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Tennison strives for more on the course

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Paige Tennison still has those conversations with her mother, the ones she has been having since her sophomore year at Newport Harbor High.

Tennison sees a cross country time and is amazed by it, perhaps temporarily forgetting the times that she is now capable of producing as a senior.

“I’m just going out and working as hard as I can,” Tennison said. “I’ll tell my mom, ‘Oh my gosh, she’s amazing!’ And my mom will be like, ‘Paige, you’ve ran faster than that.’ And it’s like, ‘Oh, right.’ It hasn’t clicked still, I guess.”

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Not too many people in California can touch Tennison on the course. She is the top-ranked Division 2 girl in the state by longtime cross country and track guru Rich Gonzalez of prepcaltrack.com. She again proved she was Orange County’s best at the Orange County Championships last weekend.

Tennison won the girls’ sweepstakes race for the second straight year at Irvine Regional Park. She became the first repeat winner since former Woodbridge standout Christine Babcock accomplished the feat in 2006-07.

Tennison still considers it an honor to be compared to someone like Babcock, or her friend Laura Hollander. Hollander, who graduated from Marina last year, is a freshman runner at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. On the same day that Tennison won, so did her former Sunset League foe Hollander, at the 6K Wisconsin Invitational.

“She beat people that were in the Olympic Trials, people that are expected to win the NCAA championship,” Tennison said. “She beat all of them. It was amazing. She’s probably my idol, one of them. She’s inspirational.”

Tennison is plenty fast herself. Her time at the Orange County Championships was 16:56, three seconds better than last year.

Not bad, considering recently she missed nearly a week of training due to an allergic reaction from a wheat-like substance in a drink.

“Who puts wheat in a Frappuccino?” said Tennison, whose illness caused her to miss the Clovis Invitational on Oct. 6.

Newport Harbor Coach Eric Tweit notes that Tennison also didn’t race at the Dana Hills Invitational earlier this year. He expects his top runner to be fresh for the end of the season. The Sailors competed at Mt. San Antonio College on Saturday. Then, next weekend, they will take part in the Sunset League finals.

Tennison will be favored to win the individual title there; last year she was second to Hollander.

“She’s really been serious about running less than two years,” Tweit said. “It wasn’t until her sophomore year of track that she really showed she was actually going to do something. It’s kind of strange. It seems like she’s been around a long time, but it’s really been less than two years. I think the big difference is pretty simple — it’s just maturity.

“Last year she had a few problems, not anything major, but a few problems just because she didn’t know the correct way to train and take care of herself ... She’s matured and she’s still learning what it takes, but she’s getting better at it.”

Some runners might just say they want to get better every race. But Tennison is not shy about stating her ultimate goal for the year, which is the state title. Last year, she finished sixth in Clovis in Division 2 and medaled.

She will certainly be one of the favorites to win, but she’s also not taking anything for granted.

“Every week we usually do a hill workout, then some sort of speed workout,” Tennison said. “Whenever I do a workout where you’re working on speed and stuff like that, I’m the type of person where it’s either as fast as I can, or not at all. If my times are off, mentally, I need to go faster. Coach Tweit will be like, ‘That’s OK, you went a little farther yesterday, your legs should be tired.’ But that doesn’t mean anything to me. I’m going to push as hard as I can, no matter how I’m feeling. It’s really hard for me to hold back.”

On the course, Tennison said she’s in the zone. She considers the OC Championships course her favorite, and one of the big reasons is that it’s clearly marked.

It seems trivial, until you consider what happened to Tennison last year at Mt. SAC.

“You’re supposed to do two loops, and I kept going on the second loop when you were supposed to turn and go up the hill,” Tennison said. “I ended up running maybe 400 meters out of the way, until I realized, ‘Oh gosh, maybe I’m going the wrong way.’ This guy was like, ‘Turn around!’ But I made my way back up. That’s probably one of my worst fears going into every race — am I going to know where to go?

“Coach Tweit’s advice to me before every race is, ‘Run your own race.’ Going into a race, I don’t go in with a strategy like most people, because I feel like that just psyches me out. I’m just completely zoned out. My coach will tell you, I don’t remember any course I’ve ever ran. Some courses, this is the third time I’ve ran them, and I could not tell you where I am going. I just get out there and run. I don’t know what I’m doing; I’m just going.”

Tennison talks more candidly than she did in the past. Tweit said that’s just part of her growth.

She said she appreciates the support of her teammates and coach. Senior Maggie Goodson is team captain for Newport Harbor, which hopes to again advance to CIF as a team. The Sailors will need either a top-three finish at league finals, or placing in the top 13 in the CIF Southern Section Division 2 rankings.

They’re not currently top 13. Tweit said they’re close, but he also said his top runner is still not close to achieving her full potential.

“This is really a long process,” Tweit said. “I think she can definitely do this through college and be very successful. It’s just going to take quite a while yet to get all the pieces together. It’s kind of like a puzzle, putting them correctly. We’ve learned some of them, and then we’ve had to say, ‘No, that piece didn’t fit, let’s take that out and put it back in the correct way.’ It’s a huge thing, and Paige is driven.

“She wants to be very good. She’s going to go somewhere to run in college. Wherever she goes, they’re going to be fortunate to get her, because I think she’s only going to get better.”

matthew.szabo@latimes.com

Twitter: @mjszabo

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Paige Tennison

Born: Sept. 11, 1994

Hometown: Newport Beach

Height: 5-foot-5

Sport: Cross country

Coach: Eric Tweit

Year: Senior

Favorite food: Power pancakes

Favorite movie: “Bridesmaids”

Favorite athletic moment: Winning the sweepstakes race last year at the O.C. Championships.

Week in review: Tennison won the girls’ sweepstakes race at the Orange County Championships for the second straight year. She finished the three-mile course at Irvine Regional Park in 16 minutes, 56 seconds.

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