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Georgia T&F Women Run Away With First NCAA Outdoor Championship

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EUGENE, Ore. — The Georgia women’s track and field team exploded for 73 points to win its first national outdoor title by 26 points as the NCAA Championships wrapped up on Saturday.
 
Senior Elena Kulichenko (high jump), junior Aaliyah Butler (400-meter dash) and Butler, Michelle Smith, Dejanea Oakley and Sydney Harris (4x400m relay) captured national crowns while Oakley collected silver in the 400m, Smith managed bronze in the 400m hurdles and freshman Skylynn Townsend posted a personal best to take sixth in the triple jump.  
 
Final Women’s Team Scores: Finishing behind Georgia (73 points) was USC (47), Texas A&M (43), Washington (31) and Illinois (29.5) in the top five.
 
This squad of 16 Bulldogs, including a relay alternate for both the 4x100m and 4x400m relays, represent seven different nations and featured six first timers at the meet and four true freshmen.  Georgia finished as the runner-up in back-to-back years in 2017-18 and its 2025 point total of 73 is a school record, topping the 62.2 in 2017.
 
While this is the first NCAA outdoor team title for the Georgia women, they did capture the 2018 indoor team championship.  The Bulldogs’ outdoor crown is the 52nd overall team national championship for UGA, including the men’s outdoor championship in Eugene in 2018, tying LSU and Arkansas for the second most team titles in the SEC.  This is the fourth national championship for UGA this academic year after women’s tennis won the indoor and outdoor crowns and equestrian captured the championship.
 

Director of Track & Field Caryl Smith Gilbert adds the 2025 championship to her 2018 and 2021 women’s titles while leading USC’s program.  Smith Gilbert was also on Tennessee’s staff when the indoor squad won the 2005 championship.  With Saturday’s championship, Smith Gilbert becomes the first collegiate female coach to win NCAA track and field championships at two separate schools.
 
“We worked really, really, really hard and we have a team that is starting to form into something that will be a great program,” Smith Gilbert said.  “It’s very important to me for us to have points all over the place.  Track and field is track and field so we made a point this year and for the future to build all parts of the program, not just the sprints.  I have the greatest coaching staff on the planet and a Director of Athletics in Josh Brooks and a president in Jere Morehead who support our program to no end.  I am so proud to bring home this championship to Athens.”
 
Meet Schedule: Other than the decathlon running Wednesday-Thursday and the heptathlon going Friday-Saturday, the meet was set up to be a men’s competition on Wednesday and Friday and a women’s competition on Thursday and Saturday.
 
Wednesday/Thursday/Friday Highlights: Georgia only had a pair of high jumpers compete on Friday and senior transfer Eddie Kurjak tied for eighth place and earned First Team All-America honors after coming from a NCAA Division II program.
 
During the women’s first day of action on Thursday, graduate transfer Stephanie Ratcliffe won her second career hammer throw title and became the first NCAA representative to accomplish the feat at two separate schools and in non-consecutive years.  Freshman Manuela Rotundo and senior Lianna Davidson finished second and fourth in the javelin to give Georgia its first pair of scorers in the event since two Bulldogs were in the top eight in 2005.  Finally, senior Kelsie Murrell-Ross steadily improved during her series to finish sixth in the shot put, becoming the first to earn scoring All-America honors in the event for UGA since 2000.
 
On Wednesday, senior transfer Moustafa Alsherif finished fourth in the javelin to give the Bulldog men a scorer in the event for the fourth straight year.  Also, freshman Jayden Keys complemented his Southeastern Conference long jump title with an eighth-place finish in the event to score for the men.
 
Full Results: To check out live results throughout the four-day season finale, please check: https://gado.gs/da0
 
The Lowdown: Kulichenko, a Ondintsovo, Russia, native, shared the national crown in 2024 but left no doubt as she claimed her first sole title in the high jump.  Coming in at 1.84 meters/6-0.50 on Saturday, Kulichenko went over five heights, including the winning mark of 1.96m/6-5, on her first try and topped Illinois’ Rose Yeboah for the championship.  This is UGA’s fourth national championship in the event.
 
Butler, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., native, collected her first individual national championship in the 400m and the second in school history (Lynna Irby, 2018).  She came in as the national leader and left with a fresh school record and became the No. 5 all-time collegiate performer.  Only one member of the field, Butler’s teammate Dejanea Oakley, came within striking distance of her.
 
Oakley, who hails from Clarendon, Jamaica, sped to her own personal record of 49.65 to earn the silver medal as Georgia tallied 18 points in the event to take control of the meet.  Oakley’s time dropped Irby’s previous No. 2 time in the school record books to No. 3.
 
Butler later combined with Smith, Oakley and Harris to win Georgia’s first women’s 4x400m relay outdoors in history.  Topping the school record and taking over the No. 8 spot on the collegiate all-time performer’s list, the Bulldogs passed the baton around for a 3:23.62 to top Arkansas (3:24.25) for gold.  Butler scorched an anchor leg of 48.79 to move into the overall lead during the final 100 meters and put an exclamation mark on Georgia’s point total.
 
Arriving on the Oregon campus seeded 11th nationally, Townsend, a native of Prosper, Texas, posted six fair attempts in the triple jump and topped out at a personal record to finish sixth at her first Nationals.  Townsend’s second try of 13.52m/44-4.50 situated her in sixth place with a comfortable cushion as she joined the great four-time NCAA outdoor triple jump champion Keturah Orji as a UGA First Team All-American.
 
How To Keep Up With The Dogs: Results and recaps from the NCAA Outdoor Championships will be found at georgiadogs.com.  News and updates from Georgia’s track and field and cross country teams are always located on X/Instagram at @UGATrack.
 
Bulldog Day 1 Scorers
Name                                     Event                          Mark/Time – Place
Moustafa Alsherif                 M. Javelin                  76.69m/251-7 – 4th
Jayden Keys                         M. Long Jump           7.80m/25-7.25 – 8th
Bulldog Day 2 Scorers
Stephanie Ratcliffe              W. Hammer Throw  *71.37m/234-2 – 1st
Manuela Rotundo                W. Javelin                  60.35m/198-0 – 2nd
Lianna Davidson                  W. Javelin                  59.03m/193-8
Kelsie Murrell-Ross             W. Shot Put               17.80m/58-4.75
*national leading mark
Bulldog Day 3 Scorers
Eddie Kurjak                         M. High Jump           2.15m/7-0.50 – T-8th
Bulldog Day 4 Scorers
Elena Kulichenko                 W. High Jump           1.96m/6-5 – 1st
Aaliyah Butler                       W. 400m                    *^49.26 – 1st
Michelle Smith                      W. 400mH                 55.20 – 3rd
Skylynn Townsend              W. Triple Jump         ^13.52m/44-4.25 – 6th
Dejanea Oakley                   W. 400m                    ^49.65 – 2nd
Butler, Smith                         W. 4x400m Relay    *^3:23.62
Oakley, S. Harris
 
Final Team Standings (top 10)
MEN

T-1. Texas A&M (41 pts.)
T-1. USC (41)
3. Arkansas (40)
4. Auburn (35)
5. New Mexico (31)
6. Oklahoma (30.5)
7. Minnesota (25)
T-8. Florida (22)
T-8. Kentucky (22)
T-8. Ole Miss (22)
45. GEORGIA (6.33)
 
WOMEN
1GEORGIA (73)
2. USC (47)

3. Texas A&M (43)
4. Washington (31)
5. Illinois (29.5)
6. Stanford (29)
7. South Carolina (28)
8. Arkansas (26)
9. New Mexico (25)
T-10. Oregon (23)
T-10. Texas (23) 
 



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Track and Field Begins 2026 Strong at TCNJ Lions Invitational

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NEW YORK – Columbia track & field opened the 2026 indoor season with multiple podium finishes, personal bests, and program marks at the TCNJ Lions Invitational on Friday inside the Armory.


FIELD EVENTS

Columbia turned in a strong showing across the field events. In the women’s pole vault, Jessica Thompson led the Lions with a third-place finish after clearing a personal best mark of 3.80m and is currently at the 64th spot in the nation. Seraiah Bruno and Lucy Markow each cleared 3.50m, with Bruno recording a season best.

On the men’s side of the pole vault, Liam Wright delivered a runner-up finish with a clearance of 4.55m, while Gavin Holcombe placed fifth at 4.40m.

In the high jump, Collin Moore led Columbia with a third-place finish in the men’s competition after clearing 1.95m. On the women’s side, Norina Khanzada and Fiona McKenna each cleared 1.50m, finishing fourth and fifth, respectively.

Zayna Flynn represented Columbia in the women’s shot put, placing ninth with a mark of 8.17m. In the men’s shot put, Adam Jaros finished 10th with a throw of 10.27m.


RUNNING EVENTS

Columbia delivered a strong performance on the track. In the men’s sprints, Matthew Mazero captured the 200m title with a time of 21.85, earning the 84th spot in the nation while Zach Willen followed closely in second at 21.98. The duo returned to the track in the 60m finals, where Mazero placed third with a time of 7.02, and Willen added a personal best with a 7.12 race effort.

The men’s 40 relay quartet of Evan Singleton, Caden Cutchall, Zach Willen, and Matthew Mazero sped past the competition, finishing second with a time of 3:20.79. Cutchall also impressed in the 500m, placing third in the 50 competition with a personal-best 1:04.99, while Haydn Brotschi posted a personal best time of 33.98 to finish second in the 300m.

On the women’s side, Columbia placed third in the 4×400 relay, crossing the line in 4:10.82 behind a strong effort from Kylie Castillo, Jayla Johnson, Olivia Dada, and Roya Amirhamzeh. Castillo also added a fifth-place finish in the 200m with a time of 26.16, while Olivia Sterling finished sixth in the 60m finals at 8.00.

In the middle-distance events, Roya Amirhamzeh clocked 1:21.85 in the 500m, while the Lions continued to post solid depth performances in the 300m, led by Kylie Castillo, who ran 41.23.


UP NEXT

The Lions are heading to Yale for an Ivy competition against Yale and Dartmouth on Saturday, January 17, with field events scheduled at 11 am and running events scheduled at 2:30 pm

Stay up to date on all things Columbia track & field by following the Lions on Twitter (@CULionsXCTF), Instagram (@culionsxctf) and on Facebook (@ColumbiaAthletics).



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Buffs Building Towards Opener – University of Colorado Athletics

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BOULDER — Head coach Ann Elliott Whidden and her Colorado lacrosse team returned to the field inside the Ford Practice Facility on Thursday, officially marking the start of the 2026 season.

The Buffaloes enter their 13th season in 2026, all under the direction of Whidden, who has compiled a 130-75 record.

“It is great to be back with this team,” Whidden expressed. “This group is highly focused and motivated to get to work and we have had a great start to our spring practices. The intensity and competitiveness they bring everyday has been great to see.”

Colorado played seven fall warm-up games, including a pair against the team’s season-opening opponent, Northwestern. The Buffs also played exhibition games against Canada’s U20 National Team, Marquette, Denver, and Stanford before their annual scrimmage against CU alums.

The 2025 Buffs finished 8-8 overall and 4-1 in Big 12 play, earning the No. 2 seed in the inaugural Big 12 Tournament. Returning defender Jess Peluso scored Nike Lacrosse Media All-America honorable mention honors last season and was the Big 12’s Defensive Player of the Year.

Sophomore goaltender Elena Oh won four Big 12 Goalkeeper of the Week awards last year and was selected to the Big 12 All-Newcomer Team. She led the Big 12 and ranked 18th in the NCAA with a 9.81 goals-against average in her freshman season. Oh was also third in the conference with a .399 save% and made 5.93 saves per game (5th Big 12).

Also returning in 2026 are All-Conference selections Maddie Shoup and Lily Assini. The offensive duo finished second and third on the team in points last season, respectively. Shoup totaled career-highs in goals (30) and assists (13) for 43 total points. Assini totaled 16 goals and a career-high 23 assists for a career-best 39 points.

Colorado scored 178 total goals in 2025 and returns 57% of its scoring from a year ago.

“We are so excited for the spring and the challenges we have on our schedule,” Whidden added. “We are looking forward to taking the next few weeks to lock in on ourselves and just focus on getting better everyday so we are prepared for those opportunities. This is a great group and I’m just really looking forwarding to seeing what we can do this season!”

Nine true freshmen will look to compete for some key roles this spring. Whidden added newcomers Rowan Edson, Georgia Rios and Sophia Yeskulsky to the attack, Charlotte Yeskulsky, Alison Stevens, Julia Etu and Parker Lemm to the middles and Hailie Abrams and Ryann McLeod to the defensive corps. Jillian Kane joins the goalie depth chart, having played her first two seasons at Colby College.

The season gets underway with a trip to Evanston, Ill., to play national runner-up Northwestern on Feb. 9. The Buffs’ first home game is set for Feb. 15 against Cornell.

For more information on Colorado Lacrosse, please visit cubuffs.com/wlax. Fans of the Buffs can follow @cubuffswlax on Instagram, X, TikTok, and Facebook.



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Jenkins Adds Marinkovic to 2026 Transfer Class

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CHARLOTTE – Charlotte Volleyball Head Coach Benavia Jenkins has announced the signing of NC State transfer outside hitter Sara Marinkovic.

A native of Belgrade, Serbia, Marinkovic joins the 49ers from NC State where she spent her freshman season, appearing in one match and tallying one kill.  Before college, she attended Gimnazija “Branko Radičević” Stara Pazova where she earned first team All-Region honors. Academically, she earned a diploma for excellent achievement. The outside hitter finished first in all pioneer, cadet and junior competitions while playing club.

“I really loved the energy I felt watching the games,” said Marinkovic. “I’ve heard great things about how kind and supportive the coaches, staff, and players are, and how hard everyone works. It also means a lot to me to have my former teammate, Jovana, going through this process with me.”

During the 2020-21 club season, she placed third in the Serbian Prva Liga with OK Omladinac and went on to finish first the following year. At the 2024-25 Servia SuperCup, she placed second with Jedinstvo Stara Pazova.

 



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PREVIEW: Track & Field Opens Season with Leonard Hilton Memorial Invitational on Saturday

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HOUSTON – The University of Houston Track & Field program opens its 2026 indoor season with the Leonard Hilton Memorial Invitational on Saturday at the LLH Healthcare Indoor Track inside Yeoman Fieldhouse. Field events begin at 10 a.m., with running events starting at 1:30 p.m.
 
New seating options are available for fans this season. Basic general admission tickets are $17 after fees while premium general admission tickets, located near the finish line with chairbacks included, are $28 after fees.
 











LEONARD HILTON MEMORIAL INVITATIONAL
Date | Time Saturday, Jan. 10 | Field Events: 10 a.m. | Running Events: 1:30 p.m.
Teams Houston (Host), Huston-Tillotson, Jacksonville College, Lamar, Prairie View A&M, Rice (Men), Sam Houston, St. Thomas (TX), Texas, Texas A&M Corpus Christi, Texas A&M Kingsville, Texas Southern, UTRGV
Location LLH Healthcare Indoor Track inside Yeoman Fieldhouse | Houston, Texas
Live Stats Results
Watch YouTube
Meet Information Meet Information and Links
Social Media X: @uhcougartf | Instagram: @uhcougartf | Facebook: H-Town Speed City Track and Field | #GoCoogs | #HTownSpeedCity

 
STARTING LINE NOTES

  • The Cougars begin their indoor season by hosting the Leonard Hilton Memorial Invitational at LLH Healthcare Indoor Track inside Yeoman Fieldhouse.
  • LLH Healthcare was named the official naming rights partner of the indoor track facility on Dec. 11, 2025.
  • Renovations to the indoor track will take place following the indoor season.
  • Houston returns 26 men and 22 women, including eight All-Americans in junior Michaela Mouton, graduate Trey East III, sophomore Damarien Jacobs, graduate Grant Levesque, graduate Jamar Marshall Jr., junior Antrea Mita, senior Ryan Mulholland and sophomore King Taylor.
  • Jamar Marshall Jr. will compete during the indoor season but has no remaining outdoor eligibility.
  • Houston welcomes nine transfers, including NCAA DII All-American senior Dakari Charlton and NJCAA All-American’s junior Ruth Agadama, junior Kevin Brooks, and junior Mouhameth Fall.
  • Houston also adds a total of 23 freshmen to the squad, with 14 on the women’s side and nine on the men’s side. 
  • At the 2025 Big 12 Indoor Championship, Houston claimed four conference titles with two champions returning to the squad this season. The men’s squad placed fifth overall and the women finished 14th.
  • Grant Levesque secured his second consecutive Big 12 Heptathlon title and Antrea Mita was crowned the men’s high jump champion.
  • At the 2025 NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships, Antrea Mita earned First Team All-America honors with an eighth-place finish in the high jump. Jamar Marshall Jr. secured Second Team All-America honors with a 16th-place finish in the men’s 60-meter hurdles.

SUPPORT YOUR COOGS
Fans can make a direct impact on the success of Houston Track and Field by providing NIL opportunities, purchasing tickets and joining the Podium Club, which provides support directly to Houston Track and Field for needs beyond its operating budget.

STAY CONNECTED

Fans can receive updates on #HTownSpeedCity by following @UHCougarTF on X and catch up with the latest news and notes on the team by clicking LIKE on the team’s Facebook page at UHCougarTF or on the team’s Instagram page at @uhcougartf.

 

– UHCougars.com –





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Jordan Larson last pro volleyball season

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GRETNA, Neb. (WOWT) – Jordan Larson shared a big announcement in a news conference for LOVB Nebraska Volleyball, formerly known as LOVB Omaha, on Friday morning.

Larson, a four-time Olympic Medalist and LOVB Nebraska founding athlete, shared that she will be stepping away from pro volleyball after the 2026 season.

Although she will not be playing beyond the current campaign, Larson said that she will continue leading a new ownership group for the team.

The announcement was also shared on social media Friday.

“From Nebraska gyms to the biggest stages in the world…Thank you for carrying home with you, everywhere you went. We can’t wait to honor you and your legacy all season long,” the post reads.

The event started at 9 a.m. Friday at the team’s new indoor training facility in Gretna — opened just last November. Jordan started off the news conference with a message for her fans.

LOVB Nebraska will hold its home opener against LOVB Houston at 3 p.m. Sunday at Baxter Arena in Omaha. The 2026 season will be its second ever in existence.

You can watch Larson play right here on WOWT from 7-9 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 16 as Nebraska takes on Madison.

LOVB Nebraska lost 3-2 in its season opener against LOVB Austin on Wednesday.

Last August, the group rebranded from LOVB Omaha to LOVB Nebraska “to capture the unique place that Nebraska occupies in the world of volleyball and its community’s tremendous passion for the sport statewide,” a release states.

Also as part of the rebrand, Larson was named to her new ownership role and former Creighton Volleyball coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth was named as president of business operations.

“Unfortunately my career is closer to the end than it is the beginning. So thinking post-volley, what does that look like and how do I see my impact in the sport?” Larson told First Alert 6 last August. “While there will be a learning curve, I’m excited to see will see what this position will look like moving forward.”

In its first year in existence last year, League One Volleyball completed its postseason on April 13. Omaha ended its first season as league runner-up, after entering the playoffs as the last-place team.

Watch our Alert Center update:

Jordan Larson, four-time Olympic Medalist and LOVB Nebraska founding athlete, shared that she will be stepping away from pro volleyball after the 2026 season.

Get a first alert to breaking news delivered to your inbox. Sign up for First Alert 6 email alerts.





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New Year, New Records – Vanderbilt University Athletics – Official Athletics Website

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Vanderbilt track and field’s Janie Ford and Falon Spearman broke a pair of program records on Friday at the Rod McCravy Memorial Track & Field Meet.

Commodores tallied a total of 13 marks ranking in the program’s all-time top 10 and 10 personal bests.

Mackenzie Dagrosa got things started for the Dores with a third-place performance in the high jump. The sophomore cleared 1.75 meters, a mark that is tied for fifth in Vanderbilt history. In the same event, Rowan Houston came within a centimeter of her personal best, registering a 1.70-meter mark. She finished the event tied for fourth place.

Ford broke the school record in the long jump, registering a 6.18-meter mark to place first among freshmen and fourth overall.

Vanderbilt’s pole vaulting duo of Olivia Kosanovich and Jacqueline Rose cleared the 3.75-meter bar. It is a collegiate best for both student-athletes and the eighth-best mark in program history.

On the track, London Jackson-Bray and Alima Kassim qualified for the 60 meters semifinals with respective times of 7.42 and 7.57 seconds, both marks ranking top 10 in program history. Kylah Woods also added her name to the Vanderbilt record books, clocking 7.60 seconds in her collegiate debut. The time is No. 7 in school history. Jackson-Bray moved onto the event final with a semifinals time of 7.43 seconds.

Ford, Taylor McKinnon, Devyn Parham, F. Spearman and Santana Spearman, qualified for the 60-meter hurdles semifinals, where every Dore improved her time. F. Spearman’s 8.17-second mark, which is a personal best and school record, earned her a spot in Saturday’s final. Ford clocked 8.50 seconds, the No. 8-ranked time in Vandy history.

Madyson Wilson recorded a personal-best in the 600 meters for the second consecutive meet. Her time of 1:30.32 is ranked No. 2 all-time at Vanderbilt. In her first meet as a Commodore, Jayden Hill registered the third-best mark in school history, crossing the finish line in 1:31.17. In the same event, Kenyah Conner matched her personal best with a time of 1:31.72.

To end Day 1, Betsy Jepkemei led Vandy runners in the 1,000 meters, turning in a time of 2:46.55, good for third place and No. 2 all-time at Vanderbilt. Kelty Oaster and Mackenzie Culpepper followed in fourth and sixth place, respectively. Oaster’s time of 2:47.50 is fourth in school history, and Culpepper’s 2:51.53 mark is ranked No. 10 in program history.

Action in Louisville continues Saturday at 9:30 a.m. CT with the shot put. Live results are available online.





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