By Ed Piper
A lasting mental image of Payton Smith, former La Jolla High sprinter now competing for the University of Michigan: Viking soccer coach Austin Mobley inserted Smith as a designated striker early in the second half of a game her junior year in high school.
Payton received the ball beyond the midway point of the field, toward the left. She had one defender on her, plus the goalie. With her elite sprint speed, she went around the defender as if her foe were planted in cement. Now it was one-on-one with the poor goalie, waiting in the shadows. More sprinting, a quick kick, and Smith had done her assignment--score a goal.
She was removed right after the goal. It was a nice warmup and jog for her--the rest of us, mere mortals looking on. On the La Jolla sideline, her teammates were whooping it up: "Way to go, Payton." "Good job." They saw her as the friend and teammate she had been for a while.
Fast-forward two, nearly three years: The ASB president has moved on to her future and greener pastures. She is back in San Diego for the summer after a good start to her collegiate track career with the Wolverines.
Her sprints coach at Michigan, Steve Rajewsky, entering his 13th year, says, "(Payton) was a very highly-recruited high school athlete."
"She's (already) in the top four in (Wolverine) school history in the indoor and outdoor 400."
As a freshman, running on the school-record-setting 4x400 relay team--the foursome clocked 3:29 in the first round of the NCAA prelims in Eugene, Oregon this spring--and rating in the "upper echelon" of runners at UMich, in Rajewsky's words, Payton adjusted well to the move from San Diego to Ann Arbor.
She had a hiccup at the end of the winter indoor season early in 2025. "She fell," related Rajewsky. "That took a little bit of time to get back in the saddle."
Finally, recovering her confidence, "she ran 52.9 at the end of the outdoor season. That was in the ballpark of where she was running before (the fall)."
A sign of growth during Smith's freshman year at the private institution was that she was running faster times than she had in her highly successful senior year at La Jolla, when she won the state meet.
In her sprints coach's view, her adjustment to the snows of Michigan, being away from San Diego, came easier because her family had previously moved to La Jolla from Albuquerque, where her father served as a Division 3 basketball coach.
Rajewsky also knows Olivia, Payton's younger sister who followed her into the ASB presidency spot this past year, having served in her "cabinet" when the elder Smith daughter served as president.
"I wouldn't say (Payton) is quieter," said Rajewsky when told by a reporter that his only contact with her was on meet days at meet sites. There's not much time to chat when you aren't familiar with the person, and the athlete is preparing to run her events.
"(Payton) has a passion for people." "I'm excited to be part of her (journey). I'm excited for year two. You have so much more knowledge (after a year in college).
"Ignorance is bliss (the first year)."
Her major is undeclared. She is dabbling in different subjects, from "education to business to communications."
"This year she'll have to narrow it down."