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Buckeyes Send 23 Entries to the NCAA East First Round

NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field East First RoundDates: Wednesday, May 28 through Saturday, May 31, 2025Venue: Hodges Stadium: 1 UNF Dr, Jacksonville, Fla. 32224Event: NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field East First Round | Meet Central | Live Results | TicketsStreaming (ESPN+): May 28 – 6 p.m. | May 29 – 6 […]

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Buckeyes Send 23 Entries to the NCAA East First Round

NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field East First Round
Dates: Wednesday, May 28 through Saturday, May 31, 2025
Venue: Hodges Stadium: 1 UNF Dr, Jacksonville, Fla. 32224
Event: NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field East First Round | Meet Central | Live Results | Tickets
Streaming (ESPN+): May 28 – 6 p.m. | May 29 – 6 p.m. | May 30 – 5 p.m. | May 31 – 5 p.m.
Rosters: Ohio State women | Ohio State men
 
COLUMBUS, Ohio – The Buckeyes will be well represented at the NCAA Division I East First Round, hosted by the University of North Florida, with 23 total athletes (13 women and 10 men) qualifying to compete in Jacksonville, Fla. this Wednesday, May 28 through Saturday, May 31.
 
The qualifying athletes include Leah Bertrand, Nick Biega, Braxton Brann, Marcus Brown, Sydnee Burr, Noah Carmichael, Katie Castelli, Fatouma Conde, Weston Day, Denzell Feagin, Morgan Fijalkowski, DJ Fillmore, Sophie Fong, Morgan Hallett, Nazzio John, Michaela McCall, Zamesha Myle, Olivia Powell, Janela Spencer, Lacey Stringer, Edidiong Udo, Amaya Ugarte and Tanner Watson.
 
Male events are scheduled for Wednesday and Friday, while the women will compete on Thursday and Saturday. Field events on Wednesday and Thursday each start at 10 a.m. with the hammer throws, with the men’s 110 hurdles and women’ 100m hurdles kicking off track events at 6 p.m. on the respective days. On Friday and Saturday, field events begin at 1 p.m. with the discus throws and track events begin at 5 p.m. with the 4x100m relays.
 
OUTDOOR SEASON RECAP FOR QUALIFIERS

  • Bertrand ranks second nationally in the women’s 100m with a time of 10.94 seconds (Texas Relays) and the 40th ranked women’s 200m of 22.99 (Big Ten Outdoor Championships prelims). Conde also qualified for the women’s 200m, having a season best 23.33 seconds at the Texas Relays.
  • Biega received a nod for the men’s 200m, having a season best time of 20.77 seconds (Tom Jones Memorial).
  • Brann had a season best time of 13.64 seconds in the men’s 110m hurdles, which ranks 51st in the nation.
  • Burr (71st, 12.80m / 42’0″) and Myle (81st, 12.75m / 41’10”) each qualified for the women’s triple jump.
  • Castelli recorded the 69th best women’s 3000m steeplechase time of 10:15.78, which occurred at the Big Ten Outdoor Championships.
  • Day’s time of 28:52.56 was good for an NCAA qualification in the men’s 10,000m.
  • John holds the 38th ranked time of 10.14 seconds from his Texas Relays 100m win. Feagin, also a men’s 100m champion (USF Invite, 10.23 seconds), was the Buckeyes’ second qualifier in the event.
  • Fong (4.13m / 13’6.5″, Jesse Owens Classic) and Fijalkowski (4.10m / 13’5.25″, Tom Jones Memorial) both qualified for the women’s pole vault.
  • Fillmore had the 51st best men’s long jump distance of the regular season – 7.68m / 25’2.50″ in the Big Ten Outdoor Championships.
  • Watson recorded the 41st best men’s discus throw of 57.57m / 188’0″ at the Raleigh Relays and Hallett qualified for the women’s discus throw with a mark of 50.33m / 165’1″ (Tom Jones Memorial).
  • Udo had a season best men’s 400m time of 45.19 (12th ranked) which took place at the Tom Jones Memorial. Also at the Tom Jones Memorial, McCall had her season best women’s 400m time of 52.70 seconds, which ranks 62nd nationally.
  • Spencer, who ranks 14th in the women’s 100m hurdles, earned her NCAA qualification with a time of 12.99 seconds (USF Invite).
  • Stringer qualified for both her 21st ranked women’s shot put (17.31m / 56’9.5″, Big Ten Outdoor Championships) and 42nd ranked women’s hammer throw (62.40m / 204’8″, Jesse Owens Classic).
  • Ugarte recorded the 20th ranked women’s high jump (1.82m / 5’11.50″) at the Drake Relays.
  • The women’s 4x100m relay team of Bertrand, Olive, Conde and Spencer ranked 38th with their Big Ten Outdoor Championships time of 43.84 seconds.
  • Brown, John, Biega and Feagin qualified as a 4x100m relay squad after they ran a season best time of 39.38 seconds at the second USF Invite of the season and rank 49th in the nation in the event.
  • The reigning Big Ten outdoor men’s 4x400m relay champions (Carmichael, Louis, Brann and Udo) qualified for the NCAA East First Round with their championship time of 3:04.08, which currently ranks 24th in the country.

 

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How the first USTFCCCA rankings predict the women’s champion

The national ratings index from the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) gives a glimpse at the best teams every week leading up to the Division I outdoor championships. When the first rankings are revealed each year, it brings excitement and anticipation. But how likely is it that the first rankings […]

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The national ratings index from the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) gives a glimpse at the best teams every week leading up to the Division I outdoor championships. When the first rankings are revealed each year, it brings excitement and anticipation. But how likely is it that the first rankings are a true indicator of who will win that year’s championship?

We took a look at the history of the women’s rankings and here’s what we found.

How the first USTFCCCA rankings predict the champion

For the sake of this article LSU’s 2012 title is not recognized because its participation in the championships was vacated by the NCAA Committee on infractions

The history of the rankings

To understand the correlation between the USTFCCCA rankings and the national champion, one must first understand the history of the rankings.

The USTFCCCA began its outdoor track and field season rankings in 2008. The first rankings came during the preseason for outdoor track and field, a tradition that would continue through 2019.

Then the 2020 outdoor track and field season got canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

After a year’s absence, the rankings returned in 2021 and for the first time, the USTFCCCA began the season with Week 1 rankings rather than preseason rankings. In 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025 Week 1 again kicked off the season’s rankings.

UNBREAKABLE: The most unbreakable — we think — records in women’s track and field

Behind the first No. 1

With each year’s initial rankings comes a team ranked in the top spot. But how is the first No.1 picked? 

From the rankings from 2008-19 — back when the first rankings were still in the preseason — it’s concluded that the first No. 1 team in the country was determined based on the prior season’s finish in the championships and returning talent.

Three times, including the latter two years of Texas A&M’s three-peat from 2009-11, was the defending champion named preseason No. 1. Another three times, the preseason No. 1 was the previous year’s runner-up. In fact, every preseason No. 1 finished within the top four of NCAA championship scoring in the year prior for the first 13 years of the ratings.

It wasn’t until 2022’s Week 1 ranking that Texas broke the mold, jumping from its seventh-place finish a year before. Then in 2023 and 2024, defending champions Florida and Texas were unranked in Week 1’s poll which came just 16 days after indoor championships. In 2025, defending champion Arkansas opened at No. 12 in Week 1.

Year First No. 1 Prior Year Finish
2008 LSU Runner-up
2009 Texas A&M Third
2010 Texas A&M Champion
2011 Texas A&M Champion
2013 Kansas Fourth
2014 Texas A&M Runner-up
2015 Texas A&M Third
2016 LSU Fourth
2017 Oregon Runner-up
2018 Arkansas Third
2019 Southern California Champion
2021 LSU N/A
2022 Texas Seventh
2023 LSU Fourth
2024 LSU Seventh
2025 Southern California Tenth

THE BOWERMAN: A complete history of track and field’s highest individual honor

What does it all mean?

It means that the team selected to the No. 1 spot in the first rankings of the season more often than not has a proven track record of success. The first teams to land the top spot in the rankings deserve it, but that doesn’t always mean they can go wire to wire.

Yet, with more and more teams waiting to start run their best runners in their outdoor openers until after Week 1 — allowing more rest from the indoor season — the preseason rankings begin to carry less weight.

Where were the champions ranked to start the season?

From 2008-2021, no team won the women’s outdoor track and field championship after starting the season ranked outside of the top four. In 2022, Florida became the first non-top four team to win the title after starting the season at No. 5. In 2023, Texas became the first team from outside of the top-25 (No. 80) to win the title. In 2024, Arkansas became the first unranked team from the first rankings to win the title. In 2025, Georgia broke the recent trend, winning the title after opening the season ranked No. 6.

In seven out of the 16 eligible years through 2024, the year’s women’s outdoor champion started the season ranked first overall.

That means 44 percent of the time the first USTFCCCA rankings will let you know who the national champion will be, simply by looking at the No. 1 team. However, the No. 2 team in the first rankings has NEVER won the national championship. Only once has the No. 3 team to start the season, 2016 Arkansas, won the title, while the No. 4 team has won the title an impressive four times since the USTFCCCA rankings began.

Year Champion Initial Ranking
2008 LSU 1
2009 Texas A&M 1
2010 Texas A&M 1
2011 Texas A&M 1
2013 Kansas 1
2014 Texas A&M 1
2015 Oregon 4
2016 Arkansas 3
2017 Oregon 1
2018 Southern California 4
2019 Arkansas 4
2021 Southern California 4
2022 Florida 5
2023 Texas 80
2024 Arkansas NR
2025 Georgia 6

🏆: Here are the DI track and field teams with most NCAA championships

What happened to the No. 1s that didn’t win the title?

Nine times the teams ranked No. 1 in the first ranking did not win the title. The No. 1 team has not won the title in any of the last seven years and all nine have come in the last decade, with Oregon’s 2017 season being the lone outlier. Listed below are the preseason/first No. 1’s to not win the title and where they finished at the championships.

VENUE HISTORY: These historic moments all happened at Hayward Field

What does history say for the future seasons?

The history of the first USTFCCCA rankings is good news for whatever team kicks off the season with the top spot in the Week 1 rankings. Said team will have a little less than a 50-50 shot at the title.

The ranking’s history is not so good news for the No. 2 team in the season’s first national ratings index. Meanwhile, the third and fourth and fourth ranked teams should have high hopes.



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VB: Karelov Releases 2025 Schedule

Story Links LAKE CHARLES— McNeese head volleyball coach Sasha Karelov has announced the Cowgirls 2025 schedule, one that is highlighted by 12 home matches including the Cowgirl Classic set for September 4-6.   “I’m excited about the schedule we’ve put together this fall,” said Karelov.  “I believe it is the most balanced […]

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LAKE CHARLES— McNeese head volleyball coach Sasha Karelov has announced the Cowgirls 2025 schedule, one that is highlighted by 12 home matches including the Cowgirl Classic set for September 4-6.
 
“I’m excited about the schedule we’ve put together this fall,” said Karelov.  “I believe it is the most balanced and travel friendly since I’ve been at McNeese.  Playing down the road at Sam Houston and at the University of Houston will be a treat for our Houston native players.  I’m really looking forward to hosting the Cowgirl Classic for the third year in a row. Playing in front of our home crowd in our amazing facility is always a highlight of our season.”
 
Fans will get a chance to see an early glimpse of the Cowgirls with two intrasquad scrimmages set for Aug. 16 and Aug. 22.  All home matches will be played in the Legacy Center.
 
The Cowgirls will begin their regular season at the Sam Houston Invitational (Aug. 29-30) where they will face Tulane, Sam Houston, and Southern Illinois.
 
A Sept. 4 match against Alcorn at the Cowgirl Classic will serve as McNeese’s home opener.  The Cowgirls will also face UT-Arlington and UL-Monroe that weekend.
 

McNeese will also take part in the Florida A&M (Sept. 12-13) and Houston Tournaments (Sept. 19-20).
 

The Southland Conference schedule is based on two divisions (Black and Gold).  The Black Division is made up of Incarnate Word, Houston Christian, Northwestern State, East Texas A&M, UTRGV and Texas A&M-Corpus Christi while the Gold Division is comprised of Lamar, McNeese, New Orleans, Nicholls, Southeastern, and Stephen F. Austin.
 
Each team in the same division will play each other twice during the regular season.  Seeding for the SLC Tournament will be based on regular season finish, regardless of division.
 
McNeese will begin its conference schedule on the road for the first three matches beginning with Southeastern, the two-time defending regular season champs on Sept. 5 followed by matches at New Orleans and Houston Christian.  The Cowgirls will also play road matches at NW State, Lamar, Stephen F. Austin, and Nicholls.
 

The SLC home opener is slated for Oct. 9 against Lamar.  McNeese will also host Stephen F. Austin, East Texas A&M, UTRGV, Texas A&M-CC, Nicholls, New Orleans, and Southeastern.
 

The Southland Conference Tournament is scheduled for Nov. 21-23 in Commerce, Texas and will be hosted by East Texas A&M.
 
 
 
 
DATE                         OPPONENT                                          SITE
Sat. Aug. 16                   Blue/Gold Scrimmage I                   Lake Charles                       
Fri. Aug. 22                   Blue/Gold Scrimmage II                  Lake Charles                       
Fri.-Sat, Aug. 29-30         Sam Houston Inv.                            Huntsville, Texas
Fri., Aug. 29                   Tulane                                                                                      
                                       Sam Houston                                                                             
Sat., Aug. 30                  Southern Illinois                                                                         
Thur., Sept. 4-6             COWGIRL CLASSIC                     Lake Charles
Thur., Sept. 4                UT-Arlington vs. UL-Monroe                                                       
                                    Alcorn                                                                                     
Fri., Sept. 5                   Alcorn vs. UL-Monroe                                                                
                                    UT-Arlington                                                                           
Sat., Sept. 6                   UT-Arlington vs. Alcorn                                                              
                                    UL-Monroe                                                                              

Fri., Sept. 12-13              Florida A&M Tournament                 Tallahassee, Fla.

Thu., Sept. 11                 Florida A&M                                                                             
Fri., Sept. 12                   Georgia State                                                                             
Tue., Sept. 16                 Southern                                          Lake Charles                       
Fri., Sept. 19-20              Houston Tournament                        Houston, Texas
Fri., Sept. 19                   Liberty                                                                                     
                                        North Alabama                                                                          
Sat., Sept. 20                  Houston                                                                                    
Thur., Sept. 25                Southeastern*                                  Hammond                            
Sat., Sept. 27                  New Orleans*                                 New Orleans                         
Thur., Oct. 2                   Houston Christian*                           Houston, Texas                      
Sat., Oct. 4                     Incarnate Word*                              San Antonio, Texas                
Thu., Oct. 9                   Lamar*                                         Lake Charles                       
Sat. Oct. 11                   Stephen F. Austin*                          Lake Charles                       
Wed., Oct. 15                 NW State*                                      Natchitoches                         
Sat., Oct. 18                   East Texas A&M*                          Lake Charles                       
Thur., Oct. 23                UTRGV*                                       Lake Charles                       
Sat. Oct. 25                   Texas A&M-CC*                            Lake Charles                       
Thur., Oct. 30                 Lamar*                                          Beaumont, Texas                   
Sat., Nov. 1                    Stephen F. Austin*                           Nacogdoches, Texas               
Wed., Nov. 5                  Nicholls*                                       Lake Charles                       
Sat., Nov. 8                    Nicholls*                                        Thibodaux                            
Tue., Nov. 11                 New Orleans*                                 Lake Charles                       
Thur., Nov. 13               Southeastern*                                Lake Charles                       
Fri.-Sun Nov. 21-23         Southland Conference Tournament      Commerce, Texas

*- Southland Conference Match

                                   



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Can the fastest NFL players beat the NCAA track stars? Here’s what the numbers say

Are football players faster than track and field athletes? It’s a question that’s been in the spotlight recently, with the likes of Tyreek Hill (NFL’s Miami Dolphins) challenging Usain Bolt (arguably the greatest Olympian sprinter ever) and more. However, before we get to the all-time greats, we should figure out if NFL players can even […]

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Are football players faster than track and field athletes? It’s a question that’s been in the spotlight recently, with the likes of Tyreek Hill (NFL’s Miami Dolphins) challenging Usain Bolt (arguably the greatest Olympian sprinter ever) and more. However, before we get to the all-time greats, we should figure out if NFL players can even beat the best sprinters in the NCAA. 

I compiled data from the NFL and the top collegiate sprinters to finally get an answer to the oft-asked question. Here’s what the numbers say.

Fastest 2022 regular season NFL speeds

Every year, the NFL uses Next Gen Stats to track the fastest players each game. Below you’ll find the fastest players that carried the ball from the 2022 regular season.

RANK SPEED (MPH) PLAYER POSITION TEAM NFL WEEK
1 22.11 Parris Campbell WR Indianapolis Colts 18
2 22.09 Kenneth Walker RB Seattle Seahawks 7
3 21.87 Breece Hall RB New York Jets 7
4 21.72 DeSean Jackson WR Baltimore Ravens 12
5 21.72 Christian Watson WR Green Bay Packers 13
6 21.68 Jaylen Waddle WR Miami Dolphins 16
7 21.68 Dalvin Cook RB Minnesota Vikings 10
8 21.62 Travis Etienne RB Jacksonville Jaguars 17
9 21.6 Devin Duvernay WR Baltimore Ravens 2
10 21.58 Tariq Woolen DB Seattle Seahawks 4

In total, 36 NFL players ran faster than 21 mph during the 2022 regular season, but only Parris Campbell and Kenneth Walker surpassed the 22 mph threshold. Campbell’s 22.11 mph speed ranks as the fifth-fastest top speed by a ball-carrier during an NFL season since 2016.

👀: Here are the DI track and field teams with most NCAA championships

RANK SPEED (MPH) PLAYER Year TEAM
1 23.34 Tyreek Hill 2016 Kansas City Chiefs
2 23.09 Raheem Mostert 2020 San Francisco 49ers
3 22.3 Matt Breida 2019 San Francisco 49ers
4 22.13 Jonathan Taylor 2021 Indianapolis Colts
5 22.11 Parris Campbell 2022 Indianapolis Colts
6 22.09 Matt Brieda 2018 San Francisco 49ers
7 22.05 Leonard Fournette 2017 Jacksonville Jaguars

So, how do these speeds relate to the top track and field athletes? Let’s find out.

DESTINATIONS: The greatest venues in outdoor track and field, according to you

Fastest NCAA track athletes in 2023

While mph data for NCAA track and field races isn’t always readily available, there’s luckily data from NCAA sprinters who participated in the 2022 World Athletics Championships. We’ll be using that data for this article.

Top male sprinters

The 100 meters is the premier male sprinting event, with track athletes running the shortest distance during an outdoor meet. To compare the 100 meters to football, it equates to just over 109 yards, roughly the front of one end zone to the back of another end zone. 

It’s rare that a football player will ever run 100 meters in a straight line continuously in a game like a sprinter would in a race, but a football player still needs to hit his peak speeds to escape from opposing players in the same way a sprinter needs to hit his peak speeds to win a race.

That said, here are the fastest 100 meter sprinters that returned to collegiate track and field in 2023.

SPEED (MPH) PLAYER School Time (Round)
26.2 Favour Ashe Auburn 10.00 (Heats)
25.6 Ismael Kone Florida State 10.17 (Heats)
24.3 Shaun Gill Texas A&M-Kingsville (DII) 10.76 (Prelims)

All three of the collegiate 100 meter sprinters ran faster than all NFL players since 2016. Yet, none of the collegiate sprinters above made the 100 meter final at World Championships, meaning there were even faster sprinters in track and field in 2022.

NCAA T&F: Here’s how the outdoor track and field championships work

What about the equipment?

A common cry in debates between football and track speed is that football players where equipment that can slow them down. Per Sports Illustrated, football equipment like shoulder pads, helmets and more can weigh more than 10 pounds. While there’s no hard data on how much football equipment slows down a player, one can assume that it likely knocks off tenths of a second from top speeds.

40-yard dash

That said, we have seen football players run their top speeds in non-game like settings via the NFL Combine’s 40-yard dash. Take a look a some of the speeds from 2022’s NFL Combine.

Speed (MPH) 40 Time Athlete School Position  
25.1 4.23 Kalon Barnes Baylor CB  
24.8 4.26 Tariq Woolen UTSA CB  
24.6 4.31 Velus Jones Tennessee WR  
24.5 4.34 Bo Melton Rutgers WR  
24.1 4.33 Danny Gray SMU WR  

Speeds taken from Reel Analytics.

Kalon Barnes ran the second-fastest 40-yard dash time in NFL history, only one-hundreth of a second behind the NFL record of 4.22 seconds. Tariq Woolen ran the fifth-fastest time in NFL history.

However, none of the top-speeds from the 2022 NFL Combine ran without football equipment surpass the top two recorded speeds from the NCAA athletes listed above at World Championships. 

While the 40-yard dash is a decent indicator of speed, it’s not the end all be all as shown by analytics experts. There’s no correlation between 40-yard dash speed and in-game speed, with players with slow 40 times running just as fast — with equipment on — as players with fast 40 times.

Moreover, the NFL record of 4.22 seconds in the 40-yard dash pales in comparison to what track athletes have ran in the 40-yard dash. Take former NCAA Champion Christian Coleman for example. He ran a 4.12 second 40-yard dash back in 2017, blowing the NFL Combine record out of the water. Coleman even beat NFL legend Bo Jackson’s rumored 4.13 second 40-yard dash time.

In 2024, Iowa sprinter Kalen Walker took running the 40-yard dash as a track athlete to the next level, running the dash at halftime of the Hawkeye’s game against Northwestern. Walker didn’t match Coleman’s time, but still finished 4.15 seconds, with the wind of an outdoor environment.

Coleman and Walker’s 40-yard dash performances shows that even in similar conditions, without equipment, track speed is faster.

The DK Metcalf race

While Christian Coleman tested out NFL conditions with his run in the 40-yard dash, NFL wide receiver DK Metcalf did the opposite, running a 100 meter race on the track.

Metcalf ran the 100 meters at the Golden Games in an attempt to qualify for the U.S. Olympic trials. In his first 100 meter race with only a few months of training, Metcalf ran a 10.37-second time to finish 15th out of 17 competitors in the preliminary round.

Metcalf’s speed paled in comparison to track and field sprinters in a race that didn’t include some of the America’s best 100 meter runners. Yet, when it comes to the NFL, Metcalf is one of the fastest in the league with a 4.33 in the 40-yard dash and a top speed of 22.64 mph 2020.

Metcalf’s top speed in the NFL is one of the fastest since the NFL has tracked the data. However, when Metcalf transferred his football speed to the track — without equipment — his speed didn’t keep up.

Tyreek Hill vs. Noah Lyles

For the longest time, NFL wide receiver Tyreek Hill — one of the fastest players we’ve seen in the NFL during the 2020s — and Olympic and World Champion Noah Lyles taunted each other over who would win in a race. The two were supposed to line it up on the track in the Summer of 2025 before the big plans fell through.

However, Hill still showed off what he could do on the track. Hill ran his first 100 meters since 2013 at the Last Chance Sprint Series. Hill finishing in 10.15 seconds at the age of 31 — much faster than Metcalf’s 10.37. 

To put that in perspective, Hill’s previous 100 meter PR was 10.19 from 2012 at 18 years old, and he hadn’t ran an outdoor track race since a +5.0 9.98 100 meters while in JUCO in 2013. 

When on a tour of Oklahoma State university in 2024, I personally asked Head Coach Dave Smith — Hill’s coach when he finished fifth in the 2014 NCAA indoor 200 meter finals — what he thought of Hill’s speed and his challenging professional track athletes. To summarize Smith’s sentiments, he explained that if Tyreek Hill chose to focus on track instead of football, he had the talent to compete at the highest level against the top sprinters of today.

Smith’s point is validated after Hill ran 10.1 in a season-opener. That’s no small feat and is on-par with some of the Olympic-level sprinters to start their seasons. 2024 Olympic 100m Bronze medalist Fred Kerley opened 2025 with a 10.23. The fifth-place 100m finisher Marcell Jacobs opened with a 10.30. The sixth-place 100m finisher and Olympic 200m champion Letsile Tebogo opened with a 10.55.

No matter how you look at it, Hill’s 10.15 performance was impressive.

The dual-sport athletes

NFL x track speed

For all the comparisons between NFL and track speed, there’s one person who blurred the lines in 2022, Devon Allen. Allen, an NCAA champion and Olympian, was a finalist in the 110 hurdles at the 2022 World Championships and also is a member of the Philadelphia Eagles roster, even scoring a touchdown during the preseason.

Devon Allen hit a top speed of 20.93 mph on his 55-yard touchdown in the preseason. While Allen’s top speed ranks below some of the top speeds in the NFL this year and the top collegians in track and field at the World Championships, Allen is an Olympian hurdler, running the third-fastest 110 hurdles time ever (12.84 seconds) at Worlds. With out football pads and routes and without hurdles, Allen’s top speed is likely much higher.

💨: Wind and scoring in track and field, explained

NCAA football x track speed

Texas A&M’s Devon Achane is a soon-to-be NFL player with legit track speed. How do we know this about the 2023 NFL draft prospect? Because he actually ran track in college.

Achane qualified for the 2022 DI outdoor championships in sprint events. Achane finished in the semifinals during the outdoor championships with a 10.48-second 100 meter time. On the gridiron, Achane was clocked at 22.2 mph in 2021 on a kick return for a touchdown.

Achane’s speed on that kick return is faster than any NFL player’s top speed during the 2022 regular season. He’s one of the select few players than when someone says “he has track speed” legitimately does.

FOOTBALL TRANSITION: Arkansas’ Rojé Stona’s attempted transition to NFL

Elsewhere, Kentucky has a football-track standout of its own — and he’s only a freshman. Jordan Anthony plays wide receiver for the Wildcats and runs sprints. Prior to enrolling, he won the U.S. U-20 200 meter title with a personal-best 20.34-second finish.

Anthony kicked off his 2023 indoor season with less than a week of track practice between the transition of football and track season by breaking the Kentucky freshman record in the 60 meters in 6.57 seconds. That performance comes after Anthony redshirted on the gridiron, playing in just two games.

Anthony is another dual-sport athlete with true “track speed”.

Anthony continued to prove he has track speed with his 2025 NCAA DI 100 meter win while running for Arkansas (he also had a stop at Texas A&M before transferring to the Razorbacks). The victory came after Anthony won the 2025 NCAA DI 60 meters and after he ran the No. 2 all-conditions 100 meter race in NCAA history, finishing in 10.75 seconds (+2.1). Anthony’s success on the track led to him signing an NIL deal with adidas and turning pro in track in June of 2025, foregoing the rest of his football career.

Arkansas’ Jordan Anthony runs 9.75! Watch every men’s 100m quarterfinals from 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships

In July 2024, track speed again made the news thanks to South Carolina’s Nyck Harbor. Harbor drew recognition around the country for his 99 speed and 99 acceleration rating in EA College Football 25.

Harbor’s speed caught many by surprise, but not track and field fans. Harbor finished 16th in the 100 meters and 10th in the 200 meters in the 2024 Division I track and field championships.

MORE: Complete history of The Bowerman award

So who’s faster?

From the data, it’s clear than the top-end speed of NCAA track and field athletes is faster than the top-end speed of NFL players. While there are other external factors like distance run, equipment weight, directions run and more, the top-end speed data is plain to see.

Could things change if the fastest NFL players raced track and field’s best? Maybe, but until that happens the win goes to the trackletes.





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Ghana National Volleyball team train ahead of Africa Qualifiers

On Tuesday, June 17, the Ghanaian beach volleyball teams, both men and women, completed their last training sessions for the week leading up to the Africa Beach Volleyball Championship qualifiers in Morocco at La Boma Beach. From June 22 to June 30, 2025, the competition will serve as a qualifying round for the World Championship […]

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On Tuesday, June 17, the Ghanaian beach volleyball teams, both men and women, completed their last training sessions for the week leading up to the Africa Beach Volleyball Championship qualifiers in Morocco at La Boma Beach.

From June 22 to June 30, 2025, the competition will serve as a qualifying round for the World Championship in Australia in August.

 

Ghana Volleyball Association President George Tetteh said he is confident in the teams, especially following their recent success in Rwanda, and called the present preparations the greatest he has seen.

George Tetteh, President of Ghana Volleyball Association

Additionally, Bawa Fuseini, the Association’s Board Chairman, stressed that qualifying in Morocco will increase their chances of obtaining corporate sponsorship.

The men’s team’s head coach declared that his players are prepared to create an impression in the World Championship in Australia because they have mastered the technical parts of the game.

Team Captain , Kelvin Caboo

Kelvin Caboo, the men’s team’s acting captain, expressed his confidence that Ghana can emerge as a dominant power in African volleyball and commended the current administration.



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Gannon Lands 11 on WWPA Women’s Water Polo All-Academic Team

Story Links OAKLAND, Calif. — The Western Water Polo Association announced the 2025 WWPA Women’s All-Academic Team on Wednesday with 11 members of the Gannon women’s water polo team recognized. A total of 96 student-athletes were honored for their performances in the classroom. Cal State Monterey Bay led the conference with 22 […]

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OAKLAND, Calif. — The Western Water Polo Association announced the 2025 WWPA Women’s All-Academic Team on Wednesday with 11 members of the Gannon women’s water polo team recognized.

A total of 96 student-athletes were honored for their performances in the classroom. Cal State Monterey Bay led the conference with 22 total selections and Biola followed with 19. Salem led the East Region with 16.

To qualify, a student-athlete must meet the following: Be an active participant of their team having competed in at least 50 percent of games; maintain over a 3.0 cumulative GPA; classified as a full-time student for all terms of attendance; and completed a minimum of one semester or two quarters at their institution.

 

Molly Sebunia (Erie, Pa./McDowell) and Ellie Velasco (Bronx, Calif./Arlington) are now four-time honorees while Molly Fehr (Erie, Pa./Villa Maria) and Claire Rogilio were honored for the third year in a year. Jillian Heinrich (Erie, Pa./Cathedral Prep) and Emma O’Gorman (Johannesburg, South Africa/St Stithians College) earned the honor for the second time. Jade Strickland (Santa Ana, Calif./Foothill) and Ana Carrera (Orlando, Fla./Lake Nona) along with freshman Brigid Carmody (Lansdale, Pa./North Penn), Claudia Orte Branch and Izabella Trunzo (Pittsburgh, Pa./North Allegheny) were named for the first time.

 

Gannon WWPA All-Academic Honorees

Brigid Carmody (Lansdale, Pa./North Penn), Fr., Applied Exercise 

Ana Carrera (Orlando, Fla./Lake Nona), So., Biology

Molly Fehr (Erie, Pa./Villa Maria), Jr., Psychology

Jillian Heinrich (Erie, Pa./Cathedral Prep), So., Management 

Emma Kayla O’Gorman, So., Health Science 

Claudia Orte Blanch (Madrid, Spain/IES Profesor Maximo Trueba), Fr., Psychology

Clare Rogillio, Sr., Biomedical Engineer/Mechanical Engineer

Molly Sebunia (Erie, Pa./McDowell), Sr., Physical Therapy 

Gabriella Velasco, Sr., Accounting

Izabella Trunzo (Pittsburgh, Pa./North Allegheny), Fr., Spec Ed

Jade Strickland (Santa Ana, Calif./Foothill), Sr., Nursing 


 



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Three Coyotes head to Eugene for U20 Nationals this week

Story Links VERMILLION, S.D. – Fresh off strong freshman campaigns, three South Dakota women’s track & field athletes are set to compete at the Nike Outdoor Nationals & USATF Under 20 Championships in Eugene, Oregon this week.   Anna Willis (women’s pole vault), Berkeley Engelland (800-meters), and Mariah Fenske […]

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VERMILLION, S.D. – Fresh off strong freshman campaigns, three South Dakota women’s track & field athletes are set to compete at the Nike Outdoor Nationals & USATF Under 20 Championships in Eugene, Oregon this week.
 
Anna Willis (women’s pole vault), Berkeley Engelland (800-meters), and Mariah Fenske in the 3,000-meter steeplechase will compete at the U20 Championships beginning Thursday. Willis and Engelland earned all-Summit League honors in their events this spring, as Willis was the pole vault runner-up and Engelland won the 800-meters. Fenske finished fourth in the 3,000-meter steeple, one place off the podium.
 
Engelland will be the first to compete Thursday, running in the prelims at 6:37 p.m. Central Time (4:37 p.m. Pacific). Her personal best in the 800-meters is 2:08.65, set at the USD Tune Up at the beginning of May. She won the Summit League title in the event with a time of 2:11.03. If Engelland were to advance to the finals, she would run at 7:26 p.m. Central (5:26 p.m. local) Friday night in the finals.
 
Fenske will compete in the finals of the steeple Thursday night with a start time of 7:33 p.m. Central. Fenske’s personal best of 10:50.77 was set at the Summit League Championships this May.
 
Willis is set to compete in the women’s pole vault at 7:30 p.m. Central Thursday. The first team all-American and Summit League Runner-Up in the pole vault holds a personal best of 14-10, set at the Summit League Championships, and recorded a height of 14-6 ¾ at the NCAA Championships in Eugene last week.
 
All the live results can be found on Athletic Timing. RunnerSpace will provide live webcasts of the meet.
 





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Gannon Lands 11 on WWPA Women’s Water Polo All-Academic Team

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