Sports
40 years on – revisiting the world records of Kristiansen, Aouita and Cram | News | Heritage
It was shortly before 11:30pm in the Land of the Midnight Sun when Steve Cram – in the words of the BBC television commentator David Coleman – “came majestically striding away” down the home straight of the Bislett Stadium to “crack the world record for the mile.”
On that never-to-be-forgotten Saturday evening 40 years ago – on 27 July 1985 – the tall, long-striding Briton not so much cracked the global mark for the classic distance as cast it to all four corners of the grand old Oslo arena.
Having metaphorically run the legs off Sebastian Coe, who faded to third behind the Spaniard Jose-Luis Gonzalez, Cram crossed the line in 3:46.32, more than a full second (1.01) inside the world record set by his celebrated compatriot in Brussels four years earlier.
And so ended the night of nights inside the Norwegian citadel of track and field.
Three world records had fallen in the space of three hours in the 1985 edition of the Bislett Games.
Metronomic magic – first sub-31-minute 10,000m
First up was an Oslo resident in the women’s 10,000m.
Roared on by a capacity crowd of 19,231, Ingrid Kristiansen pushed back the boundaries of women’s distance running for a third time in 12 months.
Having become the first female to break 15 minutes for 5000m with her 14:58.89 clocking at the 1984 Bislett Games and threatened to crack 2:20:00 for 26.2 miles before finishing with a 2:21:06 world record in the 1985 London Marathon, the 29-year-old Norwegian produced a barrier-breaking 10,000m performance on home ground.
Taking the lead after 2200m, Kristiansen metronomically reeled off laps of 74 seconds before closing with a final circuit of 67.89 to break Olga Bondarenko’s world record of 31:13.78.
She also broke the 31-minute barrier, crossing the line in 30:59.42. “I would have been very disappointed if the time had been over 31 minutes,” Kristiansen confessed.
The former cross country skiing prodigy earned a place in track and field posterity as the first runner, male or female, to simultaneously hold world records at 5000m, 10,000m and the marathon.
The gods eventually favour Aouita
Said Aouita also demonstrated an impressively broad range, running under 1:44 for 800m, sub-3:30 for 1500m, under 7:30 for 5000m and sub-27:30 for 10,000m.
The smooth-striding Moroccan won 5000m Olympic gold in Los Angeles in 1984 and 800m bronze in Seoul four years later.
The first of his four world records came in between the Kristiansen and Cram shows at Bislett – 11 days after the epic 1500m duel in Nice which the victorious Cram (3:29.67) and Aouita (3:29.71) became the first men to break 3:30.
Aouita reached the bell in the 5000m in 12:05.96, a huge 3.29 behind Dave Moorcroft’s split time en route to his 13:00.41 world record at Bislett in 1982.
Unlike the Briton, however, the magical young runner from Fes was not on a solo mission.
Pushed by former 1500m world record-holder Sydney Maree, Aouita flew round the final lap in a phenomenal 54.4, breaking Moorcroft’s record by 0.01 with 13:00.40. Maree clocked 13:01.15 as runner up.
“I thought the gods were against me in world record attempts,” said Aouita, relieved to have finally made a global mark.
Though disappointed to have missed breaking 13 minutes by a whisker, his time would come with a barrier-breaking 12:58.39 in Rome two years later.
“Something to aim for over all these years”
As for Cram, he was at the peak of his powers as he lined up alongside Coe for the hugely anticipated Dream Mile, scheduled for an 11:26pm start, local time, to suit US television.
Winner of the 1500m at the inaugural World Athletics Championships in Helsinki in 1983, Cram had been seriously hampered by a calf injury in the build up to the 1984 Olympics in LA, taking a consolation silver medal as the princely Coe emerged from two years of illness and injury to become the first man in modern history to successfully defend the Olympic 1500m title.
After years of learning his craft while Coe and Steve Ovett serially rewrote the world record book, the 24-year-old in the yellow and black Jarrow and Hebburn Athletics Club vest showed with his momentous 1500m run in Nice that he was a Great British middle-distance trailblazer in his own right.
Over the course of the four laps in Oslo, on the track where Coe had set four of his eight outdoor world records, Cram proved a majestic class apart.
Despite his performance on the Cote d’Azur, the younger Briton was chasing a victory rather than the clock. Into his eighth season on the international circuit, Cram had yet to claim Coe’s prized scalp at 1500m or the mile, having only got the better of him over 800m at Gateshead in 1983.
Coe had been out of sorts on that occasion, and was clearly not as his best in what proved to be Cram’s dream of a Dream Mile in Oslo.
Always assured and in control, Cram settled behind pacemakers James Mays and Mike Hillardt, while Coe took two laps to claw his way up into the slipstream of his compatriot.
Cram could easily have cut loose when the pace slowed from 56.1 and 57.8 to 59.3 on the third lap but kept checking over his shoulder for Coe, who had no response when Cram stretched clear down the back straight on the last lap.
Blasting round the final circuit in 53.0, Cram eased across the line in 3:46.32 – 1.01 inside the world record – with Gonzalez second in 3:47.79 and Coe third in 3:49.22.
“I honestly thought we were a little too slow to get the record,” Cram confessed. “I didn’t think I would run a 53 last lap. All I thought about was winning, not the world record.”
Asked by Jim Rosenthal of ITV how his record run in Oslo compared with that in Nice, Cram replied: “Having raced Said in the 1500m in Nice and Seb in this one and got world records in both is just beyond belief, really.
“But this one was just a little bit extra special because Seb’s always been up there for me. He’s always been something for me to aim for over all these years.”
There was to be another world record for the rampant Cram in Budapest eight days later: 4:51.39 over 2000m.
His mile in Oslo brought the tally of world records at Bislett to 45 – continuing a tradition stretching back to 1924.
Adriaan Paulen of the Netherlands, the future President of the IAAF (now World Athletics), set the first one that year, clocking 1:03.8 for 500m in an arena built principally as a speed skating arena.
The Norwegian capital was still known as Christiania at the time. It became Oslo in 1925.
Simon Turnbull for World Athletics Heritage
Sports
Flathead Bravettes Volleyball Coach to Step Down after Six Years
Flathead High School on Friday announced the resignation of head coach Emily Russell, who had led the Bravettes Volleyball program for the past six years.
The Flathead Activities Department will begin the hiring process after the holiday break, aiming to present a candidate recommendation to the Board of Trustees by February, according to a press release from the school.
“We are excited about the level of work ethic and talent that our returning players bring to the program,” Matt Allison, assistant principal and activities director, said. “The Flathead Activities mission is developing champions in life and tomorrow’s leaders.
“We will continue to push our student-athletes and this program forward.”
Russel took the helm of the program for the 2020 season, marking a return to her alma mater where as a player she helped lead the Bravettes to the school’s most recent hardware finish at the state tournament.
“A Flathead High School alumna and former setter on the 2012 state runner-up team, Russell returned to her alma mater with a passion for the program and a commitment to developing student-athletes both on and off the court,” the school said in the press release.
During her time as a coach with the program — one year as an assistant coach and six years as head coach — Russell led the Bravettes to the Class AA state tournament in 2021 where the team finished 1-2.
That state tournament appearance proved to be the winningest season during Russell’s tenure. The Bravettes finished the 2025 season 5-21 overall and 4-10 in the Western AA conference. Both the 2024 and 2025 seasons came to a close with 3-0 defeats in Class AA state tournament games.
“We are excited about the level of work ethic and talent that our returning players bring to the program,” Allison said. “The Flathead Activities mission is developing champions in life and tomorrow’s leaders. We will continue to push our student-athletes and this program forward.”
[email protected]
Sports
Texas A&M University wins first-ever volleyball championship after beating Kentucky Wildcats in NCAA Division I Championship game
KANSAS CITY, Missouri — No. 3 seed Texas A&M showed the “grit” it has displayed throughout the NCAA Division I women’s volleyball tournament in Sunday’s final, beating No. 1 seed Kentucky 3-0 to capture the program’s first national championship.
In the first all-SEC title-game showdown, the Aggies trailed by as many as six points in the first set and were down a set point. A kill by redshirt sophomore Kyndal Stowers tied the game at 24-24. A block by Ifenna Cos-Okpalla gave the Aggies a set point. And a Stowers kill sealed it.
The Aggies never trailed the rest of the way.
“As soon as we got within two, I was like, ‘Oh no’ for them,” Texas A&M coach Jamie Morrison said. “They should know better on this team. This team is not going to back down.”
The Aggies had a string of upsets just to make it to the title game, starting with a regional semifinal reverse sweep of No. 2 seed Louisville, followed by a regional final upset against previously undefeated No.1 Nebraska. Texas A&M continued its upset streak by sweeping No. 1 Pitt 3-0 in the semifinals before claiming the national title against Kentucky.
“I just said, ‘We’ve been here before. We’ve been there twice. I brought up the Louisville match,” Morrison said of his team’s first-set deficit. “We talked about Louisville being down 0-2. We talked about Nebraska. We said, ‘Hey, we’ve been here.’ … I just said, ‘It’s going to take one or two points, start to get firing, they’re going to be there.'”
PREVIOUS STORY: Texas A&M stuns unbeaten Nebraska Huskies to advance to final four in NCAA volleyball tournament
In the second set, the Aggies held a consistent lead over the Wildcats, finishing 25-15 after an attack error by Kentucky. Texas A&M held onto its lead in the third set and clinched the title when senior middle blocker Cos-Okpalla’s kill brought the score to 25-20.
After leading her team with 11 kills, Texas A&M senior Logan Lednicky fought back tears as she looked back at her four-year career in College Station. The 6-foot-3 opposite hitter credited the nine seniors on her team for helping build this program.
“I was pretty emotional all day today just knowing that no matter the outcome of this game, it would be my last getting to represent A&M on my chest,” Lednicky said. “Being able to do this with these girls, end with the trophy, end like this, I just can’t even believe it.”
Stowers, who had 10 kills in the title match, claimed the Most Outstanding Player award. The transfer from Baylor medically retired because of concussions before transferring to Texas A&M. Stowers had 17 kills against Louisville, 25 against Nebraska and 16 against Pitt.
“A year ago today, I sat on my couch and watched some good friends of mine actually win this game,” Stowers said of Penn State’s victory over Louisville. “Now, to be living that is genuinely surreal. It was a journey to get here. Good days; bad days. It took this guy, sitting next to me, Morrison, believing in me after not playing volleyball for over a year and a half, to take me on his roster and coach me every single day.”
Throughout the NCAA tournament, Texas A&M credited its “grit.” The Aggies were two points away from elimination in the regional semifinals against Louisville. Since that upset, the Aggies outscored their opponents 317-276.
“It’s a testament to the work we put in in the practice gym and just generally in all of our careers,” Lednicky said after the semifinals. “It’s been a long time coming for us, a lot of work put into this moment.”
Kentucky had won four matches in a row against Texas A&M, including a four-set victory Oct. 8. Wildcats coach Craig Skinner pointed to A&M’s passing as the difference.
“They handled our serve really well early,” Skinner said. “Our serving pressure didn’t allow them to get in sync when we were down at College Station. Today, they were in sync.
“Credit their first contact with their passers of Underwood, Applegate, Hellmuth, and Stowers for really doing a good job of providing Waak opportunities to set their whole offense. It was a difficult thing to try and score points on defense.”
Copyright © 2025 ESPN Internet Ventures. All rights reserved.
Sports
Montgomery Advertiser All-Area volleyball — Teams, player of the year
Dec. 22, 2025, 3:03 a.m. CT
The Montgomery area produced two state runners-up in Class 4 and 5A in 2025 in Prattville Christian Academy and Montgomery Catholic respectively.
PCA senior Baylee Rogers highlights the Montgomery Advertiser’s All-Metro teams, being named the player of the year in a talented pool of players that saw various milestones met, and a few school records broken.
Sports
What’s next for Texas A&M volleyball? Defending its title in 2026
Dec. 22, 2025, 6:05 a.m. ET
KANSAS CITY, MO ― What’s next for Texas A&M volleyball after winning its first title by defeating Kentucky on Sunday? Coach Jamie Morrison is already talking repeat.
Over the last month, the third-year head coach has said again and again that his Aggies would be a force to be reckoned with now and into the future.
“It’s just the beginning of what our program’s going to do,” Morrison said.
“There was a small flame going of interest in our sport. It wasn’t small, it was a pretty big one. I think we just threw a whole 13 gallons of gasoline on it,” the coach added after Texas A&M swept No. 1 Pitt in the national semifinals.
Morrison believes though the roster might look different, the Aggies can make multiple Final Four runs and win more championships along the way. He believes Texas A&M can recruit, develop talent and has plenty of resources to get the job done.
Morrison believed it before he won Coach of the Year. Before he and his team pulled off back-to-back sweeps during the Final Four. Before Texas A&M beat the Kentucky Wildcats. It was also before and three of his four players who earned All-American honors this season made the NCAA All-Tournament team.
“They all bought into the way it was going to be, how we were going to work, how we were going to act as teammates, how we were going to care and love each other. Those things weren’t easy,” Morrison said about his team after winning it all.
“There was a group of them here from the beginning that said I want to be a part of this, I want to build this program. … For all of them, I don’t think they were envisioning a national championship by the time they were done. I think when we were selling what we were doing, it was building something they could come back to in the future and be really, really proud they helped build.”
With the Aggies first championship, Morrison lived up to his vision and fulfilled the promise he made to his players. Nine of those players — including starting setter Maddie Waak, opposite Logan Lednicky, libero Ava Underwood and middle blocker Ifenna Cos-Okpalla — are seniors and will be leaving the program they helped build into a champion.
Assuming the team keeps its remaining core next season, that leaves starting redshirt junior Kyndal Stowers to lead six sophomores and one senior. Stowers, who won All-American honors and Most Outstanding Player at the Final Four, will lean on Morrison’s ability to recruit and develop talent.
“When I say, ‘Hey, we can be good for a time to come,’ it’s not just us in terms of [volleyball] … It’s the entire athletic department.” Morrison said.” I think we have a pretty unique group that’s going in there.”
Texas A&M’s incredible run might signal a changing of the guard and more parity in college volleyball. After all, for the first time in nearly 16 years, none of the sport’s blue bloods — looking at you Stanford, Penn State, Nebraska and Texas — made the Final Four. But Morrison isn’t buying the underdog talk.
“We’re a really good volleyball team,” Morrison said. “I don’t think it’s been the greatest upset in the history of sports.”
Morrison believed all along and is confident there’s more to come, starting with defending their title in 2026.
Sports
Omaha volleyball star visits 2-year-old namesake awaiting heart transplant
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – A 2-year-old girl waiting for a heart transplant after being diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy got to meet her volleyball-playing namesake.
At Children’s Nebraska, Merritt Squire is being treated for her condition, which causes the heart’s main pump chamber to be enlarged and weakened.
Named after former Nebraska volleyball and current Omaha Supernovas player Merritt Beason, when she heard of little Merritt, big Merritt wanted to meet her.
“The visit became a moment of pure joy for the family. “These are the things that really ground you, and almost humble you in a way, to remember that little girls and kids are out here fighting for their lives every single day,” Beason said.
“To have a little girl sharing the same name as you, who is so strong and fighting every single day, is just something you can’t put into words,’” per the post on Children’s Nebraska’s website.
Merritt has received a Berlin Heart, a mechanical pump to help circulate blood, while she waits for a heart donor.
“We support not only the patient but also the family as best as we possibly can through that process,” said Dr. Jason Cole, medical director of the Advanced Pediatric Heart Failure & Transplant program. “Opportunities like these give our families a chance to take a step back, take a breath and to enjoy the moments while they’re here.”
Copyright 2025 WOWT. All rights reserved.
Sports
Volleyball Adds Transfer Kameron Stover to Roster for 2026
MILWAUKEE – On Monday, Susie Johnson announced the addition of transfer Kameron Stover to the roster for the upcoming volleyball season.
Stover will join the Panthers this spring after an impressive freshman campaign at Walsh University in North Canton, Ohio.
“We are so excited to add Kami to our program this spring,” commented Johnson. “She has a ton of athleticism and competitiveness and has proved that she can compete day after day, which is what we have been looking to add to our program.”
Stover was a force for the Cavaliers in 2025, finishing the season 16th among all Division II players in total kills with 452. That mark ranked third among all freshmen at the Division II level and also led all players from the Great Midwest Athletic Conference.
In addition to her kill total, Stover led the GMAC in kills per set (4.30) and total points (507), while also pacing the league in points per set (4.83). She finished 10th in the league in service aces (30), and 14th in digs (299). Stover also recorded 33 kills in a match, the most by any GMAC player since the 2022 campaign.
Following her freshman season with the Cavaliers, Stover was selected as the conference’s Freshman of the Year and earned First Team All-Conference honors. She was also named the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) Midwest Region Freshman of the Year and later added Division II Conference Commissioners Association Second Team All-Region accolades.
Stover played at Marengo Highland High School in Ohio from 2021-24, where she amassed 1,770 career kills, the ninth-most in recorded state history. As a junior, she tallied 636 kills, the seventh-most in state history, and followed that up with another 567 as a senior. Her 48 kills in a match against Plain City Jonathan Alder as a junior ranked third all-time for a single match in Ohio.
She was a two-time First Team All-State selection and earned Third Team honors as a sophomore. A three-time First Team All-District and All-Conference selection, Stover also earned All-Region accolades from this AVCA as a senior and is the program’s kills record holder for career, single-season, and single-match.
Stover joins incoming freshmen Olivia Doerre, Emma Dufft, Kayla Landerud, and Hope Wagner, who announced their commitments to Milwaukee in mid-November.
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoSoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoBlack Bear Revises Recording Policies After Rulebook Language Surfaces via Lever
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoDonny Schatz finds new home for 2026, inks full-time deal with CJB Motorsports – InForum
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoHow Donald Trump became FIFA’s ‘soccer president’ long before World Cup draw
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoDavid Blitzer, Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoJR Motorsports Confirms Death Of NASCAR Veteran Michael Annett At Age 39
-
Sports2 weeks ago
Elliot and Thuotte Highlight Men’s Indoor Track and Field Season Opener
-
Sports2 weeks ago
West Fargo volleyball coach Kelsey Titus resigns after four seasons – InForum
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoRick Ware Racing switching to Chevrolet for 2026
-
Sports2 weeks agoTemple Begins Indoor Track & Field Season at UPenn This Weekend






