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***** NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships *****

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National Championship Meet General Preview

Nationals. One final meet. For it all.

Beginning Wednesday, the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships will convene in historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. college track and field is a weird sport. What you do in the regular season seldomly matters come June. Rankings are thrown out the window when that first gun goes off. This is a team sport that has seen overwhelmingly favorites crumble as it’s seen teams with an outside chance rise to the top. 21 events, some championship teams need scoring in 10+ events, some need about 5. There is no perfect formula to win this meet. It may be pretty, it may be ugly, it may take collegiate records, a team of multiple Bowerman watchlist athletes, it may take a plethora of 5th-8th place finishes. All that matters is who has the most points when all the events are tallied up.

How The Meet Is Scored
21 events. Each event awards points to places 1st-8th. 1st receives 10 points, then 8, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. The scores are then rallied for each school to determine the national champion.

How The Meet Is Structured.
Every race aside from the 5000 and the 10000 has a semifinal and a final. Races 800 and below (including the hurdles and relays) will have 3 heats of 8 runners each. To make the 9 person final. Getting to the final is most of the battle, it’s almost guaranteed points. For the 1500 and 3000 meter steeplechase. There are 2 heats of 12. The top 5 from each heat and the next 2 fastest times advance to a 12 person final. For the 5k and 10k, field events, and multis there’s no semis, just one final.

Field events such as the throws and horizontal jumps will have a prelims, then a subsequent final where the top 9 marks will advance to the final and be given 3 more attempts. The high jump and pole vault will have all 24 competing at once, there is an opening height for all athletes, but an athlete may open at a higher height. An athlete has 3 attempts to clear said height, but you will see take 2 and use their third attempt at a higher height.

The meet is spread across 4 days. Aside from the multi eventers. Each gender will have their own day to shine. The men will kick things off Wednesday with the semi final races and a few field events and have their final on Friday. For the women it’s on Thursday and Saturday. The Heptathlon and Decathlon are each two days. The Decathlon will take place the first two days and the Heptathlon the next two days.

Men’s Preview
Our men’s team has a very solid chance of contending for the national championship. Our men’s team has some versatility across multiple events. We have an entry in the 100, 400, 800, 1500, Steeplechase, 110 hurdles, and 400 hurdles. They also qualified both relays. However, they only have 1 field event athlete competing, which is Aleksandr Solovev in the men’s pole vault. This is a very senior laden team and if there’s ever been a close chance of winning it all, this group has as great of a chance as ever.

Our strength lies in some big hitters. We are 4th in entries for this meet. We will be relying on some big performances from Aleksandr Solovev who’s ranked 1st in the pole vault. Sam Whitmarsh who has the best PB in the 800 field, Auhmad Robinson who’s ranked 3rd in the 400 and has the capability to podium or win it all. As well as the versatility of Ja’Qualon Scott who in my opinion is the most valuable piece to this team. He’s ranked 4th in both of the 110 hurdles and 400 hurdles but has the capability to easily medal in both; and he is also the first leg of our 4×100 relay.

We also expect to score big in the 4×400 and the meet may come down to that final race. The question is who runs on that relay. The prelim should be easy but we can’t let up whatsoever with Florida and Alabama in the prelim heat. We have so many options to run the 400. We could place Auhmad Robinson, Kimar Farquharson, Cutler Zamzow, Hossam Hatib, Antonie Nortje, Eric Hemphill, or even Ja’Qualon Scott. The challenge will be picking the fastest 4. If it were me I’d go Cutler Zamzow – Auhmad Robinson – Hossam Hatib – Kimar Farquharson. Nortje hasn’t been running his best lately but if completely healthy he can easily step in. The meet may come down to this race and to win it’ll probably take a sub 3 minute race. We need these 10 points badly. All the other contenders will be in this race as well. For our men’s 4×100, it’ll take a huge huge race to get into the final. We don’t have the strong anchor that other teams have. Ernest Campbell has been running well, but in 2nd leg sk we shouldn’t move him. Last week we went Scott-Campbell-Mason Mangum-Robinson. Robinson doesn’t have the straight line speed to keep up with other anchors. We’ll be in a tough heat with Auburn, tu, and LSU. Beating one of these 3 would get us into the final probably. Anything can happen in a 4×100.

This team is strong and has some outstanding athletes, however, national championship teams cannot solely rely on a few big performers. It’s usually the team with more bullets to score that comes out on top. Rankings are important for the fans to follow, but once the gun goes off, they are of little importance. This statement is heightened in the distance events. In a championship meet, a distance race rarely comes down to who ran the fastest time (with pacers in a meet where that one event was your sole focus). It comes down to racing, strategy, and most importantly guts. In the 800, but more so in the 1500 and Steeplechase, what matters is getting to the final, then racing smartly and strategically. This is why having two strong races like Cooper Cawthra (1500) and Victor Kibiego (steeple) is great to have. I mentioned the big hitters, but points here can be the difference between standing under the confetti at the end or coming up just oh so close. I really think Cooper Cawthra can surprise the country here and have a huge performance. 2 years ago Victor Kibiego placed 3rd at this meet. He dropped out of the race last season due to health. He looked strong last week and I hope he has a huge race left in him.

The competition is fierce. We are going in ranked 2nd based on PR’s. USC is a much larger favorite thanks to their 17 entries and 8 entries between the 100 and 200. They are a speed factory with dominant sprinters and strong relays. They also have 4 field event entires. Having that many bullets who could score is scary and why they’re the favorites. They have more room to slip up while also having more room for someone to step up and have a big day. They can add some points in the high jump, long jump, and discus. Arkansas will be a factor as well. They are led by sprinting phenom Jordan Anthony (a former Aggie receiver, who never got to step foot on the track for us). He has the capability for winning both events. They also have 2 more entires than we do at 15 with all kinds of depth. They have a strong 800 duo, two strong relays, a solid distance group, a strong high jumper and even a Decathlete. Georgia has one more entry than us, and 4 other schools have more than 11 entries: Texas Tech, Ole Miss, Tennessee, and Alabama. Auburn New Mexico, and Minnesota also have a chance to score big points from a few individuals.

Our men’s team is solid. Pat Henry and staff have put together a strong squad for a moment like this. His famous saying goes, “it’s all about everybody having a great day on the same day.” We certainly have the potential to win the entire thing. It’ll take some really great performances, multiple podium finishes, and some athletes to step up big time. It’s going to be an interesting race to follow, I like our chances and I really hope we’re the ones who come out on top.

Women’s Preview
Our women sit in a similar situation as the men. One school is the favorite with us being ranked 2nd ahead of many other schools fighting along with us. Our women’s team doesn’t have the depth spread across as many events as our guys do. Our women’s team is composed of the dynamic sprinting duo of Camryn Dickson and Jasmine Montgomery, a spectacular heptathlete in Sofia Iakushina, a spectacular triple jumper in Winny Bii, and a spectacular high hurdler in Jaiya Covington. We also have a strong steeple duo in Debora Cherono and Kennady Fontenot, a 400 runner in Jaydan Wood and two strong relays that can play a factor.

This women’s team relies on the strength and versatility of Camryn Dickson and Jasmine Montgomery (and the trainers who keep them going after many races lol). They will both compete in Eugene, hopefully 8 times. They qualified in 4 events, the 100, 200, 4×100, and 4×400. They are so versatile and our staff asks a lot of them, and they always deliver. These sprinters have always been a vital part to a teams success, especially on the women’s side. Sprinters like Abby Steiner, Rhasidat Adeleke, and others. We can do a lot of damage with these two girls. Their strongest event is the 200 and they have a better shot at scoring there. I’ll break it down more in the event previews, but their 100 heat is insane lol.

As the meet will begin for the women with our runners taking center stage Thursday, Saturday will be huge for our women. Saturday we see the conclusion of the Heptathlon and the Triple Jump. Two events where we are expected to score big. Sofia is ranked first, with two amazing athletes ranked right behind her. It’s very clearly a 3 way race between Sofia, Pippi Lotta Enock of Oklahoma and Jadin O’Brien of Notre Dame. When I mean every inch or second counts in this event I mean it! Winny Bii is tied for first with the best mark in the triple jump with a 45’11.75. She is tied with Agur Dwol of Oklahoma and Shante Foreman of Clemson who all have the same best jump this season. This will be an intense back and forth battle! It’ll be on ESPN+.

Also on the track will be Jaiya Covington, the indoor 60 hurdle champion. With 40 more meters and a few more hurdles, she also has a chance of winning outdoors, but the competition will be even more intense! She is .15 behind the nation’s leader in Harris of Florida, but like I’ve said many times, it’s what happens when the gun goes off! Anything can happen, and Jaiya showed indoors she knows how to race when it matters most. Another surprise opportunity we could see some points is from the steeple. The two heats to me are really lopsided. Kennady Fontenot got placed in an extremely strong heat and I believe Cherono is in a much more manageable. Cherono has been improving each time she runs the steeple as it’s her first year doing so. So I expect her to get into the final and fight for some points!

A big piece for our women will be the relays! Our women looked great in the 4×100 even after a sluggish start. They’ve changed the first leg multiple times this season. Last time out it was Jasmine Harmon, usually it had been Latasha Smith but she had a rough meet last week and didn’t even run the relay. Jaiya Covington is also an option here. Legs 2-4 have remain the same with Dickson handing off to Bria Bullard and Montgomery closing out. I like our heat assignment and love having South Carolina and Baylor to our right to tag off of! I think this relay gets into the final with clean handoffs. Our 4×400 features Dickson and Montgomery, then usually it’s been Jaydan Wood and Latasha Smith. Who knows is Smith is healthy, if she is she’d make a huge difference. We’ll really need Wade to step up. This relay could easily get into the final with a great race, however there’s not much room to slip up. Getting both relays into the final would be huge for us and very important to add some points.

As for the competition, the overwhelming favorite is Georgia. The dawgs have put together a really strong and balanced team. What separates them from the rest of the field is their string group of lady throwers. Something we are lacking. Georgia has the two best javelin throwers in the country. They have two PB’s that are far ahead of the field. One of them is former Aggie Lianna Davidson who finished 2nd for us twice the past two years but she then transferred to UGA. I called it a devastating loss then and hoped it wouldn’t come back to bite us and now here we are UGA expects to score 18 here, they have a top hammer thrower who could win it, and a really strong shot putter. They can score 30 alone in the throws, with 3 transfers from last fall. Their 3 throwers can podium as an entire team. They also have two of the best 400 runners in the country and two strong relays and a 400 hurdler who will score. UCLA has 13 entires, one less than Georgia, we have 12 as does Arkansas, LSU, and USC. Don’t sleep on South Carolina or TCU.

On the women’s side, we have very little room to slip up. If any. One bad event for us and we might not have a chance to win it all. Losing Davidson hurts, as does losing Katelyn Fairchild for the season. Georgia is stacked, but the throws can always be tricky. We’ll have to follow what they do there. However we can still provide plenty of fight and still finish strong as a team. We have a strong group and can score big, let’s hope they all have a great day on the same day! It will be fun to follow!

Having both sides in contention will make this a great meet. I’m the first to admit that I’m the problem when it comes to this sport. We feel as if this sport is national championship or bust and I’ll be the first one upset if it doesn’t go our way, but we (ESPECIALLY I) need to understand just being in contention and finishing as a top team in the country is such an amazing feat. Like I said at the beginning of this, this sport is so fragile and delicate. Just one bad race can take you out of contention. It really takes an entire team firing all at once to win a meet like this. Pat Henry has done his best to field an amazing team on both sides. This will also be the last time we see some of these guys in an Aggie uniform. It’s felt like some of these guys have been part of the Aggie track family for so long, it’s surreal thinking about how well never get to see Auhmad Robinson, Ja’Qualon Scott, Sam Whitmarsh, Kimar Farquharson, and others in the maroon and white. I really hope they can go out on top. I’ll save the emotional stuff for later lol.

I’ll be trying to provide as much insight as I possibly can the next week or so. I’ll provide a preview for every single event, a daily preview and recap, as well as give you my predictions sometime time throughout the week. Then we can laugh at how wrong I’ll be. It’s going to be my favorite week of the year so buckle in and let’s talk and watch Aggie Track and Field! If any of you have any questions about this meet or anything about track, remember there is no dumb questions. I want to grow this fan base, all are welcome!! Let’s enjoy this championship meet, let’s cheer like crazy, and let’s BTHO Everyone!





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Joshua Knapp – Head Men’s Volleyball Coach – Men’s Volleyball Coaches

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The University of Lynchburg announced Joshua Knapp as the head coach of the Hornets’ Men’s Volleyball Program in December 2025. He arrived in the Hill City with experience as a coach, student-athlete, and official, bringing a versatile background that will support the continued growth of the Hornets’ emerging men’s volleyball operation.

Knapp most recently served as the head coach for the Liberty University men’s club volleyball program, where he led the team since January 2023. In that role, he managed all aspects of the program, including training direction, recruitment efforts, and the coordination of support staff. Prior to taking over as head coach, he worked with the Flames as an assistant coach from August 2022 to January 2023, helping integrate skills development, training plans, and travel logistics for the team.

In addition to his coaching experience, Knapp is also a certified volleyball official with the Virginia High School League and the NCAA, a role he began in August 2025. His work as an official allowed him to use working knowledge of volleyball rules, regulations, and procedures while exhibiting professionalism through all interactions.

A former two-sport student-athlete at Liberty University, Knapp competed for four years in a high-level collegiate setting and served as a team captain for the men’s volleyball team from 2020 through 2022. Knapp earned his B.S. in Interdisciplinary Studies from Liberty University in 2022, completing academic specializations in business, sports management, and carpentry.



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TSWA Class A All-State Volleyball

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TSWA Class A All-State Volleyball

Published 10:03 am Wednesday, December 31, 2025

LONGVIEW – State champion Blum dominated voting for the Blue Bell/Texas Sports Writers Association Class A All-State Volleyball Team for the 2025 season.

Blum’s Kinsley McPherson earned Player of the Year honors, and Blum head coach Lauren McPherson was named Coach of the Year.

Voting was conducted by TSWA members based on nominations from coaches and media members from around the state.

COACH OF THE YEAR: Lauren McPherson, Blum

PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Kinsley McPherson, Blum

FIRST TEAM

Middle blockers: Landree Bennett, Blum; Rylee Sears, Water Valley; Addison Spaith, Neches

Outside hitters: Kinsley McPherson, Blum; McCaylen Woods, Water Valley; Haley Scott, Blum

Setter: Tallie Rufino, Blum

Libero/Defensive Specialist: Addie Koetting, Blum

SECOND TEAM

Middle blockers: Emerson Fite, Sulphur Bluff; Janaye Coston, Water Valley; Jessica Rohde, Round Top-Carmine

Outside hitters: Bree Dooley, Round Top-Carmine; Zaylee Peyton, Sulphur Bluff; Marae Pounds, Chester

Setter: Madi Collett, Sulphur Bluff

Libero/Defensive Specialist: Audrey Gatlin, Medina

THIRD TEAM

Middle blockers: Callie Weddle, Perrin Whitt; Caitlyn Battreal, Oglesby; Braylee Clark, Woodson

Outside hitters: Brenna Briles, Forestburg; Emilee Silva, Aspermont; Crista Zirkel, Medina

Setter: Madison Markwardt, Round Top-Carmine

Libero/Defensive Specialist: Ana Servin, Sulphur Bluff

HONORABLE MENTION

Middle blockers: Zarah Wisehart, Oglesby; Kannan Collier, Perrin White; Ally Thorman, Jonesboro; Lily Payne, Chester

Outside hitters: Autumn Meyers, Oglesby; Lucchese Reilly, Perrin Whitt; Brylee Stevens, Oglesby; Alyssa Perez, Woodson; Landri McFarlin, Jonesboro; Lauren Citrano, Chester; McKieran Murphy, Perrin Whitt

Setter: Autumn Fitzpatrick, Water Valley; Nilah Stewart-Ayala, Trinidad; Ella Gustin, Jonesboro; Scarlet Aaron, Oglesby; Mailea Wimberly, Woodson

Libero/Defensive Specialist: Matti Polk, Aspermont; Natalie Carrell, Sulphur Bluff



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2026 Sand Devils schedule released – Sun Devil Athletics

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TEMPE – The 2026 Sun Devil Beach Volleyball schedule has been announced, marking the Sand Devils’ third season with head coach Kristen Glattfelder and second in the Big 12 conference.

The Sand Devils have 10 weekends of competition, two of them at home. The team will face 10 of the 16 teams that competed in the 2025 NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship and will play against all four national semifinalists (TCU, LMU, Cal Poly and UCLA).

ASU will start its season across the Valley at the Canyon Classic at Grand Canyon from February 20-21. The Sand Devils will face host GCU along with Colorado Mesa, UC Davis and reigning 2025 NCAA Champion and Big 12 Champion TCU.

The Sun Devils will continue to stay in state and head south to Tucson to compete in the Cactus Classic on February 27, where they will compete against Arizona and Georgia State.

The home opener will be from March 6-7, as ASU will host Arizona, Southern Miss, Arizona Christian and Nebraska at the Sun Devil Classic.

The Sand Devils will be out of state for three-consecutive weeks. From March 13-14, they will compete in Manhattan Beach at the East Meets West Invitational where they will go head-to-head against NCAA runner-up LMU, as well as UCLA, Hawai’i and Cal. ASU will travel to LSU for the Death Volley Invitational from March 20–21, facing Georgia State, Texas, Florida State and LSU, before heading to TCU for the Big 12 Preview Tournament from March 27–28.

To start the final month of the regular season, the Maroon and Gold will head home and host the Sparky Invitational where they’ll play Stetson, GCU, FIU and Ottawa from April 3-4. The Sand Devils will be back on the road the following week and compete at the COE Challenge at Cal Poly from April 10-11 and face California, Cal Poly and UCLA.

ASU will play at lone dual at Long Beach State on April 17 before heading to Tucson for the Big 12 Championships on April 23 and 24.

In its first Big 12 season, Arizona State went 22-14, setting a new win record for the program. The Sand Devils also went 9-1 on home sand and finished the season ranked No. 12 in the AVCA Coaches Poll. The team also finished second at the first Big 12 Beach Volleyball Championships, falling to TCU 3-2.

The program and players earned several awards and accolades after finishing second in the league. Daniella Kensinger, Ava Kirunchyk and Samaya Morin were all named to the Big 12 All-Conference Team. Morin was also named an AVCA Second Team All-American. In addition, the team had three pairs named Big 12 Pair of the Week.



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2025 Volleyball Season Recap – Iowa State Athletics

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AMES, Iowa – Iowa State concludes 2025 with a 23-8 record, showing tremendous turnaround after going 10-18 last season. It is the highest win total since 2011, while ISU also went 12-6 in Big 12 play to finish tied for third after being chosen ninth in the preseason poll.

Cyclones wrapped the season earning national and conference awards including AVCA Libero of the Year, AVCA Second Team All-America, Big 12 Libero of the Year and Big 12 Setter of the Year.

Iowa State is ranked in the final AVCA Coaches Poll for the first time since 2017 earning the rank of T-No. 22. It’s the highest final ranking in 13 seasons (2012, No. 14). The Cyclones capped the season in the second round of the NCAA Championship, ISU’s 18th trip to the tournament.

Rachel Van Gorp, National Libero of the Year

Van Gorp showed the nation she is the best of the best becoming the inaugural AVCA Libero of the Year. The true sophomore, in her first full season at the position, compiled a list of awards also including AVCA Second Team All-America, AVCA First Team All-Region, Big 12 Libero of the Year, First Team All-Big 12 and two Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week honors.

Big 12 Awards

Iowa State took home Big 12 Libero and Setter of the Year, while five Cyclones were placed on All-Big 12 Teams. Van Gorp was the unanimous choice for Libero of the Year, while Morgan Brandt secured Setter of the Year. Both were First Team All-Big 12 selections, and Tierney Jackson was placed on season team. True freshmen Alea Goolsby and Reagan Hanfelt earned Big 12 All-Rookie Team.

Leading the Conference

ISU ends 2025 as the Big 12 leader in digs (15.12 per set) and kills (13.98 per set). The Cyclones ranked top 25 nationally in kills (No. 18) and assists (12.91 per set, No. 24), helping lead Iowa State to hit at .245 on the season. The efficiency is the fourth-highest single-season hitting percentage in program history.

2025 By the Numbers

4 – ISU had four ranked wins on the season, the most since 2012. The Cyclones were the only Big 12 team to take down Arizona State this season and ended No. 6 ASU’s 12-match win streak and 26-match Big 12 win streak.

4 – Morgan Brandt ends her Iowa State career ranking fourth in program history with 3,787 assists. The total led all 2025 Big 12 active players.

7 – The Cyclones hit over .300 in seven matches. ISU had a stretch of three straight hitting over .400, a program first, while two of those match efficiencies now rank in the program all-time top 10.

8 – Iowa State ended non-conference with a record of 10-1, the best mark in eight seasons.

10 – Maya Duckworth entered the ISU top 10 in career kills and concludes her career with 1,073. Duckworth was the 12th in program history to join the 1,000-kill club.

12 – Iowa State sealed 12 Big 12 wins for the first time since 2012.

15 – ISU opened the season at 5-0 without losing a set, one of the final three teams to begins with 15 set wins. It marked the first time in program history to open the season with a 15-0 set record.

400 – Christy Johnson-Lynch celebrated win No. 400 this season vs. No. 16 TCU. Johnson-Lynch now owns 11 20-win seasons and 48 top 25 wins, with 12 in the top 10.





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Former K-State All-American Myers steps away from volleyball | K-State Sports

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Kansas State volleyball All-American Shaylee Myers announced she is stepping away from the sport and will not pursue a professional career.

The Lincoln, Nebraska native was selected in the second round of last month’s Pro Volleyball Federation draft by the Atlanta Vibe, but has decided not to continue playing beyond her collegiate career.

Myers closed her time in Manhattan with one of the most decorated seasons the program has seen. She earned All-America Honorable Mention recognition from the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA), becoming the 12th player in school history to receive the honor and the second under head coach Jason Mansfield, joining former Wildcat teammate Aliyah Carter.

Her All-America nod capped a historic senior campaign filled with accolades. Myers was named the program’s first-ever AVCA Region Player of the Year, earned AVCA First Team All-Region honors and was a unanimous First Team All-Big 12 selection. She also claimed three Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week awards during the season.

Statistically, Myers rewrote the K-State record book. She finished her senior year with 498 kills (4.70 per set) and 547.0 points (5.16 per set), setting the rally-scoring era single-season record for kills per set and tying for third-most total kills in that era. Her 34-kill performance against West Virginia on Oct. 1 marked the Big 12’s top single-match output of the season.

Myers reached another milestone during the NCAA Tournament, becoming just the 20th player in program history to surpass 1,000 career kills. She finished her career with 1,029 kills and 1,148.5 points, ranking among the program’s top 25 in multiple career categories.

K-State concluded the 2025 season at 18-10 overall and 10-8 in Big 12 play, earning an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament — the program’s 19th postseason appearance and first under Mansfield.



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Ten Biggest Track And Field Questions For 2026

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By David Melly & Paul Snyder

Happy last day of 2025! We hope that, for you, it was a year to remember and not one to forget.

For the track and field community, this year left us with a lot to process. A quick search through the newsletter archives finds four uses of the word “change” in our subject lines this year, with phrases like “forecast,” “wide open,” “worth a try,” and “what?” sprinkled in as well. With one Olympic cycle firmly in the rearview and another just picking up steam, it makes sense: 2025 was, ultimately, a period of mass transition.

As the clock ticks to midnight tonight, we have a lot more questions than answers. Somewhere between “who will I kiss when the ball drops?” and “how hungover will I be tomorrow?”, you may start thinking instead about the bigger, more long-term unknowns looming for track and field in the year to come.

What do pro leagues look like next year?

Every professional sport evolves over time, but few go through as many evolutions and permutations as ours. That’s because we’ve never really had a dominant professional circuit.

Currently, we have the Diamond League, which seems to persist as “best of all the bad options.” One big improvement we got out of the 2025 season was the reclassification of the DL final to one last big event before the World Championships. The positioning, in essence, traded a little bit of star power for real stakes: a lot of the top stars opted to skip out on Zurich, but increased prize money and the promise of a wild-card entry to Worlds kept things interesting. Sure, the meets are still hard to watch (in the U.S.) and can feel repetitive mid-season, but it’s still the closest thing we have to a Premier League for track and field.

There was still enough of a perceived gap in the market, however, that several entities stepped up to try and fill the void. Grand Slam Track took the biggest swing at a legitimate Diamond League alternative, but unfortunately was also the biggest flop. All the public-facing messaging around the League’s bankruptcy filing insists that GST will return for a second season, but there’s a bit of a “fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me” sentiment at this point in the game. It’s safe to say that, until GST is able to roll out a compelling argument for its own continued relevance, no one is taking for granted that it’ll be a genuine presence on the pro circuit moving forward.

At the other end of the spectrum, ATHLOS NYC’s second one-off exhibition meet was enough of a purported success that the event, organized by Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, has announced it’s expanding into a multi-event league for the 2026 season with stars Sha’Carri Richardson, Gabby Thomas, and Tara Davis-Woodhall attached as “advisor-owners.” Much like GST, there are more questions than answers at this point in time: How does a women’s-only event map onto a landscape that prizes gender parity? Will keeping its events in the fall ever move ATHLOS out of novelty status to feel like a “real” part of the season? Does the limitation of events to sprints, middle-distance, and long jump continue? Unlike GST, however, they benefit (at least in public perception) from taking an approach that’s generally seen as safer: starting small and expanding, rather than swinging for the fences and coming up short.

And then there’s the 11th-hour announcement that, once again, USATF will by trying to tie its disparate offerings into a branded package. This time, it’s a “USATF Tour”, which unifies 17 meets scheduled from March to July under one calendar. It’s unclear how this will be different from these meets operating entirely independently; the landing page for the site includes the notation “TBD” no less than seven times. You’ll need at least three different streamers to watch all the meets, and there doesn’t seem to be any clearly-stated prize or other incentive for athletes to participate in multiple events. The number of events isn’t even clear: the website says “16 unique events” but lists 17, the LA Distance Classic and LA Grand Prix are listed as separate events despite occurring on back-to-back days in the same city, and there’s an unnamed “Grand Prix” event set to air on NBC that has a date but no location.

It would be great if there was a unified domestic circuit for professional track and field in the U.S. It would be great if there was a premiere showcase for the best of women’s sports with a hefty prize purse. And it would be great if we all agreed to prioritize one A-tier circuit that mattered throughout the regular season. But more than anything else, it would be great if we could build a little year-over-year momentum for any one of these initiatives rather than facing down a whole bunch of unknowns each December.

How does World Ultimate Champs shape the season?

One of the few positive side effects of a life-altering global pandemic was that we haven’t had a track season without a global championship since 2018. In 2026, we’ll see what a season looks like when the entire sport isn’t oriented toward a ten-day conclusion where gold medals drown out any other metric of success.

Or will we? World Athletics is rolling out its new “World Ultimate Championship,” which, despite its name, is a three-day track meet and not a frisbee tournament. On paper, it’s sort of an unholy hybrid of a true global championship and a beefed-up Diamond League final, with most, but not all, events slated for a one-round final with big prize money on the line.

How this slots into the global calendar, and how it is perceived, remain to be seen. For steeplechasers, it might be business as usual, given that the event is omitted entirely (same goes, at least this year, for a number of jumping and throwing events). Small fields of 16 athletes on the track and 8 in the field will mean that simply qualifying for the meet will be prohibitively difficult, if not impossible, for even most pros. Conversely, it relies a lot on the biggest names to lend their star power to the event—only a few passes or withdrawals from reigning World/Olympic champs could make this event feel too small in a hurry.

Adding a new championship-style event to a non-championship year is a great idea in theory, but it has to feel like a championship level of stakes and competition to be taken seriously.

Does 2026 become the year of the comeback?

2025 was a year to forget for more than a few of the sport’s biggest stars. Olympic champs like Grant Holloway and Jakob Ingebrigtsen battled injuries and less-than-perfect returns, whereas domestic stars like Elle St. Pierre and Parker Valby returned late from long breaks. Some of the most dominant athletes of the last decade – like Yulimar Rojas, Shericka Jackson, and Soufiane El Bakkali—were not able to return to the top of podiums they’d once frequented.There’s a silver lining in each of these individual storm clouds, however: everybody loves a comeback story.

A year or two ago, athletes like Holloway and El Bakkali simply couldn’t seem to lose, and it was starting to get boring. Now, they get to head into 2026 with a chip on their shoulders rather than a target on their backs. Ingebrigtsen and Rojas are current world world record holders who remain squarely in their primes, at 25 and 30 years old, respectively. A few years of bad Achilles luck can’t possibly keep two of the sport’s biggest talents down for too much longer, right?

St. Pierre and Valby both returned to racing in November at the Abbott 5k in New York. St. Pierre was coming back from giving birth to her second son in May, and Valby was finally healthy again after an injury-plagued rookie season. Together, they represent two of the country’s biggest distance talents, but right now, we’re not quite sure where they fit into a broader pecking order where Nikki Hiltz and Sinclaire Johnson are dominating the middle distances and Shelby Houlihan has re-entered the chat.

Last, but certainly not least, there’s the crop of 30-something sprint stars who aren’t quite done. Shericka Jackson is just two years removed from her epic 21.41 200m gold in Budapest, and at 31, she’s still got the better part of a decade ahead of her if her countrywoman Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce is a model to follow. Trayvon Bromell already had a bit of a comeback season of his own, getting back atop the 100m ranks on the DL circuit but still falling short of the podium at USAs. And let’s not forget that both Tokyo Olympic champions, Elaine Thompson-Herah (33) and Lamont Marcell Jacobs (31) aren’t totally over the hill just yet, even if they’re a little farther removed from their best seasons and haven’t shown signs of life in a while. Ya never know.

Who tries a new event next?

2025 saw Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone forego the hurdles during her typically blistering trips around the oval. That foray into a new-ish-to-her event culminated in another gold medal, a 47.78 world-leading time, and a new American record. We already know that the closest thing to a rival SML has in the 400m hurdles—Femke Bol—will be experimenting with the 800m in 2026, and has already been spotted exploring fascinating training systems in her pursuit of half-mile glory. New events are in!

It’s pretty clear that if McLaughlin-Levrone gives the 400m her undivided attention for another season or two that she would have realistic ambitions to break the world record. She’s demonstrated world-class ability at this “off event” at every level of her competitive life. And what else does she have to prove in her primary event?

Male 400H World champ Rai Benjamin has also talked about wanting to take on the flat 400m or even the 200m in future seasons. Is there something about the hurdles that makes them get really boring over time? Regardless, it’ll be fun to see if Benjamin can improve on his PBs of 44.21 from 2023 or 19.99 from 2018. Heck, he even ran a wind-legal 10.03 in 2020 – is 2026 the year that births the first sub-10/sub-20/sub-44/sub-47 runner in history?

If there was ever a time for stars who’ve solidified their place atop one event to try another, it’s now. What’s to stop Faith Kipyegon from going even longer in distance, when she could always retreat to the safety of the 1500m if it doesn’t work out? Heck, even Jakob Ingebrigtsen has teased a return to the steeplechase. And simply typing out the words “Grant Fisher marathon debut” will trigger some sort of seismic activity as distance bros all over the world start to jump up and down with excitement all at once. And over in the infield, there’s one true wild card who could mix things up: Ryan Crouser.

Crouser is the best male shot putter in history, yes. But he still holds the American high school national record in the discus (72.40m) and secured World Youth Championship silver in that event back in 2009. During Crouser’s last complete outdoor season, 2024, his World ranking score in the shot was 1520. During 2025, the highest ranking attained by a discus thrower was 1476, belonging to Mykolas Alekna. Now those numbers should be taken with a grain of salt—comparing greatness across disciplines is tricky business—but if you’re Crouser, coming off an injury-shortened-ravaged campaign that still saw you win World gold in the shot, don’t you at least think about kicking the tires on a different event that you were historically great at as a teen, and that might tax your shot-put-worn body in different, career-extending ways?





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