Members of the Durango High School cross country team collected money and spent it on $100 worth of glow sticks.

The Demons will need them for the Desert Twilight Cross Country meet Friday in Casa Grande, Arizona.

The event’s sweepstakes races for the largest and most accomplished high school runners mirror the event’s name, running at twilight and into the darkness at the Grande Sports Complex.

Spotlights are used to light the course, and the glow sticks help the runners and spectators see the competitors.

In order to finance the trip, the Demons’ boys team completed a fundraising run along the Colorado trail, and the girls team sold merchandise.

“The kids work really hard,” DHS head coach David McMillan said. “We try and put it into a big trip fund.”

This season is Durango’s third consecutive trip to the Twilight Open, and this year’s Demons are bringing one of their strongest teams yet.

DHS has won three meets on the boys side this season and finished second at Coronado, the last time the Demons let their top guns push it.

Both the Demons’ boys and girls teams are focused on Oct. 2 and the state championship race, and Friday is the first step toward that.

“It’s a great tipping point,” McMillan said. “We have been running with this theme of progression.”

That doesn’t mean Durango’s systemic pack philosophy will change, though.

It just will get a little more difficult with nearly 300 athletes in a given race, nearly three times what the Demons usually see.

“It helps for the kids to key off each other,” McMillan said. “We know if our top guns can be at the front of that mass of humanity, the other kids will find comfort in that.”

Shannon Maloney has epitomized that for Durango’s girls team this year, regularly finishing in the race’s top 15.

The Demons’ depth behind her did suffer a blow, though, when junior Emily Fogel, who has been the No. 3 DHS runner all season, decided to leave the team.

“I’m a little disappointed, but she’s got a heavy academic load,” McMillan said.

DHS elevated junior Marley Weaver-Gabel to the varsity squad to help fill that gap.

The eligibility of junior Aubree Lorenzen, who had to sit out the first half of the season after transferring from Bayfield, also will help augment the Demons’ depth.

In addition to the varsity squad, DHS also will bring its junior varsity and freshman teams, placing them in categories that match up with their skill levels.

But the trip is about more than running, though.

The Demons camped out on the way to Arizona and will spend a couple days around Sedona, Arizona, for a retreat after the race.

The Desert Twilight will mark the end of the JV season for DHS, so the coaches will talk with the team about the season in wrap and its goals for next year.

Durango’s varsity team will focus on their goals for regionals and the potential state meet.

“It brings the kids closer,” McMillan said.

Even with more than 5,000 athletes at the meet, McMillan understands where his team fits in the larger scheme of the race.

“We’ve done fairly well there and are fairly competitive in the different categories we run in,” he said. “I’d like them to run fast and get some confidence. (The meet) is an indicator of our fitness, but it isn’t a make-or-break race.”

kgrabowski@ durangoherald.com