TANIKA
BROWN SPOTLIGHT
5-30-03
Although most top-level athletes come from large communities and
high schools, there are always a handful of exceptions - diamonds
in the rough - that excel in college. The question surrounding
small-school athletes concerns their competition: Can they
perform as well against Division I opponents as they did at
Podunk High? For freshman track and field athlete Tanika Brown,
who attended Group AA Powhatan High School in Powhatan, Va., not
only is the answer to that question a resounding 'yes,' she has
thrived competing against some of the region's best high jumpers.
At the ECAC Track and Field Championships in
Princeton, N.J., Brown out-jumped some of the top high jumpers on
the East Coast to win the event with a school-record height of
five feet, eight inches. She was the only competitor to make that
height, and she cleared all three of the required heights without
a miss. Brown will see many of the same athletes as well as the
nation's leading high jumper in Chaunte Howard of Georgia Tech at
the NCAA East Region meet this weekend at George Mason. The high
jump competition begins Saturday at 3:30 p.m.
In high school, Brown was head and
shoulders above other athletes in her school's class. She won
four Group AA state championships, two in the high jump and two
in the 300-meter hurdles, and set the district high jump record
at five feet, seven inches. Brown feels that although she
experienced a lot of success, she never really reached her
potential due to the lack of quality competition.
"It was hard for me to keep my
[performances] up in our district because no one else was even
close to me," Brown said. "In high school I could
easily win meets by jumping 5-3, but now in college I have to
jump well at every meet to win.
"It felt good to win the ECAC meet, but
it puts a lot of pressure on me over the next three years to
continue to get better and keep winning."
Although Brown didn't get the quality of
competition she wanted in high school, the fact that she competed
against smaller schools probably kept her under the radar of
other top Division I track and field programs and allowed VCU to
recruit her. A pre-physical therapy major, Brown liked VCU for
its academics and proximity to home, but also felt she could be a
part of an up-and-coming track and field program at VCU.
"We're developing a great team here," she said. "I
saw that they were bringing in lots of talent, like Courtney
Greene (Caroline, Va./Caroline) and Shaunte Barber (Richmond,
Va./Meadowbrook). I think we have a pretty good team coming
up."
Brown's competitiveness has allowed her to
make a quick and easy transition from small-school big shot to a
legitimate Division I high jumper. In her first-ever indoor track
season, Brown cleared 5-7 at the ECAC indoor meet to place fifth
against many of the same jumpers she later defeated at the ECAC
outdoor meet. In April Brown became only the third VCU women's
athlete to win a CAA title in a field event when she won the high
jump with a leap of 5-7. Despite being a freshman, Brown doesn't
appear to be rattled in big meets in an event that can be as much
of a mental battle as it is a physical challenge.
"You can't get nervous in the high jump,
because there are so many things to think about," she said.
"It'll just make you mess up more."
The ECAC meet was a perfect example of Brown's
focus. After making 5-8 on her first attempt, Brown sat on the
infield thinking about the next height and waiting for other
competitors to take their attempts. "I wasn't paying
attention to the other jumpers, but I noticed people were
missing. After another miss, everyone just looked at me, and
Coach [Todd] Morgan came over and told me I won. I figured there
were still people left and didn't know I had won."
This weekend Brown has her sights set on
placing in the top five and advancing to the NCAA Championships
in Sacramento, Calif. With her personal best of 5-8, Brown now
ranks 14th in the East region but is less than two inches shy of
ranking in the top five. Brown figures the winning height to be
around 6-1 this weekend, with 5-10 being enough to make the
NCAA's. She also can qualify for the U.S. Junior National meet by
clearing 5-8 1/2, a mark she barely missed after winning the ECAC
title in Princeton. This time she is no longer some freshman from
VCU, but the ECAC champion and a contender for one of the NCAA
qualifying spots.
"I'm excited [about the region
meet]," Brown said. "I'm hoping to get up a little
higher and see what I can do. My goal coming into this year was
to jump 5-9. I haven't done it yet, but if I get everything right
I think I can do it.
"[Winning ECAC's] boosted my confidence a
little bit, since I didn't expect to win it. Now I know a lot
more people and others know who I am. I like it that [other
jumpers] know who I am. That's when I compete my best, when I
know people are kind of after me."