From Graveside Sprints to State Championships: The Inspiring Track Journey of Jade Sanders

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Track athletes running in the graveyard along a stretch of pavement.
Image via AFS.
Abington Friends School track athlete Jade Sanders ’24, inspires, leads, and encourages her team with impeccable form.
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The first thing you might notice about Jade Sanders ’24 is her impeccable posture.

Her back is straight, her shoulders back — her arms folded in front of her or by her side. When she laughs, she laughs with her whole body. You can tell immediately that she is in control of every movement of her arms and legs, every push and pull of her muscles.

So it is no surprise that when Sanders, an AFS track athlete, thinks about track practice, her first thoughts go to how the basics apply no matter where you are.

“Sprinting is all about the mechanics of movement,” said Sanders. “It’s about learning how to end a race with posture and form intact. That’s what makes an athlete amazing. We could practice on the track or in the graveyard — it’s not about where you practice or how fast you can go. It’s easy to get tired; it’s hard to feel like you’ve learned something.”

Track athletes at AFS have grown familiar with the silence of the graveyard at the Abington Monthly Meeting. They are especially appreciative of the canopy provided by the centuries-old trees that protect them from the hot spring sun. There is no track at Abington Friends School, so students use the long flat paths between the headstones as a place to center themselves, take a deep breath, and push themselves to the finish. It’s an almost spiritual practice, ritual and physicalism bound up in one. It’s no wonder the solemnity of the graveyard fits so perfectly.

Over the last three years, Sanders has become a leader on the track team, with broken records to prove it. At the end of last year, she raced to a blistering personal and school record of 57.40 to place first overall in the Girls 400 Meters at the Pennsylvania Independent Schools Athletic Association State Championship Meet. But even though Sanders primarily runs the 400-meter, an individual event, she finds that having the team around her is one of the most important parts of keeping her mind in check.

Sanders competed in the State Indoor Tournament at Penn State as a junior. She was the only athlete from AFS to run, but that didn’t mean she was alone; three of her teammates joined her to cheer her on.

“Malea ’28, Rihanna ’25, and Lena ’25 — they came three hours with me to watch me run,” she said. “And if they hadn’t come, I might not have been in the right headspace to win.”

Off the track, Sanders does just as much: She loves her English and creative writing classes, is a Co-Clerk of the Black Student Union, and is thinking about studying psychology in college. And when she talks about the track team, she always emphasizes the team. It doesn’t matter where they run, whether it’s form runs in the graveyard or hill runs behind the Farmhouse: What matters is that they’re all there together.

“You’re only at your best when you come together,” said Sanders. “This year, I’m excited to be a senior on the team and really get to set that pace for everyone. Last year, I tried to bring a bunch of my friends out to try. I wanted to step into that leadership role, to show people that it’s not about being fast, and it’s not about where you run — you just have to want to run. The rest takes care of itself.”

Learn more at Abington Friends School. Abington Friends School cultivates fearless, curious learning in a culture of intellectual and creative ambition.

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