So where\'s Nicole? (how four underclassmen step up and go all-time without their star.)

So where\'s Nicole? (How four underclassmen step up and discover their power after their star misses warmups for a record attempt at the Sprint Medley Relay). \"So where\'s Nicole?\" asked several meet officials and media as the West Catholic Sprint Medley team lined up to take an anticipated shot at the National Record of 3:53.17. As they announcers introduced the teams in the hot heat, the questions continued. \"Is she leadoff? She\'s not in the line. Is she injured?\" The answer was surprising, at best, and somewhat disheartening for track fans who were hoping to see one of the best all-time performances for the 1600m event. Well, they weren\'t disappointed. And that\'s the main part of the story. All that four underclassmen - three juniors and one sophomore - did was to run the #4 all-time best of 3:56.47, winning by almost four seconds over Baton Rouge Magnet LA. In all, three other schools surpassed West Catholic\'s previous US#1 of 4:01.24. \"All of them surprised me\", said a very hoarse head coach Lenny Jordan a few hours after the race. \"We had a lot of commotion before the race in not knowing who was running, and the four girls just stuck together.\" First, the race. Christiana Taylor, the only sophomore, leads off in 26.1, and keeps the Burrs in the mix. But Long Beach Wilson was out to a good start, and it was up to Nia Ali and Kneshia Sheard to maintain contact. Ali - coming off an injury that caused her to miss her PA state meet two weeks prior - ran a strong 25.1, and then it was Kneshia Sheard\'s turn. She had PRed big-time at her state meet, running 56.65 to take third behind Leach and Wissahickon\'s Krista Simkins. She PRed again, running the final turn like an athlete on a mission, running for her finish and the team\'s hope for the win, Latavia Thomas. Sheard\'s split was 55.6. Thomas didn\'t panic, and used the first two laps to gradually reel in her target, before blowing by on the way to a 2:09.6 split and the all-time mark. Jordan, who had been sick for a few days leading up to the meet, said he felt a lot better knowing that these four girls had worked around the turmoil and \"did everything they needed to do.\" And that gets us to the subplot in the story. Nicole Leach did not make it to the meet in time for warmups for the Sprint Medley. She had been in school, but then unexpectedly did not travel with the team on Thursday afternoon. They anticipated her arrival Friday morning, but she didn\'t walk into the track with her family until 2:30. The race had been scheduled for 2:25, but by then the meet was a half-hour late. Not that it mattered. Jordan had his four girls, and they were ready to run. \"Sometimes, people have different agendas,\" Jordan commented. He says he didn\'t want to take out his frustration on Nicole, so she\'s still a member of the team for the meet. Nicole has a big day Saturday with qualifications for the 400 individual race - the Sunday final her focus where she will take a shot at the national record in the 400, having come within .09 at NSIC in 2004 with her #2 all-time 52.19. Could the team have captured the NR with Leach in the lineup? Take a second off for Sheard switching to one leg of the 200, and Leach knocking two or three off in the 400, and you\'re in the vicinity. As for the 4x400 finals, Jordan says he\'ll leave that to a vote of the girls who ran the Sprint Medley and 4x400 Trials on Friday. \"It\'s their team. What people forget is that it\'s the kid\'s team, not the adult\'s team.\"