There’s a very homey feeling when glancing at the roster of the University of Maine cross country teams.

A number of coach Mark Lech’s top returning and in-coming runners hail from the Pine Tree State, and the Black Bears appear poised to do some damage along the trails of al-ways competitive America East this fall.

“We just had a time trial on Saturday and I’m trying to pick the rosters from that, especially on the guys’ side,” said Lech.

The Black Bears will get their season off and running at the Dartmouth Invitational in Hanover, N.H., Saturday.

They were originally slated to open at Maryland-Baltimore County, in a meet designed to give America East teams a look at the course where the confer-ence championship meet will be held, but the Retrievers’ coach-ing staff postponed the meet until Oct. 3, Lech said.

Lech speculated that the park through which UMBC’s course goes through wasn’t available to be used.

The UMaine women will field some strong returning runners to complement a throng of new-comers.

Among the newcomers are Hilary Maxim of Old Town, Corey Conner of Massachu-setts, Magen Ellis of Farming-dale and Vanessa Letourneau of Fairfield, a track and field standout making her cross country debut.

“They’re doing real good, all the freshmen are doing real well,” said Lech.

The Bears will also welcome back Stephanie Jette of Frye-burg and Brunswick’s Chelsea Leeman.

Lech is expecting big things out of Maxim, who had an out-standing high school career at Old Town.

“Looking at her workouts right now, she’ll definitely be under 19 minutes for the 5K, how far under is hard to specu-late depending on the course and things like that,” Lech said.

The Bears have been toning down their mileage the last week or so with the start of the fall semester, but at training camp recently the women were plugging about 50 to 55 miles a week and the men 70 to 75.

”Usually what I do when we come back, because of the first week of classes, I have them bring the mileage back down a little bit because a lot is going on,” said Lech.

He added that Boston Uni-versity is the clear favorite in America East, even though the Terrier women lost their front-runner.

“With them they could get three people to fill in,” Lech said.

The Maine men have a solid corps of returnees, led by Miles Bartlett of Casco, Brendan Carr of Brewer, Corey Bean of Corn-ville, Charlie Theriault of Mas-sachusetts, Chris Harmon of Scarborough and David Engle-hutt of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia.

Newcomers Riley Masters of Bangor, Mark Halberson of Falmouth, Spencer McElwain of Caribou and Noah Schone-berg of Buxton will look to sup-port that group.

Masters, coming off an out-standing senior campaign at Bangor, along with the other freshmen, will have to make the adjustment of racing the 8-kilometer collegiate distance compared to 3.1 miles in high school.

“That’s the key issue,” Lech said. “What’ll happen is they’ll find themselves having to go through the 3 mile as fast or as close to as fast as they did last year in the 5K and having two more miles to go from there. That’s part of the process.”

While there is no clear-cut America East men’s favorite, New Hampshire, Boston Uni-versity and Stony Brook appear to be the top three teams while Maine is among a mix of teams, including UMBC, Albany and Binghamton, that will battle it out for fourth.

Unique meet in the County

The Caribou Invitational highlights a slate of high school cross country meets scheduled for this weekend.

The meet will start with the boys’ varsity races at 1 p.m. at Caribou High.

This meet is slightly differ-ent than a typical cross country competition, as it mirrors the old Waterville Invitational in terms of race format.

Here’s how things work: In the varsity races, all the No. 1 runners go off in a single race together, while all the No. 2s go out about 10-15 minutes later, all the way up through No. 7.

Just like in a regular meet, five runners will comprise a team’s score, based on place.

In other words, a team’s No. 7 runner can make all the differ-ence in the world and its front-runner might not even matter.

If five of a team’s seven run-ners manage to win his or her race, that equals a perfect score of 5, as opposed to 15 in a regu-lar race.

All these races will be con-tested on Caribou’s challeng-ing, spectator-friendly 2.73-mile course, many of which are the same trails the Vikings’ cross country ski teams use.

A campground area will be available in town for teams who wish to camp out, while Cari-bou will also allow teams to stay in the high school gym as well.

BDN sports freelancer Ryan McLaughlin grew up in Brewer and is a lifelong fan of the New England Patriots, Boston Red Sox, Boston Celtics and Boston Bruins.

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