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Women's Cross Country

Gabriel Wins Princeton Invitational as Women's Cross Country Finishes Fifth, Men Place 12th

PRINCETON, N.J.-- Senior Suzanne Gabriel (Falls Church, Va./McLean) placed first in a time of 23:15.70 as the UMBC men's and women's cross country teams competed in the Princeton Invitational Saturday in Princeton, N.J. The women's team placed fifth, while the men's team finished 12th.

Senior Sara Parkinson (Lancashire, England/Loughborough University) finished second behind Gabriel for the Retrievers in a time of 23:56.40, good enough for 12th  place overall. Sophomore Keri Wilson (Columbia, Md./Long Reach) finished 27th in 24:27.20, while freshmen Megan Arnold (Sicklerville, N.J./Timber Creek Regional) and Laura Blevins (Pasadena, Md./Chesapeake) rounded out the scoring five.

On the men's side, senior Andrew Madison (Edgewater, Md./South River) was the first Retriever across the line, finishing in an 8K time of 26:18.10 in 61st place overall. Senior Michael Christmas (Invercargill, New Zealand/James Hargest College) placed 80th overall 26:35.40, while freshman TJ Cowing (Severna Park, Md./Severna Park) placed 106th in 27:07.40. Sophomore brothers Roy Jones and Tim Jones (New Market, Md./Linganore) rounded out the scoring five. 

The Retrievers return to action on Saturday, Oct. 31 for the 2009 America East Cross Country Championships, hosted by Vermont.

LINKS

Women's Results
Men's Results

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Players Mentioned

Laura Blevins

Laura Blevins

5' 5"
Freshman
Suzanne Gabriel

Suzanne Gabriel

5' 4"
Senior
Sara Parkinson

Sara Parkinson

5' 9"
Senior
Keri Wilson

Keri Wilson

5' 6"
Sophomore

Players Mentioned

Laura Blevins

Laura Blevins

5' 5"
Freshman
Suzanne Gabriel

Suzanne Gabriel

5' 4"
Senior
Sara Parkinson

Sara Parkinson

5' 9"
Senior
Keri Wilson

Keri Wilson

5' 6"
Sophomore
Land Acknowledgement
UMBC was established upon the land of the Piscataway and Susquehannock peoples. Over time, citizens of many more Indigenous nations have come to reside in this region. We humbly offer our respects to all past, present, and future Indigenous people connected to this place. Learn more about this statement here.