ĢƵ

close

Layton reinstated into 110 HH at WPIAL meet

By Jim Downey, For The Greene County Messenger 3 min read
article image -

Waynesburg Central boys track & field coach Rick Layton and son Daniel had quite a tumultuous week concerning the seniorĢƵ status for the WPIAL Championships.

The week began last Wednesday when the coach incorrectly entered his son in the wrong hurdles race and concluded yesterday when the PIAA ruled in favor of the LaytonĢƵ appeal for reinstatement in the Class AA 110 high hurdles. The WPIAL Championships begin at 11 a.m. at Slippery Rock University.

“They chose to reinstate Daniel into the 110 high hurdles,” a relieved Rick Layton said.

The elder Layton spent the days in between with calls, emails and an appeal to the WPIAL that ended with a 12-3 no vote on Monday.

The PIAA appeals process began early Wednesday.

“The Stephensons (principal Bob and athletic director Justin), Mr. (Kirk) King, the solicitor, my wife and myself had a conference call at 9 a.m. I owned up to a human error. I said itĢƵ not fair to assess my error on my son,” explained Rick Layton. “There was a Q&A session. Seemed like a pretty long (deliberation) to me, but they came back with a 5-0 vote (in favor of reinstatement).”

Layton was pulled from the 300 intermediate hurdles, which was the original intent.

“Daniel was removed from the 300 intermediate hurdles. (The 17th-fastest) time should be pulled up. I hope thatĢƵ what happened,” said Rick Layton. “My understanding is (the hurdler seeded 16th in the high hurdles) will run. ItĢƵ not fair to that young man.

“So, I don’t know if they’ll run three equal heats (instead of two). I suggested have Daniel qualify for one of the two timed spots. Whether he runs by himself or in a heat, thatĢƵ up to them.”

The top three finishers in each of the two Class AA heats automatically advance to the finals, along with the two fastest times.

Rick Layton pointed out the reinstatement gives his son the opportunity to compete, but is not a guarantee.

“He still has to go out and do his job. ThatĢƵ the fairness of sports. Let the athlete decide the outcome,” said Layton. “The championship meet should be the best athletes on the track to see who is the best.”

Daniel Layton was understandably anxious and then disappointed after the WPIAL ruling.

“It was very hard. He tried to be very supportive and very strong throughout, but the ruling Monday got to him a bit. The cracks started to show,” explained Layton. “HeĢƵ breathing a lot easier. He has a reprieve.”

The reprieve allows Daniel Layton the opportunity to overcome a tragic stumble over the first hurdle in last yearĢƵ state final, causing the pre-race favorite to finish eighth.

“The PIAA finals, thatĢƵ what was killing me,” said Rick Layton. “We hired a coach just to get him ready for states.”

Layton also had to prep the other Raiders participating in the district final.

“We refocused them. I apologized to all my kids and said they need to focus on the job at hand,” said Rick Layton. 

Rick Layton appreciated the support his sonĢƵ appeal drew and understands why what happened, happened, and hopes a more streamlined process in the future will result.

“I’m going to write a letter, apologizing to Mr. (Tom) Norris and the WPIAL committee. I have no ill will to them. I know (the WPIAL Board) had their reason to vote against Daniel,” said Layton. “The WPIAL took a heckuva bash on social media. I feel sorry.

“The WPIAL needs to come up with an active verification process to catch these types of errors.”

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $4.79/week.