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ERATH - Nathan Cormier plans to study architecture, so it makes sense for him to get in on the ground floor of a rebuilding project.
The Erath High standout signed with the Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns in track and field on Wednesday and should help the program climb out of an unaccustomed last-place finish this spring in the Sun Belt Conference.
"Until this year, I didn't think about it (college track) too much," said Cormier, an Academic All-State performer in cross country at EHS who has qualified for TOPS assistance. "I've been interested in architecture since my sophomore year. After that, I started to draw more and read up on it more."
UL's interest led to an open door for Cormier, who will get reacquainted with familiar faces already on the Cajun roster in D.J. Hebert (Catholic High) and Brennan Bernard (Erath).
"I ran with them when I was a freshman and they were seniors," Cormier said. "That's good. I'm more comfortable. The atmosphere is more inviting."
Cormier is an accomplished competitor at several distances, starting with cross country in the fall and including the 400, 800 and 1600 in the spring.
He was fourth among Acadiana's Area Bests in the 800 with a time of 2:00.72 this spring and anchored the Bobcats' 4x400 relay team to fourth place at the LHSAA Class 3A State Meet at LSU in a school-record time of 3:27.26.
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Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com
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"We broke the school record at state, and that's one of those motivating factors," EHS coach Kerry Richard said. "It's a tradition, because that's something we've done well over and over. The freshmen see the seniors run it, and they try to beat their times.
"Once something is established, it's easier to maintain."
Cormier won the District 6-3A 800 meters three years in a row, from 2004 through this year, establishing his own standard for excellence.
"Nathan is a super athlete - good football player, great in basketball - and we're fortunate to have him participate in track," Richard said. "He's known he loves track since middle school."
At UL, Cormier expects to compete in cross country, the 800 and 1,500 meters.
"I think the 800 is my distance," he said. "Running the 1,500 makes you better for the 800."
Cormier's next goal is to break the two-minute mark in the 800 after hitting that plateau two seasons in a row at EHS.
"This year, I had some minor setbacks," Cormier said. "My back started to tighten up on me. I over-worked it while I was working out. I ran the two-flat early in the season at the Snooks Relays, before I hurt my back. After that, it was 2:02, 2:03.
"I've stayed out of the weight room for a while. I decided to take off, let it rest."
Once the back heals, Cormier will huddle with Cajun distance coach Timmy Lemaire to see what kind of workout regimen he recommends before reporting for the fall semester and cross country. Cormier has never run summer track, but it remains an option.
Also an option would be the 4x400 relay, that trademark EHS event that was a big part of Cormier's time there.
"If they let me run it, I'll run it," Cormier said of the relay. "We're always ready to run that."
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