dream of becoming a Meet of Champions winner.

“I’ve been through a lot of injuries and stuff throughout my high school career,” said Wischusen, who has shown a lot of heart and guts and resiliency to overcome all the adversity he’s dealt with. “This was my first track Meet of Champions I’ve ever run in, so to win this means a lot to me. I was very emotional after I won.”

Wischusen, who was battling a bad head cold on Sunday, didn’t mind the slower pace (4:40.39 for first 1,600), so he just ran relaxed until it was go time. With about 800 to go, he hit the gas and made a powerful surge that dropped the very talented field. Wischusen ran a 4:25.41 final 1,600 with a 2:09.50 final 800 and a 67.16 closing 400 to win by three-plus seconds over runner-up Nick Sullivan of CBA (9:09.01).

In the 1,600, Lawson, a senior, seems to race his best when he’s the underdog.

Lawson went into the Meet of Champions in cross-country as the underdog and proved everyone wrong when he used a huge late surge to score the upset win at Holmdel Park.

On Sunday, Lawson once again found himself playing that same underdog role, and again he showed that it’s mistake to bet against him.

Lawson, knowing he had to run faster than the 4:11.48 that Brian Boler of Delbarton in the unseeded heat, dropped the hammer with 600 to go when he blasted to the front and seized control of the race. Lawson, who avenged his second-place finish at the State Group 3 meet, then raced the clock and dropped a 60.65 final 400 to stop the clock at 4:10.56 to beat Boler’s time and secure the title.

The time by Lawson, who covered the final 800 in 2:03.82, is No. 3 in meet history, No. 3 in Union County history, and a huge personal best. His previous best for 1,600 was 4:15.83, which he ran at the Union County Championships last May.