Each of the Baldwinsville track and field teams took their shot at powerhouse Cicero-North Syracuse in separate meets on Wednesday afternoon. And while there was plenty of individual glory to be found, the Bees still lost both team events, the girls by an 86-55 margin at Pelcher-Arcaro Stadium and the boys in a 92-49 decision at Bragman Stadium. Gina Carnovale stood out in the girls meet for B’ville. She won the 100-meter dash in 12.6 seconds and added a victory in the 200-meter dash in 26.2 seconds. Also, Carnovale joined Morgan Marshall, Cierra Allen and Gabrielle Jordan for first place in the 4×400 relay in 4:15.9. B’ville took two of the three relays, also prevailing in the 4×100, where Jordan and Carnovale joined Lily VanDeValk and Stephanie Vasteno for a top time of 51.3 seconds. What hurt B’ville the most in the girls meet was the fact that it could not win any field event, bottled up there by CNS’s Katie Osborne and Lexi Thompson, who combined for five titles. Osborne, by herself, prevailed in the long jump, triple jump, high jump and 100-meter hurdles. Meanwhile, at CNS the boys Bees started out the right way, claiming the 4×800 relay as Shaun Thompson, Ethan Pacheck, Andrew Fleming and Alec Peinkofer finished in 8:34 flat. Andrew Hoover was quite impressive in the 400-meter hurdles, blazing to victory in 58.6 seconds, a full second clear of the Northstars’ Sam Nassar, this after a second (15.1 seconds) to Kareem Lee (14.9) in the 110 high hurdles. Mark Stanard would throw the discus 133 feet, nearly 14 feet better than CNS opponent Cameron Doray (118 feet 10 inches), while Antonio Peck unleashed a top long jump of 19 feet 5 inches. Thompson would get second to rival Chris Buchanan in the 3,200-meter run, 9:53.2 to Buchanan’s 9:42.2, but Pacheck would go to the front in the 400-meter dash in 52.6 seconds, nearly a full second better than CNS’s Shawn Webb. Peinkofer got second in the 800 (2:03.3). In the sprints, Antonio Peck ran the 100 in 11.1 seconds for third place, while Todd Mitchell, in 22.9 seconds, took second to CNS’s Andrew Johnson (22.7) in the 200.