Sports
North Allegheny, Shaler awarded No. 1 seeds for WPIAL boys volleyball tournament
By: Michael Love Friday, May 9, 2025 | 2:20 PM Josh Rizzo | For TribLive Shaler’s Richard O’Brien and Nathan Myers go up for a block. North Allegheny and Shaler are the top seeds for their respective WPIAL boys volleyball tournaments. The WPIAL released the Class 3A and Class 2A brackets Friday afternoon after the […]

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Friday, May 9, 2025 | 2:20 PM
North Allegheny and Shaler are the top seeds for their respective WPIAL boys volleyball tournaments.
The WPIAL released the Class 3A and Class 2A brackets Friday afternoon after the regular season concluded with section finales Thursday evening.
There will be a new WPIAL champion in Class 3A with Shaler, the 2023 and 2024 titlist, moving down to Class 2A.
North Allegheny, runner-up to Shaler last year, won Class 3A gold five straight seasons from 2017-22, and it hopes to add a 23rd overall WPIAL championship trophy to its awards case.
The Tigers, one of 14 teams in the Class 3A field, will host either No. 8 Mt. Lebanon or No. 9 Gateway in next Thursday’s quarterfinals. The Blue Devils and the Gators play their first-round game Tuesday at Mt. Lebanon.
Seneca Valley, runner-up to North Allegheny in Section 3, also received a bye as the No. 2 seed and will await the winner of Tuesday’s first-round game between No. 7 Canon-McMillan and No. 10 Central Catholic at Canon-McMillan.
The other four Tuesday first-round matchups have No. 13 Upper St. Clair at No. 4 Hempfield, No. 12 Baldwin at No. 5 Pine-Richland, No. 14 North Hills at No. 3 Latrobe and No. 11 Peters Township at No. 6 Penn-Trafford.
The top four and ties in each section with seven or more teams and the top three and ties in each section with six teams or fewer punched their ticket for the playoffs. A total of 26 teams qualified.
Twelve Class 2A teams will join the 14 from Class 3A with the hopes of reaching the WPIAL championship games set for the weekend of May 24 at Peters Township’s AHN Arena.
From the WPIAL playoffs, three teams in Class 3A and three from Class 2A will continue on in their respective state tournaments.
Shaler, gunning for its third WPIAL championship overall and first in Class 2A, not only won WPIAL Class 3A titles the past two years but followed those WPIAL runs with a PIAA runner-up finish in 2023 and last year’s state title at Penn State.
The Titans (13-1) captured the Section 2 title with an unblemished 8-0 record. Their only loss in the regular season was to North Allegheny, 3-0, on March 18.
Shaler’s hopeful run this year begins in the quarterfinals next Thursday against the winner of No. 9 Hopewell’s game Tuesday at No. 8 Derry.
The other top seeds in Class 2A are No. 2 Ambridge, No. 3 Seton LaSalle and No. 4 North Catholic. They, too, earned byes to Thursday‘s quarterfinals.
Mars is the defending Class 2A champion.
The Fightin’ Planets, the third-place team from Section 2 behind Shaler and North Catholic, have a challenging road in front of them as the No. 6 seed in the bracket.
Mars opens the playoffs Tuesday at home against No. 11 South Park with the winner advancing to meet Seton LaSalle.
The other two first-round games Tuesday will have No. 12 McKeesport at No. 5 South Fayette, and No. 10 Deer Lakes at No. 7 Thomas Jefferson.
Thomas Jefferson, Ambridge and Armstrong joined Mars as WPIAL Class 2A semifinalists last year, and the Planets, Bridgers and River Hawks represented the WPIAL in the PIAA tournament.
Class 3A
First round
Tuesday’s schedule
Gateway (10-2) at Mt. Lebanon (13-1), 7 p.m.
Upper St. Clair (5-8) at Hempfield (11-4), 7 p.m.
Baldwin (6-10) at Pine-Richland (9-5), 7 p.m.
Central Catholic (9-8) at Canon-McMillan (14-2), 7 p.m.
North Hills (8-9) at Latrobe (15-1), 7 p.m.
Peters Township (7-11) at Penn-Trafford (10-6), 7 p.m.
Byes: North Allegheny (12-1), Seneca Valley (12-3)
Class 2A
First round
Tuesday’s schedule
Hopewell (8-8) at Derry (11-6), 7 p.m.
McKeesport (8-8) at South Fayette (13-4), 7 p.m.
Deer Lakes (10-5) at Thomas Jefferson (9-6), 7 p.m.
South Park (8-8) at Mars (8-10), 7 p.m.
Byes: Shaler (13-1), Ambridge (13-1), Seton LaSalle (16-3), North Catholic (9-5)
Michael Love is a TribLive reporter covering sports in the Alle-Kiski Valley and the eastern suburbs of Pittsburgh. A Clearfield native and a graduate of Westminster (Pa.), he joined the Trib in 2002 after spending five years at the Clearfield Progress. He can be reached at mlove@triblive.com.
Tags: Ambridge, Baldwin, Canon-McMillan, Central Catholic, Deer Lakes, Derry Area, Gateway, Hempfield, Hopewell, Latrobe, Mars, McKeesport, Mt. lebanon, North Allegheny, North Catholic, North Hills, Penn-Trafford, Peters Township, Pine-Richland, Seneca Valley, Seton La Salle, Shaler, South Fayette, South Park, Thomas Jefferson, Upper St. Clair
Sports
CWU Athletics Celebrates 84 Student-Athletes for 2025 Graduation
Story Links ELLENSBURG, Wash. – Central Washington University athletics will be celebrating the graduation of 84 student-athletes and two graduate assistants during the university’s annual commencement ceremonies on Saturday, June 14. Nine CWU student-athletes excelled not only on the field, but in the classroom—completing their academic careers with a 3.50 or […]

ELLENSBURG, Wash. – Central Washington University athletics will be celebrating the graduation of 84 student-athletes and two graduate assistants during the university’s annual commencement ceremonies on Saturday, June 14.
Nine CWU student-athletes excelled not only on the field, but in the classroom—completing their academic careers with a 3.50 or higher grade-point average.
Two student-athletes held a 4.0 GPA: Baseball’s Luke VonGoedert (Info Tech and Admin Management) and Football’s Jeremy Banks (Info Tech and Admin Management), as well as two Graduate Assistants: Strength and Conditioning’s Jess Griffith (Sport and Athletic Admin – Athletic Administration Specialization), and Men’s Basketball Chisom Watson (Sport and Athletic Admin – Athletic Administration Specialization).
CWU is holding two commencement ceremonies in Ellensburg on Saturday, both at Tomlinson Stadium. The morning commencement ceremony will be held at 9:00 a.m. and will feature graduates of the College of Arts and Humanities and the College of the Sciences. The afternoon commencement ceremony will feature the graduates of the College of Business and the College of Education and Professional Studies at 2:00 p.m. There will be a live stream of each ceremony located in the link below.
For more information and to find the live stream links click HERE or email Commencement@cwu.edu
Baseball
Gabe Bustamante (Psychology)
Daniel Charron (Pre-Clinical Physiology)
Jake Felton (Exercise Science (BS))
Jonathan Garza II (Physical Education and School Health)
Travis Helm (STEM Teaching Program)
Brady Hinkle (Exercise Science (BS))
Noah Juarez (Physical Education and School Health)
Ben Leid (Biochemistry)
Trenton Love (Physical Education and School Health)
Devin MacWatters (Psychology)
Marcus Manzardo (Pre-Clinical Physiology)
Brandham Ponce (Construction Management (BS))
Baba Varner Jr. (Construction Management (BS))
Luke VonGoedert (Information Technology and Administration Management)
Cheer
Kylianna Misiak (Computer Science)
Livy Sander (Elementary Education)
Football
Jeremy Banks (Information Technology and Administration Management)
Isaac Clark (Hospitality, Tourism, and Event Management)
Jaylen Clay (Sport Management)
Chase Coalson (Exercise Science (BS))
Josiah Cochran (Business Administration (BS))
Marcus Cook (Information Technology and Administration Management)
Dylan Dean (Business Administration (BS))
Bridger Feldmann (Business Pre-Major)
Darrien Gaines (Sport Management)
Axel Isackson (Undeclared)
Chase Loidhamer (Sport Management)
Josiah Nikolao (Sport Management)
Jasiah Snow-Marshall (Business)
Tanner Volk (Business Administration (BS))
Men’s Basketball
Mitch Brizee (Master of Professional Accounting)
Xavier Kamalu-Vargas (Sport and Athletic Admin)
Noah Pepper (Biology (BS))
Men’s Cross Country & Track & Field
Johan Correa (Spanish)
Logan Easley (Industrial Engineer Technology)
Wyatt Franklin (Psychology)
Chris Hines (Sport and Athletic Administration)
Colin Hitchcock (Applied Mathematics)
Noah Sanchez (Physical Education and School Health)
Reilly Williams (Psychology)
Aiden Wise (Computer Science)
Men’s Rugby
Samson Dwyer (Business Administration (BS))
Oliver Dyrhsen (Exercise Science (BS))
Drew Farrington (Construction Management (BS))
Conner Grande (Safety & Health Management)
Kye Jones (Economics)
Clint Lyman (Wine Studies Major)
Daniel McQuade (Economics)
Andrew Miller (Business Administration (BS))
Campbell Robb (Undeclared)
Oscar Treacy (Business Administration (BS))
Jac Tregoning (Sport Management)
Tiai Vavao (Safety & Health Management)
Soccer
Jordan Bartlow (Sport Management)
Stacia Conely (Law and Justice)
Emily Darcy (Clinical Physiology)
Kylee Gregory (Psychology)
Kass Jaggard (Elementary Education)
Maggie McBroom (Geography (BS))
Casey Park (Accounting)
Paige Savage (Clinical Physiology)
Softball
Karsyn Decker (Psychology)
Ashtyn Falor (Physical Education and School Health)
Heidi Heytvelt (Exercise Science (BS))
Serena Perez (Master of Professional Accounting)
Reese Schimmel (Business Administration (BS))
Cady Wilton (Elementary Education)
Volleyball
Marianna Payne (Business Administration (BS))
Women’s Basketball
Shelby Blodgett (Public Health)
Sunny Huerta (Social Services (BS))
Malia Smith (Public Health)
Women’s Cross Country & Track & Field
Brenna Board (Sport and Athletic Administration)
Samantha DeLay (Undeclared)
Payton Elenbaas (Physical Education and School Health)
Isabella Haarer (Geological Sciences)
E’lexis Hollis (Special Education P-12)
Zoë McDevitt (Sport Management)
Jazmin Mendoza (Environmental Science)
Women’s Rugby
Shaylee Coulter-Fa’amafu (Digital Marketing)
Maleena Mero (Biology (BS))
Philomena Namosimalua (Public Health)
Winnie Namosimalua (Public Health)
Kerena Tinoisamoa (Biology (BS))
Graduate Assistants
Jess Griffith (Sport and Athletic Administration – Athletic Administration Specialization)
Chisom Watson (Sport and Athletic Administration – Athletic Administration Specialization)
Once again, Congratulations to Central Washington University’s 84 student-athletes, two graduate assistants, and the rest of CWU’s Class of 2025.
Sports
USA Men Lose To Australia 11-14 To Close Three-Game Exhibition Series
Story Links Orange, CA – June 13 – The USA Men’s National Team fell to Australia 11-14 tonight at Chapman University to close a three-game exhibition series. Hannes Daube and Nicolas Saveljic each scored four for Team USA while Adrian Weinberg notched eight saves in the cage. The two sides traded goals to begin this contest […]

Orange, CA – June 13 – The USA Men’s National Team fell to Australia 11-14 tonight at Chapman University to close a three-game exhibition series. Hannes Daube and Nicolas Saveljic each scored four for Team USA while Adrian Weinberg notched eight saves in the cage.
The two sides traded goals to begin this contest with Marcus Berehulak drawing first blood for Australia. Chase Dodd and Daube gave Team USA its first lead before Berehulak leveled for the visitors. Daube and Luke Pavillard ended the quarter with goals to leave the score knotted at 3-3 after one. In the second period, Daube picked up where he left off to record an early hat trick before Milos Maksimovic had an answer for the Aussies. Dodd would counter for the United States as did Luka Krstic for Australia before Daube and Saveljic each scored to close the half. With Daube on a scoring binge and an ordinary foul called, the whole pool thought he would rise up and shoot but at the last moment he passed off to Saveljic who floated a gorgeous lob shot into the back of the net for a 7-5 lead at the break.
Pavillard immediately evened the score in the second half with a pair of early goals prior to Saveljic retaking the lead for Team USA midway through the third quarter. Berehulak notched a hat trick with his third score as did Saveljic with just under one minute remaining. This game would enter the final frame all square after Nathan Power ripped a backhand over Weinberg’s head for a 9-9 score. Saveljic and Dylan Woodhead scored for the Americans in the fourth but it was not enough as Australia poured in five goals from Byrnes (2), Milos Maksimovic (2), and Power to claim the 14-11 victory.
Team USA went 1/7 on power plays and 1/1 on penalties while Australia went 2/6 on power plays and 1/2 on penalties.
Scoring – Stats
USA 11 (1, 5, 5, 1) H. Daube 4, N. Saveljic 4, C. Dodd 2, D. Woodhead 1
AUS 14 (3, 4, 5, 1) M. Maksimovic 3, M. Berehulak 3, L. Pavillard 3, N. Power 2, M. Byrnes 2, L. Krstic 1
Saves – USA – A. Weinberg 8 – AUS – L. Baker 6, N. Porter 6
6×5 – USA – 1/7 – AUS – 2/6
Penalties – USA – 1/1 – AUS – 1/2
Sports
Texas A&M Athletics
EUGENE – The Texas A&M men’s track & field team claimed the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championship in a final-race thriller Friday evening at Hayward Field. The victory marks the men’s fifth outdoor crown and head coach Pat Henry‘s 10th national title leading the Aggies. A&M had a pair of individual national champions and two runner-up […]

With all eyes on the final relay of the meet, the Aggies sat in fourth in the team standings leaving the men’s 4x400m quartet of Hossam Eddine Hatib, Cutler Zamzow, Kimar Farquharson and Auhmad Robinson with the team’s title hopes on the line. Hatib got the group off to a blistering start and handed the baton to Zamzow who led at the break. Another strong leg had Farquharson right in the mix with Robinson left to run. Robinson battled with the leaders and secured second in the event with a season-best time of 3:00.73, capturing the needed eight points to deliver the title.
Sam Whitmarsh added an individual national title to his resume and drove the Aggies up the team standings when he won the men’s 800m crown following a staggering kick on the final 200m. The senior crossed the line in 1:45.86 to become the second member of the Maroon & White to win a national title in the event, joining Donovan Brazier who won his title in 2016.
The Aggie hurdle duo of Ja’Qualon Scott and Bryce McCray added a crucial 11 points to the team tally following a pair of personal-best performances in the 400m hurdles. Scott broke the school record in the event to claim a runner-up finish with a time of 48.29. The senior now holds all hurdle school records across A&M’s indoor and outdoor record book. McCray delivered a career showing when the team needed it, as he ran 49.52 to finish sixth.
Robinson started the scoring for the day in the men’s 400m, as the Aggie senior clocked a mark of 46.07 to finish seventh overall in the event.
A&M’s national title march was sparked by Aleksandr Solovev on the opening day of the meet, as he contributed 10 points to the men’s total in the pole vault.
Sofia Yakushina opened her women’s heptathlon campaign on the penultimate day of the championships as she sits in eighth after the opening four events with 3,492 points. She started the day in the 100m hurdles, where she ran 13.53 to place fourth. The freshman followed that up securing eighth in the high jump (1.69m/5-6.5) and 19th in the shot put (11.46m/37-7.25). Yakushina concluded her day with another fourth-place result, this time in the 200m where she clocked 24.02.
Next Up
The Aggies return to Hayward Field tomorrow for the final day of the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
To learn more about Texas A&M Track & Field/Cross Country, visit 12thMan.com and follow @aggietfxc.
Sports
NCAA Track And Field Championships 2025 Results & Men’s Finals Scores
It’s the third day of action at the 2025 NCAA Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon at Hayward Field. Friday’s schedule was packed with men’s finals with a few women’s heptathlon events throughout the day. Record-watch was on high alert as the best in the country competed to make history and set themselves apart […]

It’s the third day of action at the 2025 NCAA Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon at Hayward Field. Friday’s schedule was packed with men’s finals with a few women’s heptathlon events throughout the day.
Record-watch was on high alert as the best in the country competed to make history and set themselves apart from the rest with 14 men’s final events. In women’s competition, JaMeesia Ford was a standout on Thursday for the South Carolina Gamecocks, qualifying for finals in each of the four events she ran, including posting the 8th fastest 100m dash time in NCAA history, 10.87, and a historic 21.98 in the 200m.
The men’s final track events saw stunning finishes by Carli Makarawu in the men’s 200m dash and Nathaniel Ezekiel in the 400m hurdles that put them in the NCAA history books.
Saturday will feature women’s finals that wrap up the championship weekend. View the recap and results from Day One or Day Two of the NCAA Track and Field Championships to catch up on what you’ve missed so far.
NCAA D1 Track And Field Championships 2025 Results, Live Updates, Schedule
View the latest updates, results, and highlights below for the 2025 NCAA D1Track and Field Championships. The most recent will be near the top of the page—if you’re looking for more general information about the event, you can find it near the bottom of the page.
How To Stream NCAA Track and Field Championships 2025
The 2025 NCAA Track and Field Championship is streaming live on ESPN+.
Men’s 4x400m Relay Results
South Florida ends the evening with a victory in the 4×400 relay, claiming a new season best time of 3:00.42.
- South Florida – 3:00.42
- Texas A&M – 3:00.73
- Arkansas – 3:01.59
- Iowa – 3:01.61
- Florida – 3:01.88
- Alabama – 3:02.17
- BYU – 3:02.51
- USC – 3:03.18
- Penn State – 3:03.85
Men’s Triple Jump Results
Oklahoma occupies the top two spots in the triple jump with Brandon Green Jr. and Floyd Whitaker adding to the Sooners’ stock.
- Brandon Green Jr. (JR, Oklahoma) – 16.81m
- Floyd Whitaker (SR, Oklahoma) – 16.41m
- Kyvon Tatham (JR, Florida State) – 16.23m
- Luke Brown (JR, Kentucky) – 16.18m
- Selva Prabhu (FR, Kansas State) – 16.09m
- Theophilus Mudzengerere (JR, South Carolina) – 16.09m
- Safin Wills (SR, Oregon) – 16.07m
- Stafon Roach (SO, ULM) – 15.99m
- Abraham Johnson (FR, Eastern Illinois) – 5.96m
- Hakeem Ford (SO, Minnesota) – 15.89m
- Jaren Holmes (SR, USC) – 15.75m
- Alexandre Malanda (SR, Kent State) – 15.69m
- Ryan John (JR, Clemson) – 15.65m
- Kelsey Daniel (SR, Texas) – 15.53m
- Jeremy Nelson (JR, Louisiana) – 15.46m
- Roman Kuleshov (SR, Louisville) – 15.35m
- Xavier Partee (SO, N. Carolina A&T) – 15.32m
- Chris Preddie (JR, Texas State) – 15.20m
- Ledamian Rowell (SR, Jackson State) – 15.15m
- Sir Jonathan Sims (JR, Tarleton State) – 15.07m
- Xavier Drumgoole (FR, Stanford) – 13.06m
Men’s 5000m Results
Brian Musau from Oklahoma State clocks a new season best in the men’s 5000m, just barely beating out opponent Habtom Samuel from New Mexico.
- Brian Musau (SO, Oklahoma State) – 13:20.59
- Habtom Samuel (SO, New Mexico) – 13:20.89
- Marco Langon (JR, Villanova) 13:21.17
- Valentin Soca (JR, CBU) – 13:21.76
- Rocky Hansen (SO, Wake Forest) – 13:22.47
- Matt Strangio (SR, Portland) – 13:23.28
- Ishmael Kipkurui (FR, New Mexico) – 13:25.18
- Fouad Messaoudi (SR, Oklahoma State) – 13:25.48
- Toby Gillen (SR, Ole Miss) – 13:26.74
- David Mullarkey (SR, Northern Arizona) – 13:28.43
Men’s High Jump Results
The men’s field event finals begin to round out as Arvesta Troupe from Ole Miss hauls in a 2.27m jump for a new personal best.
- Arvesta Troupe (JR, Ole Miss) – 2.27m
- Kason O’Riley (SR, Texas State) – 2.20m
- Aiden Hayes (JR, Texas State) – 2.20m
- Kamyren Garrett (SR, Illinois) – 2.20m
- Nathanil Figgers (SO, South Carolina) – 2.20m
- Kyren Washington (SO, Oklahoma) – 2.20m
- Tyus Wilson (SR, Nebraska) – 2.20m
- Eddie Kurjak (SR, Georgia) – 2.15m
- Kuda Chadenga (SR, LSU) – 2.15m
- Kampton Kam (JR, Penn) – 2.15m
- Desire Tonye Nyemeck (FR, Nebraska) – 2.15m
- Elias Gerald (JR, USC) – 2.15m
- Bode Gilkerson (SO, Purdue) – 2.15m
- Antrea Mita (SO, Houston) – 2.15m
- Donald Hatfield Jackson (SR, SE Missouri) – 2.15m
- Miles Grant (SR, Sacramento St.) – 2.10m
- Kennedy Sauder (JR, Miami, FL) – 2.10m
- Channing Ferguson (SR, South Carolina) – 2.10m
- Riyon Rankin (SO, Georgia) – 2.10m
- Tito Alofe (SO, Harvard) – 2.10m
- Osawese Agbonkonkon (SO, Texas) – 2.10m
- Enaji Muhammad (FR, Connecticut) – 2.10m
- Roman Smith (SR, Southern) – 2.10m
Women’s Heptathlon 200m Results
To finish out the women’s heptathlon events for Friday, Izzy Goudros from Harvard seals the deal in the 200m with a time of 23.61.
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 23.61
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 23.86
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 24.00
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 24.02
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 24.09
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 24.11
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 24.13
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 24.27
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 24.35
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 24.56
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 24.62
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 24.64
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 24.64 (24.643)
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 24.65 (24.646)
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 24.68
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 24.70
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 24.83
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach St.) – 24.99
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 25.33
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 25.34
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 25.48
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 25.52
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 25.54
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 25.86
Men’s 200m Results
Kentucky junior Carli Makarawu inks a time of 19.84, making him tied for ninth fastest in NCAA history and the seventh fastest performer in history.
- Carli Makarawu (JR, Kentucky) – 19.84
- Makanakaishe Charamba (SR, Auburn) – 19.92
- Garrett Kaalund (JR, USC) – 19.96
- Jordan Anthony (SO, Arkansas) – 20.01
- T’Mars McCallum (JR, Tennessee) – 20.16
- Max Thomas (JR, USC) – 20.23
- Xavier Butler (SO, Texas) – 20.39
- Abdul-Rasheed Saminu (SR, South Florida) – 20.55
- Cameron Miller (JR, Purdue) – 20.56
Men’s 400m Hurdles Results
Nathaniel Ezekiel records a new personal best and a No. 3 all-time NCAA finish at 47.49 seconds.
- Nathaniel Ezekiel (SR, Baylor) – 47.49
- Ja’Qualon Scott (SR, Texas A&M) – 48.29
- Kody Blackwood (JR, Texas) – 48.66
- Oskar Edlund (SR, Texas Tech) – 49.02
- Saad Hinti (FR, Tennessee) – 49.11
- Bryce McCray (SR, Texas A&M) – 49.52
- Johnny Brackins (SR, USC) – 50.15
- Bryce Tucker (SO, Rutgers) – 50.83
- Jarrett Gentles (SR, Coppin State) – 51.50
Men’s 800m Results
Ending with a 53.78 time in the last lap, senior Sam Whitmarsh out of Texas A&M comes around to take the 800m.
- Sam Whitmarsh (SR, Texas A&M) – 1:45.86
- Matthew Erickson (SR, Oregon) – 1:46.32
- Rivaldo Marshall (SR, Arkansas) – 1:46.71
- Samuel Rodman (SR, Princeton) – 1:46.86
- Aidan McCarthy (JR, Cal Poly) – 1:46.88
- Samuel Navarro (SR, Miss State) – 1:47.33
- Christian Jackson (JR, Virginia Tech) – 1:47.42
- Tyrice Taylor (JR, Arkansas) – 1:47.44
- Koitatoi Kidali (FR, Oregon) – 1:52.10
Men’s 400m Results
The SEC strikes again as Samuel Ogazi out of Alabama claims the 400m title. Gabriel Moronta from South Florida was disqualified due to stepping over his lane.
- Samuel Ogazi (SO, Alabama) – 44.84
- William Jones (JR, USC) – 45.53
- Jordan Pierre (SO, Arkansas-Pine Bluff) – 45.75
- DeSean Boyce (JR, Texas Tech) – 45.78
- Joseph Taylor (FR, Duke) – 45.83
- Jayden Davis (SO, Arizona State) – 45.91
- Auhmad Robinson (SR, Texas A&M) – 46.07
- Gabriel Clement II (SO, UCLA) – 46.17
Men’s 100m Results
Star wide receiver for Arkansas Jordan Anthony takes the reins with a 10.07 time in the 100m out of lane nine.
- Jordan Anthony, (SO, Arkansas) – 10.07
- Max Thomas, (JR, USC) – 10.10 (10.091)
- Jelani Watkins, (FR, LSU) – 10.10 (10.092)
- Kanyinsola Ajayi, (SO, Auburn) – 10.13
- Davonte Howell, (SO, Tennessee) – 10.17 (10.166)
- Jaiden Reid, (SO, LSU) – 10.17 (10.170)
- Israel Okon, (FR, Auburn) – 10.18
- T’Mars McCallum, (JR, Tennessee) – 10.24
- Eddie Nketia, (SO, USC) – 10.30
Men’s 3000m Steeplechase Results
James Corrigan of BYU storms in front at the 3000m steeplechase with opponent Geoffrey Kirwa hot on his heels.
- James Corrigan, (JR, BYU) – 8:16.41
- Geoffrey Kirwa, (FR, Louisville) – 8:17.12
- Carson Williams, (SR, Furman) – 8:19.71
- Joash Ruto,(FR, Iowa State) – 8:20.47
- Collins Kiprop Kipngok, (FR, Kentucky) – 8:22.92
- Mathew Kosgei, (FR, New Mexico) – 8:23.70
- Benjamin Balazs, (SO, Oregon) – 8:24.46
- Rob McManus, (JR, Montana State) – 8:25.83
- CJ Singleton, (JR, Notre Dame) – 8:28.93
- Silas Kiptanui, (SO, Tulane) – 8:32.20
- Victor Kibiego, (JR, Texas A&M) – 8:32.33
- Kristian Imroth, (JR, Eastern Kentucky) – 8:49.06
Men’s 110m Hurdles Results
Auburn shows off its talents once again in the men’s 110 hurdles as Ja’Kobe Tharpe inks the top spot with a time of 13.05, a new personal best. Kendrick Smallwood from Texas was disqualified after coming in ninth place.
- Ja’Kobe Tharpe (SO, Auburn) – 13.05
- Zachary Extine, (JR, Arizon) – 13.13
- John Adesola, (SR, Houston) – 13.28
- Jamar Marshall Jr., (SR, Houston) – 13.34
- Demario Prince, (FR, Baylor) – 13.44
- Darius Brown, (SR, DePaul) – 13.50
- Jahiem Stern (JR, LSU) – 13.57
- Jayden Smith, (SR, Davidson) – 13.65
Men’s 1500m Results
The men’s 1500m was a tight race, but Washington junior Nathan Green will take home the first place prize.
- Nathan Green (JR, Washington) – 3:47.26
- Ethan Strand (JR, North Carolina) – 3:47.33
- Ferenc Kovaks (SO, Harvard) – 3:47.42
- Adam Spencer (SR, Wisconsin) – 3:47.50
- Gary Martin (JR, Virginia) – 3:47.58
- Jack Crull (SR, Bradley) – 3:47.61
- Simeon Birnbaum (SO, Oregon) – 3:47.64
- Damian Hackett (SR, Cornell) – 3:47.74
- Brendan Herger (FR, Michigan) – 3:47.88
- Harrison Witt (SR, Princeton) – 3:47.92
- Trent McFarland (SO, Michigan) – 3:47.94
- Martin Segurola (JR, Indiana) – 3:48.71
Men’s 4x100m Relay Results
The Tigers secured victory in the 4x100m relay, but weren’t able to break their own meet record of 37.97. After review, LSU was disqualified.
- Auburn – 38.33
- USC – 38.46
- Arkansas – 38.72
- South Florida – 38.73
- Tennessee – 38.79
- Kentucky – 38.85
- Minnesota – 38.88
- Texas – 39.10
Men’s Wheelchair 100m Results
- Evan Correll – 14.46
- Jacob Allen – 15.33
- Jeffrey Files – 15.47
- Aidan Gravelle – 15.83
- Jason Robinson – 16.11
- Dustin Stallberg – 16.49
- Wyatt Willand – 17.36
- Ethan Burkhart – 18.04
Men’s Discus Results
The results for the first men’s field event of the evening are punched in, and Oklahoma’s Ralford Mullings beat out collegiate record holder Mykolas Alekna from California for the national title by three meters. Mullings inked 69.31 meters while Alekna came in at 66.77 meters. Mullings set a meet record and a new personal best.
- Ralford Mullings (JR, Oklahoma) – 69.31m
- Mykolas Alekna (JR, California) – 66.77m
- Uladzislau Puchko (SO, Virginia Tech) – 63.94m
- Vincent Ugwoke (SR, South Florida) – 63.73m
- Racquil Broderick (SO, USC) – 63.31m
- Michael Pinckney (JR, UCLA) – 61.39m
- Dimitrios Pavlidis (SR, Kansas) – 61.04m
- Aron Alvarez Aranda (SO, Tennessee) – 59.87m
- Christopher Crawford (JR, Alabama) – 59.08m
- Jacob Lemmon (SR, Florida) – 59.07m
- Desmond Coleman (JR, Miami Fl.) – 58.58m
- Youssef Koudssi (SR, Arizona) – 58.32m
- Casey Helm (JR, Princeton) – 57.79m
- Trevor Gunzell (JR, Alabama) – 57.52m
- Christopher Young (JR, Alabama) – 57.23m
- Maxwell Otterdahl (SR, Nebraska) – 57.07m
- Iosif Papa (JR, UMBC) – 56.98m
- Aidan Elbettar (SR, Oregon) – 56.49m
- Paden Lewis (SR, SE Missouri) – 56.27m
- Texas Tanner (JR, Air Force) – 55.76m
- Skylar Coffey (SR, Missouri) – 55.59m
- Oscar Rodriguez (SR, Texas Tech) – 55.20m
- Seth Allen (JR, Auburn) – 54.88m
- Tanner Watson (SR, Ohio State) – 53.92m
Women’s Haptathlon Shot Put Results
Jadin O’Brien continues her path to the top of the leaderboard with a first place showing in the haptathlon shot put.
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 14.44m
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 14.12m
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 13.89m
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 13.61m
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 13.48m
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 13.28m
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 13.09m
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 12.86m
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 12.76m
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 12.69m
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 12.60m
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 12.50m
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 12.37m
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 12.32m
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 12.23m
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 12.12m
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 11.62m
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 11.48m
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 11.46m
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 11.33m
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 11.11m
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 10.80m
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach St.) – 10.35m
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 10.10m
Women’s Heptathlon High Jump Results
Destiny Masters from Wichita State soared to the top of the women’s high jump as the best ranked heading into the event, Sofia Iakushina, finished in eighth after an underwhelming performance.
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 1.84m
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 1.81m
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 1.78m
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 1.75m
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 1.75m
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 1.72m
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 1.72m
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 1.69m
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 1.69m
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 1.69m
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach St.) – 1.69m
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 1.66m
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 1.66m
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 1.66m
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 1.66m
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 1.63m
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 1.63m
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 1.63m
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 1.60m
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 1.60m
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 1.60m
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 1.60m
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 1.57m
Women’s Heptathlon High Jump Start List
Flight 1
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715
Flight 2
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 5749
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698
100m Hurdles Women’s Heptathlon Results
Notre Dame’s Jadin O’Brien leads the way with teammate Alaina Brady in tow to take an early lead in the heptathlon. Brady put up a season best to take second in the section and overall.
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 13.33, 1075
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 13.41, 1063
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 13.48, 1053
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 13.53, 1046
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 13.61, 1034
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 13.65 (13.645), 1028
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 13.65 (13.645), 1028
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach State) – 13.66, 1027
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 13.72, 1018
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 13.74, 1015
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 13.75, 1014
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 13.79, 1008
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 13.86, 998
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 13.90, 993
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 13.94, 987
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 13.96, 984
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 14.02, 976
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 14.08, 967
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 14.09, 966
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 14.12, 961
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 14.23 (14.224), 946
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 14.23, 946
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 14.34, 931
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 14.96, 847
Heptathlon Competition Begins Today
Friday’s schedule opens with 100m hurdles, the first of four women’s heptathlon events for the day. Texas A&M freshman Sofia Iakushina leads the rankings heading into the championships, with a chance at opening the heptathlon with a strong performance in the 100m hurdles.
Diane Guthrie holds the current collegiate record for the heptathlon, 6527, set in June of 1995.
Women’s Heptathlon Season Best
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois) – 5749
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550
NCAA DI Track Championships 2025 Friday Schedule
All times Eastern.
Track Events
- 8:02 PM – 4x100m Relay, Final, Men
- 8:12 PM – 1500m, Final, Men
- 8:24 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Final, Men
- 8:42 PM – 110m Hurdles, Final, Men
- 8:52 PM – 100m, Final, Men
- 9:02 PM – 400m, Final, Men
- 9:14 PM – 800m, Final, Men
- 9:27 PM – 400m Hurdles, Final, Men
- 9:37 PM – 200m, Final, Men
- 9:55 PM – 5000m, Final, Men
- 10:21 PM – 4x400m Relay, Final, Men
Field Events
- 5:15 PM – Discus, Final, Men
- 7:30 PM – High Jump, Final, Men
- 8:10 PM – Triple Jump, Final Men
Combined Events
- 2:45 PM – 100 Hurdles, Heptathlon, Women
- 3:45 PM – High Jump, Heptathlon, Women
- 5:45 PM – Shot Put, Heptathlon, Women
- 9:43 PM – 200M, Heptathlon, Women
Day 3
ESPN2 at 8:30 PM ET
https://t.co/zwsHvo2ROb
https://t.co/hVc9vVfRyp#NCAATF pic.twitter.com/xiCssQMYxg
— NCAA Track & Field (@NCAATrackField) June 13, 2025
Georgia Leads The Way In Women’s Team Scores After Thursday
Team Scores after the first day of women’s competition at the NCAA Championship
Georgia leads with big help from Stephanie Ratcliffe’s Hammer Throw win (71.37m).
Georgia also received points from Manuela Rotundo (Jav-2nd), Lianna Davidson (Jav-4th), and Kelsie… pic.twitter.com/hOLqTDAjl7
— FloTrack (@FloTrack) June 13, 2025
NCAA Track And Field Championships Start Lists On Friday
Here are the men’s finals and women’s heptathlon event start lists for all track and field events today.
Combined Events
100 Hurdles, Heptathlon, Women – 2:45 p.m. ET
Section 1 of 6
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550
Section 2 of 6
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677
Section 3 of 6
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914
Section 4 of 6
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619
Section 5 of 6
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois) – 5749
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751
Section 6 of 6
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555
High Jump, Heptathlon, Women – 3:45 p.m. ET
Flight 1
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619, 1.77m
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698, 1.76m
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914, 1.83m
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655, 1.75m
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258, 1.75m
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851, 1.69m
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741, 1.83m
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231, 1.71m
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677, 1.72m
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698, 1.72m
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260, 1.74m
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715, 1.85m
Flight 2
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733, 1.65m
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555, 1.65m
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois) – 5749, 1.63m
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820, 1.71m
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551, 1.66m
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751, 1.66m
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550, 1.55m
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625, 1.68m
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817, 1.63m
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729, 1.68m
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807, 1.63m
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698, 1.63m
Shot Put, Heptathlon, Women – 5:45 p.m. ET
Flight 1
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715, 13.86m
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914, 14.51m
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258, 12.90m
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698, 10.96m
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260, 11.85m
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741, 10.47m
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231, 14.86m
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851, 12.99m
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655, 11.60m
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677, 12.79m
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698, 11.21m
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619, 12.92m
Flight 2
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729, 12.88m
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698, 14.67m
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817, 11.69m
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625, 12.83m
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733, 12.29m
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820, 12.16m
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550, 12.68m
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807, 12.06m
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois) – 5749, 13.74m
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551, 11.78m
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555, 13.05m
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751, 13.08m
200M, Heptathlon, Women – 9:43 p.m. ET
Section 1
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.)
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State)
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois)
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville)
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut)
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma)
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati)
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois)
Section 2
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington)
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame)
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA)
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State)
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard)
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M)
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State)
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue)
Section 3
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State)
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan)
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State)
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame)
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State)
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon)
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA)
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama)
Field Events
Discus, Final, Men – 5:15 p.m. ET
Flight 1
- Christopher Crawfo (JR, Alabama) – 60.06m 197-0
- Jacob Lemmon (SR, Florida) – 61.80m 202-9
- Trevor Gunzell (JR, Alabama) – 63.88m 209-7
- Desmond Coleman (JR, Miami (Fla.)) – 59.07m 193-9
- Youssef Koudssi (SR, Arizona) – 59.71m 195-10
- Aidan Elbettar (SR, Oregon) – 59.11m 193-11
- Iosif Papa (JR, UMBC) – 59.12m 193-11
- Tanner Watson (SR, Ohio State) – 57.57m 188-10
- Texas Tanner (JR, Air Force) – 63.59m 208-7
- Skylar Coffey (SR, Missouri) – 58.93m 193-4
- Paden Lewis (SR, SE Missouri) – 58.89m 193-2
- Racquil Broderick (SO, USC) – 63.09m 207-0
Flight 2
- Uladzislau Puchko (SO, Virginia Tech) – 63.15m 207-2
- Dimitrios Pavlidis (SR, Kansas) – 63.86m 209-6
- Mykolas Alekna (JR, California) – 75.56m 247-11
- Oscar Rodriguez (SR, Texas Tech) – 59.62m 195-7
- Seth Allen (JR, Auburn) – 60.96m 199-11
- Maxwell Otterdahl (SR, Nebraska) – 59.61m 195-7
- Aron Alvarez Aran (SO, Tennessee) – 61.14m 200-7
- Christopher Young (JR, Alabama) – 61.36m 201-4
- Ralford Mullings (JR, Oklahoma) – 69.13m 226-9
- Casey Helm (JR, Princeton) – 63.37m 207-11
- Michael Pinckney (JR, UCLA) – 60.88m 199-9
- Vincent Ugwoke (SR, South Florida) – 63.72m 209-1
High Jump, Final, Men – 7:30 p.m. ET
- Osawese Agbonkon (SO, Texas) – 2.17m 7-1½
- Nathanil Figgers (SO, South Carolina) – 2.16m 7-1
- Tito Alofe (SO, Harvard) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Tyus Wilson (SR, Nebraska) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Eddie Kurjak (SR, Georgia) – 2.18m 7-1¾
- Kampton Kam (JR, Penn) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Enaj Muhammad (FR, Connecticut) – 2.15m 7-½
- Antrea Mita (SO, Houston) – 2.21m 7-3
- Kason O’Riley (SR, Texas State) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Riyon Rankin (SO, Georgia) – 2.29m 7-6
- Elias Gerald (JR, USC) – 2.23m 7-3¾
- Bode Gilkerson (SO, Purdue) – 2.18m 7-1¾
- Kennedy Sauder (JR, Miami (Fla.)) – 2.18m 7-1¾
- Channing Ferguson (SR, South Carolina) – 2.15m 7-½
- Kyren Washington (SO, Oklahoma) – 2.20m 7-2½
- Aiden Hayes (JR, Texas State) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Desire Tonye Nyem (FR, Nebraska) – 2.17m 7-1½
- Scottie Vines (FR, Arkansas) – 2.17m 7-1½
- Arvesta Troupe (JR, Ole Miss) – 2.26m 7-5
Triple Jump, Final Men – 8:02 p.m. ET
Flight 1
- Chris Preddie (JR, Texas State) – 16.05m 52-8
- Xavier Partee (SO, N. Carolina A&T) – 15.97m 52-4¾
- Viktor Morozov (JR, Illinois) – 15.94m 52-3¾
- Sir Jonathan Sims (JR, Tarleton State) – 15.99m 52-5½
- Ryan John (JR, Clemson) – 15.88m 52-1¼
- Abraham Johnson (FR, Eastern Illinois) – 16.10m 52-10
- Safin Wills (SR, Oregon) – 15.88m 52-1¼
- Stafon Roach (SO, ULM) – 16.20m 53-1¾
- Roman Kuleshov (SR, Louisville) – 15.91m 52-2½
- Hakeem Ford (SO, Minnesota) – 16.54m 54-3¼
- Jaden Lippett (FR, Florida) – 15.94m 52-3¾
- Jeremy Nelson (JR, Louisiana) – 16.01m 52-6½
Flight 2
- Luke Brown (JR, Kentucky) – 16.33m 53-7
- Selva Prabhu (FR, Kansas State) – 16.49m 54-1¼
- Kyvon Tatham (JR, Florida State) – 16.37m 53-8½
- Brandon Green Jr. (JR, Oklahoma) – 16.94m 55-7
- Theophilus Mudzen (JR, South Carolina) – 16.38m 53-9
- Jaren Holmes (SR, USC) – 16.18m 53-1
- Xavier Drumgoole (FR, Stanford) – 16.42m 53-10½
- Kelsey Daniel (SR, Texas) – 16.34m 53-7½
- Alexandre Malanda (SR, Kent State) – 16.09m 52-9½
- Anthony Woods (JR, Alabama State) – 16.04m 52-7½
- Floyd Whitaker (SR, Oklahoma) – 16.27m 53-4½
- Ledamian Rowell (SR, Jackson State) – 15.99m 52-5½
Track Events
4x100m Relay, Final, Men – 8:02 p.m. ET
- Texas – 38.57
- Kentucky – 38.43
- Arkansas – 38.51
- Minnesota – 38.16
- Tennessee – 38.20
- Auburn – 37.97
- South Florida – 38.05
- LSU – 38.14
- USC – 38.41
1500m, Final, Men – 8:12 p.m. ET
- Damian Hackett (SR, Cornell) – 3:36.78
- Gary Martin (JR, Virginia) – 3:33.71
- Simeon Birnbaum (SO, Oregon) – 3:37.02
- Harrison Witt (SR, Princeton) – 3:37.22
- Martin Segurola (JR, Indiana) – 3:39.54
- Ferenc Kovacs (SO, Harvard) – 3:40.08
- Jack Crull (SR, Bradley) – 3:40.51
- Ethan Strand (JR, North Carolina) – 3:33.22
- Adam Spencer (SR, Wisconsin) – 3:34.57
- Trent McFarland (SO, Michigan) – 3:38.45
- Nathan Green (JR, Washington) – 3:35.52
- Brendan Herger (FR, Michigan) – 3:38.72
3000m Steeplechase, Final, Men – 8:24 p.m. ET
- Silas Kiptanui (SO, Tulane) – 8:27.28
- Benjamin Balazs (SO, Oregon) – 8:31.13
- Rob McManus (JR, Montana State) – 8:26.83
- Victor Kibiego (JR, Texas A&M) – 8:32.83
- Geoffrey Kirwa (FR, Louisville) – 8:13.89
- Collins Kiprop Kipn (FR, Kentucky) – 8:22.67
- Carson Williams (SR, Furman) – 8:30.83
- James Corrigan (JR, BYU) – 8:22.20
- Kristian Imroth (JR, Eastern Kentucky) – 8:30.66
- Joash Ruto (FR, Iowa State) – 8:25.42
- Mathew Kosgei (FR, New Mexico) – 8:22.13
- CJ Singleton (JR, Notre Dame) – 8:36.51
110m Hurdles, Final, Men – 8:42 p.m. ET
- Jaden Smith (SR, Davidson) – 13.39
- Jamar Marshall Jr. (SR, Houston) – 13.13
- Zachary Extine (JR, Arizona) – 13.17
- Demario Prince (FR, Baylor) – 13.18
- Ja’Kobe Tharp (SO, Auburn) – 13.14
- Kendrick Smallwood (JR, Texas) – 13.07
- Jahiem Stern (JR, LSU) – 13.29
- John Adesola (SR, Houston) – 13.26
- Darius Brown (SR, DePaul) – 13.37
100m, Final, Men – 8:52 p.m. ET
- Eddie Nketia (SO, USC) – 9.96
- Davonte Howell (SO, Tennessee) – 10.05
- Israel Okon (FR, Auburn) – 9.91
- T’Mars McCallum (JR, Tennessee) – 10.03
- Kanyinsola Ajayi (SO, Auburn) – 9.92
- Jelani Watkins (FR, LSU) – 10.01
- Jaiden Reid (SO, LSU) – 10.02
- Max Thomas (JR, USC) – 9.92
- Jordan Anthony (SO, Arkansas) – 9.75
400m, Final, Men – 9:02 p.m. ET
- Jordan Pierre (SO, Arkansas-Pine Bluff) – 45.44
- Gabriel Clement II (SO, UCLA) – 45.35
- Auhmad Robinson (SR, Texas A&M) – 44.61
- DeSean Boyce (JR, Texas Tech) – 45.15
- Joseph Taylor (FR, Duke) – 44.98
- Samuel Ogazi (SO, Alabama) – 44.43
- Gabriel Moronta (SR, South Florida) – 45.01
- William Jones (JR, USC) – 44.76
- Jayden Davis (SO, Arizona State) – 44.84
800m, Final, Men – 9:14 p.m. ET
- Samuel Rodman (SR, Princeton) – 1:46.27
- Samuel Navarro (SR, Miss State) – 1:45.32
- Rivaldo Marshall (SR, Arkansas) – 1:45.59
- Aidan McCarthy (JR, Cal Poly) – 1:45.53
- Tynice Taylor (JR, Arkansas) – 1:45.23
- Christian Jackson (JR, Virginia Tech) – 1:44.83
- Koitatoi Kidali (FR, Oregon) – 1:45.31
- Sam Whitmarsh (SR, Texas A&M) – 1:45.35
- Matthew Erickson (SR, Oregon) – 1:45.89
400m Hurdles, Final, Men – 9:27 p.m. ET
- Jarrett Gentiles (SR, Coppin State) – 49.78
- Bryce Tucker (SO, Rutgers) – 50.00
- Bryce McCray (SR, Texas A&M) – 48.58
- Oskar Edlund (SR, Texas Tech) – 49.00
- Ja’Qualon Scott (SR, Texas A&M) – 48.85
- Nathaniel Ezekiel (SR, Baylor) – 47.86
- Saud Hinti (FR, Tennessee) – 48.44
- Kody Blackwood (JR, Texas) – 48.78
- Johnny Brackins (SR, USC) – 49.04
200m, Final, Men – 9:37 p.m. ET
- Abdul-Rasheed Sami (SR, South Florida) – 19.95
- Cameron Miller (JR, Purdue) – 20.12
- Max Thomas (JR, USC) – 20.02
- Xavier Butler (SO, Texas) – 20.02
- T’Mars McCallum (JR, Tennessee) – 19.83
- Makanakaishe Charamba (SR, Auburn) – 19.79
- Garrett Kaalund (JR, USC) – 19.85
- Jordan Anthony (SO, Arkansas) – 19.93
- Carli Makarawu (JR, Kentucky) – 19.92
5000m, Final, Men – 9:55 p.m. ET
- Kidus Misgina (SR, Ole Miss) – 13:37.29
- Robin Kwemoi Bera (FR, Iowa State) – 13:26.71
- Toby Gillen (SR, Ole Miss) – 13:26.92
- Jacob White (JR, Wyoming) – 13:27.32
- Ishmael Kipkurui (FR, New Mexico) – 13:09.24
- Ernest Cheruiyot (SO, Texas Tech) – 13:27.89
- Jojo Jourdon (FR, Wake Forest) – 13:46.76
- Luke Grundvig (JR, BYU) – 13:34.63
- Luke Tewalt (SR, Wake Forest) – 13:28.18
- Colton Sands (SR, North Carolina) – 13:31.62
- David Mullarkey (SR, Northern Arizona) – 13:29.55
- Fouad Messaoudi (SR, Oklahoma State) – 13:28.17
- Valentin Soca (JR, CBU) – 13:13.10
- Matthew Forrester (JR, Butler) – 13:30.40
- Habtom Samuel (SO, New Mexico) – 13:05.87
- Justin Wachtel (JR, Virginia) – 13:34.44
- Marco Langon (JR, Villanova) – 13:27.21
- Rocky Hansen (SO, Wake Forest) – 13:22.06
- Ethan Strand (JR, North Carolina) – 13:31.13
- Brian Musau (SO, Oklahoma State) – 13:32.06
- Drew Bosley (SR, Northern Arizona) – 13:17.06
- Will Daley (JR, Virginia) – 13:39.11
- Matt Strangio (SR, Portland) – 13:34.08
- Hunter Christophe (SR, Youngstown St.) – 13:40.08
4x400m Relay, Final, Men – 10:21 p.m. ET
- BYU – 3:03.05
- Florida – 3:01.52
- South Florida – 3:01.52
- Penn State – 3:03.39
- Texas A&M – 3:02.15
- Arkansas – 3:01.82
- USC – 3:02.18
- Iowa – 3:03.14
- Alabama – 3:02.78
“Yes girl, I need some music!”
“Yes girl, I need some music!”
NCAA 3rd-place finisher Nina Ndubusi is only a sophomore and already making noise. Here’s what’s on her playlist
#NCAAOutdoors pic.twitter.com/rZuNnz73u8
— FloTrack (@FloTrack) June 13, 2025
NCAA Division I Track And Field Championship Conference Scoreboard
Only six out of 21 total events have been scored so far.
Men’s Track And Field Scoreboard by Conference
- SEC — 58 points
- Big 10 — 53 points
- Big 12 — 35.5 points
- ACC — 30.5 points
- Mountain West — 25 points
- Big Sky — 7 points
- Sun Belt — 6 points
- Western Athletic — 4 points
- West Coast — 4 points
- Southern — 2 points
- Ivy League — 2 points
- America East — 1 point
Men’s Scoreboard by School
- Minnesota – 23 (Big 10)
- New Mexico – 18 (Mountain West)
- Florida – 18 (SEC)
- Ole Miss – 12 (SEC)
- Kansas – 11.5 (Big 12)
- Texas A&M – 10 (SEC)
- Wisconsin – 10 (Big 10)
- Miami (Fla.) – 10 (ACC)
- Oklahoma State – 8 (Big 12)
- North Carolina – 8 (ACC)
- Arkansas State – 6 (Sun Belt)
- Arkansas – 6 (SEC)
- Iowa – 6 (Big 10)
- Missouri – 6 (SEC)
- Nebraska – 6 (Big 10)
- Texas Tech – 6 (Big 12)
- Georgia – 6 (SEC)
- South Carolina – 6 (SEC)
- Virginia Tech – 5 (ACC)
- Air Force – 5 (Mountain West)
- Iowa State – 5 (Big 12)
- Oregon – 5 (Big 10)
- Duke – 4.5 (ACC)
- BYU – 4 (Big 12)
- Cal Poly – 4 (Big Sky)
- Tarleton State – 4 (Western Athletic)
- Washington State – 4 (West Coast)
- Northern Arizona – 3 (Big Sky)
- NC State – 3 (ACC)
- Wyoming – 2 (Mountain West)
- Furman – 2 (Southern)
- Princeton – 2 (Ivy League)
- Illinois – 1.5 (Big 10)
- Rutgers – 1.5 (Big 10)
- UMass Lowell – 1 (America East)
- Cincinnati – 1 (Big 12)
Women’s Track And Field Scoreboard by Conference
- SEC — 59 points
- Big 10 — 55.5 points
- Big 12 — 36 points
- ACC — 35 points
- Mountain West — 21 points
- Missouri Valley — 8.5 points
- Sun Belt — 6 points
- Big East — 4 points
- Atlantic 10 — 3 points
- West Coast — 2 points
- American Athletic — 2 points
- Western Athletic — 2 points
Women’s Scoreboard by School
- Georgia — 26 (SEC)
- Illinois — 16.5 (Big 10)
- Washington — 16 (Big 10)
- Louisville — 15 (ACC)
- Colorado State — 10 (Mountain West)
- Missouri — 10 (SEC)
- New Mexico –10 (Mountain West)
- Stanford — 8 (ACC)
- Texas — 8 (SEC)
- Texas Tech — 8 (Big 12)
- NC State — 8 (ACC)
- Rutgers — 8 (Big 10)
- Baylor — 6.5 (Big 12)
- South Dakota — 6.5 (Missouri Valley)
- West Virginia — 6 (Big 12)
- TCU — 6 (Big 12)
- Texas State — 6 (Sun Belt)
- Arkansas — 5 (SEC)
- Oklahoma State — 5 (Big 12)
- Kansas — 4.5 (Big 12)
- California — 4 (ACC)
- Nebraska — 4 (Big 10)
- USC — 4 (Big 10)
- Florida — 4 (SEC)
- Georgetown — 4 (Big East)
- VCU — 3 (Atlantic 10)
- Oregon — 3 (Big 10)
- UCLA — 3 (Big 10)
- Alabama — 3 (SEC)
- LSU — 3 (SEC)
- Gonzaga — 2 (West Coast)
- North Dakota — 2 (Missouri Valley)
- Rice — 2 (American Athletic)
- Fresno State — 1 (Mountain West)
- Tarleton State — 1 (Western Athletic)
- Utah Valley — 1 (Western Athletic)
- Wisconsin — 1 (Big 10)
NCAA DI Track Championships 2025 Schedule
All times Eastern.
Friday, June 13
Track Events
- 8:02 PM – 4x100m Relay, Final, Men
- 8:12 PM – 1500m, Final, Men
- 8:24 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Final, Men
- 8:42 PM – 110m Hurdles, Final, Men
- 8:52 PM – 100m, Final, Men
- 9:02 PM – 400m, Final, Men
- 9:14 PM – 800m, Final, Men
- 9:27 PM – 400m Hurdles, Final, Men
- 9:37 PM – 200m, Final, Men
- 9:55 PM – 5000m, Final, Men
- 10:21 PM – 4x400m Relay, Final, Men
Field Events
- 5:15 PM – Discus, Final, Men
- 7:30 PM – High Jump, Final, Men
- 8:10 PM – Triple Jump, Final Men
Combined Events
- 2:45 PM – 100 Hurdles, Heptathlon, Women
- 3:45 PM – High Jump, Heptathlon, Women
- 5:45 PM – Shot Put, Heptathlon, Women
- 9:43 PM – 200M, Heptathlon, Women
Saturday, June 14
Track Events
- 9:02 PM – 4x100m Relay, Final, Women
- 9:11 PM – 1500m, Final, Women
- 9:24 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Final, Women
- 9:42 PM – 100m Hurdles, Final, Women
- 9:52 PM – 100m, Final, Women
- 10:02 PM – 400m, Final, Women
- 10:14 PM – 800m, Final, Women
- 10:27 PM – 400m Hurdles, Final, Women
- 10:37 PM – 200m, Final, Women
- 10:55 PM – 5000m, Final, Women
- 11:21 PM – 4x400m Relay, Final, Women
Field Events
- 3:30 PM – Discus, Final, Women
- 8:30 PM – High Jump, Final, Women
- 9:10 PM – Triple Jump, Final, Women
Combined Events
- 6:30 PM – Long Jump, Heptathlon, Women
- 7:45 PM – Javelin, Heptathlon, Women
- 10:43 – 800M, Heptathlon, Women
What Channel Is NCAA Track And Field On?
The NCAA D1 Track and Field Championships will be broadcast on ESPN and ESPN2 from June 11 to 14.
FloTrack Is The Streaming Home For Many Track And Field Meets Each Year
Don’t miss all the track and field season action streaming on FloTrack. Check out the FloTrack schedule for more events.
FloTrack Archived Footage
Video footage from each event will be archived and stored in a video library for FloTrack subscribers to watch for the duration of their subscriptions.
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Sports
USC men earn share of NCAA outdoor track and field title – Daily Breeze
EUGENE, Ore. — The USC men’s track and field team completed a rare double championship on Friday, with an assist from South Florida. South Florida ran a brilliant 4×400-meter relay to close the NCAA men’s outdoor track and field championships, leaving USC and Texas A&M tied for the team title. The Trojans, who also won […]

EUGENE, Ore. — The USC men’s track and field team completed a rare double championship on Friday, with an assist from South Florida.
South Florida ran a brilliant 4×400-meter relay to close the NCAA men’s outdoor track and field championships, leaving USC and Texas A&M tied for the team title.
The Trojans, who also won the indoor title earlier this year, hadn’t won an outdoor title in 49 years. USC and Texas A&M both finished with 41 points on Friday, one ahead of Arkansas, with the Trojans becoming just the third team ever to win the indoor and outdoor national championships in the same year.
The team result came after a late surge by the USF anchor to edge Texas A&M in the final race, winning in 3 minutes, 42 seconds. Arkansas was third with the Trojans a disappointing eighth to earn just one team point. The Aggies earned eight points in the relay – a win would have been worth 10 points – and the Razorbacks got six.
Arkansas protested after the race that a USF runner hindered a Razorback, but the protest was denied. If successful, Texas A&M would have won the title and Arkansas and USC would have tied for second.
USC, which scored all of its points in seven events on Friday, won its first outdoor track and field title since 1976 and now has 27 outdoor titles, more than double the next program. USC also became the first Big Ten program to win the outdoor team title since Minnesota in 1948.
The Trojans won the team title without winning any individual events, just like they did for the indoor title earlier this year. The indoor meet also required waiting for the results of an unsuccessful Arkansas protest in the 4×400 relay before USC could celebrate.
“It is just an awesome feeling for the program, the University, the USC community, all of our fans and these student-athletes. They worked their butts off,” USC director of track & field Quincy Watts said. “I am just so proud of them.”
The Trojans’ march to the title began with sophomore Racquil Broderick breaking his school discus record with a throw of 207 feet, 8 inches to place fourth, securing USC’s first five points of the two-day meet. Broderick, who placed second as a freshman, earned first-team All-America honors for the second time.
The 4×100 relay team of senior Travis Williams, junior Max Thomas, graduate transfer Taylor Banks and junior transfer Garrett Kaalund placed second with a time of 38.46 seconds. The second-fastest time in program history was worth another eight points in the team competition.
Thomas then used a strong finish to place second in the 100 with a time of 10.10 (+0.7), out-leaning the third-place finisher by 0.001 seconds. Thomas gave USC its best finish in the event since Andre DeGrasse won the NCAA title in 2015.
Junior William Jones took second in the 400 with a time of 45.53 for another eight points that gave USC a meet best 29 points after 14 of the 21 events. Jones’ effort was the best finish by a Trojan since Michael Norman won the title in 2018 in a record-setting 43.61.
Senior Johnny Brackins Jr. placed seventh in the 400 hurdles with a time of 50.15 for two more points. After 18 events, USC had 31 points and was two behind Texas A&M for the lead.
Kaalund then placed third in the 200 at 19.96 and Thomas took sixth at 20.23, adding nine points that moved the Trojans into first place with 40 points, five ahead of Auburn, six ahead of Arkansas and seven ahead of the Aggies with the 5,000 and the 4×400 relay remaining.
Kaalund’s finish was USC’s best showing in the 200 since DeGrasse won the title in 2015.
USC ran a 4×400 team of junior Jacob Andrews, Thomas, junior Jaelen Knox and Jones, and they did just enough to secure a share of the team title, finishing eighth with a time of 3:03.18 despite a couple of balky exchanges.
“It is a journey and throughout the journey you are going to have hurdles and adversity,” Watts said. “We had some adversity when one of our top runners (Kaalund) was having some issues with his hamstring (leaving him unavailable for the 4×400). I gathered everybody that was here with the men’s team and we surrounded Garrett while he was on the training table. We let him know we were going to win the team title for him. We wanted to look him in the eye and let him know we had his back. Garrett has been there for us all year. Just a tremendous team with tremendous character as human beings.”
In other notable performances for USC, graduate transfer Jaren Holmes placed 11th in the triple jump with a top mark of 51-8¼ (+0.6), good enough for second-team All-America honors in the event.
Junior Elias Gerald placed 12th in the high jump with a best clearance of 7-0½, also earning second-team All-America honors.
The women’s title will be decided Saturday at Hayward Field on the Oregon campus.
Sam Whitmarsh of Texas A&M, runner-up a year ago, beat indoor champion Matthew Erickson of Oregon to capture the 800 in 1:45.86, the second-fastest in school history.
Jordan Anthony of Arkansas, the NCAA champion in the indoor 60, added an outdoor title, winning the 100 in 10.07 from Lane 9.
Ja’Kobe Tharp, who won the 60 hurdles at the indoor championships for Auburn, added the 110 hurdles title to his resume with a personal-best time of 13.05. Tharp ran the fifth-fastest time in NCAA history, only 0.07 off of Grant Holloway’s record.
Auburn also won the 400 relay in a time of 38.33.
Samujel Ogazi of Alabama raced to a dominant win in the 400 with a time of 44.84, more than six-tenths faster than the runner-up. The sophomore, who made the Olympic final in Paris, became the first Nigerian athlete to win the 400 NCAA title in 26 years.
James Corrigan of BYU, a 2024 Olympian, won the 3,000 steeplechase in 8:16.41, grabbing the lead at the last water jump. His time is the fourth fastest in college history.
Nathan Green of Washington, the 2023 champion, won the 1,500 meters in 3:47.26 with the top 11 finishing within 0.68 of Green.
Brian Masau on Oklahoma State added the outdoor title in the 5,000 to the indoor title he won earlier this year, finishing in 13:20.59.
Ezekiel Nathaniel of Baylor lowered his Nigerian record to 47.49 in the 400 hurdles, the second-fastest time in the world this year.
Carli Makarawu of Kentucky took the 400 in 19.84 seconds, a Zimbabwe national record, edging countryman Makanakaishe Charamba of Auburn, who ran 19.92.
Oklahoma’s Ralford Mullings, who returned to the championship for the second time in his career, took the discus title by launching a meet-record and person-best 227 feet, 4 inches.
Brandon Green Jr. and Floyd Whitaker gave Oklahoma a 1-2 finish in the triple jump with Green soaring 55-2 to win by more than a foot. Green led from the first jump and had it wrapped up after five rounds and then had his best leap to end it.
Arvesta Troupe of Mississippi cleared 7-5¼ to win the high jump.
Sports
Cumbrians aged 60 and over invited to Carlisle sports day
The inaugural Better Club Games, a multi-sport event, is set to take place at The Sands Centre in Carlisle this September. Organised by GLL, the charitable social enterprise that operates Better leisure centres in Cumbria, the event is being delivered in partnership with Cumberland Council, Age UK, Sellafield, and Active Cumbria. Chloe Nixon, community sports […]

The inaugural Better Club Games, a multi-sport event, is set to take place at The Sands Centre in Carlisle this September.
Organised by GLL, the charitable social enterprise that operates Better leisure centres in Cumbria, the event is being delivered in partnership with Cumberland Council, Age UK, Sellafield, and Active Cumbria.
Chloe Nixon, community sports manager at The Sands Centre, said: “This is a fantastic initiative designed to keep our beloved seniors active, foster new friendships, and improve their social, mental and physical wellbeing.
“This event allows us to celebrate the sporting talent amongst our older members who regularly attend our wide range of tailored sessions, while demonstrating the benefits that regular exercise and an active lifestyle can bring.
“It will be a race to the finish as we pit contestants from Cumberland against each other in a diverse range of competitive activities.”
Participants from 11 Better leisure centres across the region will compete in activities including badminton, pickleball, water polo, carpet bowls, rowing, table tennis, and a danceathon.
The day will end with an awards ceremony honouring winners in each discipline.
Veteran members who have taken part in senior sessions since they launched in 2023 have shared their enthusiasm for the event.
John Lightowler said: “Joining the Better Senior sessions has been a game-changer, literally.
“The idea of an inter-centre competition is an inspiration.
“Pickleball, table tennis, and water polo, amongst other activities, have given me a reason to get out of the house and just have a laugh without realising you are exercising and keeping the joints moving.
“Meeting like-minded people from other areas of the county is a great idea and there is nothing wrong with friendly rivalry.
“More than just sports, these activities have given me a wonderful community of friends who cheer each other on.
“Staying active has never been this fun.”
Julie Farrey said: “I am looking forward to the club games as it allows us to meet others who are interested in sport in older age.
“We have such fun together enjoying various activities.
“We have new members joining all the time with different abilities.
“We have all made great friendships that would not have happened if it was not for our club.
“To share this with others and to get to know more people and exchange stories will be great.
“It’s all about fun, laughter, and the ability to enjoy exercise with good friends.”
Councillor Anne Quilter, executive member for vibrant and healthy places at Cumberland Council, said the project highlights the value of partnership working.
Cllr Quilter said: “This is set to be a great event and one that demonstrates all our partners’ commitment to health and wellbeing.
“We want to provide inclusive leisure facilities for all ages and abilities – keeping Cumberland on the move.
“Best of luck to all the competitors.”
The Better Club Games is part of a nationwide programme developed by GLL to fill the gap in large-scale sporting events for older adults.
The initiative aims to promote ‘active ageing’ and highlight the capabilities of older people through sport.
Better leisure centres across Cumbria offer weekly senior sessions, including zumba, chair yoga, walking football, netball, aqua aerobics, and social gatherings.
Discounted membership is available for anyone aged 66 and over, providing access to facilities and instructor-led classes.
Earlier this year, The Sands Centre was named a finalist in the Cumbria Sports Awards for its senior activity programmes.
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