Dartmouth senior Ben True made history on Friday afternoon at the Ivy League Heptagonals Cross Country Championship in New York City's Van Cortlandt Park.
He did it by becoming the first Ivy Leaguer to win three individual conference titles in nearly a quarter century. The last Ivy to pull off the the feat was another Big Green harrier, Jim Sapienza, who claimed the title in 1982, 1983 and 1984.
True -- who won in 2005 and 2006, but sat out last season -- finished in 23:59.6 to grasp individual honors and break the Heps record of 24:08.1 set by Brown's Chris Schille in 1987, but it was the Princeton Tigers which took the team crown for the third straight year.
"I think Ben's race was very impressive, particularly because he really had to do the whole race by himself," explained Dartmouth Coach Barry Harwick. "He took the lead very early on by the mile mark, and to keep pushing the whole way, and to break 24 minutes -- that was his goal going in and it's great to see him achieve that."
Last year's individual champion Michael Maag, a senior, led the way for Princeton, taking second in 24:32.4. While that time was the fastest for a Tiger runner since 1981, Maag was 32.8 seconds behind True. That was the widest margin of victory at Heps since 1976 when Army's Curt Alitz bested the field by 37 seconds.
True and Sapienza are two of just four athletes to navigate their way to three crowns. The other two were Army’s Dick Shea (1949-50-51) and Penn’s Dave Merrick (1971-73-75).
"It's also nice that after his five years at Dartmouth College, to really go away as the all-time Heptagonal record holder," added Coach Harwick. "Not a more deserving athlete you're ever going to find -- hard worker, great competitor, the whole package."
Princeton had three runners among the first six across the finish line, but Columbia's remarkable pack running really dethroned Coach Steve Dolan's Tigers.
Following True and Maag across the line were Cornell senior Zac Hine (24:43.3), Princeton junior Ben Sitler (24:46.1), Harvard junior Chas Gillespie (24:47.3), Princeton freshman Brian Leung (24:48.8) and Brown junior Duriel Hardy (24:52.3). That group of seven earns first-team All-Ivy status.
Coach Willy Wood's first Light Blue finisher was Tom Poland in 10th place (25:05.5), but Columbia runners took five of the six spots directly behind him.
The final points race was Princeton (58), Columbia (61), Cornell (75), Dartmouth (89), Brown (142), Harvard (145), Yale (176) and Penn (193).
NOTES: ALL-TIME TOP FIVE-MILE TIMES 23:59.6 -- Ben True (Dartmouth, 2008)
24:08.1 -- Chris Schille (Brown, 1987)
24:09.0 -- Ron Harris (Navy, 1986)
24:11.2 -- Chris Schille (Brown, 1986)
24:13.0 -- Curtis Alitz (Army, 1976)
24:14.6 -- Bob Kempainen (Dartmouth, 1987)
24:15.4 -- David Merrick (Penn, 1975)
24:15.7 -- Matt Farmer (Princeton, 1981)
24:19.1 -- Andrew Atkeson (Yale, 1981)
24:19.4 -- Paul Gompers (Harvard, 1986)
WIDEST MARGIN OF VICTORY
72.8 seconds, Dick Shea (Army), 1950
65.5 seconds, Dick Shea (Army), 1951
60.8 seconds, LeRoy Schwarzkopf (Yale), 1942
55.2 seconds, Walter Hewlett (Harvard), 1964
37.0 seconds, Curt Alitz (Army), 1976 32.8 seconds, Ben True (Dartmouth), 2008
32.8 seconds, Dave Merrick (Penn), 1973
32.4 seconds, Arthur Truxes (Army), 1943
31.6 seconds, Dave Merrick (Penn), 1975
24.4 seconds, Jon Anderson (Cornell), 1970