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NCAA Track And Field Championships 2025 Entries: Full Start Lists

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The 2025 NCAA Division I Track and Field Championships are upon us and will take place at the esteemed Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon from June 11 to 14.

Following intense regional competitions, 24 athletes or relay teams in each event have earned their spots at the national championships.

This prestigious event marks the end of the collegiate outdoor track and field season, featuring a wide array of events including sprints, distance races, hurdles, jumps, throws, and relays.

Over the course of four days, athletes from various programs across the nation will vie for the title of national champion.

For start lists and entries in both men’s and women’s disciplines, see below.

NCAA Track And Field Championships Broadcast Schedule

All Times Eastern

Wednesday, June 11

  • Men’s Day 1: 7:00 PM | ESPN

Thursday, June 12

  • Women’s Day 1: 7:00 PM | ESPN

Friday, June 13

  • Men’s Day 2: 8:00 PM | ESPN2

Saturday, June 14

  • Women’s Day 2: 9:00 PM | ESPN2

NCAA Track And Field Championships Start Lists

Here’s the men’s and women’s start lists for all track and field events. 

Men’s Track Start Lists

Men’s 100 Meter Dash  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Connor Washington (SR, Arkansas) – 10.05  
  • 3. Malachi Snow (SO, Texas Tech) – 10.04  
  • 4. Jehlani Gordon (SO, Georgia) – 10.07  
  • 5. Kalen Walker (JR, Iowa) – 9.94  
  • 6. T’Mars McCallum (JR, Tennessee) – 10.04  
  • 7. Max Thomas (JR, USC) – 10.03  
  • 8. Neo Mosebi (SO, Florida State) – 10.08  
  • 9. Jamarion Stubbs (JR, Alabama State) – 10.11  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Ernest Campbell (FR, Texas A&M) – 10.02  
  • 3. Jelani Watkins (FR, LSU) – 10.01  
  • 4. Taylor Banks (SR, USC) – 9.91  
  • 5. Abdul-Rasheed Saminu (SR, South Florida) – 9.86  
  • 6. Eddie Nketia (SO, USC) – 10.03  
  • 7. Jaleel Croal (JR, South Florida) – 10.08  
  • 8. Travis Williams (SR, USC) – 10.15  
  • 9. Israel Okon (FR, Auburn) – 10.13  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Davonte Howell (SO, Tennessee) – 10.05  
  • 3. Mason Lawyer (JR, Washington State) – 9.95  
  • 4. Kanyinsola Ajayi (SO, Auburn) – 9.95  
  • 5. Jordan Anthony (SO, Arkansas) – 9.75  
  • 6. Jaiden Reid (SO, LSU) – 10.05  
  • 7. Chrstyn John (Jc) Stevenson (JR, USC) – 10.06  
  • 8. Chance Cross (JR, Kennesaw State) – 10.09  
  • 9. Tristyn Flores (JR, Long Beach St.) – 10.05  

Men’s 200 Meter Dash  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Mason Lawyer (JR, Washington State) – 20.34  
  • 3. Dario Matau (SR, Auburn) – 20.19  
  • 4. Eddie Nketia (SO, USC) – 20.24  
  • 5. Carli Makarawu (JR, Kentucky) – 19.92  
  • 6. Garrett Kaalund (JR, USC) – 19.85  
  • 7. Jamarion Stubbs (JR, Alabama State) – 20.11  
  • 8. Tristyn Flores (JR, Long Beach St.) – 20.46  
  • 9. Jelani Watkins (FR, LSU) – 20.24  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Tory Lanham (SO, Kansas City) – 20.33  
  • 3. Jalen Johnson (FR, Clemson) – 20.29  
  • 4. Kashie Crockett (SR, TCU) – 20.32  
  • 5. De’montray Callis (SR, Baylor) – 20.32  
  • 6. T’Mars McCallum (JR, Tennessee) – 19.83  
  • 7. Xavier Butler (SO, Texas) – 20.02  
  • 8. Abdul-Rasheed Saminu (SR, South Florida) – 19.95  
  • 9. Jaiden Reid (SO, LSU) – 19.97  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Brody Buffington (FR, Georgia) – 20.32  
  • 3. Mikey McClain (SO, Iowa State) – 20.30  
  • 4. Jaleel Croal (JR, South Florida) – 19.95  
  • 5. Jordan Anthony (SO, Arkansas) – 20.20  
  • 6. Makanakaishe Charamba (SR, Auburn) – 19.79  
  • 7. Max Thomas (JR, USC) – 20.05  
  • 8. Cameron Miller (JR, Purdue) – 20.17  
  • 9. Cameron Tarver (JR, San Jose St.) – 20.55  

Men’s 400 Meter Dash  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Malik Ricketts (SR, Pittsburgh) – 45.63  
  • 3. Jordan Pierre (SO, Arkansas-Pine Bluff) – 45.75  
  • 4. Micahi Danzy (FR, Florida State) – 45.26  
  • 5. Auhmad Robinson (SR, Texas A&M) – 45.57  
  • 6. Samuel Ogazi (SO, Alabama) – 44.43  
  • 7. DeSean Boyce (JR, Texas Tech) – 45.54  
  • 8. Kelsey Singleton (JR, Southern Miss.) – 45.66  
  • 9. Hossam Hatib (SR, Texas A&M) – 45.85  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Cutler Zamzow (SR, Texas A&M) – 45.93  
  • 3. Edidiong Udo (FR, Ohio State) – 45.27  
  • 4. Gabriel Clement II (SO, UCLA) – 45.75  
  • 5. Gabriel Moronta (SR, South Florida) – 45.01  
  • 6. William Jones (JR, USC) – 45.32  
  • 7. Shemar Chambers (SR, Georgia) – 45.39  
  • 8. Anthony East III (SR, Houston) – 45.84  
  • 9. Will Floyd (SO, Georgia) – 45.68  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Johnny Goode (SR, California) – 45.84  
  • 3. Ervin Pearson (FR, Georgia) – 45.43  
  • 4. Jalen Williams (JR, Wisconsin) – 45.78  
  • 5. Nathan Kent (JR, Navy) – 45.23  
  • 6. Jayden Davis (SO, Arizona State) – 45.35  
  • 7. Joseph Taylor (FR, Duke) – 45.05  
  • 8. Shaemar Uter (JR, Texas Tech) – 45.61  
  • 9. Jenoah McKiver (SR, Florida) – 45.29

Men’s 800 Meter Run  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Samuel Navarro (SR, Miss State) – 1:46.47  
  • 3. Matthew Erickson (SR, Oregon) – 1:47.07  
  • 4. Tinoda Matsatsa (SO, Georgetown) – 1:45.36  
  • 5. Tyrice Taylor (JR, Arkansas) – 1:46.64  
  • 6. Samuel Rodman (SR, Princeton) – 1:47.24  
  • 7. Koitatoi Kidali (FR, Oregon) – 1:47.17  
  • 8. Allon Clay (JR, Penn State) – 1:47.29  
  • 9. Yared Kidane (JR, Wichita State) – 1:47.35  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Patrick Tuohy (SR, NC State) – 1:46.60  
  • 3. Lloyd Frilot (SR, TCU) – 1:47.15  
  • 4. Aidan McCarthy (JR, Cal Poly) – 1:47.01  
  • 5. Rynard Swanepoel (SR, Wake Forest) – 1:45.42  
  • 6. Sam Whitmarsh (SR, Texas A&M) – 1:46.68  
  • 7. Abdullahi Hassan (SR, Miss State) – 1:45.64  
  • 8. Nicholas Plant (JR, Virginia Tech) – 1:45.90  
  • 9. Andrew Casey (SO, Wisconsin) – 1:47.30  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Dugion Blackman (SR, Iowa State) – 1:47.13  
  • 3. Handal Roban (JR, Penn State) – 1:45.47  
  • 4. Kyle Reinheimer (SR, Washington) – 1:46.82  
  • 5. Christian Jackson (JR, Virginia Tech) – 1:45.31  
  • 6. Rivaldo Marshall (SR, Arkansas) – 1:46.97  
  • 7. Brian Kweyei (SO, Clemson) – 1:47.28  
  • 8. Patrick Hilby (FR, Wisconsin) – 1:47.30  
  • 9. Kirk Dawkins (JR, Florida A&M) – 1:46.62  

Men’s 1500 Meter Run  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 1. Nathan Green (JR, Washington) – 3:46.47  
  • 2. Michael Danzi (SR, Notre Dame) – 3:41.02  
  • 3. Jack Crull (SR, Bradley) – 3:47.31  
  • 4. Garrett MacQuiddy (SR, California) – 3:47.06  
  • 5. Colin Sahlman (JR, Northern Arizona) – 3:40.17  
  • 6. Gary Martin (JR, Virginia) – 3:38.94  
  • 7. Brendan Herger (FR, Michigan) – 3:39.81  
  • 8. Liam Murphy (SR, Villanova) – 3:44.83  
  • 9. Alex Stitt (SR, Oklahoma State) – 3:40.11  
  • 10. Trent McFarland (SO, Michigan) – 3:44.48  
  • 11. Davis Helmerich (SR, Arkansas) – 3:40.70  
  • 12. Abel Teffra (SR, Georgetown) – 3:38.65  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 1. Adam Spencer (SR, Wisconsin) – 3:46.78  
  • 2. Damian Hackett (SR, Cornell) – 3:39.67  
  • 3. Ethan Strand (JR, North Carolina) – 3:44.23  
  • 4. Ferenc Kovacs (SO, Harvard) – 3:44.54  
  • 5. Reuben Reina (SO, Arkansas) – 3:40.92  
  • 6. Duncan Robinson (SO, Iona) – 3:40.04  
  • 7. Martin Segurola (JR, Indiana) – 3:44.96  
  • 8. Simeon Birnbaum (SO, Oregon) – 3:39.79  
  • 9. Cooper Cawthra (SR, Texas A&M) – 3:40.15  
  • 10. Leo Young (SO, Stanford) – 3:40.35  
  • 11. Harvey Cramb (SO, Montana State) – 3:47.28  
  • 12. Harrison Witt (SR, Princeton) – 3:38.83  

Men’s 5000 Meter Run  

Section 1 Timed Finals  

  • 1. Kidus Misgina (SR, Ole Miss) – 13:54.94  
  • 2. Robin Kwemoi Bera (FR, Iowa State) – 13:26.71  
  • 3. Toby Gillen (SR, Ole Miss) – 14:08.45  
  • 4. Jacob White (JR, Wyoming) – 13:27.32  
  • 5. Ishmael Kipkurui (FR, New Mexico) – 13:28.25  
  • 6. Ernest Cheruiyot (SO, Texas Tech) – 13:34.88  
  • 7. JoJo Jourdon (FR, Wake Forest) – 13:53.89  
  • 8. Luke Grundvig (JR, BYU) – 13:34.63  
  • 9. Luke Tewalt (SR, Wake Forest) – 13:39.60  
  • 10. Colton Sands (SR, North Carolina) – 14:08.96  
  • 11. David Mullarkey (SR, Northern Arizona) – 13:33.85  
  • 12. Fouad Messaoudi (SR, Oklahoma State) – 13:34.34  
  • 13. Valentin Soca (JR, CBU) – 13:26.58  
  • 14. Matthew Forrester (JR, Butler) – 14:00.14  
  • 15. Habtom Samuel (SO, New Mexico) – 13:32.41  
  • 16. Justin Wachtel (JR, Virginia) – 14:07.91  
  • 17. Marco Langon (JR, Villanova) – 14:06.40  
  • 18. Rocky Hansen (SO, Wake Forest) – 13:36.54  
  • 19. Ethan Strand (JR, North Carolina) – 14:06.41  
  • 20. Brian Musau (SO, Oklahoma State) – 13:32.05  
  • 21. Drew Bosley (SR, Northern Arizona) – 13:34.58  
  • 22. Will Daley (JR, Virginia) – 13:39.97  
  • 23. Matt Strangio (SR, Portland) – 13:25.98  
  • 24. Hunter Christopher (SR, Youngstown St) – 13:55.21  

Men’s 10000 Meter Run  

Section 1 Timed Finals  

  • 1. Ben Rosa (SR, Harvard) – 29:02.85  
  • 2. Sam Lawler (SR, Syracuse) – 29:04.98  
  • 3. Shane Brosnan (SO, Harvard) – 29:19.56  
  • 4. William Zegarski (SO, Butler) – 29:10.03  
  • 5. Ethan Coleman (JR, Notre Dame) – 29:03.36  
  • 6. Timothy Chesondin (SO, Arkansas) – 28:23.00  
  • 7. Evans Kurui (SO, Washington State) – 28:19.22  
  • 8. David Mullarkey (SR, Northern Arizona) – 28:19.73  
  • 9. Dylan Throop (SR, Penn) – 29:07.67  
  • 10. Ishmael Kipkurui (FR, New Mexico) – 28:09.32  
  • 11. Creed Thompson (JR, BYU) – 28:21.52  
  • 12. Joey Nokes (SR, BYU) – 28:21.04  
  • 13. Cole Sprout (SR, Stanford) – 28:20.82  
  • 14. Dismus Lokira (FR, Alabama) – 29:03.27  
  • 15. Drew Bosley (SR, Northern Arizona) – 28:19.60  
  • 16. Rodgers Kiplimo (JR, Iowa State) – 28:19.84  
  • 17. Dennis Kipruto (SO, Alabama) – 29:01.39  
  • 18. Bernard Cheruiyot (FR, Tulane) – 29:02.16  
  • 19. Denis Kipngetich (SO, Oklahoma State) – 28:15.51  
  • 20. Dylan Schubert (SR, Furman) – 29:00.47  
  • 21. Habtom Samuel (SO, New Mexico) – 28:09.33  
  • 22. Ernest Cheruiyot (SO, Texas Tech) – 28:12.16  
  • 23. Victor Kiprop (SR, Alabama) – 29:00.88  
  • 24. Murphy Smith (SR, Navy) – 29:06.20  

Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Christian Martin (SR, Minnesota) – 13.53  
  • 3. Demaris Waters (JR, Florida) – 13.49  
  • 4. Isaiah Taylor (SO, N. Carolina A&T) – 13.46  
  • 5. Ja’Qualon Scott (SR, Texas A&M) – 13.16  
  • 6. Oscar Smith (SR, Louisiana Tech) – 13.42  
  • 7. John Adesola (SR, Houston) – 13.26  
  • 8. Demario Prince (FR, Baylor) – 13.39  
  • 9. Christopher Serrao (JR, Rutgers) – 13.49  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Johnny Brackins (SR, USC) – 13.39  
  • 3. Bradley Franklin (FR, Samford) – 13.46  
  • 4. Jerome Campbell (JR, Northern Colorado) – 13.23  
  • 5. Ja’Kobe Tharp (SO, Auburn) – 13.14  
  • 6. Jamar Marshall Jr. (SR, Houston) – 13.19  
  • 7. Jayden Smith (SR, Davidson) – 13.48  
  • 8. Josh Parrish (SO, Wichita State) – 13.56  
  • 9. Jahiem Stern (JR, LSU) – 13.56  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Matthew Sophia (JR, LSU) – 13.46  
  • 3. Zachary Extine (JR, Arizona) – 13.23  
  • 4. Braxton Brann (SO, Ohio State) – 13.36  
  • 5. Kendrick Smallwood (JR, Texas) – 13.13  
  • 6. Ethan Exilhomme (SR, Northeastern) – 13.45  
  • 7. Darius Brown (SR, DePaul) – 13.37  
  • 8. Tyson Williams (SR, Florida State) – 13.54  
  • 9. Joshua Hornsby (SR, Cal St. Fullerton) – 13.58

Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Alex Sadikov (SO, Penn) – 50.21  
  • 3. Mario Paul (JR, Texas Tech) – 49.66  
  • 4. Ja-Van Poole (SR, Oakland) – 49.87  
  • 5. Johnny Brackins (SR, USC) – 49.04  
  • 6. Xzaviah Taylor (SO, N. Carolina A&T) – 49.18  
  • 7. Nathaniel Ezekiel (SR, Baylor) – 49.03  
  • 8. Bryce Tucker (SO, Rutgers) – 50.00  
  • 9. Jayden Douglas (SO, TCU) – 49.81  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Cameron Wilmington (SR, Grand Canyon) – 50.12  
  • 3. Marcus Johnson (SR, Binghamton) – 49.93  
  • 4. Bryce McCray (SR, Texas A&M) – 49.56  
  • 5. Jarrett Gentles (SR, Coppin State) – 49.78  
  • 6. Kody Blackwood (JR, Texas) – 48.83  
  • 7. Saad Hinti (FR, Tennessee) – 49.83  
  • 8. Hugo Menin (SO, UTSA) – 49.61  
  • 9. Isaiah Taylor (SO, N. Carolina A&T) – 50.25  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Harry Barton (SR, Tennessee) – 50.13  
  • 3. Tamaal Myers II (JR, UCLA) – 50.01  
  • 4. Alex Sherman (SR, Virginia) – 50.13  
  • 5. Oskar Edlund (SR, Texas Tech) – 49.44  
  • 6. Noah Langford (SR, Howard) – 49.50  
  • 7. Ja’Qualon Scott (SR, Texas A&M) – 48.87  
  • 8. Ryan Matulonis (SO, Penn) – 49.88  
  • 9. Jason Parrish (SO, Wichita State) – 49.80  

Men’s 3000 Meter Steeplechase  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 1. Brett Gardner (JR, NC State) – 8:37.63  
  • 2. Ryker Holtzen (JR, Wyoming) – 8:34.95  
  • 3. Andrew Nolan (SR, Michigan State) – 8:37.83  
  • 4. Victor Kibiego (JR, Texas A&M) – 8:32.83  
  • 5. Geoffrey Kirwa (FR, Louisville) – 8:26.25  
  • 6. Declan Rymer (SR, Virginia Tech) – 8:41.11  
  • 7. Kristian Imroth (JR, Eastern Kentucky) – 8:30.80  
  • 8. Mathew Kosgei (FR, New Mexico) – 8:25.41  
  • 9. Peter Visser (JR, Weber State) – 8:40.17  
  • 10. Quinton Orr (JR, Iowa State) – 8:39.13  
  • 11. Nathan Davis (JR, Army West Point) – 8:38.72  
  • 12. Rob McManus (JR, Montana State) – 8:30.65  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 1. Silas Kiptanui (SO, Tulane) – 8:27.28  
  • 2. Collins Kiprop Kipngok (FR, Kentucky) – 8:24.91  
  • 3. Cody Larson (JR, South Dakota State) – 8:39.60  
  • 4. Benjamin Balazs (SO, Oregon) – 8:31.13  
  • 5. Carson Williams (SR, Furman) – 8:31.61  
  • 6. James Corrigan (JR, BYU) – 8:31.79  
  • 7. Joash Ruto (FR, Iowa State) – 8:28.86  
  • 8. Bismack Kipchirchir (FR, Akron) – 8:42.88  
  • 9. Titus Kimaru (FR, Texas Tech) – 8:36.83  
  • 10. Kole Mathison (SO, Colorado) – 8:32.74  
  • 11. Ezekiel Pitireng (FR, Alabama) – 8:40.37  
  • 12. CJ Singleton (JR, Notre Dame) – 8:36.51  

Men’s 4×100 Meter Relay

Heat 1 Prelims

2. Arizona — 39.33

  • James Onanubosi JR
  • Brian Limage JR
  • Isaac Davis SR
  • Tyson Tippett SR
  • Diego Marquez SR
  • Reinaldo Rodrigues SR

3. Florida — 39.21

  • Justin Braun JR
  • Jaden Wiley FR
  • Malique Smith-Band SO
  • Garrett Fox JR
  • Reheem Hayles SR
  • Rios Prude SO
  • Nicholas Spikes FR

4. Cal St. Fullerton — 39.26

  • John Clifford SR
  • Isaiah Emerson JR
  • Dominic Gates JR
  • Ian Dossman SO
  • Abel Jordan JR
  • Joshua Hornsby SR
  • Carter Birade JR

5. Arkansas-Pine Bluff — 38.98

  • Dwight Henry SR
  • Avindale Smith JR
  • Jared Sylvester SR
  • Ross Walrond JR
  • Jordan Pierre SO
  • Mohamed Soumare SR
  • Anthony Fuqua JR
  • Pierre Brownlee-Ford SO

6. Tennessee — 38.63

  • Deron Dudley SR
  • Davonte Howell SO
  • Kalib Branch SO
  • T’Mars McCallum JR
  • Aaron Bell SO
  • Calvin Wetzel SR
  • Christian Parker SO
  • Harry Barton SR

7. USC — 38.89

  • Travis Williams SR
  • Max Thomas JR
  • Taylor Banks SR
  • Eddie Nketia SO
  • Garrett Kaalund JR
  • Chrstyn John (Jc) Stevenson JR
  • Jazonte Levan FR

8. Florida State — 38.81

  • Jaiden Rollins JR
  • Neo Mosebi SO
  • Micahi Danzy FR
  • Durian Moss FR
  • Amare Williams SO
  • Tyler Azcano SO

9. N. Carolina A&T — 39.09

  • Jaeden Gumbs SR
  • Isaiah Taylor SO
  • Xzaviah Taylor SO
  • Brandon Nya SR
  • Correy McManus Jr. FR
  • Jordan Ware SO
  • Jason Holmes SO

Heat 2 Prelims

2. Ohio State — 39.21

  • Nick Biega SO
  • Nazzio John SR
  • Marcus Brown SO
  • Denzell Feagin SR
  • Braxton Brann SO
  • DJ Fillmore SO
  • Noah Carmichael JR

3. Washington State — 39.09

  • Bryson Stubblefield JR
  • Mason Lawyer JR
  • Parker Duskin JR
  • Keenan Kuntz FR
  • Eysias Banks JR
  • Grant Buckmiller SO
  • Royal Haley FR
  • John Paredes JR

4. Kentucky — 39.07

  • Miles Jones SO
  • Clinton Muunga SR
  • Josh Onwunili FR
  • Carli Makarawu JR
  • Anthony Waterman FR
  • Luke Brown JR
  • Shavique Bascus SO

5. Arkansas — 38.63

  • Tevijon Williams JR
  • Connor Washington SR
  • Kevin Bello FR
  • Jordan Anthony SO
  • Jaden Smith JR
  • Juriad Hughes FR
  • Grant Williams SO

6. South Florida — 38.05

  • Shomari Pettigrew SO
  • Jaleel Croal JR
  • Alexavier Monfries SR
  • Abdul-Rasheed Saminu SR
  • Nathan Metelus JR
  • Isaac Chandra FR
  • Jermaine Dyges SR
  • Corey Ottey JR

7. Minnesota — 39.07

  • Zion Campbell JR
  • Kion Benjamin SR
  • Aaron Charles JR
  • Devin Augustine SR
  • Charles Godfred SO

8. Ole Miss — 39.11

  • Iangelo Atkinstall-Daley SR
  • Jordan Urrutia FR
  • Wesley Todd FR
  • Joseph Michel JR
  • Tarique Wright FR

9. Sam Houston — 39.32

  • Xzamion Parker FR
  • Javain Johnson SR
  • Jayden Jones SO
  • Tyriq Brunn SR
  • Harley Jensen FR
  • Nathan Williams FR

Heat 3 Prelims

2. TCU — 39.44

  • Coulaj Eans SO
  • Kashie Crockett SR
  • Jordan Parker FR
  • Sanjay Salmon JR
  • Finn Dunshee FR
  • Justin Frater FR
  • Destin Drummond JR
  • Jayden Douglas SO

3. Georgia — 39.14

  • Micah Larry SO
  • Brody Buffington FR
  • Jehlani Gordon SO
  • Will Floyd SO

4. Texas A&M — 38.96

  • Ja’Qualon Scott SR
  • Ernest Campbell FR
  • Mason Mangum SR
  • Auhmad Robinson SR
  • Blake Holland FR
  • Keanu Jones JR
  • Khybah Dawson JR
  • Eric Hemphill III JR

5. Auburn — 38.51

  • Azeem Fahmi JR
  • Kanyinsola Ajayi SO
  • Dario Matau SR
  • Makanakaishe Charamba SR
  • Israel Okon FR
  • Ian Myers JR
  • Tyler Davis SR

6. Texas — 38.57

  • Kendrick Smallwood JR
  • John Rutledge JR
  • Almond Small SR
  • Xavier Butler SO
  • Logan Popelka JR

7. LSU — 38.78

  • Jordan Turner JR
  • Jaiden Reid SO
  • Myles Thomas JR
  • Jelani Watkins FR
  • Jahiem Stern JR

8. Utah Valley — 39.13

  • Gavin Stafford FR
  • Cameron Franklin SR
  • Kade Thompson JR
  • Gabe Remy SO
  • Gunner Stepp SO

9. Pittsburgh — 39.12

  • Darren McQueen JR
  • Nigel Hussey SR
  • Malik Ricketts SR
  • Stephon Brown SR
  • Thomas McDonough SR
  • Jaden Shelton JR

Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay

Heat 1 Prelims

2. Wichita State — 3:06.38

  • Joakim Genereux SR
  • Josh Parrish SO
  • Yared Kidane JR
  • Jason Parrish SO
  • RJ Hutchison SR
  • Brock Merz JR

3. N. Carolina A&T — 3:03.56

  • Elijah Thomas FR
  • Dyimond Walker JR
  • Caleb Gurnell SO
  • Xzaviah Taylor SO
  • Isaiah Taylor SO
  • Jailen Hicks FR
  • Nakhi Benjamin SO

4. Texas Tech — 3:02.37

  • Johnathan Crawford JR
  • DeSean Boyce JR
  • Oskar Edlund SR
  • Shaemar Uter JR
  • Carl Hicks SR
  • George Garcia JR

5. Princeton — 3:02.62

  • Karl Dietz FR
  • Xavier Donaldson SO
  • Kavon Miller SO
  • Joey Gant JR
  • Jackson Clarke SO
  • Chris Paige SR
  • Samuel Rodman SR
  • Greg Foster JR

6. Arkansas — 3:02.13

  • Brandon Battle SR
  • Steven McElroy JR
  • Jonah Vigil SR
  • Jaden Smith JR
  • Zyaire Nuriddin FR
  • TJ Tomlyanovich JR
  • Kevin Bello FR

7. Georgia — 3:03.15

  • Shemar Chambers SR
  • Will Floyd SO
  • Xai Ricks FR
  • Ervin Pearson FR
  • London Costen FR

8. Iowa — 3:03.88

  • Tyrese Miller FR
  • Zidane Brown JR
  • Josh Pugh SO
  • Terrick Johnson JR
  • Derek Leicht JR
  • James Fingalsen FR
  • Landon Fontenot FR
  • Caleb Levy SO

9. Duke — 3:04.47

  • Joseph Taylor FR
  • TJ Clayton SR
  • Michael Bennett JR
  • Callum Robinson SR
  • Aden Bandukwala FR
  • Andres Langston FR

Heat 2 Prelims

2. Navy — 3:04.05

  • Nathan Kent JR
  • David Walker SO
  • Peter DeJonge SR
  • Jacques Guillaume SR
  • Simon Alexander SO
  • Conor McFadden FR
  • Cooper Wakley FR

3. Texas — 3:02.55

  • Kody Blackwood JR
  • Logan Popelka JR
  • Nabil Tezkratt SO
  • John Rutledge JR
  • Xavier Butler SO
  • Damon Frabotta JR
  • Chris Brinkley JR

4. Ohio State — 3:03.42

  • Noah Carmichael JR
  • Mason Louis SO
  • Braxton Brann SO
  • Edidiong Udo FR
  • Nick Biega SO
  • Nazzio John SR
  • Denzell Feagin SR
  • DJ Fillmore SO

5. USC — 3:02.18

  • Jacob Andrews SO
  • Max Thomas JR
  • Johnny Brackins SR
  • William Jones JR
  • Jaelen Knox JR
  • Garrett Kaalund JR
  • Yougendy Mauricette SO
  • Nathan Cumberbatch SO

6. South Florida — 3:01.52

  • Nathan Metelus JR
  • Alexavier Monfries SR
  • Gabriel Moronta SR
  • Corey Ottey JR
  • Markel Jones SO
  • Antonio Hanson SR
  • Michael Bourne III SR
  • Devontie Archer SR

7. Arizona State — 3:02.87

  • Nicholas Ramey SR
  • Malik Franklin FR
  • Trevin Moyer SR
  • Jayden Davis SO
  • Josiah Anderson FR
  • Mateo Medina FR

8. Penn State — 3:03.56

  • Handal Roban JR
  • James Onwuka SR
  • Max DeAngelo FR
  • Jake Palermo FR
  • Matt DeMatteo JR
  • Joshua Stolarski FR
  • Olivier Desmeules SR
  • Darius Smallwood SR

9. Baylor — 3:05.33

  • Tyler Honeyman FR
  • Abbas Ali FR
  • Aren Spencer JR
  • Nathaniel Ezekiel SR
  • Jack Jackson SO
  • Laurenz Colbert SR

Heat 3 Prelims

2. TCU — 3:04.12

  • Ronnie Kendrick FR
  • Jayden Douglas SO
  • Destin Drummond JR
  • Lloyd Frilot SR
  • Dominic Byles SO
  • Jordan Parker FR
  • Kashie Crockett SR

3. Howard — 3:03.88

  • Emerson McKindra SO
  • Noah Langford SR
  • Cameron Brazell FR
  • Elijah Grant FR
  • Dylan Gaines SO

4. LSU — 3:03.78

  • Jeremiah Walker JR
  • Shakeem McKay JR
  • Gregory Prince JR
  • Amal Glasgow FR
  • Jaiden Reid SO

5. Alabama — 3:02.78

  • Donald Chiyangwa JR
  • Peter Diebold SR
  • Samuel Ogazi SO
  • Oussama El Bouchayby JR
  • Jekovan Rhetta SR
  • Antonio Crisco SR
  • Ryan Nash FR
  • Hillary Cheruiyot SR

6. Florida — 3:02.01

  • Ashton Schwartzman SR
  • Reheem Hayles SR
  • Malique Smith-Band SO
  • Jenoah McKiver SR
  • Rios Prude SO
  • Justin Braun JR
  • Nicholas Spikes FR

7. Texas A&M — 3:02.57

  • Hossam Hatib SR
  • Cutler Zamzow SR
  • Kimar Farquharson SR
  • Auhmad Robinson SR
  • Antonie Nortje SR
  • Eric Hemphill III JR
  • Musa Isah FR

8. Houston — 3:03.49

  • Damarien Jacobs FR
  • Anthony East III SR
  • Sahfi Reed FR
  • King Taylor FR
  • Adam Mason SR
  • Jaylin Santiago FR

9. BYU — 3:03.65

  • Eli Hazlett SR
  • Josh Taylor JR
  • Jonah Heimuli FR
  • Trey Jackson SR
  • Ty Oustrich SO

Women’s Track Start Lists

Women’s100 Meter Dash

Heat 1 Prelims

  • 2. Jassani Carter (JR, USC) – 11.06
  • 3. Anthaya Charlton (JR, Florida) – 11.01
  • 4. Samirah Moody (SR, USC) – 11.02
  • 5. Shenese Walker (JR, Florida State) – 10.98
  • 6. Jade Brown (SO, Arizona) – 11.07
  • 7. Kelly Ufodiama (FR, East Carolina) – 11.15
  • 8. Indya Mayberry (FR, TCU) – 11.15
  • 9. Reign Redmond (FR, Georgia) – 11.24

Heat 2 Prelims

  • 2. Camryn Dickson (JR, Texas A&M) – 11.17
  • 3. Tima Godbless (SO, LSU) – 11.11
  • 4. Jasmine Montgomery (JR, Texas A&M) – 11.02
  • 5. Leah Bertrand (SR, Ohio State) – 10.99
  • 6. Victoria Cameron (SO, Tarleton State) – 11.01
  • 7. Cynteria James (SO, South Carolina) – 11.07
  • 8. Iyana Gray (SR, TCU) – 11.14
  • 9. Kailei Collins (SR, Howard) – 11.21

Heat 3 Prelims

  • 2. Aniyah Kitt (FR, Clemson) – 11.12
  • 3. Brianna Selby (FR, USC) – 11.03
  • 4. Joella Lloyd (SR, Florida State) – 11.01
  • 5. Dajaz Defrand (JR, USC) – 11.00
  • 6. JaMeesia Ford (SO, South Carolina) – 11.00
  • 7. Alicia Burnett (SR, Missouri) – 11.10
  • 8. Kaila Jackson (JR, Georgia) – 11.17
  • 9. London Tucker (FR, TCU) – 11.17

Women’s 200 Meter Dash

Heat 1 Prelims

  • 2. Naomi Johnson (JR, UCLA) – 22.94
  • 3. Kya Epps (JR, Cincinnati) – 22.82
  • 4. Jassani Carter (JR, USC) – 22.52
  • 5. Tima Godbless (SO, LSU) – 22.68
  • 6. Madison Whyte (SO, USC) – 22.16
  • 7. Jayla Jamison (SR, South Carolina) – 22.77
  • 8. Tiriah Kelley (JR, Baylor) – 22.58
  • 9. Aniyah Bigam (SO, LSU) – 23.07

Heat 2 Prelims

  • 2. Iaunia Pointer (SR, Syracuse) – 22.90
  • 3. Samirah Moody (SR, USC) – 22.86
  • 4. Taylor Snaer (SO, UCLA) – 22.64
  • 5. Leah Bertrand (SR, Ohio State) – 22.71
  • 6. Jasmine Montgomery (JR, Texas A&M) – 22.26
  • 7. Kelly Ufodiama (FR, East Carolina) – 22.54
  • 8. Kenondra Davis (JR, Texas) – 22.58
  • 9. Gabrielle Matthews (JR, Florida) – 22.87

Heat 3 Prelims

  • 2. Precious Nzeakor (FR, Alabama) – 23.03
  • 3. Holly Okuku (FR, Texas) – 22.85
  • 4. Cynteria James (SO, South Carolina) – 22.72
  • 5. Indya Mayberry (FR, TCU) – 22.30
  • 6. JaMeesia Ford (SO, South Carolina) – 22.27
  • 7. Dajaz Defrand (JR, USC) – 22.33
  • 8. Fatouma Conde (JR, Ohio State) – 22.78
  • 9. Camryn Dickson (JR, Texas A&M) – 22.69

Women’s 400 Meter Dash

Heat 1 Prelims

  • 2. Onyah Onyinye Favour (SO, SE Louisiana) – 51.94
  • 3. Damaris Mutunga (FR, Iowa) – 51.57
  • 4. Kaelyaah Liburd (SO, Florida State) – 51.31
  • 5. Rosey Effiong (SR, Arkansas) – 51.07
  • 6. Aaliyah Butler (JR, Georgia) – 50.68
  • 7. Yemi John (JR, USC) – 51.14
  • 8. Caitlyn Bobb (SR, Virginia Tech) – 51.65
  • 9. Jaydan Wood (SR, Texas A&M) – 51.88

Heat 2 Prelims

  • 2. Sanaria Butler (JR, Arkansas) – 52.00
  • 3. Davenae Fagan (SO, Cincinnati) – 51.76
  • 4. Aaliyah Pyatt (SR, Arkansas) – 51.36
  • 5. Vimbayi Maisvorewa (SR, Auburn) – 51.10
  • 6. Kaylyn Brown (SO, Arkansas) – 50.58
  • 7. Ella Onojuvwevwo (JR, LSU) – 50.99
  • 8. Shaquena Foote (JR, San Diego St) – 51.38
  • 9. Zaya Akins (SO, South Carolina) – 51.77

Heat 3 Prelims

  • 2. Charlee Crawford (SR, Rutgers) – 51.80
  • 3. Sara Reifenrath (SR, South Dakota) – 51.91
  • 4. Maygan Shaw (SR, Northwestern St) – 51.68
  • 5. Sami Oblad (SR, BYU) – 51.29
  • 6. Rachel Joseph (JR, Iowa State) – 50.66
  • 7. Dejanea Oakley (JR, Georgia) – 50.70
  • 8. Javonya Valcourt (JR, Tennessee) – 51.16
  • 9. Joanne Reid (SR, Arkansas) – 51.65

Women’s 800 Meter Run  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Emma Kelley (SR, Wisconsin) – 2:01.87  
  • 3. Lauren Tolbert (JR, Duke) – 2:00.27  
  • 4. Laura Pellicoro (SR, Portland) – 2:01.44  
  • 5. Michaela Rose (SR, LSU) – 1:58.91  
  • 6. Fanny Arendt (JR, Texas Tech) – 2:02.63  
  • 7. Victoria Bossong (SR, Harvard) – 2:01.83  
  • 8. Marie Warneke (FR, UCLA) – 2:02.93  
  • 9. Jenna Schwinghamer (SR, Kentucky) – 2:02.38  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Sophia Gorriaran (SO, Harvard) – 2:00.46  
  • 3. Alli Bookin-Nosbisch (SR, Iowa) – 2:01.70  
  • 4. Makayla Paige (JR, North Carolina) – 1:59.73  
  • 5. Meghan Hunter (SR, BYU) – 1:58.95  
  • 6. Smilla Kolbe (SR, North Florida) – 2:00.09  
  • 7. Aaliyah Moore (SR, Kansas) – 2:02.87  
  • 8. Maeve O’Neill (SO, Providence) – 2:03.44  
  • 9. Sanu Jallow (JR, Arkansas) – 2:03.16  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Veronica Hargrave (FR, Indiana) – 2:00.51  
  • 3. Kaylie Politza (JR, Oklahoma State) – 2:02.04  
  • 4. Makayla Clark (JR, Iowa State) – 2:01.75  
  • 5. Gladys Chepngetich (SO, Clemson) – 1:59.47  
  • 6. Roisin Willis (JR, Stanford) – 1:59.81  
  • 7. Janet Jepkemboi Amimo (FR, Kentucky) – 2:00.36  
  • 8. Emma Sullivan (SR, Kennesaw State) – 2:01.71  
  • 9. Tessa Buswell (FR, BYU) – 2:02.54  

Women’s 1500 Meter Run  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 1. Kimberley May (SR, Providence) – 4:06.31  
  • 2. Carlee Hansen (JR, BYU) – 4:07.64  
  • 3. Bahiya El Arfaoui (SO, Eastern Kentucky) – 4:05.20  
  • 4. Taryn Parks (SR, North Carolina) – 4:10.77  
  • 5. Maggi Congdon (SR, Northern Arizona) – 4:05.73  
  • 6. Silan Ayyildiz (JR, Oregon) – 4:06.61  
  • 7. Allie Zealand (FR, Liberty) – 4:09.76  
  • 8. Amina Maatoug (SR, Washington) – 4:10.34  
  • 9. Berlyn Schutz (SO, Nebraska) – 4:11.01  
  • 10. Margot Appleton (SR, Virginia) – 4:08.04  
  • 11. Salma Elbadra (SO, South Carolina) – 4:08.35  
  • 12. Riley Chamberlain (JR, BYU) – 4:08.42  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 1. Mena Scatchard (SR, Princeton) – 4:08.34  
  • 2. Kaiya Robertson (JR, Boise State) – 4:11.38  
  • 3. Silvia Jelelgo (SO, Clemson) – 4:05.68  
  • 4. Chloe Foerster (JR, Washington) – 4:06.74  
  • 5. Lindsey Butler (SR, Virginia Tech) – 4:10.32  
  • 6. Sophie O’Sullivan (SR, Washington) – 4:08.21  
  • 7. Mia Barnett (SR, Oregon) – 4:10.88  
  • 8. Charlotte Tomkinson (JR, Georgetown) – 4:10.92  
  • 9. Judy Rono (FR, New Mexico) – 4:09.07  
  • 10. Shannon Flockhart (SR, Providence) – 4:04.97  
  • 11. Vera Sjoberg (JR, Boston U.) – 4:07.39  
  • 12. Klaudia Kazimierska (SR, Oregon) – 4:06.53

Women’s 5000 Meter Run  

Section 1 Timed Finals  

  • 1. Edna Chelulei (FR, Eastern Kentucky) – 15:30.56  
  • 2. Jenna Hutchins (JR, BYU) – 15:49.95  
  • 3. Julia David-Smith (JR, Washington) – 15:54.92  
  • 4. Rachel Forsyth (FR, Michigan State) – 15:30.50  
  • 5. Sadie Sigfstead (JR, Villanova) – 15:33.68  
  • 6. Brenda Jepchirchir (FR, Auburn) – 15:33.50  
  • 7. Isca Chelangat (FR, Oklahoma State) – 15:51.86  
  • 8. Agnes McTighe (JR, Northern Arizona) – 16:01.83  
  • 9. Alex Millard (JR, Providence) – 15:28.91  
  • 10. Vera Sjoberg (JR, Boston U.) – 15:27.51  
  • 11. Zofia Dudek (JR, Stanford) – 16:01.80  
  • 12. Ava Mitchell (SO, Northern Arizona) – 16:00.58  
  • 13. Maelle Porcher (JR, Iowa State) – 15:55.73  
  • 14. Silvia Jelelgo (SO, Clemson) – 15:27.68  
  • 15. Sophia Kennedy (SO, Stanford) – 15:50.36  
  • 16. Chloe Scrimgeour (SR, Georgetown) – 15:28.65  
  • 17. Pamela Kosgei (FR, New Mexico) – 15:51.20  
  • 18. Florence Caron (JR, Penn State) – 15:27.05  
  • 19. Amina Maatoug (SR, Washington) – 15:49.52  
  • 20. Margot Appleton (SR, Virginia) – 15:25.99  
  • 21. Grace Hartman (JR, NC State) – 15:23.52  
  • 22. Paityn Noe (SO, Arkansas) – 15:43.45  
  • 23. Samantha Bush (SR, NC State) – 15:28.10  
  • 24. Marion Jepngetich (FR, New Mexico) – 15:52.44  

Women’s 10000 Meter Run  

Section 1 Timed Finals  

  • 1. Joy Naukot (FR, West Virginia) – 32:51.33  
  • 2. Brenda Jepchirchir (FR, Auburn) – 33:13.61  
  • 3. Edna Chepkemoi (FR, LSU) – 33:11.87  
  • 4. Josphine Mwaura (SO, Oklahoma State) – 34:31.93  
  • 5. Jadyn Keeler (JR, North Dakota) – 34:07.67  
  • 6. Logan Hofstee (FR, Gonzaga) – 34:30.82  
  • 7. Morgan Jensen (SR, Utah) – 34:15.28  
  • 8. Brenda Tuwei (JR, Alabama) – 32:48.02  
  • 9. Hilda Olemomoi (JR, Florida) – 32:45.45  
  • 10. Florence Caron (JR, Penn State) – 32:44.94  
  • 11. Ali Weimer (SO, Minnesota) – 34:09.14  
  • 12. Sydney Thorvaldson (SR, Arkansas) – 34:16.03  
  • 13. Pamela Kosgei (FR, New Mexico) – 33:37.04  
  • 14. Jenny Schilling (SR, Virginia) – 32:51.43  
  • 15. Ruth White (FR, New Hampshire) – 32:50.17  
  • 16. Mckaylie Caesar (SR, Utah) – 34:15.26  
  • 17. Chloe Scrimgeour (SR, Georgetown) – 32:45.60  
  • 18. Rosina Machu (JR, Gonzaga) – 33:50.76  
  • 19. Diana Cherotich (FR, Oregon) – 33:43.18  
  • 20. Paityn Noe (SO, Arkansas) – 33:56.89  
  • 21. Edna Chelulei (FR, Eastern Kentucky) – 32:50.68  
  • 22. Grace Hartman (JR, NC State) – 32:32.80  
  • 23. Ruth Kimeli (SO, Baylor) – 34:21.49  
  • 24. Sadie Sigfstead (JR, Villanova) – 32:56.98

Women’s 100 Meter Hurdles  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Sky Hagan (JR, San Jose St.) – 13.14  
  • 3. Marcia Sey (JR, Howard) – 12.99  
  • 4. Kiara Smith (SR, Tennessee) – 12.94  
  • 5. Yanla Ndjip-Nyemeck (SR, UCLA) – 12.82  
  • 6. Ana-Liese Torian (SO, Auburn) – 12.81  
  • 7. Destiny Smith (SR, Texas Tech) – 13.01  
  • 8. Celeste Polzonetti (FR, UCLA) – 13.08  
  • 9. Falon Spearman (JR, Vanderbilt) – 13.13  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Rachel Mehringer (SO, Indiana State) – 13.08  
  • 3. Akala Garrett (SO, Texas) – 12.98  
  • 4. Emmi Scales (SO, Kentucky) – 12.93  
  • 5. Aaliyah McCormick (JR, Oregon) – 12.74  
  • 6. Myreanna Bebe (SR, Tennessee) – 12.89  
  • 7. Amari Kiluvia (SO, TCU) – 13.09  
  • 8. Oneka Wilson (JR, Clemson) – 13.04  
  • 9. Shania Myers (FR, Arkansas) – 13.15  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Simone Ballard (SO, Arkansas) – 13.14  
  • 3. Adaobi Tabugbo (SR, UCF) – 12.95  
  • 4. Marissa Simpson (SR, UTEP) – 12.90  
  • 5. Habiba Harris (FR, Florida) – 12.80  
  • 6. Jaiya Covington (JR, Texas A&M) – 12.87  
  • 7. Janela Spencer (JR, Ohio State) – 12.94  
  • 8. Tonie-Ann Forbes (SO, Texas Tech) – 13.11  
  • 9. Camden Bentley (SO, Kentucky) – 13.14  

Women’s 400 Meter Hurdles  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 2. Macaela Walker (FR, Cincinnati) – 57.16  
  • 3. Dyandra Gray (SR, Minnesota) – 56.86  
  • 4. Allyria McBride (JR, Vanderbilt) – 55.65  
  • 5. Calisha Taylor (SR, Baylor) – 55.94  
  • 6. Savannah Sutherland (SR, Michigan) – 54.39  
  • 7. Safhia Hinds (JR, Kansas State) – 56.34  
  • 8. Aliya Garozzo (SR, Duke) – 56.46  
  • 9. Loubna Benhadja (SR, UTEP) – 56.77  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 2. Yasmeen Tinsley (SR, Monmouth) – 56.97  
  • 3. Natalie Block (JR, Milwaukee) – 56.95  
  • 4. Tia Williams (SO, TCU) – 56.74  
  • 5. LiNay Perry (SR, Northern Arizona) – 56.70  
  • 6. Michelle Smith (FR, Georgia) – 55.25  
  • 7. Amelliah Birdow (SO, TCU) – 55.96  
  • 8. Aniya Woodruff (JR, Howard) – 56.12  
  • 9. Jessicka Woods (JR, Miss State) – 56.48  

Heat 3 Prelims  

  • 2. Mackenzie Collins (FR, Texas) – 57.14  
  • 3. Chloe Fair (JR, Harvard) – 56.49  
  • 4. Jourdin Edwards (JR, Kansas State) – 56.73  
  • 5. Tyra Wilson (SR, Florida State) – 55.63  
  • 6. Akala Garrett (SO, Texas) – 54.72  
  • 7. Sanaa Hebron (SO, Miami (Fla.)) – 55.47  
  • 8. Jenna James (SR, Oklahoma) – 56.71  
  • 9. Braelyn Baker (FR, Duke) – 56.48  

Women’s 3000 Meter Steeplechase  

Heat 1 Prelims  

  • 1. Katelyn Stewart-Barnett (SR, Michigan State) – 9:47.15  
  • 2. Taylor Lovell (SO, BYU) – 9:42.83  
  • 3. Madaline Ullom (SR, Penn State) – 9:54.42  
  • 4. Gwenno Goode (SO, La Salle) – 10:01.65  
  • 5. Shelby Jensen (SO, Utah State) – 10:00.46  
  • 6. Brooke Mullins (SR, Florida State) – 10:05.48  
  • 7. Sophia McDonnell (SR, New Mexico) – 9:57.14  
  • 8. Karrie Baloga (SO, Northern Arizona) – 9:40.13  
  • 9. Doris Lemngole (SO, Alabama) – 9:13.12  
  • 10. Kennady Fontenot (SO, Texas A&M) – 9:58.13  
  • 11. Sydney Masciarelli (JR, North Carolina) – 9:48.12  
  • 12. Leah Jeruto (FR, Oklahoma) – 9:58.74  

Heat 2 Prelims  

  • 1. Sarah Tait (SR, West Virginia) – 9:42.14  
  • 2. Emily Paupore (SR, Central Michigan) – 9:53.89  
  • 3. Ebba Cronholm (FR, Kansas) – 10:01.90  
  • 4. Angelina Napoleon (SO, NC State) – 9:37.42  
  • 5. Maggie Liebich (SR, Washington) – 9:53.74  
  • 6. Hanna Ackermann (SO, Boise State) – 9:54.40  
  • 7. Nelly Jemeli (FR, Miss State) – 9:59.39  
  • 8. Lexy Halladay-Lowry (SR, BYU) – 9:23.03  
  • 9. Katja Pattis (SR, Idaho) – 10:02.04  
  • 10. Molly Malague (JR, Harvard) – 9:56.92  
  • 11. Debora Cherono (FR, Texas A&M) – 9:42.55  
  • 12. Layla Roebke (SR, Louisville) – 9:49.08  

Women’s 4×100 Meter Relay  

Heat 1 Prelims  

2. Duke — 43.72  

  • Mia Edim SO  
  • Abby Geiser SR  
  • Meredith Sims SR  
  • Braelyn Baker FR  
  • Julia Jackson JR  
  • Megan McGinnis SR  
  • Aliya Garozzo SR  

3. Tarleton State — 43.66  

  • Hanna Dudley SR  
  • Lauren Roy SR  
  • Amandine Estival JR  
  • Victoria Cameron SO  
  • Prestina Ochonogor FR  

4. Howard — 43.36  

  • Ai’yana Gray-Williams SO  
  • Marcia Sey JR  
  • Kailei Collins SR  
  • Tiffani Rae Pittman SR  
  • Mackenzie Robinson SO  
  • Kiya Lawson SO  

5. Texas — 42.85  

  • Carleta Bernard SO  
  • Holly Okuku FR  
  • Kenondra Davis JR  
  • Ramiah Elliott JR  
  • Nita Koom-Dadzie FR  

6. Florida State — 42.72  

  • Lucy May Sleeman FR  
  • Shenese Walker JR  
  • Liana Tyson SO  
  • Joella Lloyd SR  
  • Oludoyin Soremi FR  

7. TCU — 43.13  

  • Teanna Harlin SO  
  • Iyana Gray SR  
  • London Tucker FR  
  • Indya Mayberry FR  
  • Bryce Brazzell FR  
  • Mikayla Hayes SR  

8. Clemson — 43.44  

  • Oneka Wilson JR  
  • Aniyah Kitt FR  
  • McKenzie Calloway JR  
  • Sade Gray FR  
  • Aleksandra Stoilova JR  
  • Shantae Foreman JR  

9. Oregon — 43.89  

  • Shaniya Hall SR  
  • Lily Jones JR  
  • Brazil Neal SO  
  • Amirah Shaheed FR  
  • Ella Clayton SR  
  • Annaleise Taylor FR  

Heat 2 Prelims  

2. Utah — 43.85  

  • Megan Rose SR  
  • Emily Martin JR  
  • Bailey Kealamakia SR  
  • Chelsea Amoah FR  
  • Rachel Bair JR  
  • Chloe Shewell SR  

3. UCF — 43.57  

  • Adaobi Tabugbo SR  
  • Janiah Pulliam FR  
  • I’Asia Wilson SR  
  • Jazmen Newberry JR  

4. UCLA — 43.04  

  • Yanla Ndjip-Nyemeck SR  
  • Naomi Johnson JR  
  • Kaylen Fletcher JR  
  • Taylor Snaer SO  
  • Kayla McBride FR  
  • Alyssa Conyers SR  

5. LSU — 42.85  

  • Machaeda Linton JR  
  • Nasya Williams FR  
  • Aniyah Bigam SO  
  • Tima Godbless SO  
  • Garriel White SR  
  • Ella Onojuvwevwo JR  

6. USC — 42.36  

  • Samirah Moody SR  
  • Dajaz Defrand JR  
  • Madison Whyte SO  
  • Jassani Carter JR  
  • Brianna Selby FR  
  • Olivia Pace FR  
  • Mia Brahe-Pedersen FR  
  • Christine Mallard JR  

7. Georgia — 43.11  

  • Karsen Phillips SO  
  • Reign Redmond FR  
  • Sanaa Frederick FR  
  • Dejanea Oakley JR  
  • Sole Frederick FR  
  • Kaila Jackson JR  
  • Adaejah Hodge FR  

8. Iowa — 43.86  

  • Holly Duax SO  
  • Alexandria Edison SO  
  • Alivia Williams FR  
  • Lia Love SR  
  • Olicia Lucas SO  
  • Chioma Nwachukwu FR  
  • Pauline Bikembo FR  
  • Maud Zeffou-Poaty SO  

9. Tennessee — 43.70  

  • Milan Fields SR  
  • Faith Okwose SO  
  • Elo Blessing Okpah SO  
  • Cydney Wright JR  
  • Myreanna Bebe SR  
  • Kaniya Johnson JR  
  • Javonya Valcourt JR  

Heat 3 Prelims  

2. Stanford — 43.84  

  • Teagan Zwaanstra SR  
  • Alyssa Jones JR  
  • Alaysia Oakes JR  
  • Sage Hinton SO  
  • Arianna Guerrero SO  

3. Kentucky — 43.64  

  • Stacey Onyepunuka FR  
  • Hannah Douglas SR  
  • Morgan Davis SO  
  • Sharmelle Holmes FR  
  • A’Laji Bradley FR  
  • Victoria Perrow SR  
  • Kori Martin FR  

4. Illinois — 43.35  

  • Azariyah Bryant JR  
  • Sophia Beckmon SO  
  • Asia Thomas SO  
  • Llyric Driscoll FR  
  • Lucie Kienast FR  
  • Melissa Wullschleger FR  

5. Florida — 43.17  

  • Quincy Penn SO  
  • Anthaya Charlton JR  
  • Gabrielle Matthews JR  
  • Habiba Harris FR  
  • Alyssa Banales FR  

6. Texas A&M — 43.12  

  • Jasmine Harmon SO  
  • Camryn Dickson JR  
  • Bria Bullard SR  
  • Jasmine Montgomery JR  
  • Jaiya Covington JR  
  • Latasha Smith SR  

7. South Carolina — 42.81  

  • Jayla Jamison SR  
  • Cynteria James SO  
  • Zaya Akins SO  
  • JaMeesia Ford SO  
  • McKenzie Travis FR  

8. Baylor — 43.15  

  • Tiriah Kelley JR  
  • Hannah Lowe FR  
  • Alexis Brown SR  
  • Michaela Francois SR  
  • Janae De Gannes FR  
  • Mariah Ayers SR  
  • Summer Sergeant SR  

9. Ohio State — 43.46  

  • Bobbi Olive FR  
  • Fatouma Conde JR  
  • Janela Spencer JR  
  • Leah Bertrand SR  
  • Michaela McCall SO  
  • Adylin Armstrong FR  
  • Sydnee Burr FR  

Men’s Field Start Lists

Men’s High Jump

Flight 1 Finals

  • 1. Osawese Agbonkonkon (SO, Texas) – 2.17m  
  • 2. Nathanil Figgers (SO, South Carolina) – 2.15m  
  • 3. Tito Alofe (SO, Harvard) – 2.18m  
  • 4. Tyus Wilson (SR, Nebraska) – 2.17m  
  • 5. Eddie Kurjak (SR, Georgia) – 2.18m  
  • 6. Kampton Kam (JR, Penn) – 2.15m  
  • 7. Enaji Muhammad (FR, Connecticut) – 2.15m  
  • 8. Antrea Mita (SO, Houston) – 2.17m  
  • 9. Kason O’Riley (SR, Texas State) – 2.17m  
  • 10. Riyon Rankin (SO, Georgia) – 2.15m  
  • 11. Elias Gerald (JR, USC) – 2.17m  
  • 12. Bode Gilkerson (SO, Purdue) – 2.18m  
  • 13. Kennedy Sauder (JR, Miami (Fla.)) – 2.18m  
  • 14. Channing Ferguson (SR, South Carolina) – 2.15m  
  • 15. Kyren Washington (SO, Oklahoma) – 2.17m  
  • 16. Aiden Hayes (JR, Texas State) – 2.17m  
  • 17. Desire Tonye Nyemeck (FR, Nebraska) – 2.17m  
  • 18. Scottie Vines (FR, Arkansas) – 2.17m  
  • 19. Arvesta Troupe (JR, Ole Miss) – 2.18m  
  • 20. Donald Hatfield Jackson (SR, SE Missouri) – 2.17m  
  • 21. Roman Smith (SR, Southern) – 2.18m  
  • 22. Kamyren Garrett (SR, Illinois) – 2.17m  
  • 23. Miles Grant (SR, Sacramento St) – 2.17m  
  • 24. Kuda Chadenga (SR, LSU) – 2.18m  

Men’s Pole Vault

Flight 1 Finals

  • 1. Nico Morales (SR, Rutgers) – 5.33m  
  • 2. Sean Gribble (SO, Texas Tech) – 5.42m  
  • 3. Logan Kelley (JR, Ole Miss) – 5.33m  
  • 4. Bradley Jelmert (SR, Arkansas State) – 5.42m  
  • 5. Bryce Barkdull (FR, Kansas) – 5.42m  
  • 6. Evan Puckett (JR, Tennessee) – 5.43m  
  • 7. Tre Young (SR, South Dakota) – 5.32m  
  • 8. Ricardo Montes de Oca (FR, High Point) – 5.43m  
  • 9. Arnie Grunert (JR, Western Illinois) – 5.42m  
  • 10. Ashton Barkdull (JR, Kansas) – 5.42m  
  • 11. Jak Urlacher (SR, Minnesota) – 5.32m  
  • 12. Aleksandr Solovev (JR, Texas A&M) – 5.42m  
  • 13. John Kendricks (SO, Ole Miss) – 5.43m  
  • 14. Kevin O’Sullivan (JR, Rutgers) – 5.33m  
  • 15. Nikolai van Huyssteen (SR, Georgia) – 5.43m  
  • 16. Logan Hammer (JR, Utah State) – 5.42m  
  • 17. Cody Johnston (SO, Illinois) – 5.42m  
  • 18. Cade Gray (JR, Tennessee) – 5.33m  
  • 19. William Staggs (SR, Indiana State) – 5.43m  
  • 20. Simen Guttormsen (SR, Duke) – 5.33m  
  • 21. Colton Rhodes (JR, Oklahoma) – 5.42m  
  • 22. Scott Toney (SR, Washington) – 5.42m  
  • 23. Hunter Garretson (SR, Akron) – 5.33m  
  • 24. Benjamin Conacher (SR, Virginia Tech) – 5.33m 

Men’s Long Jump

Flight 1 Finals

  • 1. Safin Wills (SR, Oregon) – 7.67m
  • 2. Roy Morris (FR, Northwestern St) – 7.52m
  • 3. Juriad Hughes (FR, Arkansas) – 7.72m
  • 4. Anthony Riley (SR, Oklahoma) – 7.73m
  • 5. Micah Larry (SO, Georgia) – 7.55m
  • 6. Henry Kiner (SR, Arkansas) – 7.61m
  • 7. Reinaldo Rodrigues (SR, Arizona) – 7.71m
  • 8. Malcolm Clemons (SR, Florida) – 7.59m
  • 9. Channing Ferguson (SR, South Carolina) – 7.47m
  • 10. Uroy Ryan (FR, Arkansas) – 7.82m
  • 11. Tye Hunt (SR, Youngstown St) – 7.48m
  • 12. DJ Fillmore (SO, Ohio State) – 7.51m

Flight 2 Finals

  • 1. Jayden Keys (FR, Georgia) – 7.72m
  • 2. Louis Gordon (SR, Albany) – 7.83m
  • 3. Greg Foster (JR, Princeton) – 7.64m
  • 4. Charles Godfred (SO, Minnesota) – 8.10m
  • 5. Curtis Williams (JR, Florida State) – 7.59m
  • 6. Tyson Adams (FR, NC State) – 7.61m
  • 7. Blair Anderson (SR, Oklahoma State) – 7.93m
  • 8. De’Aundre Ward (SR, Southern Miss.) – 7.75m
  • 9. Chrstyn John (Jc) Stevenson (JR, USC) – 7.84m
  • 10. Josh Parrish (SO, Wichita State) – 7.84m
  • 11. Chris Preddie (JR, Texas State) – 8.01m
  • 12. Lokesh Sathyanathan (SR, Tarleton State) – 7.87m

Men’s Triple Jump

Flight 1 Finals

  • 1. Chris Preddie (JR, Texas State) – 15.93m
  • 2. Xavier Partee (SO, N. Carolina A&T) – 15.97m
  • 3. Viktor Morozov (JR, Illinois) – 15.93m
  • 4. Sir Jonathan Sims (JR, Tarleton State) – 15.97m
  • 5. Ryan John (JR, Clemson) – 15.82m
  • 6. Abraham Johnson (FR, Eastern Illinois) – 16.10m
  • 7. Safin Wills (SR, Oregon) – 15.88m
  • 8. Stafon Roach (SO, ULM) – 15.98m
  • 9. Roman Kuleshov (SR, Louisville) – 15.80m
  • 10. Hakeem Ford (SO, Minnesota) – 16.03m
  • 11. Jaden Lippett (FR, Florida) – 15.94m
  • 12. Jeremy Nelson (JR, Louisiana) – 15.95m

Flight 2 Finals

  • 1. Luke Brown (JR, Kentucky) – 16.07m
  • 2. Selva Prabhu (FR, Kansas State) – 16.49m
  • 3. Kyvon Tatham (JR, Florida State) – 16.01m
  • 4. Brandon Green Jr (JR, Oklahoma) – 16.94m
  • 5. Theophilus Mudzengerere (JR, South Carolina) – 16.38m
  • 6. Jaren Holmes (SR, USC) – 16.13m
  • 7. Xavier Drumgoole (FR, Stanford) – 16.42m
  • 8. Kelsey Daniel (SR, Texas) – 16.34m
  • 9. Alexandre Malanda (SR, Kent State) – 16.09m
  • 10. Anthony Woods (JR, Alabama State) – 16.04m
  • 11. Floyd Whitaker (SR, Oklahoma) – 16.27m
  • 12. Ledamian Rowell (SR, Jackson State) – 15.99m

Men’s Shot Put

Flight 1 Finals

  • 1. Thomas Kitchell (SR, North Carolina) – 18.99m
  • 2. Alexander Kolesnikoff (SR, Georgia) – 18.84m
  • 3. Maxwell Otterdahl (SR, Nebraska) – 18.87m
  • 4. Jacob Cookinham (FR, Kansas) – 18.93m
  • 5. Danny Bryant (SR, BYU) – 18.91m
  • 6. Joshua Huisman (FR, Michigan) – 18.95m
  • 7. Christopher Crawford (JR, Alabama) – 19.09m
  • 8. David (Trey) Wilson (SO, Texas Tech) – 19.05m
  • 9. Tucker Smith (JR, Oklahoma) – 19.06m
  • 10. Dylan Targgart (SR, South Carolina) – 19.08m
  • 11. Sascha Schmidt (JR, Memphis) – 18.77m
  • 12. Bryce Foster (JR, Kansas) – 19.20m

Flight 2 Finals

  • 1. Cam Jones (SR, Iowa State) – 19.45m
  • 2. Fred Moudani Likibi (SR, Cincinnati) – 19.71m
  • 3. Christopher Licata (SR, South Carolina) – 20.25m
  • 4. Obiora Okeke (SR, Columbia) – 19.52m
  • 5. Daniel Reynolds (SR, Wyoming) – 19.47m
  • 6. Joseph White (SR, Wisconsin) – 19.87m
  • 7. Joe Licata (JR, Princeton) – 19.23m
  • 8. Zach Landa (SR, Arizona) – 20.06m
  • 9. Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan (JR, Ole Miss) – 20.85m
  • 10. Trevor Gunzell (JR, Alabama) – 19.23m
  • 11. Kobe Lawrence (FR, Oregon) – 19.38m
  • 12. Jason Swarens (SR, Wisconsin) – 19.80m

Men’s Discus Throw

Flight 1 Finals

  • 1. Christopher Crawford (JR, Alabama) – 58.91m
  • 2. Jacob Lemmon (SR, Florida) – 58.05m
  • 3. Trevor Gunzell (JR, Alabama) – 57.71m
  • 4. Desmond Coleman (JR, Miami (Fla.)) – 57.04m
  • 5. Youssef Koudssi (SR, Arizona) – 58.75m
  • 6. Aidan Elbettar (SR, Oregon) – 58.25m
  • 7. Iosif Papa (JR, UMBC) – 58.02m
  • 8. Tanner Watson (SR, Ohio State) – 56.70m
  • 9. Texas Tanner (JR, Air Force) – 59.49m
  • 10. Skylar Coffey (SR, Missouri) – 58.93m
  • 11. Paden Lewis (SR, SE Missouri) – 58.89m
  • 12. Racquil Broderick (SO, USC) – 59.54m

Flight 2 Finals

  • 1. Uladzislau Puchko (SO, Virginia Tech) – 60.67m
  • 2. Dimitrios Pavlidis (SR, Kansas) – 62.00m
  • 3. Mykolas Alekna (JR, California) – 72.12m
  • 4. Oscar Rodriguez (SR, Texas Tech) – 59.62m
  • 5. Seth Allen (JR, Auburn) – 60.95m
  • 6. Maxwell Otterdahl (SR, Nebraska) – 59.61m
  • 7. Aron Alvarez Aranda (SO, Tennessee) – 59.17m
  • 8. Christopher Young (JR, Alabama) – 59.10m
  • 9. Ralford Mullings (JR, Oklahoma) – 67.21m
  • 10. Casey Helm (JR, Princeton) – 59.19m
  • 11. Michael Pinckney (JR, UCLA) – 60.88m
  • 12. Vincent Ugwoke (SR, South Florida) – 59.89m

Men’s Hammer Throw

Flight 1 Finals

  • 1. Kyle Brown (SR, Auburn) – 66.61m
  • 2. Sean Mockler (SR, Indiana) – 65.36m
  • 3. Sean Smith (JR, Iowa) – 65.16m
  • 4. Mason Hickel (JR, Ole Miss) – 66.05m
  • 5. Rory Devaney (JR, Cal Poly) – 65.94m
  • 6. Ryan Johnson (SO, Iowa) – 66.14m
  • 7. Kellen Kimes (SO, Liberty) – 65.02m
  • 8. Noa Isaia (SO, Arkansas State) – 65.97m
  • 9. Orry Willems (SR, Cincinnati) – 65.58m
  • 10. Alex Bernstein (JR, DePaul) – 65.36m
  • 11. Cole Hooper (SR, Wisconsin) – 66.03m
  • 12. Alex Kristeller (SR, Manhattan) – 64.99m

Flight 2 Finals

  • 1. Travis Martin (SR, Cal Poly) – 67.81m
  • 2. Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan (JR, Ole Miss) – 74.51m
  • 3. Christian Toro (SO, Duke) – 66.86m
  • 4. Kostas Zaltos (SR, Minnesota) – 75.63m
  • 5. Keyandre Davis (JR, Virginia) – 66.71m
  • 6. Jake Dalton (SR, Ole Miss) – 67.82m
  • 7. Texas Tanner (JR, Air Force) – 70.32m
  • 8. Angelos Mantzouranis (SO, Minnesota) – 76.10m
  • 9. Bryson Smith (JR, Ole Miss) – 68.40m
  • 10. Igor Olaru (FR, Baylor) – 67.08m
  • 11. Kyle Moison (SR, Auburn) – 68.20m
  • 12. Daniel Reynolds (SR, Wyoming) – 68.10m

Men’s Javelin Throw

Flight 1 Finals

  • 1. Colin Winkler (SR, Central Connecticut) – 68.18m
  • 2. Gabriel Koletsi (JR, Memphis) – 67.84m
  • 3. Ryan Rieckmann (SR, Cincinnati) – 67.90m
  • 4. Jack Greaves (FR, Rice) – 72.17m
  • 5. Callan Saldutto (SR, Missouri) – 69.17m
  • 6. Trevor Hook (SR, Northern Arizona) – 68.62m
  • 7. Preston Kuznof (FR, TCU) – 68.71m
  • 8. Liam Miksic (SR, UC Irvine) – 68.57m
  • 9. Steven Coponi (SR, Rutgers) – 69.87m
  • 10. James Kotowski (SR, UMass Lowell) – 69.88m
  • 11. Sam Roller (JR, North Dakota State) – 70.43m
  • 12. Kevin Burr (SO, Tennessee) – 67.40m

Flight 2 Finals

  • 1. Devoux Deysel (SR, Miami (Fla.)) – 72.02m
  • 2. Leikel Cabrera Gay (SO, Florida) – 73.11m
  • 3. Mike Stein (JR, Iowa) – 76.96m
  • 4. Moustafa Alsherif (SR, Georgia) – 75.02m
  • 5. Keyshawn Strachan (JR, Nebraska) – 76.97m
  • 6. Remi Rougetet (SR, Mississippi State) – 74.43m
  • 7. Riley Marx (SO, Kansas State) – 72.58m
  • 8. Dash Sirmon (JR, Nebraska) – 72.28m
  • 9. Tuomas Narhi (FR, Mississippi State) – 74.89m
  • 10. Jesse Avina (SR, Arizona) – 72.48m
  • 11. Arthur Petersen (SR, Nebraska) – 74.50m
  • 12. Roddy Schenk (FR, Tennessee) – 69.89m

Women’s Field Start Lists

Women’s High Jump

  • 1. Elena Kulichenko (SR, Georgia) – 1.82m
  • 2. Valentina Fakrogha (FR, UCLA) – 1.81m
  • 3. Zharia Taylor (JR, UC Irvine) – 1.81m
  • 4. Svenia DeConinck (JR, Kent State) – 1.79m
  • 5. Amaya Ugarte (SR, Ohio State) – 1.82m
  • 6. Rose Yeboah (SR, Illinois) – 1.84m
  • 7. Temitope Adeshina (SO, Texas Tech) – 1.84m
  • 8. Maria Arboleda (FR, Iowa) – 1.84m
  • 9. Kristi Perez-Snyman (SR, Missouri) – 1.84m
  • 10. Jenna Rogers (SR, Nebraska) – 1.84m
  • 11. Carly Tarentino (SR, Virginia) – 1.79m
  • 12. Spirit Morgan (JR, N. Carolina A&T) – 1.82m
  • 13. Alyssa Jones (JR, Stanford) – 1.84m
  • 14. Diamonasia Taylor (SO, Murray State) – 1.79m
  • 15. Celia Rifaterra (JR, Virginia) – 1.82m
  • 16. Ajia Hughes (JR, Southern Utah) – 1.81m
  • 17. Zahra Amos (SR, Buffalo) – 1.79m
  • 18. Eva Baldursdottir (JR, Pittsburgh) – 1.82m
  • 19. Miracle Ailes (SR, Alabama) – 1.82m
  • 20. Kendall Ward (SO, Georgia Tech) – 1.79m
  • 21. Claudina Diaz (SR, Missouri) – 1.84m
  • 22. Alice Taylor (SO, Rice) – 1.81m
  • 23. Cheyla Scott (JR, South Carolina) – 1.82m
  • 24. Sharie Enoe (SO, Kansas State) – 1.84m

Women’s Pole Vault

  • 1. Sydney Horn (SR, High Point) – 4.24m
  • 2. Sarah Schmitt (SR, Tennessee) – 4.24m
  • 3. Gennifer Hirata (SR, South Dakota) – 4.42m
  • 4. Chiara Sistermann (SO, Virginia Tech) – 4.24m
  • 5. Molly Haywood (SO, Baylor) – 4.42m
  • 6. Alyssa Quinones-Mixon (JR, Auburn) – 4.24m
  • 7. Julia Fixsen (SR, Virginia Tech) – 4.24m
  • 8. Anna Willis (FR, South Dakota) – 4.42m
  • 9. Payton Phillips (SR, Kentucky) – 4.09m
  • 10. Amanda Moll (SO, Washington) – 4.42m
  • 11. Emily Fitzsimmons (JR, Oregon) – 4.42m
  • 12. Hana Moll (SO, Washington) – 4.42m
  • 13. Carly Pujol (JR, Arkansas State) – 4.42m
  • 14. Chloe Timberg (SR, Rutgers) – 4.24m
  • 15. Johanna Duplantis (SR, LSU) – 4.24m
  • 16. Tenly Kuhn (SR, Baylor) – 4.32m
  • 17. Erica Ellis (SR, Kansas) – 4.42m
  • 18. Lyndsey Reed (SR, Virginia Tech) – 4.24m
  • 19. Lilly Nichols (FR, App State) – 4.24m
  • 20. Mia Morello (JR, Illinois) – 4.42m
  • 21. Katerina Adamiec (SR, UCLA) – 4.42m
  • 22. Gemma Tutton (SO, Duke) – 4.24m
  • 23. Ka’Leila Abrille (SR, UCLA) – 4.42m
  • 24. Ashley Callahan (JR, Louisville) – 4.24m

Women’s Long Jump

Flight 1 Finals  

  • 1. Funminiyi Olajide (SR, Arkansas) – 6.36m  
  • 2. Marta Amani (SO, Harvard) – 6.30m  
  • 3. Hailey Coey (JR, Montana State) – 6.44m  
  • 4. Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 6.38m  
  • 5. Ella Scally (JR, Miami (Ohio)) – 6.17m  
  • 6. Molly Wise (SO, Richmond) – 6.18m  
  • 7. Shalom Olotu (SR, Kansas State) – 6.44m  
  • 8. Julia Sue-Kam-Ling (JR, Jacksonville) – 6.15m  
  • 9. Jenica Bosko (SR, Arizona) – 6.42m  
  • 10. Aaliyah Foster (SO, Texas) – 6.44m  
  • 11. Paige Floriea (SR, Rutgers) – 6.22m  
  • 12. Mariama Hunt (FR, NC State) – 6.11m  

Flight 2 Finals  

  • 1. Anthaya Charlton (JR, Florida) – 6.52m  
  • 2. Alexis Brown (SR, Baylor) – 6.94m  
  • 3. Sophia Beckmon (SO, Illinois) – 6.56m  
  • 4. Imani Moore (SR, Georgia Southern) – 6.54m  
  • 5. Janae De Gannes (FR, Baylor) – 6.58m  
  • 6. Synclair Savage (SR, Louisville) – 6.64m  
  • 7. Georgina Scoot (JR, Princeton) – 6.32m  
  • 8. Prestina Ochonogor (FR, Tarleton State) – 6.66m  
  • 9. Alyssa Banales (FR, Florida) – 6.41m  
  • 10. Alyssa Jones (JR, Stanford) – 6.65m  
  • 11. Tacoria Humphrey (SR, Illinois) – 6.63m  
  • 12. Mariia Horielova (SO, Alabama) – 6.43m  

Women’s Triple Jump

Flight 1 Finals  

  • 1. Shalom Olotu (SR, Kansas State) – 13.45m  
  • 2. Jada Joseph (SR, Brown) – 13.01m  
  • 3. Ryann Porter (SR, Oregon) – 13.42m  
  • 4. Ashley Moore (SR, Oklahoma) – 13.48m  
  • 5. Sharvari Parulekar (JR, Louisville) – 12.93m  
  • 6. Cameran Gist (FR, South Carolina) – 13.07m  
  • 7. Christina Warren (SR, Miami (Fla.)) – 12.93m  
  • 8. Kayla Pinkard (JR, Florida State) – 13.01m  
  • 9. Georgina Scoot (JR, Princeton) – 13.04m  
  • 10. Katharina Graman (SO, San Jose St.) – 13.50m  
  • 11. Rachela Pace (SR, UTSA) – 13.46m  
  • 12. Emilia Sjostrand (SR, San Jose St.) – 13.49m  

Flight 2 Finals  

  • 1. Daniela Wamokpego (SO, Iowa) – 13.67m  
  • 2. Shantae Foreman (JR, Clemson) – 14.01m  
  • 3. Tamiah Washington (SO, Texas Tech) – 13.54m  
  • 4. Agur Dwol (JR, Oklahoma) – 13.65m  
  • 5. Sophie Galloway (JR, Kentucky) – 13.08m  
  • 6. Winny Bii (JR, Texas A&M) – 14.00m  
  • 7. Machaeda Linton (JR, LSU) – 13.25m  
  • 8. Simone Johnson (SR, San Jose St.) – 13.63m  
  • 9. Olivia Dowd (JR, N. Carolina A&T) – 13.22m  
  • 10. Victoria Gorlova (SR, Texas Tech) – 13.99m  
  • 11. Asia Phillips (FR, Florida) – 13.29m  
  • 12. Skylynn Townsend (FR, Georgia) – 13.48m  

Women’s Shot Put

Flight 1 Finals  

  • 1. Gretchen Hoekstre (SR, BYU) – 16.87m  
  • 2. Kellyn Kortemeyer (SO, Nebraska) – 16.71m  
  • 3. Abigail Russell (FR, Michigan) – 16.95m  
  • 4. Melanie Duron (JR, Texas State) – 16.75m  
  • 5. Makayla Hunter (JR, Indiana) – 16.83m  
  • 6. Megan Hague (JR, Auburn) – 17.00m  
  • 7. Tapenisa Havea (JR, Arizona) – 16.25m  
  • 8. Lucija Leko (SO, California) – 17.10m  
  • 9. Cierra Jackson (SR, Fresno State) – 16.71m  
  • 10. Amanda Ngandu-Ntumba (SR, Cincinnati) – 16.85m  
  • 11. Alida Van Daalen (JR, Florida) – 17.08m  
  • 12. Treneese Hamilton (JR, Alabama) – 16.92m  

Flight 2 Finals  

  • 1. Chrystal Herpin (SR, Texas) – 17.55m  
  • 2. Kalynn Meyer (SR, Nebraska) – 17.96m  
  • 3. Akaoma Odeluga (SO, Ole Miss) – 18.24m  
  • 4. Ashley Erasmus (FR, USC) – 17.58m  
  • 5. Nina Ndubuisi (SO, Texas) – 17.15m  
  • 6. MyeJoi Williams (SR, Alabama) – 17.18m  
  • 7. Jayden Ulrich (SR, Louisville) – 17.97m  
  • 8. Mya Lesnar (SR, Colorado State) – 18.50m  
  • 9. Kelsie Murrell-Ross (SR, Georgia) – 17.17m  
  • 10. Abria Smith (SR, Illinois) – 17.69m  
  • 11. Gracelyn Leiseth (SO, Florida) – 18.31m  
  • 12. Elizabeth Tapper (SO, Michigan) – 17.28m  

Women’s Discus Throw

Flight 1 Finals  

  • 1. Ines Lopez (JR, Arizona State) – 54.39m  
  • 2. Klaire Kovatch (JR, Colorado State) – 54.32m  
  • 3. Zoe Burleson (SR, Texas Tech) – 55.47m  
  • 4. Michaelle Valentin (SR, FIU) – 54.73m  
  • 5. Donna Douglas (FR, Tennessee) – 54.56m  
  • 6. Gretchen Hoekstre (SR, BYU) – 54.58m  
  • 7. Adrienne Adams (SR, Auburn) – 55.09m  
  • 8. Jamora Alves (JR, St. John’s) – 54.16m  
  • 9. Estel Valeanu (SR, Virginia) – 55.06m  
  • 10. Milina Wepiwe (SO, Harvard) – 54.54m  
  • 11. Krishna Jayasankar Menon (JR, UNLV) – 55.61m  
  • 12. Paige Low (SR, Oklahoma) – 54.82m  

Flight 2 Finals  

  • 1. Sofia Sluchaninova (JR, Kansas) – 58.22m  
  • 2. Jayden Ulrich (SR, Louisville) – 64.81m  
  • 3. Taylor Kesner (JR, Wisconsin) – 57.83m  
  • 4. Jade Whitfield (SR, Louisville) – 57.05m  
  • 5. Shelby Frank (SR, Texas Tech) – 61.23m  
  • 6. Caisa-Marie Lindfors (SR, California) – 59.03m  
  • 7. Angeludi Asaah (JR, Penn) – 56.32m  
  • 8. Princesse Hyman (FR, LSU) – 55.11m  
  • 9. Cierra Jackson (SR, Fresno State) – 61.27m  
  • 10. Amanda Ngandu-Ntumba (SR, Cincinnati) – 59.43m  
  • 11. Alida Van Daalen (JR, Florida) – 59.78m  
  • 12. Tamaiah Koonce (JR, Kansas State) – 55.99m  

Women’s Hammer Throw

Flight 1 Finals  

  • 1. Kassidy Gallagher (SR, Oklahoma) – 64.08m  
  • 2. Emilia Kolokotroni (SO, Harvard) – 63.63m  
  • 3. Kajsa Borrman (SO, Colorado State) – 62.93m  
  • 4. Skylar Soli (SO, Ole Miss) – 63.44m  
  • 5. Kenna Curry (SR, North Dakota) – 63.44m  
  • 6. Annika Kelly (SR, Virginia) – 64.94m  
  • 7. Monique Hardy (SR, Kansas State) – 62.99m  
  • 8. Mariana Pestana (SO, Virginia Tech) – 63.52m  
  • 9. Kennedy Clarke (SO, Oklahoma) – 64.11m  
  • 10. Giavonna Meeks (SO, California) – 64.55m  
  • 11. Kate Powers (SO, Kentucky) – 63.91m  
  • 12. Marie Rougetet (FR, Miss State) – 65.23m  

Flight 2 Finals  

  • 1. Emily Fink (SR, Army West Point) – 66.46m  
  • 2. Kali Terza (JR, Kennesaw State) – 66.75m  
  • 3. Shelby Frank (SR, Texas Tech) – 66.17m  
  • 4. Chioma Njoku (SR, Maryland) – 65.60m  
  • 5. Valentina Savva (FR, California) – 67.75m  
  • 6. Gudrun Hallgrimsdottir (SR, VCU) – 69.53m  
  • 7. Chloe Lindeman (SR, Wisconsin) – 64.62m  
  • 8. Audrey Jacobs (SO, California) – 64.94m  
  • 9. Lara Roberts (SO, Texas State) – 65.61m  
  • 10. Stephanie Ratcliffe (SR, Georgia) – 67.13m  
  • 11. Emma Robbins (SR, Oklahoma State) – 66.47m  
  • 12. Paola Bueno (JR, Liberty) – 65.73m  

Women’s Javelin Throw

Flight 1 Finals  

  • 1. Maria Bienvenu (SR, TCU) – 52.68m  
  • 2. Kate Joyce (SR, North Carolina) – 52.43m  
  • 3. Sara Sanders (SR, Oregon State) – 52.17m  
  • 4. Taylor Kesner (JR, Wisconsin) – 52.39m  
  • 5. Trinity Spooner (SO, LSU) – 51.03m  
  • 6. Beatriz Mora Herencia (FR, Albany) – 49.42m  
  • 7. Megan Albamonti (SR, Alabama) – 52.94m  
  • 8. Lilly Urban (SO, Nevada) – 53.49m  
  • 9. Deisiane Teixeira (SR, Miami (Fla.)) – 52.72m  
  • 10. Jana van Schalkwyk (SR, UCLA) – 53.27m  
  • 11. Emma Yungeberg (JR, Michigan) – 52.97m  
  • 12. Eniko Sara (SR, Nebraska) – 54.73m  

Flight 2 Finals  

  • 1. Evelyn Bliss (SO, Bucknell) – 57.06m  
  • 2. Erin McMeniman (SR, Georgia) – 53.14m  
  • 3. Kelsi Oldroyd (SR, Utah Valley) – 57.72m  
  • 4. Lianna Davidson (SR, Georgia) – 53.37m  
  • 5. Maddie Harris (SR, Nebraska) – 56.82m  
  • 6. Arndis Oskarsdottir (FR, FIU) – 54.99m  
  • 7. Irene Jepkemboi (SO, TCU) – 58.36m  
  • 8. Manuela Rotundo (FR, Georgia) – 55.88m  
  • 9. Elizabeth Korczak (JR, Iowa) – 55.28m  
  • 10. Shea Greene (JR, Princeton) – 56.91m  
  • 11. McKyla Van Der Westhuizen (JR, Rice) – 57.17m  
  • 12. Valentina Barrios Bornacelli (JR, Missouri) – 56.71m  

NCAA DI Track Championships 2025 Schedule

All times Eastern.

Wednesday, June 11 

Track Events

  • 7:05 PM – 4x100m Relay, Semifinal, Men
  • 7:21 PM – 1500m, Semifinal, Men
  • 7:38 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Semifinal, Men
  • 8:08 PM – 110m Hurdles, Semifinal, Men
  • 8:25 PM – 100m, Semifinal, Men
  • 8:41 PM – 400m, Semifinal, Men
  • 8:58 PM – 800m, Semifinal, Men
  • 9:14 PM – 400m Hurdles, Semifinal, Men
  • 9:29 PM – 200m, Semifinal, Men
  • 9:56 PM – 10,000m, Final, Men
  • 10:36 PM – 4x400m Relay, Semifinal, Men

Field Events

  • 4:30 PM – Hammer Throw, Final, Men
  • 7:35 PM – Pole Vault, Final, Men
  • 8:15 PM – Javelin, Final, Men
  • 8:40 PM – Long Jump, Final, Men
  • 9:10 PM – Shot Put, Final, Men

Combined Events

  • 3:00 PM – 100M, Decathalon, Men
  • 3:40 PM – Long Jump, Decathlon, Men
  • 4:55 PM – Shot Put, Decathlon, Men
  • 6:10 PM – High Jump, Decathlon, Men
  • 9:43 PM – 400M, Decathlon, Men

Thursday, June 12

Track Events

  • 7:00 PM – 4x100m Relay, Semifinal, Women
  • 7:21 PM – 1500m, Semifinal, Women
  • 7:38 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Semifinal, Women
  • 8:08 PM – 100m Hurdles, Semifinal, Women
  • 8:25 PM – 100m, Semifinal, Women
  • 8:41 PM – 400m, Semifinal, Women
  • 8:58 PM – 800m, Semifinal, Women
  • 9:14 PM – 400m Hurdles, Semifinal, Women
  • 9:29 PM – 200m, Semifinal, Women
  • 9:56 PM – 10,000m, Final, Women
  • 10:36 PM – 4x400m Relay, Semifinal, Women

Field Events

  • 3:30 PM – Hammer Throw, Final, Women
  • 7:35 PM – Pole Vault, Final, Women
  • 8:15 PM – Javelin, Final, Women
  • 8:40 PM – Long Jump, Final, Women
  • 9:10 PM – Shot Put, Final, Women

Combined Events

  • 12:45 PM – 110M Hurdles, Decathlon, Men
  • 1:35 PM – Discus, Decathlon, Men
  • 2:45 PM – Pole Vault, Decathlon, Men
  • 5:15 PM – Javelin, Decathlon, Men
  • 9:43 PM – 1500M, Decathlon, Men

Friday, June 13

Track Events 

  • 8:02 PM – 4x100m Relay, Final, Men
  • 8:12 PM – 1500m, Final, Men
  • 8:24 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Final, Men
  • 8:42 PM – 110m Hurdles, Final, Men
  • 8:52 PM – 100m, Final, Men
  • 9:02 PM – 400m, Final, Men
  • 9:14 PM – 800m, Final, Men
  • 9:27 PM – 400m Hurdles, Final, Men
  • 9:37 PM – 200m, Final, Men
  • 9:55 PM – 5000m, Final, Men
  • 10:21 PM – 4x400m Relay, Final, Men

Field Events

  • 5:15 PM – Discus, Final, Men
  • 7:30 PM – High Jump, Final, Men
  • 8:10 PM – Triple Jump, Final Men

Combined Events

  • 2:45 PM – 100 Hurdles, Heptathlon, Women
  • 3:45 PM – High Jump, Heptathlon, Women
  • 5:45 PM – Shot Put, Heptathlon, Women
  • 9:43 PM – 200M, Heptathlon, Women

Saturday, June 14

Track Events

  • 9:02 PM – 4x100m Relay, Final, Women
  • 9:11 PM – 1500m, Final, Women
  • 9:24 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Final, Women
  • 9:42 PM – 100m Hurdles, Final, Women
  • 9:52 PM – 100m, Final, Women
  • 10:02 PM – 400m, Final, Women
  • 10:14 PM – 800m, Final, Women
  • 10:27 PM – 400m Hurdles, Final, Women
  • 10:37 PM – 200m, Final, Women
  • 10:55 PM – 5000m, Final, Women
  • 11:21 PM – 4x400m Relay, Final, Women

Field Events

  • 3:30 PM – Discus, Final, Women
  • 8:30 PM – High Jump, Final, Women
  • 9:10 PM – Triple Jump, Final, Women

Combined Events

  • 6:30 PM – Long Jump, Heptathlon, Women
  • 7:45 PM – Javelin, Heptathlon, Women
  • 10:43 – 800M, Heptathlon, Women

FloTrack Is The Streaming Home For Many Track And Field Meets Each Year

Don’t miss all the track and field season action streaming on FloTrack. Check out the FloTrack schedule for more events.

FloTrack Archived Footage

Video footage from each event will be archived and stored in a video library for FloTrack subscribers to watch for the duration of their subscriptions.

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MSU’s Hargan Garners AVCA Honorable Mention All-America Honors

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• Complete AVCA All-American Teams

The honors keep coming for Morehead State Volleyball’s M.E. Hargan. The senior outside hitter from Elizabethtown, Ky., has been named Honorable Mention All-American by the American Volleyball Coaches Association.

Hargan becomes the fifth player in program history to earn All-America recognition. She joins Katelyn Barbour (2008), Holly Evans (2010), Ellie Roberson (2012) and Olivia Lohmeier (2020).

Hargan led the Ohio Valley Conference with 493 kills this season, averaging 4.61 kills per set ranking 16th in the country in NCAA Division I. Her 569 points (5.32 points per set average) ranked 11th in the country.

 

She was named the OVC Player of the Year, the sixth Eagle to earn the award, joining Dayle Hammontree (1988. 1989), Amy Almond (2001, 2002), Holly Evans (2010), Roberson (2012) and Lohmeier (2018, 2020).

One of Morehead State’s most prolific hitters, Hargan finished her career with 1,488 kills ranking third in program history for the modern era (2008-present when rally scoring changed to 25-point sets). Her 493 kills this season were the third-highest total in the modern era in the Eagle record book. Hargan finished with three seasons in the top 10 in program history for kills.

 

Her 2,575 total attacks’ tally is the second-highest in the program’s modern era. She also finished with 956 career digs, ranking ninth in the records. Her 98 career service aces and 36 career block solos both rank 10th in the program, as does her 439 career sets played.

 

In November, the Ohio Valley Conference named Hargan an OVC Scholar-Athlete, the highest recognition awarded by the conference. She is just the fifth Morehead State volleyball player to have earned the award.

 

Hargan was an All-OVC First Team selection the last three seasons becoming the seventh player in program history to be named to the All-OVC First Team at least three years.  This season, she was named OVC Player of the Week five times, including a run of three straight weeks (September 8 to September 22).

 

 









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NCAA volleyball tournament Final Four: Schedule, scores, highlights

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Updated Dec. 18, 2025, 10:31 a.m. ET



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NCAA women’s volleyball tournament: Title game predictions, storylines and more

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The NCAA women’s college volleyball semifinals are here! After probably the most eventful Sunday in national quarterfinals history where we saw No. 1 overall seed Nebraska fall to No. 3 seed Texas A&M, and No. 1 seed Texas fall to Wisconsin, we’re in for an exciting semifinals.

Pittsburgh’s making its fifth consecutive visit to the semifinals, something no other program has done before, but will this be the year the Panthers make it through to the national championship game? Pitt’s Olivia Babcock, the reigning National Player of the Year, is a name mentioned numerous times as a must-watch player throughout the tournament, but who else should volleyball fans keep their eye on heading into the semis?

Our women’s college volleyball experts give their thoughts on four big questions heading into the final four.

Jump to:
Key storylines | Most to prove
Must-watch player | Title game prediction

What are the key storylines going into the final four?

Sam Gore: Pitt has incredibly made the past five NCAA semifinals, but is still seeking its first breakthrough into the national championship. Will the fifth time be the charm? Going into the tournament, Nebraska was the team to beat. Now that it lost to Texas A&M, it feels like you can make the case for each of the remaining four to win it all. Each team has a Player of the Year candidate and multiple weapons. Kentucky is the front runner, but you can never count Wisconsin out. Will Texas A&M become another NCAA tournament Cinderella champion, or does Pitt take the next step and make history for the ACC?

Madison Fitzpatrick: Texas A&M battled through two five-setters to advance to its first national semifinals in school history! The Aggies took down a No. 1 seed, undefeated Nebraska and displayed more heart and grit than I’ve ever seen in a volleyball team. Coach Jamie Morrison said he prepared and built this roster to make it to Kansas City, and he was 100% correct! Watch out world, A&M is on a mission.

Emily Ehman: There are so many good ones. Can Pitt finally advance past the national semifinal on its fifth straight try? Can Texas A&M’s magical regionals run continue on? Kentucky vs. Wisconsin will be a slugfest full of heavy hitters. Then of course, who ends up taking home the Player of the Year award? I also love how Kentucky’s Craig Skinner and Wisconsin’s Kelly Sheffield grew up together and have been lifelong friends.

Charlie Creme: Who doesn’t have their eye on Texas A&M? The win over Nebraska in the regional finals was not only an instant classic, but one of the great upsets the sport has ever seen. As the page turns from Lincoln to Kansas City for the Aggies, questions naturally arise about what is next. Will there be a hangover for A&M? Can the Aggies duplicate the focus and intensity it took to knock off the regular season’s best team? Is there anything left in the emotional tank? The underdog is always a story, and Texas A&M will have that distinction once again facing Pittsburgh.

Michael Voepel: A big thing is how the vibe of the final four changes without Nebraska and its huge fan base. The Huskers faithful filled the arena the last time the final four was in Kansas City, when Nebraska won the title in 2017. Lincoln, Nebraska, is only a three-hour drive from Kansas City, and it would have been the same at T-Mobile Center this year if the Huskers were playing.

Some Huskers fans will still come because they are huge volleyball fans in general. But it will no longer feel like a home match for Nebraska. It will be more like a neutral environment, with all four teams having good fan followings — but not quite the same overwhelming red wave of the Huskers.

Former Florida coach and ESPN commentator Mary Wise said that Texas A&M’s 3-2 victory at Nebraska in the regional final might be the biggest road win in NCAA tournament history. I think she’s right. One other fairly recent epic road victory in a regional final also comes to mind: the freshman-led Stanford squad winning in a reverse-sweep against Wisconsin on the Badgers’ home court in 2016. That led to the first of that Cardinal group’s three national championships in four years.

This is a different scenario in that Stanford was already a longtime established national power then even though freshmen led the way, while this Texas A&M group is led by seniors and in the program’s first final four. Plus, Nebraska had powerfully swept through this season and had not lost a home match in three years.

Charlotte Gibson: It has been more than 72 hours, and the volleyball world is still reeling from Texas A&M’s 3-2 upset of previously undefeated No. 1 Nebraska in Sunday’s match. The Aggies booked their ticket to Kansas City for the program’s first final four. And the nine seniors on the Aggies’ roster are leading the way in Kansas City. Texas A&M head coach, Jamie Morrison, said he was “not scared of Nebraska” heading into their matchup. After beating the Huskers, there’s nothing to be scared about, right? It’s either win a championship or go home for the Aggies.


Who or what team has the most to prove in Kansas City?

Gibson: When it’s your fifth straight appearance to the final four, you have something to prove. For No. 1 seed Pitt, this week in Kansas City is more than another notch on the belt when it comes to final four appearances — it’s a test of whether this team can win its first championship. In the semifinal matchup, it will be the underdogs (Texas A&M) versus the veterans of the final four (Pitt).

Voepel: Pitt’s situation reminds me of LSU in women’s basketball from 2004-2008. The Tigers had future Hall of Famers Seimone Augustus and Sylvia Fowles during that time and made the Final Four five years in a row but never got past the national semifinals. The Panthers are now in their fifth consecutive final four in volleyball and looking to advance to their first championship match.

Last season seemed like Pitt’s year to do that, but the Panthers had to face the hometown crowd in Louisville against the Louisville Cardinals in the semifinals, falling 3-1. But despite losing outside hitter Torrey Stafford, who transferred to Texas, the Panthers relied on Babcock to make yet another run to the national semifinals this year.

Everyone thought they would be facing unbeaten Nebraska there, but instead, they will go against the upset specialists from Texas A&M. That may seem like a good break for Pitt. But considering how well the Aggies have played, the Panthers will not underestimate them.

Gore: Pitt would seem to have the most to prove, but not to anyone other than itself. No other program has made the past five national semis, so its legacy is intact. However, you know the Panthers are burning to make the championship to cap their legacy of consistency with the ACC’s first national volleyball title.

Fitzpatrick: Pitt Panthers. This will be their fifth national semifinals, yet to advance to a final. Will this be their year? They have the pieces to deliver, but it won’t be easy vs. A&M.

Creme: Pittsburgh. The Panthers have now made five straight trips to the final four. The previous four ended at the national semifinals and they’ve have never made a final. Last year, Pittsburgh entered the NCAA tournament as the No. 1 overall seed but lost in the national semifinals to a Louisville team it had beaten twice during the regular season. Had Nebraska reached the final four, the Panthers would have been expected to lose once again in the semifinals. Now, they are the favorites against Texas A&M and need to deliver.

Ehman: Pitt. It has now made its fifth consecutive national semifinal and has never advanced further. Kentucky and Wisconsin have both already won a title in the past five years, and Texas A&M wasn’t expected by most to even make it here. Now’s the time for the Panthers to make their run!


Which player should we keep our eye on?

Fitzpatrick: Kyndal Stowers for A&M is coming off a career high 25 kills versus an undefeated Nebraska team. A year ago today, she wasn’t playing at all due to getting four concussions at Baylor. But she’s back, better than ever and one of the most explosive players her head coach said he has ever seen. Now Stowers’ out to win it all with A&M!

Creme: Wisconsin’s Charlie Fuerbringer led the nation in assists per set during the regular season and has been even better in the NCAA tournament. Fuerbringer’s 61 assists in the regional semifinals against Stanford were a career high. Her second-best assist total came two days later against Texas. Fuerbringer is also second on the team in digs per set. Her value cannot be understated. Three of the Badgers’ four losses came with Fuerbringer on the sidelines with a shoulder injury. They haven’t lost since her return.

Voepel: Kentucky junior Brooklyn DeLeye will be playing in the final four just about an hour from her hometown of Topeka, Kansas. The 6-foot-2 outside hitter leads the Wildcats in kills per set at 4.69. She teamed with SEC Player of the Year Eva Hudson, a transfer from Purdue, to power the Wildcats’ attack in going 15-0 in SEC regular season play and the league tournament championship. DeLeye is one of those electric players who can take over matches.

Gibson: The 6-foot-4 right side hitter from Pitt: Babcock. After winning the ACVA National Player of the Year last season, Pitt junior Babcock is once again a finalist for the prestigious award. Her accolades speak for themselves: 2025 AVCA first-team All-American, 2025 AVCA East Coast Region Player of the Year, 2025 ACC Player of the Year, five 2025 ACC Offensive Player of the Week honors, 2024 AVCA National Player of the Year — just to name a few. Babcock recorded career highs in kills per set (5.11) and digs per set (2.11) this season.

Gore: There are so many, but Babcock is the elite among the elite.

Ehman: I’m supposed to pick just one? If I must, it has to be Pitt’s Babcock. She’s the reigning National Player of the Year and a finalist for the award this year for good reason. She’s like watching a professional player playing at the college level — she’s that good!


What’s your championship matchup prediction?

Ehman: No matchup would surprise me here because the field is so evenly matched across. I’ll give the advantage to Pitt and Kentucky though. First to Pitt because I’m not sure Texas A&M’s left side block will be able to shut down Babcock, and Pitt has motivation after facing heartbreak in this round for four straight years. Then to Kentucky because it not only can compete with Wisconsin offensively, but it has the defense to back it up. And there’s just no stopping Kentucky’s DeLeye and Hudson once they get hot!

Gibson: There is trepidation in predicting a matchup after what happened on Sunday. And as much as I love an underdog story, I think we will see both No.1 seeds, Pitt and Kentucky, in the championship. Pitt is no stranger to the final four. Kentucky is no stranger to the championship. Both teams will first have to remind volleyball fans why they are the standard in college volleyball by defeating Texas A&M and Wisconsin.

Voepel: Kentucky won its NCAA title in the pandemic-impacted 2020 season, when all the NCAA tournament matches were played in the spring of 2021 in Omaha, Nebraska. While the Wildcats certainly celebrated that, it didn’t quite feel the same as a regular final four. Now they have that chance, and I think they will prevail in a tight final vs. Pitt, 3-2.

Creme: Pittsburgh vs. Wisconsin. With Nebraska out of the way, the path for the Panthers to finally break through to a national championship game, while not easy, is clearer. They have the best player in the country in Babcock. That was the case a year ago too, but this time Babcock has fifth-year senior Brooke Mosher feeding her. Perhaps Mosher, who played at Illinois before this season, is the difference.



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2025 AVCA Division I WVB All-America Teams

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The AVCA is proud to announce its 44th annual All-America teams for NCAA Division I women’s volleyball.

The 2025 list includes 42 players—14 on the first, second, and third teams—from 24 schools, and 57 players receive honorable mention honors. Kentucky, Nebraska, and Texas A&M lead the way with four players on the first three teams. Creighton and Purdue each had three players earn first-, second-, or third-team All-America honors.

Eight first-team honorees are earning their third All-America honors: Olivia Babcock of Pittsburgh, Mimi Colyer of Wisconsin, Eva Hudson of Kentucky, Kennedy Martin of Penn State, Harper Murray of Nebraska, Bergen Reilly of Nebraska, Elia Rubin of Stanford, and Torrey Stafford of Texas. There are six 2025 first-team All-Americans who also were first-teamers a year ago.

The 2025 AVCA Freshman of the Year is Kassie OBrien. She took over the starting setter role for Kentucky in September and has guided the Wildcats back to the NCAA Championship semifinals. She averages 11.02 assists per set, has 231 digs, and is second on the team in blocks with 84 this season.

Freshman of the Year: Kassie OBrien, University of Kentucky, S
Player of the Year: announced Dec. 19
Coach of the Year: announced Dec. 18
Assistant Coach of the Year: announced Dec. 18

The 2025 All-America selections were made by the AVCA Division I All-America Committee: Matt Ulmer, Kansas (chair); Bre Henry, Ole Miss; Branden Higa, UC Riverside; Kim Lambert, Delaware; Kelli Miller Phillips, Ball State; Rob Neilson, Utah State; Lauren Ramatowski, Tulsa; Jackie Simpson Kirr, Clemson; Erin Virtue, Michigan; Jason Williams, TCU; and Leanne Williamson, South Dakota.

Click here to see links to bios on First-, Second-, and Third-Team All-Americans.

2025 AVCA Division I First-Team All-Americans

ALL-AMERICANS

 

HONORABLE MENTION

 

Check out the Division I Awards Archives, which include the All-America Teams and Award Winners history.

AVCA Women's Division I All-America Teams



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Beyond his sideline stoicism, Dan Fisher built Pitt volleyball into a powerhouse

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The unlikeliest journey to NCAA volleyball’s final four

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THE DAY KYNDAL STOWERS was told she couldn’t play volleyball anymore, she got in her car, silenced her phone, and drove aimlessly around town.

It was the spring of 2024, and she had endured four concussions over eight months on the volleyball court at Baylor, once in a collision with a teammate and three times from getting hit by the ball. “Why does this keep happening?” she asked herself. She figured she would redshirt her sophomore season and give her brain time to heal.

But near the end of the 2024 spring semester, a team doctor summoned Stowers. She thought it was just another checkup. When she arrived, the doctor, a trainer and a member of the university’s compliance department greeted her. They told her that she was being medically retired, and that her tuition would be paid for but her playing days — at Baylor at least — were finished.

She eventually went home to Denton, Texas, and watched the 2024 Final Four on her parents’ couch.

One year later, on Sunday, Stowers stood on the court at the Bob Devaney Center in Lincoln, Nebraska, celebrating her Texas A&M team’s five-set upset over the No. 1 — and previously undefeated — Cornhuskers in the regional finals. She had 25 kills and then found her mom in the crowd and cried. She rarely does that, Tina Stowers said.

But this is a story about the unlikeliest player on the unlikeliest semifinal team in the NCAA women’s volleyball tournament, and the moment commanded some emotion. It’s about a sports family supporting her decision to keep playing, and taking the steps necessary to ensure she’s as safe as she can be in an unpredictable arena of high-velocity swings, crashing bodies and flying elbows.

On Thursday, she’ll play for Texas A&M against Pittsburgh in the national semifinals.

“I knew that I wasn’t done,” Stowers said. “How can I be done with something I never got to start?”


THE STOWERS FAMILY knows about the violence of sports. Don Stowers, Kyndal’s dad, played football for New Mexico State in the 1990s, and was invited to the NFL combine. He played in NFL Europe for a year, and before that was a priority undrafted free agent for the Cincinnati Bengals before becoming a preseason cut by the Bengals and Denver Broncos. But he said there’s video of him tackling Emmitt Smith in a preseason game.

He has coached high school football in Texas, and his son, Eli, is a tight end for Vanderbilt. Tina Stowers graduated from Baylor, played beach volleyball for more than a decade, and coached high school and junior college volleyball. She said she never had a concussion in 30-plus years of volleyball, but acknowledges that back then, there were no protocols, and assessments were generally concluded with the term “getting your bell rung.”

But concussions in volleyball aren’t as rare as they might seem. A 2023 study found that volleyball had the highest rate of concussions (4.93 per 10,000 athlete exposures) among limited-contact sports, including softball, swimming/diving and baseball, and a rate higher than men’s basketball, which is considered a high-contact sport. The NCAA has a concussion safety protocol that schools must follow that applies to all sports. It includes immediate removal from a game or practice if a concussion is suspected and continued evaluation by a team physician in the hours and days following the injury.

When Kyndal sustained her first concussion at Baylor during the summer of 2023, before her freshman season, she called her mom. She was annoyed, Tina Stowers said, but otherwise fine. Then came the September game when she dove for a ball and a teammate went airborne and kneed her in the head.

Baylor sat her for 10 days, Tina Stowers said, but about a week after she returned, she looked tired. After an early October game, Tina and Don spoke to the trainers.

“So they were like, ‘You know what? We’re just going to take you out of the gym for a little bit longer,'” Tina Stowers said. “And then she was shagging balls and she got hit by [a serve] probably going 70 mph. Hit her right in the back of the head.”

When Stowers played, she dominated. During her freshman season, she had double-digit kills in 12 of the 14 matches she played. She had 29 kills and 16 digs against SMU; she hit above .450 in three matches and was once named Big 12 offensive player of the week.

But she never played after that Oct. 6 game against Kansas State.

During a spring practice in February 2024, she got hit by a shanked ball. She was diagnosed with her fourth concussion.

Baylor coach Ryan McGuyre said the decision to medically retire her was difficult for him and the Stowers family to take.

“Both of us were frustrated about not being able to navigate forward or at least just wait longer and let it work itself out,” he said.


BACK HOME IN Denton, Stowers lifted weights and worked on her speed and explosiveness alongside football players. She served and swatted at volleyballs alone in her club gym. She did Fellowship of Christian Athletes camps, binge-watched some TV series and dog-sat to earn money. Her symptoms waned.

One of the biggest perks of being off for an entire autumn was that she was finally able to see her brother play football for Vanderbilt.

“On the weekends, I was going to all of his games,” she said, “which was really cool because I’ve never been able to do that ever because we’ve both been playing at the same time.”

Her mom lovingly called her “college dropout” during her stay back home.

During the 2024 NCAA volleyball tournament, she entered the transfer portal. She wasn’t sure what the market would hold for a 19-year-old outside hitter with an extensive concussion history. She was at church one day when an onslaught of calls and texts hit her phone. It was so intrusive that she had to activate the “Do Not Disturb” feature.

Texas A&M coach Jamie Morrison was among the many reaching out. The Aggies were coming off a 21-8 season that ended with a five-set loss to Wisconsin in the regional semifinals. They were returning a talented roster, but there was room for more. Soon, Stowers visited College Station. Her brother started his football career there before transferring to New Mexico State and then Vanderbilt, so she was familiar with some of the faces and the athletic department’s culture.

“But obviously meeting the volleyball staff and seeing what they were about in their program meant a lot to me,” she said. “So, yeah, fell in love with it and then committed two days later.”


MORRISON SAID HE had two priorities when Stowers arrived. He wanted to give her back the thing she loved — the ability to play volleyball. He said he was also committed to keeping her safe.

Stowers wasn’t just working out during her time away from volleyball. She underwent concussion rehabilitation at the Andrews Institute in Plano, Texas, and received VOMS (Vestibular Ocular Motor Screening), which is a clinical assessment tool.

“When I moved home, I saw a ton of doctors in Dallas,” Stowers said, “a lot of very well-known neuropsychologists. Neurologists. Even some, like, general people, across every board that I could think of because I didn’t want to put myself at risk.

“I mean, my dad played football … my brother is about to go into the NFL. The world of concussions is not foreign to me, and I know obviously what that can lead to. So I didn’t want to put myself at risk by any means. Part of it was like, I want to get all of this evidence that I’m fine to continue playing, but I also want to make sure I’m good.”

She said that eventually, the lingering concussion symptoms she’d experienced at Baylor were gone, and she was cleared to continue playing volleyball by her personal doctors.

“I would never have put my daughter back out on a court if I thought it was not safe for her,” Tina Stowers said. “We definitely got plenty of clearance from a lot of people that know better than I do. And then it just kind of worked out.”

Morrison said A&M’s medical staff pored through all of her medical records, which accounted for about 60 hours of work. One of the conditions he set for Stowers to play was that she wore a Q-Collar, a horseshoe-shaped safety device that is worn around the neck and has been cleared by the FDA.

Dr. Julian Bailes, a renowned neurosurgeon and concussions expert who was part of the research and development of the Q-Collar, said the device has a spring inside that compresses the jugular.

“And what that does,” he said, “it puts a little more blood in the cranium, which reduces the ability of the brain to move or slosh around. …

“If you get hit on the head by any mechanism, if the brain doesn’t move, it doesn’t get injured. It’s the movement of the brain that creates brain injury, whether it’s concussion or, you know, major injury in a car accident or a fall, something like that.”

Though the device, which has become common in the NFL, has its skeptics, most everyone agrees that more research on concussion prevention needs to be done.

Stowers said she has worn the Q-Collar all season, and has been hit in the head occasionally. That’s going to happen to everyone, she said. But she hasn’t sustained another concussion, and doesn’t worry about getting hit in the head.

“I’ve been perfectly fine,” she said.


IT HAS BEEN a busy December for the Stowers family. Eli won the John Mackey Award, which is given to the nation’s top tight end, and the William V. Campbell Trophy, which honors the top scholar-athlete.

The family has jet-setted to New York and Las Vegas for Eli’s awards, then watched Kyndal play in the postseason in between. Sometimes it’s hard to remember what time zone they’re in — or where they are.

Texas A&M came back from two games down last weekend to knock off No. 2-seeded Louisville, then had the gumption to cancel the plans of thousands of Nebraskans who were supposed to flock three hours south to see their undefeated team hoist the trophy.

“Zero surprise to me what she’s doing,” said Baylor’s McGuyre, who has known Stowers since she was in junior high. “I’m really excited for her. My wife was the first to tell her, ‘Hey, if you don’t feel like you’re done playing, go play. You’ll flourish.’

“We were cheering super, super loud in that Nebraska match. Seeing her do what she did just kind of is another sucker punch to the gut a little bit, like, ‘Oh, what if?’ But I think both families still believe there’s a purpose and plan in this life. … I believe in over-comers. I wouldn’t be [talking] if I didn’t believe she’s something special.”

The Stowers family will be there Thursday to watch Kyndal try to do what seemed impossible 12 months ago. And if the Aggies beat Pitt, Eli hopes to make it to Sunday’s championship game.

On Tuesday, Kyndal, who was scrambling to pack for Kansas City, paused for a moment to reflect on the Aggies’ postseason run. She felt as if she fit in seamlessly when she arrived in College Station, that she was around like-minded teammates with the perfect measure of confidence and goofiness.

Nobody has time to worry about the heaviness of the moment.

“[Last year] I was sitting at home on my couch watching all these games being played,” she said.

“I believe that that’s where the Lord had me. And I was like, ‘This is a really cool story. God, if you want me to come out of this, how dope would that be?’ I mean, being medically retired, and now we’re here? It’s surreal.”



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