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HUFF WINS NORTH CAROLINA
SPIRIT OF SPORT AWARD
CHAPEL
HILL-- Jenna Huff of North Stanly High School is the first recipient of the
North Carolina Spirit of Sport Award presented by the North Carolina High
School Athletic Association.
The
NCHSAA is participating in the “Spirit of Sport Award” program
sponsored by the National Federation of State High School Associations.
It was established to recognize those individuals who exemplify the ideals of
the positive spirit of sport that represents the core mission of
education-based athletics.
The award
is given in recognition of a specific act or an activity of longer
duration. Nominees can be a coach, athletic administrator, trainer,
student-athlete or any others associated with the school’s athletic program. Huff will be recognized at the NCHSAA
Annual Meeting on May 5 at the Smith Center on the campus of the University of
North Carolina.
Davis Whitfield, NCHSAA commissioner, said, "Jenna's act of
selflessness defines what the Spirit of Sport Award represents. She did what
was uncommon in the eyes of many by turning her focus to aid a competitor. Her
act of compassion taught us all a life lesson that day."
Tommy Harkey, athletic director at North Stanly High School, provided
information for the nomination, noting, "This event at the regional cross
country meet had spectators clapping, cheering, and crying at the same
time." Drew Laucher, the North Stanly cross-country coach, wrote a story
about it for the local paper, The Stanly News and Press, which drew
additional attention to it.
Huff,
a cross-country runner for North Stanly, was competing at Dan Nicholas Park in
the 2010 2-A Midwest Regional for the right to advance to the state
championship. Late in the race she was in 22nd place, trailing Deb
Gunther of Cuthbertson by about five meters. Suddenly Gunther screamed in pain
and grabbed her hip, almost stopping.
Instead
of sprinting past Gunther to gain a spot in the standings, Huff slowed down,
checked on her and told her, "Come on," gently putting her hand on
Gunther's elbow.
They
shuffled along toward the finish line, and as coach Laucher said, "As they
approach the finish line, the crowd catches on. Applause and cheers erupt.
Jenna puts Deb in front of her, just as it would have been before Deb's hip
gave out. Jenna didn't take that point; it was always Deb's so it stayed
Deb's."
That
in itself is remarkable, but it also had an impact on the meet. It turned out
that Cuthbertson and Salisbury tied for first in the regional meet, and ties in
cross country means that the performance of the sixth-place finisher is used.
Cuthbertson's sixth-place runner: Deb Gunther.
As
Harkey noted, "Jenna could have passed the Cuthbertson runner, but instead
made sure she went across the finish line in front of her, which ended up
giving Cuthbertson the victory over Salisbury."
Coach
Laucher was right when he said, "Cuthbertson won the regional meet that
day. Jenna Huff won the crowd."





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