“It told me I could make it pretty far if I put my mind to it.” “Making it to CCS as a freshman was a really nice reward for all the hard work I put in,” Barreras said. It looks to be a harbinger of even greater performances on the track and in cross country.
However, she burst onto the scene with a tremendous track and field season, highlighted by the CCS Semis appearance. “And I just enjoy running so much I really wouldn’t want to quit.”īarreras couldn’t run cross country last year due to Covid and all the sports being condensed into two mini seasons. “My coach is always telling us you can do anything in life for 30 seconds, so I keep on going and pushing through it,” she said. When workouts or races get hard, Paulson focuses on getting through the next 30-second increment and then keeps on repeating that mantra. “It’s nice to have a training partner because we can build off each other,” Paulson said.īarreras echoed similar sentiments: “We pace each other well and it’s nice having some inside information from her at courses I haven’t run at yet and be able to get some advice from her.” “That’s when everyone usually starts talking about their day and we’ll get into really random conversations that side tracks our mind from running, so it’s nice to let go in that aspect,” Barreras said.Įven though Paulson and Barreras have an intrinsic motivation for running, it helps when they can partner up on a practice run or race. In some practices, the entire group will stay together in a pack during a workout, building camaraderie in the process. Paulson and Barreras have thoroughly enjoyed the team dynamic this season. “Me and Sofia were kind of working off each other the whole time.” “That was definitely one of my best races of the season,” Paulson said. The two enjoyed the race as they stuck together from start to finish. In the aforementioned third league meet at Montgomery Hill in the foothills of San Jose, Paulson took first place in 21 minutes, 30 seconds, and Barreras was right behind in 21:32 on the 3.0-mile course. “I enjoy cross country because it’s an individual sport, but also a team sport at the same time.”
“Running is a very nice outlet for me,” she said. Paulson, a senior, said running is therapeutic in that it allows her to get away from life’s daily stressors. “The courses are usually dirt and have a lot of hills with different scenery, which is a lot different than just doing a monotonous motion of going around a track all the time.” “What I like about cross country is you can put yourself into a different mindset,” said Barreras, a Live Oak High sophomore who finished 19th in the Central Coast Section Track and Field Semifinals in the 400 meter run last spring. 13-it makes their experience all the more rewarding.
When they finish 1-2 in a cross country race-as was the case in a Blossom Valley League meet on Oct. Abby Paulson and Sofia Barreras simply enjoy being out on a good run.