In Review

As late summer arrived in 1991, expectations were running high for the Yellowjacket cross country program.
During the previous four seasons, Rochester had been a dominating presence in New York: four straight state titles, three NCAA regional championships, and four consecutive Top 10 finishes at the NCAA championship meet.
The team had come tantalizingly close to winning a national title, finishing third in 1988, seventh in 1989, and fourth in 1990.
They had come so close, in fact, that captain Joseph Mello III 鈥92 had begun the season by predicting big things for the talented and experienced team. But he had seen firsthand how challenging it could be to win it all.
鈥淚t takes talent and hard work to get the opportunity to fight for that spot,鈥 Mello says, 鈥渂ut the difference between first and fourth at the highest levels is razor thin, and you need a break.鈥
After a season of winning nearly every meet on their schedule, the Yellowjackets realized that the finishing order of the NCAA championship meet had turned into a cliffhanger.
As finishers crossed the line, race officials tore a slip of paper from each runner鈥檚 jersey and used that information to sort the results. The racers were given a piece of paper that noted their finishing order.
But the results wouldn鈥檛 be official until the NCAA extracted the information for all 185 runners.
鈥淩ight after the race, we were very worried,鈥 says Ray Lawson 鈥92.

Coach Tim Hale, accompanied by former Yellowjacket runners Dick Keil 鈥83 and Tom Tuori 鈥87, had scrambled to tabulate results, but Hale wasn鈥檛 sure he had more than a rough sense of how Rochester had done.
Adding to the team鈥檚 anxiety, Chris Rizzo 鈥93 had collapsed in the finish chute and had to be treated for heat exhaustion.
Mello and others began to doubt whether they had the title. 鈥淚 remember finishing and starting to count informal scores and thinking we just missed again. The unofficial scores looked like we finished second or worse.鈥
In the final tally, Rochester had edged out three-time defending national champion Wisconsin-Oshkosh and pushed ahead of surprise challenger North Central of Illinois to claim the top spot.
The margin of victory was the closest in what was then the 19-year history of the national meet. Rochester finished with 139 points, eight ahead of North Central and 11 more than Wisconsin-Oshkosh.
Three Yellowjackets鈥擩im Dunlop 鈥92, Dave Boutillier 鈥92, and Mello鈥攅arned All-America honors. Dunlop was the national individual runner-up. Mello was 10th overall, and Boutillier was 17th. Joining them at the finish line were Anthony Kerr 鈥93 in 44th and Lawson in 67th.
It was the first national title for Rochester in cross country, a milestone that was recognized during Meliora Weekend in October. Among those honored was Hale, who says the team understood the expectations placed on them but also knew that they couldn鈥檛 take anything for granted.
鈥淲e enjoyed the respect that coaches across the country had for us, but we also knew the last day of the season would be the final say,鈥 he says.
For Mello, 鈥淥n that day, I felt the pressure go. I felt we finally carried that baton across the line, a process that started years before I ever showed up on campus. I have never forgotten the role we played, and the road those before us paved that gave us that opportunity.鈥
Mello says he鈥檚 proud to have been part of something 鈥済reater than I could have ever imagined,鈥 the culmination of years of hard work, dedication, sacrifice, and training. But he also recognizes the luck, timing, and fortune that were in the right place at the right time鈥斺渨ith the right people.鈥
Dennis O鈥橠onnell is director of communications for the Department of Athletics and Recreation.锘匡豢