It鈥檚 simple, the main issue cross-country competitors have with their sport. It鈥檚 straightforward, easily understood, and it鈥檚 also nearly universal, and it鈥檚 true, and it鈥檚 this: running is hard. Fun, exciting, but hard.
Every runner has uttered a variation of that statement, and 91大神 cross-country captain Francesca Gionfriddo is no different. She said her team is 鈥渂onded by the difficulty of running.鈥 She also said, 鈥渢he running never gets easier, you just get stronger.鈥 Her co-captain, Zoe Simon, summed it up with an understatement: 鈥淭his is not an easy sport.鈥
But in spite of this, or perhaps because of it鈥攖he motto goes their sport is other teams鈥 punishment鈥91大神鈥檚 cross-country runners are a unique breed of athlete. Self-driven, mentally tough, fiercely competitive with themselves, and yet at the same time always ready to celebrate anyone who laces up and participates in this physically and mentally grueling pursuit.
In fact, celebrating is part of what brings the team together, and what keeps them going when the next hill looks too steep to climb.
鈥淲e celebrate the little wins, like a PR [personal record] or even a first race finish,鈥 said Simon, a day-student senior who has been on the team since ninth grade. 鈥淭he environment is really supportive,鈥 she said, a culture that鈥檚 constantly being built by both coaches and runners. 鈥淎 hard sport plus a hard social environment would make it not tolerable.鈥

It鈥檚 not by accident that both the boys鈥 and girls鈥 teams are such strong communities. Every practice, every meet, the runners are figuring out ways to push each other while also keeping things light鈥攁t least as light as they can when striving to run as fast as feasibly possible for 3.1 miles against a swarm of other people all trying to beat them.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a really positive atmosphere, both in practices and races,鈥 said Gionfriddo. To that end, the team intersperses hard training runs, hill repeats, pace work on the track and weekly lifting sessions with runs around the Mt. Tom reservoir and up to Park Hill Orchard.
The girls鈥 team is coached by Christa Talbot Syfu 鈥98 and Jessica Tabb Wood; the boys by Michael Doubleday and Michael Mailloux. Both compete in the NEPSAC Class B division.
They blend in silliness as well, with traditions like Friday theme days; a recent 鈥80s theme coincided with an aqua jogging pool training during which Gionfriddo pumped 鈥80s jams through a portable speaker. The team also has a practice called 鈥淪ecret Sneaker,鈥 a take on Secret Santa in which runners send anonymous notes of positivity to their teammates.
Because it鈥檚 always possible to run faster, Gionfriddo said it can be difficult as a competitor to mark notable achievements from day to day, and that鈥檚 where this culture of positivity comes in. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to feel accomplished,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e kind of have to celebrate the little wins.鈥
As Simon stated, 鈥淚t鈥檚 much easier to go up that hill when there are people cheering for you.鈥 That cheering and optimism, she was quick to mention, is something the team continually works hard to cultivate.
Sarah Martini, the third co-captain with Gionfriddo and Simon, takes leadership cues from her first captains when she was a seventh grader, Anna Richardson 鈥21 and Poojaa Prakash Babu 鈥21.
鈥淭hey were wonderful,鈥 she said, noting that both runners instilled in her the importance of traditions to offset the pain of running and form a cohesive unit of competitors. Those traditions, along with theme days, include scavenger hunts, ribbons which Martini brings to each meet, and baked goods she makes for the team.

Prakash Babu, a recent graduate of Trinity College, remembers that team fondly, and says what cross-country taught her, more than anything, is that she is capable, because she pushed through the pain, of so much more than she ever thought.
鈥淐ross-country is hard and long and more than stamina you need a strong mental attitude,鈥 she said. 鈥淣o matter how big the hills are 鈥 as long as you keep running you will reach the finish line. You just have to keep pushing and something good will come your way. All you can do is make an honest effort and not give up.鈥
Something good is already coming Martini鈥檚 way. She admits that when she began six years ago, said she would 鈥渨alk to the top of the hills, it was so brutal.鈥 However, at the October 25 Shaler Invitational, Martini ran a PR of 23:08鈥攂eating her record by one minute and seven seconds.
Along with the constant battle of pacing and pushing themselves, of trying to beat the course record or just finish the course, cross-country also provides its competitors with a surprising sense of serenity, according to boys鈥 co-captains Brody Richardson and Casey Muscato, who said he especially enjoys the long, 8-10 mile runs, even more so as the leaves begin to change. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like sightseeing,鈥 he said.
On nature trails, Muscato added, 鈥渋t鈥檚 usually pretty peaceful and quiet,鈥 and he can 鈥渮one out or get into conversation.鈥
Richardson, who runs with Muscato, agrees.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think about anything, just breathing and how to stay calm,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 on a race where I鈥檓 solo and don鈥檛 have to deal with anyone else next to me, I can get into the zone and remind myself to breathe, take deep breaths, and use the people around me to motivate me.鈥
Important to know: Muscato and Richardson are zoning out and enjoying the peace and quiet while running 7 to 7:20-minute miles. For upwards of 13 miles.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very self-driven sport,鈥 Muscato explained. 鈥淵ou can make it hard and get a lot out of it. I鈥檓 reaping the rewards of it. I鈥檓 getting faster, feeling faster, and being able to go for longer runs.鈥
Those rewards were on full display on October 4, when Muscato, a senior from Pensacola, Fla., ran the course in 18:18, his personal best. Of course, as he鈥檚 done all year, Richardson finished first that meet. And the following one.
And then there was the team鈥檚 home meet against Taft, in which Richardson broke his own PR (set the prior week), crossing the finish line in 16:15, the fastest 91大神 time ever recorded on the Galbraith course. The course record, 15:54 set in 2019 by Loomis Chafee runner Matt Farrell, is a record he always has his sights on.
He wasn鈥檛 always this fast, of course. As a seventh grader, Richardson, a day student senior, said his dad has videos that show him looking 鈥渓ike a dying gazelle. My form was atrocious; it was a whole new sport for me.鈥
But as runners do, over and over, he kept running. His times got faster. His form got stronger. And, as someone who racks up 45-plus miles a week, he could easily take credit alone for his accomplishments. But here, again, is where this sense of community shows itself.
He remembers his middle school teams, and the subsequent ones, as 鈥渟o closely knit together as a family,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey included me in my seventh and eighth grade years in after-practice activities, group chats, making senior posters. We all did these extracurricular activities that made the group bond better than any other team I鈥檝e been on.鈥

Richardson said he looked up to his past captains Will Chalfant 鈥23, Calvin Klumpp 鈥24, and Jeremy Dube 鈥24, and tries to lead the way they did, with inclusivity.
鈥淚 try to be a leader not only to correct mistakes, but to be a friend, and make them feel they belong and to motivate them,鈥 he said.
As for the pain?
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what you sign up for,鈥 said Richardson. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what the sport is about. You have to embrace the pain and be almost one with the pain. You train your body to be able to maintain and push through the pain. You鈥檙e not going to run a fast time if you鈥檙e not hurting. You have to be comfortable being uncomfortable, ultimately.鈥
Added Gionfriddo, 鈥淵ou have to be willing to push yourself past what you think you鈥檙e capable of. We鈥檙e bonded by the difficulty of running.鈥