On top of the world

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Hall's Kendall Rush and Princeton's Alyssa Donner are both No. 1 after wining their events in the IHSA 1A State Track and Field championships in Charleston. Rush won the triple jump while Donner claimed top honors in the pole vault.
Hall's Kendall Rush and Princeton's Alyssa Donner are both No. 1 after wining their events in the IHSA 1A State Track and Field championships in Charleston. Rush won the triple jump while Donner claimed top honors in the pole vault. (BCR photo/Chris Yucus)
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CHARLESTON - For a pair of area seniors, Saturday’s state track finals on the campus of Eastern Illinois University culminated with the ultimate award — a state title.

When the results were tallied, Princeton’s Alyssa Donner and Hall’s Kendall Rush stood atop the podium as the IHSA 1A champions in the pole vault and triple jump. The triumphs come on the heels of the duo’s indoor state titles won in the same events at the Peoria Top Times track meet earlier this spring.

Donner set a new personal record, clearing 10-10 in the pole vault as she soared over the 1A competitors to claim the state title.

“Coming in here and winning is a dream of mine, and I’m so happy it came true,” said an emotional Donner.

While winning the state title was a goal of Donner’s, who entered Saturday’s finals as the favorite to win, she says that setting a new personal record was also something she was shooting for.

Donners says when Rochester’s Erica Bertrand failed to clear 10-6 and the state title was hers, that her father, Bureau Valley track coach Dale Donner, and Princeton assistant Lew Flinn, the 1955 vault champion for PHS, reminded her that she still had some unfinished business.

“They told me ‘congratulations, now go get your record’,” Donner said. “They said I came here to win, but that’s not the only thing I came for, I came to get my own personal record.”

Donner becomes Princeton’s second ever state champ, with the first being Rebekah Faber who won the 1600 in 2003.

Rush entered Saturday’s finals of the triple jump with a comfortable cushion, having already posted an IHSA class A state record jump of 39-3 1/4 in Thursday’s prelims. Rush was not able to duplicate her record-setting mark with her three finals jumps, the best of which measured in at 37-10, but neither were any of her competitors. Breese Central’s Jena Hemann came the closest, but her top jump of 38-1 ½ was more than a foot less than Rush’s colossal leap posted on Thursday.

“It’s a lot to take in,” said Rush. “I just remember last year staring at the first place and wanting to be up on that so bad, and looking up to Leah Orley (last year’s winner), and the fact that I jumped farther than she did last year, I would have never imagined it.”

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