Sports
2025 All-Big West Women’s Water Polo Awards Announced
Story Links 2025 Big West Women’s Water Polo Awards The Big West proudly boasts its women’s water polo major award winners and all-conference selections one week ahead of the 2025 NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championship. Our awards and teams were voted on by the conference’s eight head coaches. Bernadette Doyle of Hawai’i wears […]

2025 Big West Women’s Water Polo Awards
The Big West proudly boasts its women’s water polo major award winners and all-conference selections one week ahead of the 2025 NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championship. Our awards and teams were voted on by the conference’s eight head coaches.
Bernadette Doyle of Hawai’i wears The Big West Player of the Year distinction after recording 53 goals, 38 assists (91 points), 43 drawn exclusions, 13 field blocks, and a conference best 51 steals. In league play, Doyle dished out a UH high in points with 37 alongside 19 tallies and a team-best 19 assists. The Aukland, New Zealand native’s 2.1 steals per game lead the league while also ranking No. 3 in assists per game at 1.6. This is the third straight season a member of the Rainbow Wahine has been recognized as the Player of the Year and seventh recipient in program history.
Éma Vernoux has earned the Big West Freshman of the Year award following an impressive season that saw the first-year player finish with the third-most tallies in the league with 75. As the top overall goal scorer for UH, Vernoux found the back of the net six times in against Arizona State and posted a career-best eight points (4 goals, 4 assists) in a non-conference clash against UC Irvine. The Marseille, France native is the fourth UH player in the last five years (sixth overall) to find themselves as the Freshman of the Year.
James Robinson claimed Big West Coach of the Year during the first year at the helm of Hawai’i. After serving as associate head coach for two seasons, Robinson aided the Rainbow Wahine to a 21-4 season including an unblemished 7-0 mark in Big West battles. The Rainbow Wahine won The Big West’s regular season and Championship in back-to-back seasons. Overall, UH downed 18 nationally ranked opponents this year including a staple 8-5 victory versus UCLA this season which helped the team remain No. 3 in the nation for seven straight weeks sparking an eight-game win streak. UH swept the major award category (Player and Freshman of the Year) and had student-athletes win Big West Player of the Week six times under Robinson’s watch in 2025.
Joining fellow UH teammates in the first team list is 2025 Big West Tournament MVP Daisy Logtens. The netminder managed to finish atop the conference in goals-against average at an astounding 9.02 mark alongside 59 total saves, which qualify as third most in The Big West. During the Championship Final against LBSU, Logtens fell just one stop away of the sophomore’s career high with 14 saves. Overall, the goalkeeper turned away 25 shots on the team’s journey to the national tournament.
A duo of Long Beach State attackers also earned first team status in Martina Cardona and Elisa Portillo. The pairing of Cardona (70) and Portillo (67) place fourth and fifth in The Big West with the most goals scored, respectively. Cardona (103) and Portillo (109) were two of five players to put together over 100 points during the 2025 campaign. This is the first nod on the All-Big West first team for both student athletes. LBSU capped off the season as the runner’s-up after beating CSUN 22-8 in the quarterfinals and edging UC Irvine 12-11 for a spot in the Championship Final.
Another duo dots the first team list, this time representing UC San Diego with Caroline Christl and Kendall Thomas. Christl led the Tritons with 92 goals on the year which also accounted as second best in the league standings while Thomas saw 58 shots go through the net. Both representatives were rewarded Big West Player of the Week with Chistil claiming the award twice within a month’s span (Feb. 12 & March 5) and Thomas taking home the honor during the final week of the regular season on April 23. This is the first time Thomas has been named All-Big West while Christl collected first team honors in 2023 and earned a second team nod last season.
Last season’s Freshman of the Year, Lauren Hett was also tapped to the first team. Hett scored a UC Irvine high 20 times in conference play of the sophomore’s 67 scores this season.
The second team consists of UC Irvine’s Kennedy East and Brooke Hourigan, UC Santa Barbara’s Annie Kuester, Bridget Miller of UC Davis, Long Beach State’s Chelsea Oliver, CSUN’s Dorottya Telek and Jordan Wedderburn of Hawai’i.
Telek touts a new Big West record in single season goals after netting a career-best six tallies in CSUN’s regular season finale en route to shattering the record with 104 goals. Telek tied the milestone in 2023 with 101 tallies after Monika Eggens of UH recorded the mark back in 2013. The center has scored 376 times in the senior’s career, qualiyfing as the most ever by a Big West student athlete.
Wedderburn totaled the second most goals on UH this season with 65 tallies. The Joahnnesburg, South Africa native notched a career-high seven scores in a non-conference contest versus UCI. Wedderburn also racked up Player of the Week three times this season, tying the UH program record.
East and Hourigan earned way as second team selections after each registering 41 goals apiece for UCI this season. The Anteaters compiled a 5-2 record in conference play this season and earned a hard-fought victory in the quarterfinal round of the 2025 Big West Women’s Water Polo Championship, 12-11 where the duo combined for four tallies.
Kuester collected 60 scores to lead UCSB this season and notched 19 in league play. The senior found the back of the net three or more times in 10 games this season, highlighted by a six-goal standout performance in the Gauchos season opener.
Miller led UCD in goals after putting 47 through the net in 2025. The center recorded four goals in three games this season, the amongst all Aggies.
During Big West play, Oliver led the league in saves (81), goals-against average (7.22) and save percentage (.609). Oliver made double-digit stops four times in Big West battles reaching a career high 14 saves twice.
Imani Clemons of UC Santa Barbara, Daniela Quinzada Gonzalez of Long Beach State, Sadie Henry of UC Davis, Destiny Hernandez of Cal State Fullerton, Kelly Hungerford, Chelsea Johnson, and Gianna Nocetti of UC Davis, Madi O’Hara of UC Irvine, Jamie Oberman of Long Beach State, Courtney Okumura of UC San Diego, Anna Pal of CSUN, Roni Perlman of Hawai’i, Amanda Price of Long Beach State, and Nioka Thomas of UC Irvine all received honorable mention.
The All-Freshman team features LBSU’s Rita Gurri Capel, Gabrielle Doyle of UH, LBSU’s Daniela Quinzada Gonzalez, UCI’s Pippa Heaver, UCSB’s Bella Mady, UCSD’s Holly Roberts, and Éma Vernoux of UH.
Hawai’i received the conference’s automatic qualifier into the NCAA Championship by winning The Big West Championship for the sixth time in program history after stifling second-seeded LBSU by a score of 8-6 in the Championship Final. This is the first time UH has punched consecutive tickets to the NCAA Championship since 2005-06.
The Rainbow Wahine earned the No. 4 seed and will compete in a rematch of last year’s NCAA Championship Semifinal against California (19-5) in this year’s quarterfinals of the national tournament on Friday, May 9 at 2 p.m. PT/11 a.m. HT. The 2025 NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championship is hosted on the campus of IUPUI at the IU Natatorium, May 9-11.
2025 All-Big West First Team
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Student-Athlete | Year | Position | Institution | Hometown |
Martina Cardona | Sr. | ATK | Long Beach State | Barcelona, Spain |
Caroline Christl | R-Sr. | UTL | UC San Diego | San Clemente, Calif. |
Bernadette Doyle | Sr. | ATK | Hawai’i | Auckland, New Zealand |
Lauren Hett | So. | ATK | UC Irvine | Orinda, Calif. |
Daisy Logtens | So. | GK | Hawai’i | Uden, Netherlands |
Elisa Portillo | Jr. | ATK | Long Beach State | Madrid, Spain |
Kendall Thomas | Sr. | CEN | UC San Diego | Merced, Calif. |
Éma Vernoux | Fr. | ATK | Hawai’i | Marsielle, France |
2025 All-Big West Second Team | ||||
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Student-Athlete | Year | Position | Institution | Hometown |
Kennedy East | Sr. | ATK | UC Irvine | Redondo Beach, Calif. |
Brooke Hourigan | Gr. | ATK | UC Irvine | Newport Beach, Calif. |
Annie Kuester | Sr. | UTL | UC Santa Barbara | Danville, Calif. |
Bridget Miller | So. | UTL | UC Davis | Ladera Ranch, Calif. |
Chelsea Oliver | Jr. | GK | Long Beach State | Auckland, New Zealand |
Dorottya Telek | Sr. | CEN | CSUN | Budapest, Hungary |
Jordan Wedderburn | Sr. | UTL | Hawai’i | Johannesburg, South Africa |
Honorable Mention: Imani Clemons (UC Santa Barbara, Sr., CEN), Daniela Quinzada Gonzalez (Long Beach State, UTL), Sadie Henry (UC Davis, So., UTL), Destiny Hernandez (Cal State Fullerton, Sr., UTL), Kelly Hungerford (UC Davis, Sr., ATK), Chelsea Johnson (UC Davis, So., CEN), Gianna Nocetti (UC Davis, R-Jr., ATK), Madi O’Hara (UC Irvine, R-Jr., UTL), Jamie Oberman (Long Beach State, Sr., DEF), Courtney Okumura (UC San Diego, Sr., Los Altos, Calif.), Anna Pal (CSUN, Sr., DEF), Roni Perlman (Hawai’I, Jr., ATK), Amanda Price (Long Beach State, Gr., UTL), Nioka Thomas (UC Irvine, Sr., CEN) | ||||
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All-Freshman Team: Rita Gurri Capel (Long Beach State, DEF), Gabrielle Doyle (Hawai’i, ATK), Daniela Quinzada Gonzalez (Long Beach State, UTL), Pippa Heaver (UC Irvine, ATK), Bella Mady (UC Santa Barbara, UTL), Holly Roberts (UC San Diego, UTL), Éma Vernoux (Hawai’i, ATK) |
Sports
Track and Field Wrap up Outdoor Season in NCAA First Round
Story Links COLLEGE STATION, Texas – The Central Arkansas track and field teams spend four days competing down at Texas A&M’s campus in the first round of the NCAA Championship. And though none of the Bears’ athletes advanced to Eugene, those that competed continued to add to the rising stock of […]

COLLEGE STATION, Texas – The Central Arkansas track and field teams spend four days competing down at Texas A&M’s campus in the first round of the NCAA Championship. And though none of the Bears’ athletes advanced to Eugene, those that competed continued to add to the rising stock of the track program at Central Arkansas.
“I’d be lying if we didn’t leave College Station wanting more this week. That being said, we had some great performances and competed well across the board,” Head coach Josey Weaver said of his team. “The experience we gained this week will be a building block for what’s to come.”
The men’s throwers started the week on Wednesday with the hammer toss, and Jaden Schneeberger led the way with a 63.53m toss, just .05 meters from tying his personal-best. Treavor Green was a short ways away with a 61.60m throw, and Aiden Patton registered a 58.59m toss. Jeff King took on the javelin in the early afternoon on Wednesday, and as one of nine freshmen in the competition, gave it a good effort, finishing with a distance of 57.36m. Jeremiah Boudreaux ran his heat of the 400m hurdles on Wednesday as well, and placed third in his heat with a 50.68 to qualify for Friday’s final.
Thursday, the women got started. Joia Perry opened competition in the hammer throw, and after what appeared to be a clinching distance of 62.22m, was edged out at the end, finishing 14th out of 48 throwers. Raghan Allen was next, competing in the 100m dash. She set a school record with a blazing time of 11.38, but came up .05 seconds away from moving on to Saturday’s finals.
Friday’s action had Pete Johnson competing in the 3000m steeplechase. And in an event that saw the top-nine finishers break the facility record, the Bears’ senior ran an 8:57.59, two seconds faster than his time at the ASUN Championships, finishing in 25th place. Later on in the evening, Boudreaux had his quarterfinal run in the 400m hurdles, but clipped one during his heat, unfortunately becoming disqualified.
Saturday, the women’s 4×100 team of Troynelle Miller, Raghan Allen, Baleigh Cashion and Brenae Allen had their second-best time of the season, clocking in at 45.35, but couldn’t secure a spot in Eugene.
“This has been an amazing ride with a remarkable group. I am very thankful for all of those who have contributed to building our program to the top of the ASUN Conference,” Weaver added. “We realize that we will have a target on our backs next year, and I’m looking forward to watching how our team responds.”
Sports
Pellicoro Advances to NCAA Championships in 800m
Story Links College Station, Texas — Laura Pellicoro is headed to Eugene. The senior earned her spot at the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships with a strong performance in the 800m quarterfinal on Saturday evening at the West Regional. Pellicoro placed second in her heat and third overall […]

College Station, Texas — Laura Pellicoro is headed to Eugene. The senior earned her spot at the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships with a strong performance in the 800m quarterfinal on Saturday evening at the West Regional.
Pellicoro placed second in her heat and third overall with a time of 2:01.44. She earned an automatic qualifying spot by finishing among the top three in her heat. She will compete on the national stage at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon on June 11–14.
Pellicoro will be joined in Eugene by Matt Strangio, who qualified yesterday in the men’s 5,000m after winning his semifinal in a facility record time.
2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships West First Round
College Station, Texas (E.B. Cushing Stadium)
May 28-31, 2025
Wednesday, May 28
Men’s 1,500m First Round
8. Mark Milner, 3:46.65
44. Jonas Price, 3:58.32
Men’s 10,000m Semifinals
32. Jona Bodirsky, 29:23.75
46. Bradley Peloquin, 31:12.92
Thursday, May 29
Women’s 800m First Round
3. Laura Pellicoro, 2:03.55
Women’s 10,000m Semifinals
24. Juliette Forstrom, 35:09.34
Friday, May 30
Men’s 1,500m Quarterfinal
20. Mark Milner, 3:50.34
Men’s 3,000m Steeplechase Quarterfinals
33. Giuliano Scasso, 9:07.72
Men’s 5,000m Semifinals
1. Matt Strangio, 13:25.98 (Facility Record)
Saturday, May 31
Women’s 800 Quarterfinal, 5:05 PM (PT)
3. Laura Pellicoro, 2:01.44
Sports
Itziar Almeda and Millie Quin Collect All-American Nods
Story Links TEMPE – The Collegiate Water Polo Association has announced the 2025 ACWPC All-American teams and Sun Devils’ junior Millie Quin made the third team and freshman Itziar Almeda earned an honorable mention nod. The pair of attackers are the second duo in Sun Devil history to each record 100+ points […]

TEMPE – The Collegiate Water Polo Association has announced the 2025 ACWPC All-American teams and Sun Devils’ junior Millie Quin made the third team and freshman Itziar Almeda earned an honorable mention nod.
The pair of attackers are the second duo in Sun Devil history to each record 100+ points in a season after leading Sun Devil Water Polo to a 19-9 record. This marks back-to-back years for a Sun Devil pair to each record 100+ points in a season.
The selections were picked by the Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches (ACWPC) and are selected based on nominations and voted on by the head coaches of each varsity program.
Quin collects a third team nod after she posted career highs in all offensive categories with 89 goals for 116 points. Her 89 goals ranks her tied second in program history and her 116 points are the fifth-most in a season in ASU history. This is the second award she has earned this season after she also received a spot on the 2025 MPSF All-Third Team. For the Sun Devils, she had 23 multi-goal games and tallied 17 hat tricks on the year. Defensively she led the team with 37 steals and 15 field blocks.
Almeda caps off her freshman year by earning her All-American Honorable Mention recognition. This past season, she cemented her name all over the record books, tying for third in assists with 46, as well as notching the fourth-most points recorded in a season with 117. Ultimately, the freshman led the team this season in both categories. She finished second on the team with goals scored, finding the back of the net 71 times. Defensively, she finished the season with 15 steals and six field blocks, ranking her third and fifth on the team, respectively.
HOW TO FOLLOW:
Continue following Sun Devil Water Polo on Twitter/X, Instagram, and Facebook all offseason long on @SunDevilWP for coverage of the team, alumnae and Olympic updates. Stats can be found on 6-8 sports and TheFosh along with other MPSF Conference teams.
Sports
Riyon Rankin, Smilla Kolbe qualify for nationals
College World Series; Women’s College World Series; NFL OTAs | 2MD College baseball’s 64-team tournament is set to begin; the Women’s College World Series is down to 8 teams; Dolphins, Jaguars, Bucs OTAs. Georgia high jumper Riyon Rankin qualified for nationals despite a knee injury. UNF runner Smilla Kolbe won her 800m heat, securing her […]

College World Series; Women’s College World Series; NFL OTAs | 2MD
College baseball’s 64-team tournament is set to begin; the Women’s College World Series is down to 8 teams; Dolphins, Jaguars, Bucs OTAs.
- Georgia high jumper Riyon Rankin qualified for nationals despite a knee injury.
- UNF runner Smilla Kolbe won her 800m heat, securing her spot at nationals.
- Multiple Hodges Stadium records were broken during the meet.
Leader in the NCAA high jump standings, ranked inside the top 10 in the world, Riyon Rankin had a problem to face for the biggest college meet of his season.
As jumper after jumper took aim at the bar, Rankin was stretching his right knee. Flexing it. Rubbing it. Trying to keep his sophomore track campaign at Georgia going.
Back on familiar turf just over an hour south of his Georgia hometown, Rankin fought through the pain and punched his ticket to nationals at the NCAA Track and Field East First Round inside the University of North Florida’s Hodges Stadium.
“I’m hurting a little bit out there,” he said, “but I was able to put everything together and get the job done.”
Through four days of competition among the leading Division I track athletes from the eastern half of the United States, Rankin’s gritty effort highlighted the Jacksonville-area success stories.
A Georgia High School Association champion at Brunswick High School, Rankin had cleared 7 feet, 5 1/4 inches during an April meet to climb to ninth in the World Athletics rankings.
But this time, his face showed the aching with every step, caused by a nagging injury to knee cartilage. Still, through three rounds, he battled on. On the third, his pained approach to the bar evoked memories of Kirk Gibson’s limp around the bases in his 1988 World Series home run — yet for Rankin, he still found enough to clear 7 feet, 1/2 inch.
That was all he needed. After missing on his first attempt at 7 feet, 1 3/4 inches, Rankin elected to call off his remaining attempts. If the other 12 remaining athletes had all cleared that height, Rankin would have missed out on nationals. As it turned out, they didn’t.
Now owner of one of the East’s 12 qualifying berths in front of friends and family, Rankin has nearly two weeks to recuperate until the next challenge from June 11-14 in Eugene, Ore. He placed second at the NCAA indoor finals in March.
“The support helped me to break through that mental stage of my knee hurting,” he said. “So I was able to jump well.”
KOLBE SWOOPS TO NATIONALS
Rankin wasn’t the only athlete with First Coast ties celebrating over the weekend in the NCAA’s eighth visit in 14 years to UNF and the distinctive blue Hodges Stadium track.
Already a national qualifier in 2024 at the outdoor finals and in March of this year at the NCAA indoor meet, University of North Florida middle distance runner Smilla Kolbe entered her May 31 quarterfinal with one simple approach in the women’s 800 meters.
Run fast. Get to the front. And don’t let anybody pass.
“I’ve been until now racing all these races in a similar way from the front, and I’m confident in my abilities,” said Kolbe, a senior from Hanover, Germany.
She achieved that flawlessly, setting the pace early and leading wire to wire. Janet Jepkemboi Amimo of Kentucky pressed hard in the final stretch, but Kolbe crossed first in 2:00.09 to win her second heat of the 800.
Ranked third in the NCAA standings at the distance, she continued a season of perfection in the 800 on her home track. The only thing Kolbe lost was her Hodges Stadium record in the 800, edged by LSU’s Michaela Rose at 1:58.91 in the first quarterfinal.
“I’ve had pretty good races, all wins on my home track, so it’s amazing,” Kolbe said. “I’m really happy.”
Jacksonville University’s Julia Sue-Kam-Ling had already qualified in the long jump on May 29, but other locals’ quests in weekend individual events turned out less favorably.
Navy senior Jacques Guillaume, a Mandarin graduate, ran a personal-best 50.58 in the men’s 400 hurdles but placed only 17th, a third of a second outside the last qualifying time.
Tennessee’s Ka’Myya Haywood (Bishop Kenny) completed the first lap in third place in her 800 heat but finished with the 24th time, and Yale’s Nathan Lebowitz (Ponte Vedra) ended 38th in the men’s discus.
RECORDS KEEP ON FALLING
The parade of Hodges Stadium broken records didn’t slow down: In one case, facility marks tumbled barely 10 minutes apart.
Louisville freshman Geoffrey Kirwa started the ball rolling with his time of 8:26.25 in the first heat of the men’s 3,000 steeplechase, surpassing the facility-record 8:29.54 set by Mason Ferlic of Michigan in 2016. In the next heat, it was the turn of Kentucky’s Collins Kiprop Kipngok, crossing the line in 8:24.91.
Alabama sophomore Samuel Ogazi also achieved a facility record in the men’s 400, running 44.43 to top the 44.52 of Trevor Stewart from North Carolina A&T in 2021.
South Florida also had plenty to celebrate. The Bulls set a facility record of 38.05 in the men’s 4×100 relay, and senior Abdul-Rasheed Saminu followed with a blistering 9.86 for first place in the men’s 100, breaking the previous stadium mark of 9.88 set by Olympian Trayvon Bromell in 2021.
The women’s distance races continued the trend: Providence’s Shannon Flockhart won the 1,500 quarterfinals in 4:04.97 as the top eight finishers all broke the stadium-record 4:09.48 of Alabama’s Amaris Tyynismaa from 2021; Alabama’s NCAA record holder Doris Lemngole ran 9:13.12 to shatter Leah O’Connor’s steeplechase mark by 22 seconds; and N.C. State’s Grace Hartman was fastest in the 5,000 at 15:23.52, one of 10 runners to beat the 2023 stadium record of Katelyn Tuohy at 15:31.00.
Savannah Sutherland of Michigan also broke the stadium mark with 54.39 in the women’s 400 hurdles, beating the 2022 mark of British Olympian Lina Nielsen, and Georgia’s women’s 4×400 team capped the meet with a facility-record 3:25.80 in the meet’s final event.
The NCAA in October designated UNF as the East First Round host for 2027 as well.
Sports
Gamecock Women Combine for 11 Tickets to Eugene – University of South Carolina Athletics
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (May 31, 2025) – The NCAA East Regional wrapped up on Saturday evening with South Carolina putting the track world on notice in Jacksonville, Fla. The Gamecocks combined for 11 tickets punched to nationals, including nine on the track. The field events kicked things off on the final day of the regional meet with […]

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (May 31, 2025) – The NCAA East Regional wrapped up on Saturday evening with South Carolina putting the track world on notice in Jacksonville, Fla. The Gamecocks combined for 11 tickets punched to nationals, including nine on the track.
The field events kicked things off on the final day of the regional meet with Cameran Gist and Cheyla Scott earning their way to the NCAA Outdoor Championship. Gist jumped a personal best 13.07m (42-10.75) to place seventh overall for the automatic qualifying spot. Additionally, Gist improves on her fifth-place mark in program history and becomes just the fifth Gamecock to eclipse the 13.00m mark. Scott punched her ticket for the second consecutive year in the high jump, clearing each bar with ease as she needed to clear just 1.82m (5-11.5) to advance to nationals. Scott will look to improve on last year’s performance when she placed seventh at the national meet to earn First Team All-American honors.
JaMeesia Ford and Cynteria James each punched two individual tickets on the afternoon, doing so in the 100m and the 200m. Ford was able to run a new wind-aided program record in the 100m, crossing the finish line in 11.00 (2.3) for the third fastest time in the event. James was right on her heels with a time of 11.07 (2.3) to finish sixth at the regional meet. The duo then returned in the 200m to earn automatic qualifying times. Ford ran the fastest 200m of the regional, coasting to a 22.27 (1.4) to win her heat, while James ran a new personal best time of 22.72 (0.4) to finish third in her heat.
Salma Elbadra was the first Gamecock on the track to punch her ticket as she did so in the 1500m. The Morocco native ran 4:08.35, cruising to a third-place finish in the heat to earn the automatic qualifying spot. Zaya Akins locked in her ticket to nationals in the 400m after she ran 51.77 to finish third in the third and final heat. Jayla Jamison also punched a trip to Hayward Field in the 200m after clocking a new season best time of 22.77 (0.7) to win her heat.
The Gamecock relays continued their momentum from the SEC Outdoor Championship and posted convincing performances as they head to the NCAA Championship. The 4×100 meter relay of Jamison, James, Akins and Ford won the third and final heat after running 42.81 for the second fastest time in the field. The 4x400m squad of Akins, James, Sylvia Chelangat and Ford then closed the meet with a time of 3:27.56 to win the second heat, stamping their place in the coveted relay championship.
The Gamecocks will now have one final week of preparation before the NCAA Outdoor Championship at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. The four-day meet will begin on Wednesday, June 11 and will conclude on Saturday, June 14.
Women’s Individual Results
100 Meters (Quarterfinals)
3. JaMeesia Ford – 11.00Q* (2.3)
6. Cynteria James – 11.07Q (2.3)
200 Meters (Quarterfinals)
1. JaMeesia Ford – 22.27Q (1.4)
5. Cynteria James – 22.72Q* (0.4)
6. Jayla Jamison – 22.77Q (0.7)
400 Meters (Quarterfinals)
10. Zaya Akins – 51.77Q
1500 Meters (Quarterfinals)
8. Salma Elbadra – 4:08.35Q
4×100 Meter Relay (Quarterfinals)
2. Jamison, James, Akins, Ford – 42.81Q
4×400 Meter Relay (Quarterfinals)
2. Akins, James, Chelangat, Ford – 3:27.56Q
3000 Meter Steeplechase (Quarterfinals)
12. Teresa Cherotich – 10:02.90
Triple Jump
7. Cameran Gist – 13.07m/42-10.75q* (1.1)
High Jump
1. Cheyla Scott – 1.82m/5-11.5q
* – denotes outdoor PR
Sports
Track and Field Sends Program-Record Eight to NCAA Championships
Story Links JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Rutgers track and field set records at the 2025 NCAA East First Round, qualifying the most competitors – eight – for NCAA Championships in program history, while also adding a pair of school records. It marks the fourth consecutive year that Rutgers will send […]

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Rutgers track and field set records at the 2025 NCAA East First Round, qualifying the most competitors – eight – for NCAA Championships in program history, while also adding a pair of school records.
It marks the fourth consecutive year that Rutgers will send competitors from both the men’s and women’s team to the outdoor championships. The eight Scarlet Knights in seven events is the most all-time and best mark since 2018 when RU qualified five competitors in four events.
“I’ve never been prouder of a group of athletes,” said Bobby Farrell, director of track and field & cross country. “This was an unbelievable week of performances. They overcame weather delays, 95 degree temperatures and competing at midnight due to the delays. None of that affected their focus and drive. We came to compete.”
A Scarlet Knight will compete in three events on the track with Charlee Crawford, Chris Serrao and Bryce Tucker advancing in their respective events.
Crawford broke the women’s 400-meter record twice on her way to earning a trip to the NCAA Championships. She broke a 42-year-old record set by Lori McCauley in 1983 in the first round on Thursday, running 52.18. Crawford then improved on that time in the quarterfinals to set the record two days later with a time of 51.80.
Serrao also added a school record, breaking another four-decade old time, in the men’s 110-meter hurdles. He ran a time of 13.49 to top the time previously set by Eugene Norman in 1984. Tucker ran 50.00 in the quarterfinals of the 400-meter hurdles to seal his spot at the NCAA Championships.
Rutgers secured a qualifier on the first day of competition at the NCAA East First Round with Steve Coponi advancing in the javelin. Coponi recorded a throw of 69.87m (229′ 2″) to make his first trip to the NCAA Championships.
Reigning national champion Chloe Timberg will return to the Eugene, Oregon for the NCAA Championships with a chance to defend her pole vault title after posting a qualifying height of 4.24m (13′ 11″). The Scarlet Knights will send a total of three pole vaulters to the nation finals with Nico Morales and Kevin O’Sullivan making their debut on the men’s side. Morales and O’Sullivan cleared identical heights of 5.33m (17′ 5.75″) to qualify for their first NCAA Outdoor Championships.
Paige Floriea will make NCAA Championships debut in her first season with the Scarlet Knights after posting a qualifying mark of 6.22m (20′ 5″) in the long jump.
The 2025 NCAA Championships will run from Wednesday, June 11 through Saturday, June 14 at Hayward Field. Full schedule of Events.
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