My freshman 800 time was a 2:26, yet I am a mile and two mile runner. If your main event is the 800, a good time for a freshman would be between 2:05 and 2:15 or better than that. Anything else you would probably not place
Yes, a freshman with determination and good study habits can handle 2 honors classes at the same time.
I do a mile in 3 1/2 minutes.
idk but i ran a 15.68 and people tell me that's good..im a freshman 2 ..it sure would be easier to work down
I would say a good time for a woman to run just a mile cross country would be around 6 minutes. A good split for a three mile would be 7 minutes.-------------------------------------------- It depends what shape you are in. I am a teenager and it literally takes me only 4-6 minutes to run 1 whole mile. But I am in REALLY good shape for I have ran cross-country and track for 2 years.
My son turned 10 about 2 months ago - he'd run about a 5.20-5.25 for a mile right now. He's pretty good though. James from Sydney.
i am a 13 year old in middle school. i currently run a 5:45 mile and a 2:22 800. i want to get it down to a 5:10 or under mile and a 2:10 or under 800 by the end of freshman year track. is it possible? i will be doing xc in the fall
Project Freshman - 2007 Best of Project Freshman Season 2 1-13 was released on: USA: 5 December 2007
It would depend on how long you've been running and what grade you're in. If you're in 6th grade, I'd say a good time for boys would be 6:30-8:00 for 1 mile (multiply that by 1.5 for a 1.5-mile race). If you're in 7th grade, maybe 6:00-7:30 for 1 mile. For 8th graders, 5:15-6:30. Again, if your races are 1.5 miles, multiply that mile time by 1.5. If you run 2-mile races (which I doubt, for middle school), multiply it by 2. Although, keep in mind that you probably won't be able to maintain your mile pace for 1.5 or 2 miles, so it will be about 15-30 seconds per mile slower.
The Freshman Class - 2013 2-1 was released on: USA: 2014
Freshman Diaries - 2003 1-2 was released on: USA: 2003
not bad. 28 inches would be considered good for a highschool football player, probably freshman or sophomore.