- Salina South’s Reese Altman – Spangles Athlete of the Month
- Ellsworth’s Shaylee Leiker – Track Spotlight Presented by Salina Ortho
- Smoky Valley Track Spotlight – Presented by Salina Regional Orthopedic Clinic
- Hutchinson’s Brock Southern – Golf Spotlight Presented by Visit Wichita
- Andover Central’s Easton Elliott – Spangles Athlete of the Month
- Kapaun Mount Carmel’s Hadlie Lowe – Schmidt’s Welding Player Profile
- Goddard High School – ICT Cheer Legacy Team of the Month
- Wichita’s Alexandria Stegman & Topeka’s D’André Phillips – Army ROTC Spotlight
- 10th Anniversary Run2Believe 5k Memorial Run/Walk
- Salina South’s Madalyn Crow – Spangles Athlete of the Month
Shocker Track Club continues to thrive – Presented by Shocker Track Club
- Updated: September 19, 2019
By Brad Hallier, VYPE Kansas Editor In Chief
Track clubs pop up and disappear almost as fast as they start.
That has made the Shocker Track Club something of an outlier in the Wichita-area track market. The club started modestly in 2011, and more than eight years later, is a steady and confident club.
“One or two people often run everything, and you find out it’s a boatload of work,” said Darren Muci, the Shocker Track Club’s president since its founding, with a laugh.

Shocker Track Club member Maxwell Christie opens the 100 meters at the USATF Hershey National Junior Olympics Championships in Sacramento, Calif. (Photo courtesy Shocker Track Club)
Muci acknowledged there might be other track clubs around Wichita that have bigger numbers, but Shocker Track Club has advantages. All club coaches are USATF members, pass background checks and go through other training. Most of the coaches competed in track at the collegiate level.
Not only does the club cater to children as young as 5 and all the way through high school, but it has competitive divisions for high-achieving adults, a Masters division for those 30 and older, Open (age 19-29) as well as road racing from five-kilometer (5K) to marathons.
Even those athletes who don’t necessarily do track as a primary sport can compete. Muci said the club has a better than 60-percent return rate.

Shocker Track Club pole vaulters, including Camden Wagoner (right), prepare for practice. (Photo courtesy Shocker Track Club)
“Track is the foundation of all sports, but it does take a special person that wants to learn about an individual event,” Muci said.
Plus, with the start of the 2019-2020 season, the club will introduce an indoor program.
Last academic year, 32 high school athletes who trained with the club qualified for the Kansas state track meet. Nine also qualified for the 2019 USATF Junior Olympics in Sacramento, Calif., and six qualified for the AAU Junior Olympics in Greensboro, N.C.
To learn more about the club, visit www.shockertrackclub.com.