Track and field state finals recap
A recap and some of the outstanding performances from the outdoor track and field championships.
A recap and some of the outstanding performances from the outdoor track and field championships.
Track and field state finals recap Updated: 11:18 PM EDT Jun 10, 2025 GLENBURN ELEMENTARY. HIGH SCHOOL SPRING SPORTS TOURNAMENTS ROLLED ON TODAY WITH HIGH SCHOOL TRACK AND FIELD TAKING CENTER STAGE. ANXIOUS ATHLETES HAD TO WAIT AN EXTRA THREE DAYS TO COMPETE DUE TO RAIN ON SATURDAY. THE CLASS A MEET TOOK PLACE AT […]
Track and field state finals recap
GLENBURN ELEMENTARY. HIGH SCHOOL SPRING SPORTS TOURNAMENTS ROLLED ON TODAY WITH HIGH SCHOOL TRACK AND FIELD TAKING CENTER STAGE. ANXIOUS ATHLETES HAD TO WAIT AN EXTRA THREE DAYS TO COMPETE DUE TO RAIN ON SATURDAY. THE CLASS A MEET TOOK PLACE AT LEWISTON AND BLUE DEVILS SENIOR RYKER PARADIS PARADIS HAD A GREAT DAY. HE WON BOTH THE BOYS SHOT PUT AND DISCUS EVENTS. SOUTH PORTLAND’S ARNAUD SIOHO WHO HAS BATTLED INJURY FOR MOST OF THE SEASON, WON THE LONG JUMP AND TRIPLE JUMP EVENTS. CARTER ENGLEMAN OF WINDHAM ALSO WON MULTIPLE EVENTS. HE TIED FOR FIRST IN THE POLE VAULT AND WON THE 110 METER HURDLES. ANDRE CLARK WON THE 100 AND 200 METER DASHES AND HELPED MARSHWOOD SET A RECORD IN THE 4 BY 100 METER RELAY. ALI CARTER OF FALMOUTH WON THE 400 METER DASH AND ANTOINE DUBE OF GORHAM WON THE 300 METER HURDLES. ON THE GIRLS SIDE, CASSIDY HARDY OF MOUNT BLUE WAS SEEDED THIRD IN THE JAVELIN BUT WON WITH HER BEST THROW OF THE SEASON. TAYLA PELLETIER OF WINDHAM WON THE TRIPLE JUMP BY NEARLY THREE FEET OVER THE NEXT COMPETITOR. ON THE TRACK, JENNI FLYNN OF LEWISTON EDGED ANNELIESE COLLIN OF PORTLAND IN THE 100 METER HURDLES, BUT COLLIN CAME BACK AN HOUR LATER TO WIN THE 300 METER HURDLES. EMERSON FLAKER FROM SCARBOROUGH SPRINTED HER WAY TO WINNING THE 200 AND 400 METER DASHES AND HER TEAMMATE LAUREL DRISCOLL WON THE 16 HUNDRED METERS. THE BANGOR GIRLS AND SOUTH PORTLAND BOYS ARE LEADING THE TEAM SCORES. BUT DUE TO WET CONDITIONS NEAR THE HIGH JUMP AREA THAT EVENT DID NOT TAKE PLACE AND WILL BE TOMORROW AT EDWARD LITTLE HIGH SCHOOL STARTING AT TWO. THE CLASS B MEET TOOK PLACE IN BAR HARBOR. VICTORIA ZANDAN OF GREELY WINS THE GIRLS 100 METER HURDLES AND ALSO WON THE LONG JUMP. STEPHEN PIERRE FROM LEAVITT WOULD WIN THE BOYS RACE AND ALSO WIN THE LONG JUMP TITLE. IN THE GIRLS 100 METER DASH, AVERY BARITEAU OF FRYEBURG ACADEMY WON IN 12 POINT SIX NINE SECONDS. HISTORY WAS MADE IN THE GIRLS 16 HUNDRED METERS. SHEALYN BROCHU OF MORSE SET A NEW STATE RECORD. SAM LAVARDIERE OF LAKE REGION PULLED AWAY TO WIN THE BOYS RACE. GREELY WON THE BOYS AND GIRLS TEAM TITLES. THE CLASS C MEET TOOK PLACE AT MESSALONSKEE HIGH SCHOOL IN OAKLAND. BUCKSPORT’S HALEY ROSE WINS THE GIRLS 200 METER DASH. GEORGE STEVENS ACADEMY WENT ONE TWO IN THE BOYS RACE WITH ROWAN GAGNE TAKING FIRST. LISBON’S JACOB ROBERTSON WAS THIRD. TEANNE EWINGS OF HOULTON WON THE GIRLS 32 HUNDRED METER RACE BY NEARLY 45 SECONDS. THE BOYS RACE WAS MUCH CLOSER WITH BEN ARSENAULT OF ORONO BEATING OUT DESMOND ROBINSON OF CARRABEC
Track and field state finals recap
A recap and some of the outstanding performances from the outdoor track and field championships.
A recap and some of the outstanding performances from the outdoor track and field championships.
SALT LAKE CITY – McKaylie Caesar and Morgan Jensen of Utah track & field officially earned honorable mention accolades from the United Sates Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). In their final collegiate race, both Caesar and Jensen went out with honorable mention distinction in their first-ever appearance at NCAA Championships. […]
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LEWISBURG, Pa.- Bucknell track & field and cross country head coach Kevin Donner announced the addition of 44 student-athletes to the 2024-25 rosters. The Bison welcome 21 new members for the men’s team and 23 for the women’s squad. “We are very happy with the quality of the incoming class,” said Donner. “This class has […]
LEWISBURG, Pa.- Bucknell track & field and cross country head coach Kevin Donner announced the addition of 44 student-athletes to the 2024-25 rosters. The Bison welcome 21 new members for the men’s team and 23 for the women’s squad.
“We are very happy with the quality of the incoming class,” said Donner. “This class has a few athletes from each gender who should be able to help us immediately, as well as others who will assist us in the future as they gain experience. We were able to strengthen areas that needed reinforcement and enhance some areas that were already strong. I have learned over the years that you do not evaluate a recruiting class until the second semester of the sophomore year, because a lot can happen for better or worse. However, on paper, we are very pleased and look forward to welcoming these student-athletes to campus. Our Assistant Coaches put in a lot of time and effort into this class and I want to thank them for their efforts and hard work.”
The Bison men’s track & field squad placed fourth at the Patriot League Indoor and Outdoor Championships during the 2024-25 campaigns. Wade Shomper headlined the efforts by becoming the school record holder in the indoor and outdoor shot put. The program is full of youth and promising talent and this newest class reinforces the ranks, as the Orange & Blue prep for return to the PL’s top three.
The squad set 29 top-ten marks in the all-time lists, 17 more than in 2024-25, combined with Shomper’s two school records.
Owen Allen
Ponaganset High School, RI
Top Marks: 25LB weight throw 69-1.5, hammer 12LB 222-1, hammer 16LB 177-0
Colin Burke
Christian Brothers Academy, NJ
Top Marks: 400m 49.74, high jump 6-2
Nicholas Bouril
St. John Paul the Great High School, Va.
Top Mark: 400m 49.03
Julius Catuogno
Midland Park High School, NJ
Top Mark: javelin, 172-3
Michael Devine
Union Catholic High School, NJ
Top Marks: mile 4:24.58, 3200m 9:25.78
Adam Dicken
Plymouth Canton High School, Mi.
Top Marks: 1600m 4:20.21, 800m 1:54.41
Ethan Fianko
Christian Brothers Academy, NJ
Top Mark: 400m 48.99
Eamon Golden
Rumson-Fair Haven High School, NJ
Top Marks: 400 hurdles 55.94
Cooper Hollinger
Warwick High School, Pa.
Top Marks: mile 4:11.10, 3200m 9:09.06
Aidan Karson
Berkshire High School, Mass.
Top Marks: high jump 6-3.5, long jump 21-11.5
Colin Krause
Pascack Valley High School, NJ
Top Mark: javelin 180-11
Owen Little
St. Francis DeSales High School, Ohio
Top Marks: 800m 1:56.58, 1600m 4:14.008
David Loew
Hunterdon Central High School, NJ
Top Mark: shot put 52-4.5
Joel Langdon
Milton Area High School, Pa.
Top Marks: high jump 6-6, triple jump 44-4.75, 110 high hurdles 14.83
Ronald Morgan
Morristown High School, NJ
Top Marks: javelin 179-4, shot put 54-7.5
Alex Napolitano
Bronxville High School, NY
Top Marks: 25LB weight throw 63-3, hammer 12LB 188-5
Logan Newman
East Pennsboro Area, Pa.
Top Marks: discus 169-9, shot put 56-2.5
Ryan Pepperman
Great Valley High School, Pa.
Top Marks: 1600m 4:21.63, 3200m 9:21.76
Alex Polenik
Penn Manor High School, Pa.
Top Marks: discus 183-4, shot put 56-10.5
Colin Ruether
Strath Haven High School, Pa.
Top Mark: 800m 1:54.46
Andre Williams
Millville High School, NJ
Top Marks: 400m hurdles 56.25, 400m 50.08
The Bison women repeated fourth place at the Patriot League Indoor and Outdoor Championships during the 2024-25 season. Despite losing a decorated senior class, the squadron set multiple school records and numerous top-ten marks, and prepared the program for a return to the Patriot League’s top three in the upcoming seasons. The team collected 32 top-ten marks in 2024-25, an increase of 13 from the previous season, while setting four team records.
Evelyn Bliss defended her Patriot League javelin title and repeated as Second Team All-American at the NCAA National Championships. The sophomore sensation will compete at the FISU World Games and USATF National Championships later this summer.
Freshman sprinter Alexandra Lea delivered a performance for the ages at the Patriot League Outdoor Championships. Lea won the 200 and 400-meter dashes, setting the school record in both events and the meet record in the latter.
Junior javelin thrower Brylee Tereska qualified for her third straight NCAA East First Round where she finished a career-best 17th at the event.
Gentry Bowie
Northern-Calvert High School, Md.
Top Marks: 800m 2:18.01, 1600m 5:02.90, 3200m 11:04.29
Sarah Bronson
Athens High School, Pa.
Top Marks: 800m 2:20.01, 1600m 5:03.53, 3200m 11:13.44
Grace Camerlingo
Clarkstown South High School, NY
Top Marks: 100m 12.39, 200m 25.78, 400m 57.02
Frances Clulow
Athenian High School, Calif.
Top Marks: 1600m 5:26.74, 3200m 11:40.81
Sophia Douglas
Somerville High School, NJ
Top Marks: 1600m 5:14.46, 3200m 11:01.87
Allison DeMatt
Hempfield High School, Pa.
Top Marks: long jump 17-4.5, triple jump 37-5.5, high jump 5-2
Natalie Dill
Great Valley High School, Pa.
Top Marks: mile 5:13.64, 3200m 11:23.17
Caitlin Fritz
Centennial High School, Md.
Top Mark: 1600m 5:19.97
Kate Harnish
Penn Manor High School, Pa.
Top Marks: pole vault 12-5, long jump 18-3.5
Madeline Kerr
Montrose High School, Mass.
Top Marks: 800m 2:15.85, 1500m 4:44.35
Liv Kopitsky
Mount Carmel Area High School, Pa.
Top Marks: discus 128-1, shot put 39-11
Anna Kylish
Westfield High School, NJ
Top Marks: 800m 2:16.55, 1600m 5:12.19
Raygan Lust
Warrior Run High School, Pa.
Top Marks: 200m 26.14, 400m 56.66, 800m 2:18.73
Ella McCrum
Juniata Valley High School, Pa.
Top Marks: 800m 2:18.66, 1600m 5:03.75, 3200m 11:17.07
Jordan Muraglia
Point Pleasant Boro High School, NJ
Top Marks: long jump 19-2, 100m 11.98, 200m 24.90
Giana Piloto
IMG Academy, Fla.
Top Marks: 400m 59.46
Piper Portacio
Immaculate Heart Academy, NJ.
Top Marks: 100m 11.98, 200m 24.74, 400m 56.09
Juliette Reed
Ethical Culture Fieldston School, NY
Top Marks: 100m 12.25, 200m 25.34, 400m 57.68
Alicia Scali
Monroe Woodbury High School, NY
Top Marks: 800m 2:21.78, 1500m 4:52.98
Emilia Smith
Winnetka High School, Ill.
Top Marks: long jump 18-1.25, triple jump 38-6.25, 400m 58.03
Anne Sehon
Mercersburg Academy High School, Pa.
Top Marks: 800m 2:18.76, 1600m 5:21.39
Hannah Stoss
Wyoming Area High School, Pa.
Top Marks: 800m 2:18.87
Julia Sobilo
Immaculate Heart Academy High School, NJ
Top Mark: discus 138-9
The Bucknell track & field teams will return to action this December at the traditional Bison Opener.
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Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.
Speedo Sectionals finalist Riley Ogilvie has announced her commitment to swim for Cleveland State University starting in the fall of 2025.
“I’m so excited to finally announce my verbal commitment to continue my academic and athletic career by joining the D1 swim team at Cleveland State University! I would like to thank all of my family, friends, teammates, and coaches that have supported me throughout my journey! A special thank you to Coach Trent for believing in me and providing this amazing opportunity! GO VIKES!”
The California native wrapped up her senior year at Ayala High School in Chino Hills and was a member of the varsity swim and dive team all four years. A versatile threat in the water, Ogilvie currently trains year-round with the Mission Viejo Nadadores, where she excels at freestyle, backstroke and IM.
Ogilvie enjoyed a tremendous weekend of racing at the 2025 Oceanside Sectionals, posting a series of lifetime best performances. She placed 13th in both the 1000 free (10:25.47) and the 400 IM (4:28.01), setting new personal best times in both. She also took 13th in the 500 free (5:02.74) after turning in a best time of 5:01.90 during prelims. Continuing her successful streak, Ogilvie finished 20th in the 200 back (2:05.70 – PB), 40th in the 200 IM (2:09.77) and 52nd in the 100 back (58.81 – PB).
At the CIF-SS Division 2 Championship in May, Ogilvie improved her 100 back time even further, throwing down a time of 58.70 to place 6th. She also registered a new lifetime best time of 27.33 in the 50 back as the leadoff on Ayala High School’s 200 medley relay, helping the team to a 12th-place finish overall. Additionally, she took 4th in the 500 free in 5:02.02 and helped her team to a 9th-place finish in the 400 free relay, splitting a time of 53.28 as the anchor leg.
Best Times SCY
A Division I Mid-Major program, the Cleveland State women took 3rd at the Horizon League Championships this past season. The Vikings had two individual champions at the meet: Giovanna Cappabianca (200 breast – 2:15.19) and Grace Chelf (50 free – 22.78), with Chelf set to be a senior next season.
Based on the results from the 2025 championship, Ogilvie would have landed in the ‘A’ final in the 400 IM and 500 free and in the ‘B’ final in the 200 free and 200 IM, setting her up to be a significant contributor for the Vikings right from the start.
In addition to swimming, Ogilvie played water polo for the Ayala Bulldogs this past season. Outside of the pool, she received her seal of biliteracy for four years of American Sign Language at the school, and she enjoys going to Glamis with her family to ride sand cars in the sand dunes.
Set to join Ogilvie in Cleveland this fall is Chelsea Burkhart, a South Carolina high school state champion. Burkhart also excels at free, breast and IM, meaning she should make for a strong training partner over the next four years.
If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to [email protected].
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Throughout the year, multiple NSW teams improved their record from a season ago, including a few going from losing seasons to conference or regional champions. Justin Cornwell gives us the nominees for the Most Improved Team here on NSW. This segment is presented by Grow Wellness. Naperville North boys golf We tee off the Most […]
Throughout the year, multiple NSW teams improved their record from a season ago, including a few going from losing seasons to conference or regional champions. Justin Cornwell gives us the nominees for the Most Improved Team here on NSW. This segment is presented by Grow Wellness.
We tee off the Most Improved list with a fall sport where local boys golf teams like Neuqua Valley, Waubonsie Valley, Naperville Central and Metea Valley have taken turns at the top of the DVC standings in recent years, while Naperville North has struggled to rise above the middle of the pack. In the fall of 2024, a young Husky squad made a strong push to win the conference and make a postseason run. While seniors Will Nelson, Dylan Kaiman and JT Schmitt made key contributions throughout the season, the underclassmen were the key to the Huskies’ improvement this fall. North went 4-1 in the DVC, including a win over eventual conference champion Neuqua Valley, only falling to Waubonsie Valley in a head-to-head showdown. At the regional meet, four Husky sophomores, Trevor Schmitt, Henry Haumesser, Lincoln Schultz and Colin Mills qualified for sectionals with fellow sophomore Zach Zafar and freshman Jack Fleury just missing the cut. With the entire regional roster returning for multiple seasons, Naperville North could soon emerge as the local team to beat.
Waubonsie Valley girls cross country had essentially become a one-person show in recent seasons with Lily Baibak being the lone Warrior you would see running near the leaders of the pack. This fall, the rest of the green and gold running roster made major strides throughout the season. Seniors Katie Beyers, Marissa Martin and Emely Galvez helped raise the floor while junior Katherine Heap, freshman Dhanya Shanmugasundaram and sophomore Mia Bertolini developed into forces to be reckoned with. Playing host at the regional meet, the Warriors finished in second place to perennial power Naperville North and qualified for sectionals as a team for the first time since 2018. Bairbak and Bertolini finished in top 10, along with Shanmugasundaram and Heap in the top 20. The following week at the Hinsdale Central 3A sectional, the Warriors made school history with a fourth-place team finish, qualifying for state for the first time ever. While Baibak and her fellow seniors are moving on, the Warriors should continue to be a program on the rise.
For our next nominee, we jump all the way to the spring with another Waubonsie Valley squad, the girls water polo team. The Warriors have had several strong seasons over the past five years, but their record dipped below .500 last year, and the team only secured one conference victory. This spring, the green and gold put things back in the right direction with a 14-win campaign and a second-place finish in the DVC, the best in program history. Waubonsie also defeated Naperville Central for the first time in well over a decade and earned the number two seed in the Naperville North sectional. Senior Ruby Meier was selected to the All-State fourth team. Veteran Calin Ball, goaltender Emma Buchenauer and underclassmen Reece Calvey and Hadley Vierck all played key roles in the turnaround. Despite falling in a 10-8 heartbreaker to Naperville Central in the sectional semis, Waubonsie girls water polo became an opponent to be reckoned with this spring.
Neuqua Valley girls soccer has a rich history with a state championship in 2005, a state runner-up finish in 2015, while consistently challenging for a conference title. 2024 was a rough year for the Wildcats who finished the year with only six victories and a 1-4 record in the DVC. The blue and gold flipped the script in 2025, winning 16 games and a share of the DVC championship. Neuqua defeated eventual state runner-up Naperville North in conference play and was the only team to defeat Naperville Central this season, winning their DVC matchup and eventually eliminating the Redhawks in the sectional semifinals. Senior Selma Larbi returned to the roster after playing club during her junior season, and made the All-DVC and All-Sectional teams along with Chloe Orlow, while midfielder Allessandra Russo was named All-State. Addison Gusky, Sydney Michalak, Alexis May, Alaina Chandola, and Safa Jeffery were all important contributors to the Wildcats earning another regional title. Despite a tough 2-1 loss to Naperville North in the sectional final, it was clear the Cats had their claws back this spring and appear well set to remain a state contender for years to come.
Like the Neuqua Valley girls soccer team, the blue and gold boys volleyball program has a proud history, earning third-place state trophies in 2007 and 2008 and finishing as the state runner-up in 2018. In 2024, the Neuqua boys only won 9 games, one of the roughest seasons in team history. Coach Erich Mendoza and his team entered 2025 eager to get things turned around. The Cats won 11 of their first 12 to start the year, showing immediate improvement that carried on throughout the season. Neuqua won the DVC championship and 27 games in total, the most since 2018. Chase Marston set a new program record for kills in a season while Dhruva Jasti set the single-season assists record. Veda Chebrolu, Liam Mitchell, Blake Thompson, Noah Cullen, and Vishwak Naramreddy each played major roles in Neuqua winning its first regional championship since 2019. The Wildcats saw their run end at the hands of powerhouse Glenbard West in the sectional semifinals, but proved their mettle throughout their turnaround campaign.
Waubonsie Valley boys tennis is unique compared to the other nominees as the Warriors are coming off back-to-back successful campaigns. However, this spring the Waubonsie boys took another step forward with one of the greatest seasons in program history. The Warriors went undefeated during the DVC regular season against tough opponents like Naperville North, Neuqua Valley, and Metea Valley and capped it off at the DVC tournament to win their first conference title in at least 15 years. Playing host for the 2A sectional, Waubonsie qualified both singles players and both doubles teams to state, surging past Neuqua Valley to win the sectional championship for the first time since 2015.
Junior Hector Diaz dazzled in singles play, taking first place in the conference and sectional meets. Senior Samayan Tayal went 24-3 playing two singles and finished in second at sectionals. Revanth Kothapalli and Ishan Suresh Kumar swept the DVC and sectional doubles titles while freshmen Krish Dave and Kavin Sivapunniyam had strong debut seasons, finishing in fourth at sectionals. Legendary head coach Phil Galow, who has led the program since 1982, then saw his boys earn the best team finish in history, ending the state meet in ninth place. Tayal is the only graduate in the main varsity rotation, so there is a chance the green and gold can build on this historic season in 2026.
The winner of the most improved team is Neuqua Valley girls soccer! The Wildcats improved their win total by 10 games and home DVC and regional titles!
For more prep sports content, visit our Naperville Sports Weekly page!
By John Frierson Staff Writer Aaliyah Butler already had the two big things she wanted at last week’s NCAA Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Championships, the individual 400-meter national title and the team title for the Georgia women. The last prize, in the event’s final race Saturday night, she wanted that for her 4×400 relay […]
Aaliyah Butler already had the two big things she wanted at last week’s NCAA Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Championships, the individual 400-meter national title and the team title for the Georgia women. The last prize, in the event’s final race Saturday night, she wanted that for her 4×400 relay teammates.
The Bulldogs had an insurmountable lead in the team competition heading into the final relay at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore., and Georgia’s 4×400 quartet of Butler, Michelle Smith, Dejanea Oakley and Sydney Harris could have taken four victory laps. Instead, the four sprinted their way to another national championship with a time of 3:23.62.
“Knowing that we already had (the team title) in the bag, and knowing that we didn’t have to score points at all to win the (team) championship, we still had other teammates on the relay that we knew could win,” said Butler, who made the U.S. Olympic team last summer on that same track. “Just giving them a chance to be a national champion individually was good.”
Before the final race, Georgia Director of Track & Field Caryl Smith Gilbert gave the racers the chance to select the order in which they ran. She wanted them to decide how they closed out the program’s first NCAA Outdoor team title.
“I said, ‘You know what, guys, I trust you,'” Smith Gilbert said.
That trust was rewarded as Oakley, Smith, Harris and then Butler sprinted to the fastest time in school history and the eighth-fastest collegiate time ever.
“I thought it’s a great order if they decide to really run,” assistant coach Karim Abdel Wahab said. “Sometimes you don’t know how motivated they are, because they’d already won the national championship. So the incredible thing is that they all ran really well and broke the school record and won the national championship.”
“Just going out there knowing you’re a national champion as a team, I think really brought the energy towards the (4×400), which then we were able to go and win,” Harris said, adding, “I would say be able to run free was one of the biggest things. I think that really helped us win.”
At the end of the meet, Georgia finished with 73 points, well ahead of second-place USC’s 47.
Butler entered Saturday’s individual 400 final as the favorite, having posted the fastest time in the country this spring. In fact, heading into the final, she was the only woman to break 50 seconds this year. She was soon joined by a teammate in the sub-50 category.
Butler won the 400 title by lowering her school record to 49.26, and Oakley took second place with a time of 49.65. Between the two of them, they have the five fastest 400 times in the country this year and seven of the top 10.
“She’s grown a lot, and she cares about the team,” Smith Gilbert said of Butler. “She was the one at SECs who said ‘It is time to win, guys.’ She doesn’t talk a lot, hardly ever, so when she talks, it means something.”
At the SEC Outdoor meet, Butler also won the 400 and helped the women capture their first conference title since 2006. Georgia’s women won three individual titles at the SEC Outdoors — Butler, Lianna Davidson in the javelin and Stephanie Ratcliffe in the hammer throw — and then won four titles at the NCAA Outdoors. Along with Butler’s 400 title and the 4×400 title, Ratcliffe won the hammer and high jumper Elena Kulichenko won her third straight (two outdoor, one indoor) NCAA title.
While coaching the USC women, Smith Gilbert won NCAA Outdoor titles in 2018 and 2021. She said this one was different.
“I feel more happy,” she said.
Why?
“Because the whole team did it,” she said.
For Smith, who placed third in the 400 hurdles, she said the whole experience at the meet was special.
“From start to finish, it wasn’t real,” Smith said. “It was pretty cool because I got to spend all that time with my teammates, and we worked so hard to get to this point.”
Georgia’s track national championship was the athletic department’s fourth in 2025. The women’s tennis team won the ITA National Indoor Championships in February and followed that with a dominating run through the NCAA tournament in May. In April, Georgia’s equestrian team also captured the program’s eighth NCEA national championship.
The four team titles won in 2025 match the bountiful spring of 1999, when women’s swimming, gymnastics, men’s golf and men’s tennis all won NCAA championships. Overall, Georgia has now won 52 team national championships, tied for second in SEC history.
Assistant Sports Communications Director John Frierson is the staff writer for the UGA Athletic Association and curator of the ITA Men’s Tennis Hall of Fame. You can find his work at: Frierson Files.
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