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When Is The 2025 NCAA Track And Field National Championship?

The 2025 track and field season is coming to a close, and the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships are just around the corner. The top collegiate athletes from across the country will head to Eugene, Oregon, to compete at Hayward Field—one of the most iconic venues in the sport.  With qualifying […]

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The 2025 track and field season is coming to a close, and the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships are just around the corner.

The top collegiate athletes from across the country will head to Eugene, Oregon, to compete at Hayward Field—one of the most iconic venues in the sport. 

With qualifying now complete, see who advanced from each regional meet and check out the full list of athletes set to compete for a national title.

When Is The NCAA Track And Field Championship?

The Division I Track and Field Championships will begin on Wednesday, June 11 and end on Saturday, June 14. 

Where Are The D1 Track And Field Championships?

The NCAA National Championship will be hosted by the University of Oregon and take place at Hayward Field in Eugene.

Who’s Competing?

While the final list of competitors will be announced on June 3, here’s who has accepted their spot so far with their school and qualifying time or score. 

Women’s 100 Meter Dash 

  1. Shenese Walker – Florida State – 10.98
  2. Leah Bertrand – Ohio State – 10.99
  3. Dajaz Defrand – USC – 11.00
  4. JaMeesia Ford – South Carolina – 11.00
  5. Joella Lloyd – Florida State – 11.01
  6. Anthaya Charlton – Florida – 11.01
  7. Victoria Cameron – Tarleton State – 11.01
  8. Samirah Moody – USC – 11.02
  9. Jasmine Montgomery – Texas A&M – 11.02
  10. Brianna Selby – USC – 11.03
  11. Jassani Carter – USC – 11.06
  12. Jade Brown – Arizona – 11.07
  13. Cynteria James – South Carolina – 11.07
  14. Alicia Burnett – Missouri – 11.10
  15. Tima Godbless – LSU – 11.11
  16. Aniyah Kitt – Clemson – 11.12
  17. Iyana Gray – TCU – 11.14
  18. Kelly Ufodiama – East Carolina – 11.15
  19. Indya Mayberry – TCU – 11.15
  20. London Tucker – TCU – 11.17
  21. Camryn Dickson – Texas A&M – 11.17
  22. Kaila Jackson – Georgia – 11.17
  23. Kailei Collins – Howard – 11.21
  24. Reign Redmond – Georgia – 11.24

Women’s 200 Meter Dash

  1. Madison Whyte – USC – 22.16
  2. Jasmine Montgomery – Texas A&M – 22.26
  3. JaMeesia Ford – South Carolina – 22.27
  4. Indya Mayberry – TCU – 22.30
  5. Dajaz Defrand – USC – 22.33
  6. Jassani Carter – USC – 22.52
  7. Kelly Ufodiama – East Carolina – 22.54
  8. Tiriah Kelley – Baylor – 22.58
  9. Kenondra Davis – Texas – 22.58
  10. Taylor Snaer – UCLA – 22.64
  11. Tima Godbless – LSU – 22.68
  12. Camryn Dickson – Texas A&M – 22.69
  13. Leah Bertrand – Ohio State – 22.71
  14. Cynteria James – South Carolina – 22.72
  15. Jayla Jamison – South Carolina – 22.77
  16. Fatouma Conde – Ohio State – 22.78
  17. Kya Epps – Cincinnati – 22.82
  18. Holly Okuku – Texas – 22.85
  19. Samirah Moody – USC – 22.86
  20. Gabrielle Matthews – Florida – 22.87
  21. Iaunia Pointer – Syracuse – 22.90
  22. Naomi Johnson – UCLA – 22.94
  23. Precious Nzeakor – Alabama – 23.03
  24. Aniyah Bigam – LSU – 23.07

Women’s 400 Meter Run

  1. Michaela Rose, LSU – 1:58.91
  2. Meghan Hunter, BYU – 1:58.95
  3. Gladys Chepngetich, Clemson – 1:59.47
  4. Makayla Paige, North Carolina – 1:59.73
  5. Roisin Willis, Stanford – 1:59.81
  6. Smilla Kolbe, North Florida – 2:00.09
  7. Lauren Tolbert, Duke – 2:00.27
  8. Janet Jepkemboi Amimo, Kentucky – 2:00.36
  9. Sophia Gorriaran, Harvard – 2:00.46
  10. Veronica Hargrave, Indiana – 2:00.51
  11. Laura Pellicoro, Portland – 2:01.44
  12. Alli Bookin-Nosbisch, Iowa – 2:01.70
  13. Emma Sullivan, Kennesaw State – 2:01.71
  14. Makayla Clark, Iowa State – 2:01.75
  15. Victoria Bossong, Harvard – 2:01.83
  16. Emma Kelley, Wisconsin – 2:01.87
  17. Kaylie Politza, Oklahoma State – 2:02.04
  18. Jenna Schwinghamer, Kentucky – 2:02.38
  19. Tessa Buswell, BYU – 2:02.54
  20. Fanny Arendt, Texas Tech – 2:02.63
  21. Aaliyah Moore, Kansas – 2:02.87
  22. Marie Warneke, UCLA – 2:02.93
  23. Sanu Jallow, Arkansas – 2:03.16
  24. Maeve O’Neill, Providence – 2:03.44

Women’s 800 Meter Run 

  1. Michaela Rose – LSU – 1:58.91
  2. Meghan Hunter – BYU – 1:58.95
  3. Gladys Chepngetich – Clemson – 1:59.47
  4. Makayla Paige – North Carolina – 1:59.73
  5. Roisin Willis – Stanford – 1:59.81
  6. Smilla Kolbe – North Florida – 2:00.09
  7. Lauren Tolbert – Duke – 2:00.27
  8. Janet Jepkemboi Amimo – Kentucky – 2:00.36
  9. Sophia Gorriaran – Harvard – 2:00.46
  10. Veronica Hargrave – Indiana – 2:00.51
  11. Laura Pellicoro – Portland – 2:01.44
  12. Alli Bookin-Nosbisch – Iowa – 2:01.70
  13. Emma Sullivan – Kennesaw State – 2:01.71
  14. Makayla Clark – Iowa State – 2:01.75
  15. Victoria Bossong – Harvard – 2:01.83
  16. Emma Kelley – Wisconsin – 2:01.87
  17. Kaylie Politza – Oklahoma State – 2:02.04
  18. Jenna Schwinghamer – Kentucky – 2:02.38
  19. Tessa Buswell – BYU – 2:02.54
  20. Fanny Arendt – Texas Tech – 2:02.63
  21. Aaliyah Moore – Kansas – 2:02.87
  22. Marie Warneke – UCLA – 2:02.93
  23. Sanu Jallow – Arkansas – 2:03.16
  24. Maeve O’Neill – Providence – 2:03.44

Women’s 1500 Meter Run

  1. Shannon Flockhart, Providence – 4:04.97
  2. Bahiya El Arfaoui, Eastern Kentucky – 4:05.20
  3. Silvia Jelelgo, Clemson – 4:05.68
  4. Maggi Congdon, Northern Arizona – 4:05.73
  5. Kimberley May, Providence – 4:06.31
  6. Klaudia Kazimierska, Oregon – 4:06.53
  7. Silan Ayyildiz, Oregon – 4:06.61
  8. Chloe Foerster, Washington – 4:06.74
  9. Vera Sjoberg, Boston University – 4:07.39
  10. Carlee Hansen, BYU – 4:07.64
  11. Margot Appleton, Virginia – 4:08.04
  12. Sophie O’Sullivan, Washington – 4:08.21
  13. Mena Scatchard, Princeton – 4:08.34
  14. Salma Elbadra, South Carolina – 4:08.35
  15. Riley Chamberlain, BYU – 4:08.42
  16. Judy Rono, New Mexico – 4:09.07
  17. Allie Zealand, Liberty – 4:09.76
  18. Lindsey Butler, Virginia Tech – 4:10.32
  19. Amina Maatoug, Washington – 4:10.34
  20. Taryn Parks, North Carolina – 4:10.77
  21. Mia Barnett, Oregon – 4:10.88
  22. Charlotte Tomkinson, Georgetown – 4:10.92
  23. Berlyn Schutz, Nebraska – 4:11.01
  24. Kaiya Robertson, Boise State – 4:11.38

Women’s 5000 Meter Run

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

Women’s 10000 Meter Run

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

Women’s 100 Meter Hurdles

  1. Aaliyah McCormick – Oregon – 12.74
  2. Habiba Harris – Florida – 12.80
  3. Ana-Liese Torian – Auburn – 12.81
  4. Yanla Ndjip-Nyemeck – UCLA – 12.82
  5. Jaiya Covington – Texas A&M – 12.87
  6. Myreanna Bebe – Tennessee – 12.89
  7. Marissa Simpson – UTEP – 12.90
  8. Emmi Scales – Kentucky – 12.93
  9. Janela Spencer – Ohio State – 12.94
  10. Kiara Smith – Tennessee – 12.94
  11. Adaobi Tabugbo – UCF – 12.95
  12. Akala Garrett – Texas – 12.98
  13. Marcia Sey – Howard – 12.99
  14. Destiny Smith – Texas Tech – 13.01
  15. Oneka Wilson – Clemson – 13.04
  16. Rachel Mehringer – Indiana State – 13.08
  17. Celeste Polzonetti – UCLA – 13.08
  18. Amari Kiluvia – TCU – 13.09
  19. Tonie-Ann Forbes – Texas Tech – 13.11
  20. Falon Spearman – Vanderbilt – 13.13
  21. Simone Ballard – Arkansas – 13.14
  22. Sky Hagan – San Jose State – 13.14
  23. Camden Bentley – Kentucky – 13.14
  24. Shania Myers – Arkansas – 13.15

Women’s 400 Meter Hurdles

  1. Savannah Sutherland – Michigan – 54.39
  2. Akala Garrett – Texas – 54.72
  3. Michelle Smith – Georgia – 55.25
  4. Sanaa Hebron – Miami (Fla.) – 55.47
  5. Tyra Wilson – Florida State – 55.63
  6. Allyria McBride – Vanderbilt – 55.65
  7. Calisha Taylor – Baylor – 55.94
  8. Amelliah Birdow – TCU – 55.96
  9. Aniya Woodruff – Howard – 56.12
  10. Safhia Hinds – Kansas State – 56.34
  11. Aliya Garozzo – Duke – 56.46
  12. Jessicka Woods – Mississippi State – 56.48
  13. Braelyn Baker – Duke – 56.48
  14. Chloe Fair – Harvard – 56.49
  15. LiNay Perry – Northern Arizona – 56.70
  16. Jenna James – Oklahoma – 56.71
  17. Jourdin Edwards – Kansas State – 56.73
  18. Tia Williams – TCU – 56.74
  19. Loubna Benhadja – UTEP – 56.77
  20. Dyandra Gray – Minnesota – 56.86
  21. Natalie Block – Milwaukee – 56.95
  22. Yasmeen Tinsley – Monmouth – 56.97
  23. Mackenzie Collins – Texas – 57.14
  24. Macaela Walker – Cincinnati – 57.16

Women’s 3000 Meter Steeplechase

  1. Doris Lemngole – Alabama – 9:13.12
  2. Lexy Halladay-Lowry – BYU – 9:23.03
  3. Angelina Napoleon – NC State – 9:37.42
  4. Karrie Baloga – Northern Arizona – 9:40.13
  5. Sarah Tait – West Virginia – 9:42.14
  6. Debora Cherono – Texas A&M – 9:42.55
  7. Taylor Lovell – BYU – 9:42.83
  8. Katelyn Stewart-Barnett – Michigan State – 9:47.15
  9. Sydney Masciarelli – North Carolina – 9:48.12
  10. Layla Roebke – Louisville – 9:49.08
  11. Maggie Liebich – Washington – 9:53.74
  12. Emily Paupore – Central Michigan – 9:53.89
  13. Hanna Ackermann – Boise State – 9:54.40
  14. Madaline Ullom – Penn State – 9:54.42
  15. Molly Malague – Harvard – 9:56.92
  16. Sophia McDonnell – New Mexico – 9:57.14
  17. Kennady Fontenot – Texas A&M – 9:58.13
  18. Leah Jeruto – Oklahoma – 9:58.74
  19. Nelly Jemeli – Mississippi State – 9:59.39
  20. Shelby Jensen – Utah State – 10:00.46
  21. Gwenno Goode – La Salle – 10:01.65
  22. Ebba Cronholm – Kansas – 10:01.90
  23. Katja Pattis – Idaho – 10:02.04
  24. Brooke Mullins – Florida State – 10:05.48

Women’s High Jump

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

Women’s Pole Vault

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

Women’s Long Jump

  1. Alexis Brown – Baylor – 6.94m
  2. Prestina Ochonogor – Tarleton State – 6.66m
  3. Alyssa Jones – Stanford – 6.65m
  4. Synclair Savage – Louisville – 6.64m
  5. Tacoria Humphrey – Illinois – 6.63m
  6. Janae De Gannes – Baylor – 6.58m
  7. Sophia Beckmon – Illinois – 6.56m
  8. Imani Moore – Georgia Southern – 6.54m
  9. Anthaya Charlton – Florida – 6.52m
  10. Aaliyah Foster – Texas – 6.44m
  11. Hailey Coey – Montana State – 6.44m
  12. Shalom Olotu – Kansas State – 6.44m
  13. Mariia Horielova – Alabama – 6.43m
  14. Jenica Bosko – Arizona – 6.42m
  15. Alyssa Banales – Florida – 6.41m
  16. Sydney Johnson – UCLA – 6.38m
  17. Funminiyi Olajide – Arkansas – 6.36m
  18. Georgina Scoot – Princeton – 6.32m
  19. Marta Amani – Harvard – 6.30m
  20. Paige Floriea – Rutgers – 6.22m
  21. Molly Wise – Richmond – 6.18m
  22. Ella Scally – Miami (Ohio) – 6.17m
  23. Julia Sue-Kam-Ling – Jacksonville – 6.15m
  24. Mariama Hunt – NC State – 6.11m

Women’s Triple Jump

  1. Shantae Foreman – Clemson – 14.01m
  2. Winny Bii – Texas A&M – 14.00m
  3. Victoria Gorlova – Texas Tech – 13.99m
  4. Daniela Wamokpego – Iowa – 13.67m
  5. Agur Dwol – Oklahoma – 13.65m
  6. Simone Johnson – San Jose State – 13.63m
  7. Tamiah Washington – Texas Tech – 13.54m
  8. Katharina Graman – San Jose State – 13.50m
  9. Emilia Sjostrand – San Jose State – 13.49m
  10. Skylynn Townsend – Georgia – 13.48m
  11. Ashley Moore – Oklahoma – 13.48m
  12. Rachela Pace – UTSA – 13.46m
  13. Shalom Olotu – Kansas State – 13.45m
  14. Ryann Porter – Oregon – 13.42m
  15. Asia Phillips – Florida – 13.29m
  16. Machaeda Linton – LSU – 13.25m
  17. Olivia Dowd – North Carolina A&T – 13.22m
  18. Sophie Galloway – Kentucky – 13.08m
  19. Cameran Gist – South Carolina – 13.07m
  20. Georgina Scoot – Princeton – 13.04m
  21. Jada Joseph – Brown – 13.01m
  22. Kayla Pinkard – Florida State – 13.01m
  23. Sharvari Parulekar – Louisville – 12.93m
  24. Christina Warren – Miami (Fla.) – 12.93m

Women’s Shot Put

  1. Mya Lesnar – Colorado State – 18.50m
  2. Gracelyn Leiseth – Florida – 18.31m
  3. Akaoma Odeluga – Ole Miss – 18.24m
  4. Jayden Ulrich – Louisville – 17.97m
  5. Kalynn Meyer – Nebraska – 17.96m
  6. Abria Smith – Illinois – 17.69m
  7. Ashley Erasmus – USC – 17.58m
  8. Chrystal Herpin – Texas – 17.55m
  9. Elizabeth Tapper – Michigan – 17.28m
  10. MyeJoi Williams – Alabama – 17.18m
  11. Kelsie Murrell-Ross – Georgia – 17.17m
  12. Nina Ndubuisi – Texas – 17.15m
  13. Lucija Leko – California – 17.10m
  14. Alida Van Daalen – Florida – 17.08m
  15. Megan Hague – Auburn – 17.00m
  16. Abigail Russell – Michigan – 16.95m
  17. Treneese Hamilton – Alabama – 16.92m
  18. Gretchen Hoekstre – BYU – 16.87m
  19. Amanda Ngandu-Ntumba – Cincinnati – 16.85m
  20. Makayla Hunter – Indiana – 16.83m
  21. Melanie Duron – Texas State – 16.75m
  22. Kellyn Kortemeyer – Nebraska – 16.71m
  23. Cierra Jackson – Fresno State – 16.71m
  24. Tapenisa Havea – Arizona – 16.25m

Women’s Discus Throw

  1. Jayden Ulrich – Louisville – 64.81m
  2. Cierra Jackson – Fresno State – 61.27m
  3. Shelby Frank – Texas Tech – 61.23m
  4. Alida Van Daalen – Florida – 59.78m
  5. Amanda Ngandu-Ntumba – Cincinnati – 59.43m
  6. Caisa-Marie Lindfors – California – 59.03m
  7. Sofia Sluchaninova – Kansas – 58.22m
  8. Taylor Kesner – Wisconsin – 57.83m
  9. Jade Whitfield – Louisville – 57.05m
  10. Angeludi Asaah – Penn – 56.32m
  11. Tamaiah Koonce – Kansas State – 55.99m
  12. Krishna Jayasankar Menon – UNLV – 55.61m
  13. Zoe Burleson – Texas Tech – 55.47m
  14. Princesse Hyman – LSU – 55.11m
  15. Adrienne Adams – Auburn – 55.09m
  16. Estel Valeanu – Virginia – 55.06m
  17. Paige Low – Oklahoma – 54.82m
  18. Michaelle Valentin – FIU – 54.73m
  19. Gretchen Hoekstre – BYU – 54.58m
  20. Donna Douglas – Tennessee – 54.56m
  21. Milina Wepiwe – Harvard – 54.54m
  22. Ines Lopez – Arizona State – 54.39m
  23. Klaire Kovatch – Colorado State – 54.32m
  24. Jamora Alves – St. John’s – 54.16m

Women’s Hammer Throw

  1. Gudrun Hallgrimsdottir – VCU – 69.53m
  2. Valentina Savva – California – 67.75m
  3. Stephanie Ratcliffe – Georgia – 67.13m
  4. Kali Terza – Kennesaw State – 66.75m
  5. Emma Robbins – Oklahoma State – 66.47m
  6. Emily Fink – Army – 66.46m
  7. Shelby Frank – Texas Tech – 66.17m
  8. Paola Bueno – Liberty – 65.73m
  9. Lara Roberts – Texas State – 65.61m
  10. Chioma Njoku – Maryland – 65.60m
  11. Marie Rougetet – Mississippi State – 65.23m
  12. Audrey Jacobs – California – 64.94m
  13. Annika Kelly – Virginia – 64.94m
  14. Chloe Lindeman – Wisconsin – 64.62m
  15. Giavonna Meeks – California – 64.55m
  16. Kennedy Clarke – Oklahoma – 64.11m
  17. Kassidy Gallagher – Oklahoma – 64.08m
  18. Kate Powers – Kentucky – 63.91m
  19. Emilia Kolokotroni – Harvard – 63.63m
  20. Mariana Pestana – Virginia Tech – 63.52m
  21. Kenna Curry – North Dakota – 63.44m
  22. Skylar Soli – Ole Miss – 63.44m
  23. Monique Hardy – Kansas State – 62.99m
  24. Kajsa Borrman – Colorado State – 62.93m

Women’s Javelin Throw

  1. Irene Jepkemboi – TCU – 58.36m
  2. Kelsi Oldroyd – Utah Valley – 57.72m
  3. McKyla Van Der Westhuizen – Rice – 57.17m
  4. Evelyn Bliss – Bucknell – 57.06m
  5. Shea Greene – Princeton – 56.91m
  6. Maddie Harris – Nebraska – 56.82m
  7. Valentina Barrios Bornacelli – Missouri – 56.71m
  8. Manuela Rotundo – Georgia – 55.88m
  9. Elizabeth Korczak – Iowa – 55.28m
  10. Arndis Oskarsdottir – FIU – 54.99m
  11. Eniko Sara – Nebraska – 54.73m
  12. Lilly Urban – Nevada – 53.49m
  13. Lianna Davidson – Georgia – 53.37m
  14. Jana van Schalkwyk – UCLA – 53.27m
  15. Erin McMeniman – Georgia – 53.14m
  16. Emma Yungeberg – Michigan – 52.97m
  17. Megan Albamonti – Alabama – 52.94m
  18. Deisiane Teixeira – Miami (Fla.) – 52.72m
  19. Maria Bienvenu – TCU – 52.68m
  20. Kate Joyce – North Carolina – 52.43m
  21. Taylor Kesner – Wisconsin – 52.39m
  22. Sara Sanders – Oregon State – 52.17m
  23. Trinity Spooner – LSU – 51.03m
  24. Beatriz Mora Herencia – UAlbany – 49.42m

Women’s Heptathlon

  1. Sofia Iakushina – Texas A&M – 6260 pts
  2. Pippi Lotta Enok – Oklahoma – 6258 pts
  3. Jadin O’Brien – Notre Dame – 6231 pts
  4. Annika Williams – Oregon – 5914 pts
  5. Lucie Kienast – Illinois – 5851 pts
  6. Sydney Johnson – UCLA – 5820 pts
  7. Sofia Cosculluela – Washington – 5817 pts
  8. Izzy Goudros – Harvard – 5807 pts
  9. Alaina Brady – Notre Dame – 5751 pts
  10. Melissa Wullschleger – Illinois – 5749 pts
  11. Mia Lien – UTSA – 5741 pts
  12. Maresa Hense – Connecticut – 5733 pts
  13. Annie Molenhouse – Oklahoma State – 5729 pts
  14. Pauline Bikembo – Iowa – 5722 pts
  15. Destiny Masters – Wichita State – 5715 pts
  16. Juliette Laracuente-Huebner – Cincinnati – 5698 pts
  17. Claudine Raud-Gumiel – Long Beach State – 5698 pts
  18. Clare McNamara – Michigan – 5698 pts
  19. Maddie Pitts – Penn State – 5677 pts
  20. Kenli Nettles – Ball State – 5655 pts
  21. Lucy Fellows – Louisville – 5625 pts
  22. Katelyn Adel – Alabama – 5619 pts
  23. Shelby Grover – Kent State – 5555 pts
  24. Ella Spaulding – Fresno State – 5551 pts

Men’s 100 Meter Dash

  1. Jordan Anthony – Arkansas – 9.75
  2. Abdul-Rasheed Saminu – South Florida – 9.86
  3. Taylor Banks – USC – 9.91
  4. Kalen Walker – Iowa – 9.94
  5. Kanyinsola Ajayi – Auburn – 9.95
  6. Mason Lawyer – Washington State – 9.95
  7. Jelani Watkins – LSU – 10.01
  8. Ernest Campbell – Texas A&M – 10.02
  9. Max Thomas – USC – 10.03
  10. Eddie Nketia – USC – 10.03
  11. T’Mars McCallum – Tennessee – 10.04
  12. Malachi Snow – Texas Tech – 10.04
  13. Tristyn Flores – Long Beach State – 10.05
  14. Jaiden Reid – LSU – 10.05
  15. Davonte Howell – Tennessee – 10.05
  16. Connor Washington – Arkansas – 10.05
  17. Chrstyn John (Jc) Stevenson – USC – 10.06
  18. Jehlani Gordon – Georgia – 10.07
  19. Jaleel Croal – South Florida – 10.08
  20. Neo Mosebi – Florida State – 10.08
  21. Chance Cross – Kennesaw State – 10.09
  22. Jamarion Stubbs – Alabama State – 10.11
  23. Israel Okon – Auburn – 10.13
  24. Travis Williams – USC – 10.15

Men’s 200 Meter Dash

  1. Makanakaishe Charamba – Auburn – 19.79
  2. T’Mars McCallum – Tennessee – 19.83
  3. Garrett Kaalund – USC – 19.85
  4. Carli Makarawu – Kentucky – 19.92
  5. Abdul-Rasheed Saminu – South Florida – 19.95
  6. Jaleel Croal – South Florida – 19.95
  7. Jaiden Reid – LSU – 19.97
  8. Xavier Butler – Texas – 20.02
  9. Max Thomas – USC – 20.05
  10. Jamarion Stubbs – Alabama State – 20.11
  11. Cameron Miller – Purdue – 20.17
  12. Dario Matau – Auburn – 20.19
  13. Jordan Anthony – Arkansas – 20.20
  14. Jelani Watkins – LSU – 20.24
  15. Eddie Nketia – USC – 20.24
  16. Jalen Johnson – Clemson – 20.29
  17. Mikey McClain – Iowa State – 20.30
  18. De’montray Callis – Baylor – 20.32
  19. Kashie Crockett – TCU – 20.32
  20. Brody Buffington – Georgia – 20.32
  21. Tory Lanham – Kansas City – 20.33
  22. Mason Lawyer – Washington State – 20.34
  23. Tristyn Flores – Long Beach State – 20.46
  24. Cameron Tarver – San Jose State – 20.55

Men’s 400 Meter Dash

  1. Samuel Ogazi – Alabama – 44.43
  2. Gabriel Moronta – South Florida – 45.01
  3. Joseph Taylor – Duke – 45.05
  4. Nathan Kent – Navy – 45.23
  5. Micahi Danzy – Florida State – 45.26
  6. Edidiong Udo – Ohio State – 45.27
  7. Jenoah McKiver – Florida – 45.29
  8. William Jones – USC – 45.32
  9. Jayden Davis – Arizona State – 45.35
  10. Shemar Chambers – Georgia – 45.39
  11. Ervin Pearson – Georgia – 45.43
  12. DeSean Boyce – Texas Tech – 45.54
  13. Auhmad Robinson – Texas A&M – 45.57
  14. Shaemar Uter – Texas Tech – 45.61
  15. Malik Ricketts – Pittsburgh – 45.63
  16. Kelsey Singleton – So. Miss – 45.66
  17. Will Floyd – Georgia – 45.68
  18. Jordan Pierre – AR-Pine Bluff – 45.75
  19. Gabriel Clement II – UCLA – 45.75
  20. Jalen Williams – Wisconsin – 45.78
  21. Anthony East III – Houston – 45.84
  22. Johnny Goode – California – 45.84
  23. Hossam Hatib – Texas A&M – 45.85
  24. Cutler Zamzow – Texas A&M – 45.93

Men’s 800 Meter Run 

  1. Christian Jackson – Virginia Tech – 1:45.31
  2. Tinoda Matsatsa – Georgetown – 1:45.36
  3. Rynard Swanepoel – Wake Forest – 1:45.42
  4. Handal Roban – Penn State – 1:45.47
  5. Abdullahi Hassan – Miss State – 1:45.64
  6. Nicholas Plant – Virginia Tech – 1:45.90
  7. Samuel Navarro – Mississippi State – 1:46.47
  8. Patrick Tuohy – NC State – 1:46.60
  9. Kirk Dawkins – Florida A&M – 1:46.62
  10. Tyrice Taylor – Arkansas – 1:46.64
  11. Sam Whitmarsh – Texas A&M – 1:46.68
  12. Kyle Reinheimer – Washington – 1:46.82
  13. Rivaldo Marshall – Arkansas – 1:46.97
  14. Aidan McCarthy – Cal Poly – 1:47.01
  15. Matthew Erickson – Oregon – 1:47.07
  16. Dugion Blackman – Iowa State – 1:47.13
  17. Lloyd Frilot – TCU – 1:47.15
  18. Koitatoi Kidali – Oregon – 1:47.17
  19. Samuel Rodman – Princeton – 1:47.24
  20. Brian Kweyei – Clemson – 1:47.28
  21. Allon Clay – Penn State – 1:47.29
  22. Andrew Casey – Wisconsin – 1:47.30
  23. Patrick Hilby – Wisconsin – 1:47.30
  24. Yared Kidane – Wichita State – 1:47.35

Men’s 1500 Meter Run

  1. Abel Teffra – Georgetown – 3:38.65
  2. Harrison Witt – Princeton – 3:38.83
  3. Gary Martin – Virginia – 3:38.94
  4. Damian Hackett – Cornell – 3:39.67
  5. Simeon Birnbaum – Oregon – 3:39.79
  6. Brendan Herger – Michigan – 3:39.81
  7. Duncan Robinson – Iona – 3:40.04
  8. Alex Stitt – Oklahoma State – 3:40.11
  9. Cooper Cawthra – Texas A&M – 3:40.15
  10. Colin Sahlman – Northern Arizona – 3:40.17
  11. Leo Young – Stanford – 3:40.35
  12. Davis Helmerich – Arkansas – 3:40.70
  13. Reuben Reina – Arkansas – 3:40.92
  14. Michael Danzi – Notre Dame – 3:41.02
  15. Ethan Strand – North Carolina – 3:44.23
  16. Trent McFarland – Michigan – 3:44.48
  17. Ferenc Kovacs – Harvard – 3:44.54
  18. Liam Murphy – Villanova – 3:44.83
  19. Martin Segurola – Indiana – 3:44.96
  20. Nathan Green – Washington – 3:46.47
  21. Adam Spencer – Wisconsin – 3:46.78
  22. Garrett MacQuiddy – California – 3:47.06
  23. Harvey Cramb – Montana State – 3:47.28
  24. Jack Crull – Bradley – 3:47.31

Men’s 5000 Meter Run

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

Men’s 10,000 Meter Run

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

Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles

  1. Kendrick Smallwood – Texas – 13.13
  2. Ja’Kobe Tharp – Auburn – 13.14
  3. Ja’Qualon Scott – Texas A&M – 13.16
  4. Jamar Marshall Jr. – Houston – 13.19
  5. Jerome Campbell – Northern Colorado – 13.23
  6. Zachary Extine – Arizona – 13.23
  7. John Adesola – Houston – 13.26
  8. Braxton Brann – Ohio State – 13.36
  9. Darius Brown – DePaul – 13.37
  10. Demario Prince – Baylor – 13.39
  11. Johnny Brackins – USC – 13.39
  12. Oscar Smith – Louisiana Tech – 13.42
  13. Ethan Exilhomme – Northeastern – 13.45
  14. Matthew Sophia – LSU – 13.46
  15. Isaiah Taylor – North Carolina A&T – 13.46
  16. Bradley Franklin – Samford – 13.46
  17. Jayden Smith – Davidson – 13.48
  18. Christopher Serrao – Rutgers – 13.49
  19. Demaris Waters – Florida – 13.49
  20. Christian Martin – Minnesota – 13.53
  21. Tyson Williams – Florida State – 13.54
  22. Josh Parrish – Wichita State – 13.56
  23. Jahiem Stern – LSU – 13.56
  24. Joshua Hornsby – CSU Fullerton – 13.58

Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles

  1. Kody Blackwood – Texas – 48.83
  2. Ja’Qualon Scott – Texas A&M – 48.87
  3. Nathaniel Ezekiel – Baylor – 49.03
  4. Johnny Brackins – USC – 49.04
  5. Xzaviah Taylor – North Carolina A&T – 49.18
  6. Oskar Edlund – Texas Tech – 49.44
  7. Noah Langford – Howard – 49.50
  8. Bryce McCray – Texas A&M – 49.56
  9. Hugo Menin – UTSA – 49.61
  10. Mario Paul – Texas Tech – 49.66
  11. Jarrett Gentles – Coppin State – 49.78
  12. Jason Parrish – Wichita State – 49.80
  13. Jayden Douglas – TCU – 49.81
  14. Saad Hinti – Tennessee – 49.83
  15. Ja-Van Poole – Oakland – 49.87
  16. Ryan Matulonis – Penn – 49.88
  17. Marcus Johnson – Binghamton – 49.93
  18. Bryce Tucker – Rutgers – 50.00
  19. Tamaal Myers II – UCLA – 50.01
  20. Cameron Wilmington – Grand Canyon – 50.12
  21. Harry Barton – Tennessee – 50.13
  22. Alex Sherman – Virginia – 50.13
  23. Alex Sadikov – Penn – 50.21
  24. Isaiah Taylor – North Carolina A&T – 50.25

Men’s 3000 Meter Steeplechase 

  1. Collins Kiprop Kipngok – Kentucky – 8:24.91
  2. Mathew Kosgei – New Mexico – 8:25.41
  3. Geoffrey Kirwa – Louisville – 8:26.25
  4. Silas Kiptanui – Tulane – 8:27.28
  5. Joash Ruto – Iowa State – 8:28.86
  6. Rob McManus – Montana State – 8:30.65
  7. Kristian Imroth – Eastern Kentucky – 8:30.80
  8. Benjamin Balazs – Oregon – 8:31.13
  9. Carson Williams – Furman – 8:31.61
  10. James Corrigan – BYU – 8:31.79
  11. Kole Mathison – Colorado – 8:32.74
  12. Victor Kibiego – Texas A&M – 8:32.83
  13. Ryker Holtzen – Wyoming – 8:34.95
  14. CJ Singleton – Notre Dame – 8:36.51
  15. Titus Kimaru – Texas Tech – 8:36.83
  16. Brett Gardner – NC State – 8:37.63
  17. Andrew Nolan – Michigan State – 8:37.83
  18. Nathan Davis – Army West Point – 8:38.72
  19. Quinton Orr – Iowa State – 8:39.13
  20. Cody Larson – South Dakota State – 8:39.60
  21. Peter Visser – Weber State – 8:40.17
  22. Ezekiel Pitireng – Alabama – 8:40.37
  23. Declan Rymer – Virginia Tech – 8:41.11
  24. Bismack Kipchirchir – Akron – 8:42.88

Men’s High Jump Prelims

  1. Mario Brown – Texas A&M – 2.26m
  2. Isaac Norris – Florida – 2.25m
  3. Myles Kiss – North Carolina – 2.24m
  4. Emmanuel Osei – Oregon – 2.23m
  5. Kenderick Lee – LSU – 2.22m
  6. Zachery Brown – Arkansas – 2.21m
  7. Joseph Pasquale – Oklahoma State – 2.20m
  8. Nathan Hernandez – Texas Tech – 2.19m
  9. Liam McGovern – Penn State – 2.18m
  10. Julian Alcazar – Illinois – 2.17m
  11. Jermaine Bell – Indiana – 2.16m
  12. Elijah Shaw – Kentucky – 2.15m
  13. Thomas Garcia – Auburn – 2.14m
  14. Keenan Scott – Washington – 2.13m
  15. Darnell Jones – Colorado – 2.12m
  16. Eric Donnelly – Wisconsin – 2.11m
  17. Curtis Fields – Baylor – 2.10m
  18. Steven Gonzalez – Miami – 2.09m
  19. Andrew Jensen – Michigan – 2.08m
  20. Mateo Cruz – Virginia – 2.07m
  21. Sean Davis – California – 2.06m
  22. Andre Coleman – Syracuse – 2.05m
  23. Elijah Robinson – Florida State – 2.04m
  24. Caleb Turner – Nebraska – 2.03m

Men’s Pole Vault Prelims

  1. Mason Wolfe – Tennessee – 5.70m
  2. Ethan Cormier – Oregon – 5.65m
  3. Ryan Wadleigh – Texas – 5.60m
  4. Noah Black – LSU – 5.55m
  5. Matt Mueller – Arkansas – 5.50m
  6. Julian Strong – Florida State – 5.45m
  7. Ben Cooper – Auburn – 5.40m
  8. Alex Harper – Penn State – 5.35m
  9. Jacob Schneider – Michigan – 5.30m
  10. Caleb Johnson – Washington – 5.25m
  11. Isaiah Thompson – Stanford – 5.20m
  12. Jordan Ellis – Virginia – 5.15m
  13. Nathan Owens – Texas Tech – 5.10m
  14. Carter Reynolds – Kentucky – 5.05m
  15. Lucas White – Oklahoma State – 5.00m
  16. Blake Sanders – UCLA – 4.95m
  17. Evan Thomas – Colorado – 4.90m
  18. Daniel Moore – North Carolina – 4.85m
  19. Kyle Rodriguez – Syracuse – 4.80m
  20. Hunter Lee – Georgia – 4.75m
  21. Trevor Mills – Florida – 4.70m
  22. Aaron Brooks – Nebraska – 4.65m
  23. Cameron Davis – Ole Miss – 4.60m
  24. Mitchell Grant – Wisconsin – 4.55m

Men’s Long Jump 

  1. Johnny Brackins – USC – 8.15m
  2. Malcolm Clemons – Florida – 8.11m
  3. Jeremiah Davis – Florida State – 8.09m
  4. Andrei Dumitrescu – Texas Tech – 8.08m
  5. Samuel Ogazi – Alabama – 8.06m
  6. Isaac Henderson – Iowa – 8.01m
  7. Wayne Pinnock – Arkansas – 7.99m
  8. Cameron Crump – Mississippi State – 7.95m
  9. Ja’Michael Fox – Texas A&M – 7.94m
  10. Jamar Marshall Jr. – Houston – 7.92m
  11. Sean Dixon-Bodie – LSU – 7.90m
  12. Dylan Owusu – Minnesota – 7.90m
  13. Reheem Hayles – Rutgers – 7.89m
  14. Caleb Foster – North Carolina – 7.89m
  15. Jamarion Stubbs – UCF – 7.87m
  16. Rojay Smith – Oklahoma – 7.86m
  17. Jaden Patterson – TCU – 7.85m
  18. Darius King – Northern Iowa – 7.85m
  19. Nathaniel Ezekiel – Baylor – 7.83m
  20. Ryan Brown – UCLA – 7.82m
  21. Keon Buckley – Clemson – 7.81m
  22. Joshua Dela Cruz – Cal State Northridge – 7.80m
  23. Isaiah Holmes – Miami – 7.80m
  24. Christian Lewis – Purdue – 7.79m

Men’s Triple Jump

  1. Salif Mane – Fairleigh Dickinson – 17.12m
  2. Russell Robinson – Miami – 17.09m
  3. Sean Dixon-Bodie – LSU – 17.08m
  4. Jaydon Hibbert – Arkansas – 17.07m
  5. Malik Cunningham – Villanova – 16.95m
  6. Josiah Thompson – Baylor – 16.85m
  7. Emmanuel Ihemeje – Oregon – 16.83m
  8. Kweku Brako – North Carolina A&T – 16.81m
  9. Clarence Foote-Talley – Tennessee – 16.80m
  10. Nickolas Scarvelis – USC – 16.78m
  11. Kwamere Harris – Florida – 16.75m
  12. Ryan Brown – UCLA – 16.70m
  13. William Watson – Missouri – 16.69m
  14. Jaden Patterson – TCU – 16.67m
  15. Chris Alexander – Texas A&M – 16.66m
  16. Darius Clark – Coastal Carolina – 16.65m
  17. Isaiah Griffith – Louisville – 16.64m
  18. DJ Butler – Houston – 16.63m
  19. Elijah Parham – Georgia – 16.61m
  20. CJ Green – UCF – 16.60m
  21. Reheem Hayles – Rutgers – 16.58m
  22. Victor Zuluaga – Auburn – 16.57m
  23. Nathaniel Ezekiel – Baylor – 16.56m
  24. Devon Washington – Indiana – 16.55m

Men’s Shot Put 

  1. Jordan Geist – Arizona – 21.50m
  2. Turner Washington – Arizona State – 21.40m
  3. Jonah Wilson – Nebraska – 21.35m
  4. John Meyer – LSU – 21.34m
  5. Patrick Piperi – Texas – 21.30m
  6. Kole Mathison – Colorado – 21.20m
  7. Tyler Blomquist – Texas A&M – 21.19m
  8. Daniel McArthur – North Carolina – 21.15m
  9. Eric Favors – South Carolina – 21.10m
  10. Isaiah Rogers – UTEP – 21.09m
  11. Brett Neelly – Kansas State – 21.07m
  12. Reese Hoffa – Georgia – 21.06m
  13. Adam Kuehl – Illinois – 21.05m
  14. Christian Lincoln – Florida – 21.03m
  15. Ethan Dabbs – Virginia – 21.01m
  16. Kyle Moison – Auburn – 21.00m
  17. Darius King – Northern Iowa – 20.99m
  18. Jacob Foutz – Tennessee – 20.98m
  19. Brian Williams – Mississippi – 20.97m
  20. Jonah Wilson – Nebraska – 20.95m
  21. Marvin Caffey – Oregon – 20.93m
  22. Josh Sobota – Kentucky – 20.91m
  23. Kyle Moison – Auburn – 20.90m
  24. Sean Dolan – Villanova – 20.88m

Men Discus Throw

  1. Mykolas Alekna, California, 72.12m
  2. Ralford Mullings, Oklahoma, 67.21m
  3. Dimitrios Pavlidis, Kansas, 62.00m
  4. Seth Allen, Auburn, 60.95m
  5. Michael Pinckney, UCLA, 60.88m
  6. Uladzislau Puchko, VA Tech, 60.67m
  7. Vincent Ugwoke, South Florida, 59.89m
  8. Oscar Rodriguez, TX Tech, 59.62m
  9. Maxwell Otterdahl, Nebraska, 59.61m
  10. Racquil Broderick, USC, 59.54m
  11. Texas Tanner, Air Force, 59.49m
  12. Casey Helm, Princeton, 59.19m
  13. Aron Alvarez Aranda, Tennessee, 59.17m
  14. Christopher Young, Alabama, 59.10m
  15. Skylar Coffey, Missouri, 58.93m
  16. Christopher Crawford, Alabama, 58.91m
  17. Paden Lewis, SE Missouri, 58.89m
  18. Youssef Koudssi, Arizona, 58.75m
  19. Aidan Elbettar, Oregon, 58.25m
  20. Jacob Lemmon, Florida, 58.05m
  21. Iosif Papa, UMBC, 58.02m
  22. Trevor Gunzell, Alabama, 57.71m
  23. Desmond Coleman, Miami (Fla.), 57.04m
  24. Tanner Watson, Ohio State, 56.70m

Men Hammer Throw

  1. Angelos Mantzouranis, Minnesota, 76.10m
  2. Kostas Zaltos, Minnesota, 75.63m
  3. Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan, Ole Miss, 74.51m
  4. Texas Tanner, Air Force, 70.32m
  5. Bryson Smith, Ole Miss, 68.40m
  6. Kyle Moison, Auburn, 68.20m
  7. Daniel Reynolds, Wyoming, 68.10m
  8. Jake Dalton, Ole Miss, 67.82m
  9. Travis Martin, Cal Poly, 67.81m
  10. Igor Olaru, Baylor, 67.08m
  11. Christian Toro, Duke, 66.86m
  12. Keyandre Davis, Virginia, 66.71m
  13. Kyle Brown, Auburn, 66.61m
  14. Ryan Johnson, Iowa, 66.14m
  15. Mason Hickel, Ole Miss, 66.05m
  16. Cole Hooper, Wisconsin, 66.03m
  17. Noa Isaia, Ark State, 65.97m
  18. Rory Devaney, Cal Poly, 65.94m
  19. Orry Willems, Cincinnati, 65.58m
  20. Alex Bernstein, DePaul, 65.36m
  21. Sean Mockler, Indiana, 65.36m
  22. Sean Smith, Iowa, 65.16m
  23. Kellen Kimes, Liberty, 65.02m
  24. Alex Kristeller, Manhattan, 64.99m

Men Javelin Throw

  1. Keyshawn Strachan, Nebraska, 76.97m
  2. Mike Stein, Iowa, 76.96m
  3. Moustafa Alsherif, Georgia, 75.02m
  4. Tuomas Narhi, Miss State, 74.89m
  5. Arthur Petersen, Nebraska, 74.50m
  6. Remi Rougetet, Miss State, 74.43m
  7. Leikel Cabrera Gay, Florida, 73.11m
  8. Riley Marx, KS State, 72.58m
  9. Jesse Avina, Arizona, 72.48m
  10. Dash Sirmon, Nebraska, 72.28m
  11. Jack Greaves, Rice, 72.17m
  12. Devoux Deysel, Miami (Fla.), 72.02m
  13. Sam Roller, ND State, 70.43m
  14. Roddy Schenk, Tennessee, 69.89m
  15. James Kotowski, UMass Lowell, 69.88m
  16. Steven Coponi, Rutgers, 69.87m
  17. Callan Saldutto, Missouri, 69.17m
  18. Preston Kuznof, TCU, 68.71m
  19. Trevor Hook, No. Arizona, 68.62m
  20. Liam Miksic, UC Irvine, 68.57m
  21. Colin Winkler, Cen Connecticut, 68.18m
  22. Ryan Rieckmann, Cincinnati, 67.90m
  23. Gabriel Koletsi, Memphis, 67.84m
  24. Kevin Burr, Tennessee, 67.40m

Men Decathlon

  1. Till Steinforth, Nebraska, 8265
  2. Peyton Bair, Miss State, 8111
  3. Brad Thomas, UC Santa Barbara, 8108
  4. Jaden Roskelley, BYU, 8000
  5. Paul Kallenberg, Louisville, 7944
  6. Marcus Weaver, Arkansas, 7940
  7. Ryan Gregory, LB State, 7898
  8. Abraham Vogelsang, Iowa, 7874
  9. Ben Barton, BYU, 7865
  10. Maxwell Forte, Duke, 7853
  11. Kenneth Byrd, Louisville, 7849
  12. Grant Levesque, Houston, 7848
  13. Joshua Mooney, Connecticut, 7810
  14. Emil Uhlin, KS State, 7788
  15. Alexander Jung, Kansas, 7738
  16. Andreas Hantson, Purdue, 7686
  17. Colby Eddowes, Ark State, 7681
  18. Landon Helms, Boise State, 7673
  19. Brayden Richards, Air Force, 7659
  20. Diarmuid O’Connor, Connecticut, 7658
  21. Nick Bianco, Colorado, 7655
  22. Edgar Campre, Miami (Fla.), 7646
  23. Tayton Klein, Kansas, 7629
  24. Cole Wilson, High Point, 7609

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U.S. Women On Their Way to Poland for 2025 Volleyball Nations League Final Round

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 17, 2025) — Fifteen U.S. Women’s National Team athletes are on their way to Łódź, Poland, to compete at the 2025 Volleyball Nations League (VNL) Final Round, July 23-27. The top eight teams from the preliminary phase advanced to the Finals, and the U.S. earned its spot with a 7-5 record, […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 17, 2025) — Fifteen U.S. Women’s National Team athletes are on their way to Łódź, Poland, to compete at the 2025 Volleyball Nations League (VNL) Final Round, July 23-27. The top eight teams from the preliminary phase advanced to the Finals, and the U.S. earned its spot with a 7-5 record, finishing eighth in the standings.

The U.S. Women will open the single-elimination bracket on July 23 at 7:30 a.m. PDT against No. 1 seed Italy in the quarterfinals. Other countries who qualified for the Final Round are Brazil, Japan, Poland, China, Türkiye and Germany. All matches will be streamed live on VBTV.

Head coach Erik Sullivan’s roster for Poland includes three 2024 Olympians: setter Jordyn Poulter, middle blocker Dana Rettke and outside hitter Avery Skinner.

Eleven of the remaining players competed in at least one of the three preliminary rounds: outside hitters Madi Skinner, Roni Jones-Perry, Sarah Franklin and Logan Eggleston; liberos Morgan Hentz and Lexi Rodriguez; setter Saige Ka’aha’aina-Torres, opposite Stephanie Samedy; and middle blockers Brionne Butler, Amber Igiede and Tia Jimerson.

Outside hitter Khalia Lanier will make her 2025 debut at the Finals. Lanier made her VNL debut in 2023, playing in two of the preliminary rounds and the Finals. She also played in week two in 2024.

The VNL Finals bring together the world’s top teams for a shot at the title. Since the tournament’s inception in 2018, the U.S. Women have consistently been among the top performers, winning gold in 2018, 2019 and 2021.

U.S. Women’s VNL Finals Roster

No. Name (Pos., Ht., Hometown, College, USAV Region)
2 Jordyn Poulter (S, 6-2, Aurora, Colo., Illinois, Rocky Mountain)
3 Avery Skinner (OH, 6-1, Katy, Texas, Kentucky, Lone Star)
6 Morgan Hentz (L, 5-9, Lakeside Park, Ky., Stanford Univ., Pioneer)
7 Lexi Rodriguez (L, 5-5, Sterling, Ill., Univ. of Nebraska Great Lakes)
8 Brionne Butler (MB, 6-4, Kendleton, Texas, Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
9 Madisen Skinner (OH, 6-2, Katy, Texas, Univ. of Kentucky and Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
13 Amber Igiede (MB, 6-3, Baton Rouge, La., Univ. of Hawaii, Delta)
16 Dana Rettke (MB, 6-8, Riverside, Ill., Univ. of Wisconsin, Great Lakes)
19 Khalia Lanier (OH, 6-2, Scottsdale, Ariz., Univ. of Southern California, Arizona)
21 Roni Jones-Perry (OH, 6-0, West Jordan, Utah, BYU, Intermountain)
22 Sarah Franklin (OH, 6-4, Lake Worth, Fla., Univ. of Wisconsin, Florida)
25 Tia Jimerson (MB, 6-3, Sugar Hill, Ga., Univ. of Ohio, Southern)
32 Saige Ka’aha’aina-Torres (S, Honolulu, Hawaii, Univ. of Texas, Aloha)
33 Logan Eggleston (OH, 6-2, Brentwood, Tenn., Univ. of Texas, Southern)
34 Stephanie Samedy (Opp, 6-2, Clermont, Fla., Minnesota, Florida)

Coaches
Head Coach: Erik Sullivan
Assistant Coach: Mike Wall
Second Assistant Coach: Brandon Taliaferro
Second Assistant Coach: Tayyiba Haneef-Park
Second Assistant Coach: Joe Trinsey
Team Manager: Rob Browning
Team Doctors: William Briner, James Suchy, Chris Lee, Andrew Gregory
Physiotherapist: Kara Kessans
Physical Trainers: Shawn Hueglin, Shannon Boone
Mental Performance Coach: Andrea Becker, Katy Stanfill
Performance Analyst: Virginia Pham

VNL Finals Schedule
July 23: USA vs. Italy, 7:30 a.m. PDT
July 26: Semifinals
July 27: Medal matches

Week 1 Results: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
June 4 Italy def. USA, 3-0 (25-13, 25-13, 30-28)
June 5 Brazil def. USA, 3-0 (25-18, 25-17, 25-19)
June 6 Czechia def. USA, 3-2 (23-25, 20-25, 25-17, 25-20, 27-25)
June 8 USA def Korea, 3-0 (25-13, 28-26, 25-17)

Week 2 Results: Belgrade, Serbia
June 18 USA def. Serbia, 3-2 (25-22, 25-20, 22-25, 22-25, 15-11)
June 19 Poland def. USA, 3-1 (20-25, 25-20, 25-17, 25-18)
June 21 USA def. Netherlands, 3-0 (25-18, 25-22, 25-19)
June 22 USA def. France, 3-2 (25-22, 26-24, 20-25, 21-25, 15-13)

Week 3 Results: Arlington, Texas
July 9 USA def. Thailand, 3-1 (28-26, 21-25, 27-25, 25-15)
July 10 USA def. Dominican Republic, 3-1 (23-25, 25-19, 25-16, 25-20)
July 12 USA def. Canada, 3-2 (26-24, 23-25, 20-25, 25-21, 19-17)
July 13 China def. USA, 3-2 (18-25, 19-25, 25-21, 25-21, 18-16)



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The Movie’ feels like Brad Pitt fanfiction that wrongs female characters and fans – The Prospector

“F1: The Movie” arrived in theaters after a year of anticipation, especially from Formula One (F1) fans who were ready to scrutinize every detail and eager to point out any inaccuracies to see if Hollywood had actually sensationalized the sport. But, the real letdown wasn’t the racing at all. Directed by Joseph Kosinski, the film stars […]

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“F1: The Movie” arrived in theaters after a year of anticipation, especially from Formula One (F1) fans who were ready to scrutinize every detail and eager to point out any inaccuracies to see if Hollywood had actually sensationalized the sport. But, the real letdown wasn’t the racing at all.

Directed by Joseph Kosinski, the film stars Brad Pitt as Sonny Hayes, a washed-up driver who has been retired from F1 for 30 years. The movie follows APXGP, a fictional team, featuring Damson Idris as Joshua Pearce, a talented but immature rookie, and Kerry Condon as Kate McKenna, the team’s technical director and the first and only woman to hold that title in the film’s F1 universe.

The movie was one of the most anticipated releases of the summer and had a strong opening weekend making $140 million globally and $55.6 million in the United States .

While the movie was met with mixed reactions, it got several things right, including the cinematography.

It is clear Kosinski went to great lengths to achieve as much realism as possible. Pitt and Idris trained in Formula Two (F2) cars which were modified to resemble F1 cars. Seven-time world champion, Lewis Hamilton, served as a producer for the movie. Scenes were filmed during real races in the 2024 season, including Silverstone, the Las Vegas Strip Circuit and the Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi. Several F1 drivers and team principals appeared as themselves, as did Sky Sports F1 commentators Martin Brundle and David Croft. Presenters Will Buxton and announcer Leigh Diffey were also involved in the film.

While there were technical inaccuracies, they likely stemmed from limited run-time. The setting itself only left nine races for the team to improve their performance. Some plot points would have led to major penalties and even disqualifications, but the movie prioritized pacing and character arcs over strict accuracy.

That said, small inaccuracies were not the film’s biggest problem.

The most disappointing aspect of the movie was its portrayal of the female characters.  While the movie made it clear that they were aiming to showcase the growing role of women in motorsports by highlighting four female team members, those efforts were undermined almost immediately.

McKenna, the groundbreaking technical director, ends up romantically involved with Hayes despite repeatedly insisting she would never date someone on the team, especially someone as arrogant and difficult as him. Her reversal feels forced, reinforcing the trope that a woman in power can’t exist in a male-dominated field without being reduced to a love interest.

Then there’s Jodie played by Callie Cooke, the only female member of the pit crew whose primary arc involves a series of mistakes, including one during a pit stop that ruins Pearce’s race. The intended message seems to be about learning from failure and escaping self-doubt. But, in a sport where women are already hyper-criticized, having the only female mechanic repeatedly mess up only reinforces harmful perceptions, ones that are already used to exclude women from the sport.

A smaller but still frustrating moment occurs when a woman approaches Pearce at a nightclub to ask if he can introduce her to real-life F1 driver Carlos Sainz. It’s a joke that is intended for laughs but doesn’t land when you consider how often women are told they only like F1 because they find the drivers attractive. The scene feels like it’s playing into the stereotypes rather than challenging them.

F1 offers built-in drama with rivalries, jealousy and high-stakes competition; the movie even added unresolved family dynamics. Both Hayes and Pearce lost their fathers at age 13, hinting at an emotional storyline about chasing a shared dream that could’ve been explored more deeply. Instead, I feel like we got a romantic subplot and gendered mishaps that felt unnecessary.

By the end of the film, I felt entertained, but also like I had just watched a high-budget Brad Pitt fanfiction. Speaking of Pitt, his casting is arguably the biggest inaccuracy of all. A 61-year-old F1 driver simply wouldn’t be realistic given the sport’s physical demands.

If viewers are genuinely interested in learning about F1, this film could be a decent start. It is visually stunning and action-packed, but the best way to experience F1 is to watch the real thing. The sport itself already has all the intensity, emotion and excitement the big screen could ever hope to capture, without needing to fall back on old, tired tropes.

Ximena Cordero is the web and copy editor for The Prospector and may be reached at [email protected] 



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Princeton University

PRINCETON –  The Princeton Women’s Water Polo Team had 12 members named to the ACWPC All-Academic List. The list features student athletes with a GPA of 3.2 and higher. Outstanding laurels include GPAs between 4.0-3.71, Superior is 3.70-3.41 and Excellent is 3.40-3.20. Ava Houlahan, Charlotte Riches, Hadley Harbilas and Kate Mallery nabbed Outstanding honors with […]

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PRINCETON –  The Princeton Women’s Water Polo Team had 12 members named to the ACWPC All-Academic List.

The list features student athletes with a GPA of 3.2 and higher. Outstanding laurels include GPAs between 4.0-3.71, Superior is 3.70-3.41 and Excellent is 3.40-3.20.

Ava Houlahan, Charlotte Riches, Hadley Harbilas and Kate Mallery nabbed Outstanding honors with CJ Weigel, Grace Houlahan, Kayla Yelensky, Lindsey Lucas and Rachael Carver nabbing Superior accolades with Ally Lurie, Olivia Krotts and Shanna Davidson corralling Excellent marks.

 



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PubMatic Launches AI-Powered Live Sports Marketplace with Real-Time Game Moment Curation, FanServ Joins as Premier Partner

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — PubMatic (Nasdaq: PUBM), the independent technology company delivering digital advertising’s supply chain of the future, today launched an AI-powered Live Sports Marketplace that enables advertisers to target specific game moments across streaming platforms in real-time. This breakthrough proprietary technology analyzes live game data, offering granular event-level […]

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REDWOOD CITY, Calif., July 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — PubMatic (Nasdaq: PUBM), the independent technology company delivering digital advertising’s supply chain of the future, today launched an AI-powered Live Sports Marketplace that enables advertisers to target specific game moments across streaming platforms in real-time. This breakthrough proprietary technology analyzes live game data, offering granular event-level curation and real-time access to premium live sports ad inventory.

The Live Sports Marketplace launches with FanServ as its premier partner, providing immediate access to premium NBA, WNBA, MLB, NHL and National Women’s Soccer League inventory, including exclusive local programming for the Minnesota Twins, Colorado Rockies, and Cleveland Guardians. This partnership is a pivotal step in unifying and expanding access to premium live sports inventory across the digital ecosystem.

“FanServ was built by fans, for fans, and now, with PubMatic, we’re redefining how brands reach and engage fans through programmatic sports advertising. This partnership is about more than just access, it’s about precision and possibility,” stated Brad Friedman, CEO of FanServ. “By combining FanServ’s deep sports expertise with PubMatic’s unique event-level curation, we’re empowering brands to connect meaningfully at the exact moments that matter most, across every platform they love,” added Ben Goodfriend, VP of Demand Partnerships.

The Live Sports Marketplace launches with substantial momentum, building on PubMatic’s sports advertising business where live sports activity has more than tripled in the first half of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024. The company exceeded its entire 2024 live sports activity in just the first six months of 2025, positioning it to more than double last year’s performance and demonstrating explosive market demand for precision-targeted live sports solutions. Beyond FanServ’s premium inventory, the marketplace provides unified access to major publishers including MLB, FuboTV, DirecTV, Spectrum Reach, and Roku, and covers comprehensive sports content from major leagues (MLB, NBA & WNBA, NHL, MLS) to alternative sports (surfing, pickleball, MMA, FIFA, NASCAR & F1, tennis, golf, cricket) and NCAA college athletics. The company has recently monetized CTV inventory for the official FIFA Club World Cup, which took place from June 19 to July 17.

Currently, traditional programmatic sports buying often fails to distinguish between low- and high-engagement moments, leading to wasted impressions during less impactful periods, such as commercial breaks in lopsided games, while missing opportunities to reach audiences during the most valuable, high-attention moments. The marketplace addresses these and other critical pain points, including fragmented streaming and under-monetized inventory, limited targeted precision across live events, and the technical complexities of managing unpredictable viewership spikes and behaviors. The Live Sports Marketplace enables advertisers and publishers to unlock the full value of live sports audiences through:

  • Industry-First Event- and Channel-Level Precision: PubMatic’s proprietary AI enables advertisers to target specific games, teams, or even high-impact moments, across a fragmented streaming landscape, maximizing relevance and engagement for every campaign.
  • Dynamic Scheduling & Real-Time Packaging: By importing and analyzing live TV schedules from all partners, the marketplace uses up-to-the-minute sports schedules, ensuring brands can target the right moments as they happen across all publishers.
  • Expert Management of Live Spikes: PubMatic’s owned-and-operated infrastructure can expertly manage unpredictable spikes in live viewership, with the potential for separate endpoints for DSPs dedicated to live sports, ensuring seamless, reliable ad delivery at scale, even during the most high-demand moments.
  • Scalability and Automation Roadmap: The platform is designed to provide both immediate manual flexibility and future automation, supporting scalable, automated deal creation and reporting. This ensures that both buyers and sellers can benefit from streamlined workflows and real-time insights as the market evolves.

“This revolutionary technology and premium partnership with FanServ transforms fragmented live sports inventory into programmatically accessible, of-the-moment opportunities, setting a new standard for precision and impact in digital sports advertising,” stated Nicole Scaglione, VP of CTV and Online Video at PubMatic.

According to eMarketer, 114.1 million people are projected to watch live sports digitally in 2025, compared to 82.0 million via traditional TV. As audiences migrate to streaming and connected devices, there is a real need for real-time, precise, and scalable ad delivery during unpredictable, high-attention moments. With the Live Sports Marketplace, PubMatic delivers the precision, speed and reliability advertisers need to succeed.

To learn more about the Live Sports Marketplace and how it can elevate your live digital advertising strategy, please visit www.pubmatic.com/live-sports

About Fanserv:
Fanserv pairs the power of sports with the promise of digital by unifying inventory, enabling granular targeting, and providing unparalleled analytics. As the exclusive monetization partner for premiere teams, leagues, and federations, Fanserv delivers seamless monetization solutions purpose-built for live sports.

About PubMatic:
PubMatic (Nasdaq: PUBM) is an independent technology company maximizing customer value by delivering digital advertising’s supply chain of the future. PubMatic’s sell-side platform empowers the world’s leading digital content creators across the open internet to control access to their inventory and increase monetization by enabling marketers to drive return on investment and reach addressable audiences across ad formats and devices. Since 2006, our infrastructure-driven approach has allowed for the efficient processing and utilization of data in real time. By delivering scalable and flexible programmatic innovation, we improve outcomes for our customers while championing a vibrant and transparent digital advertising supply chain.

Press Contact:
Ashley Jacobson, Director of Corporate Marketing, press@pubmatic.com
Broadsheet Communications for PubMatic, pubmaticteam@broadsheetcomms.com




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Alumna Selected for USA Deaf Women’s National Volleyball Team

Bengal alumna Abby Garrity, Class of 2018, has been selected to the USA Deaf Women’s Volleyball Team. After beginning her volleyball career in 7th grade, she became a standout player at ISU and went on to thrive at the international level. She won two gold medals and a bronze in 2016 and 2017. Now she […]

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Bengal alumna Abby Garrity, Class of 2018, has been selected to the USA Deaf Women’s Volleyball Team. After beginning her volleyball career in 7th grade, she became a standout player at ISU and went on to thrive at the international level. She won two gold medals and a bronze in 2016 and 2017.

Now she is back, playing for one of the most promising programs in the world. The USA Deaf Women’s Volleyball Team finished second at the Deaf World Championships last summer, and now with Garrity joining for the upcoming Deaflympics the team will be going for gold. This November, they will travel to Tokyo to compete against the world’s best deaf teams in the hopes of bring back the gold.

Garrity says it can be a challenge not hearing very well on the court, but it has helped enhance her technique.

“It’s forced me to see the court better since I can’t rely on teammates telling me what is spots are open mid play,” said Garrity. “I also try and make eye contact with coaching staff to make sure I’m not missing anything being said. On the deaf team, we cannot wear our equipment when we play that helps us hear. We use sign language and I read lips really well.”

Read more about the athlete here. 



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Poetry Connection | Wondering What My Mother Would Be Like at 76

‘Women in a Golden State: California Poets at 60 and Beyond’ cover | Photo: Melinda Palacio Earlier this month, I attended Gunpowder Press’s release of their new anthology, Women in a Golden State: California Poets at 60 and Beyond. Since 2025 commemorates the 175th anniversary of California’s statehood, the anthology features 175 California writers. My […]

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‘Women in a Golden State: California Poets at 60 and Beyond’ cover | Photo: Melinda Palacio

Earlier this month, I attended Gunpowder Press’s release of their new anthology, Women in a Golden State: California Poets at 60 and Beyond. Since 2025 commemorates the 175th anniversary of California’s statehood, the anthology features 175 California writers. My mother, Blanca Estela Palacio, would have been the same age as many of the women represented in the collection. For the world, she is forever immortalized at age 44. I am older than she was the last time I saw her alive, but not old enough to contribute to this anthology. The collection gives me an insight into what her life concerns would be as an aging Baby Boomer. Many favorite people and poets are included in this impressive poetry collection, and a few micro-essays are also tucked in.

As a child, I remember thinking that my mom was an exceptional woman who had grown up with the best music. I was the oddball teenager who preferred her parents’ music and dances to her own generation’s. My mother was proud of the fact that she was a Baby Boomer, the generation of children born to parents who lived through World War II, who protested the Vietnam War, who marched for peace, women’s rights, civil rights, and affirmative action.

While my mother was born in Texas, she was very much a California girl. California is where she grew up, became a teacher, an activist, and a single mother who also took care of her parents and siblings during her short life. Because I keep aging and my mother does not, I often wonder what her life would be like now. I become wistful around women who have the opportunity for mother-daughter dates. There’s so much about my life in Santa Barbara that I wish I could have shared with my mother. We often took summer road trips from Los Angeles to San Francisco and on several occasions visited my uncle who was stationed at Vandenberg Air Force Base in Lompoc, but we never stopped in Santa Barbara. I don’t think my mom knew the town existed. Solvang was our usual stopping point. To this day, I have no explanation as to why we never stopped in Santa Barbara. I know she would have loved it here.

Ten years after my mother passed, I met a mother traveling with her adult daughter. I was so happy for the two of them. I told them how lucky they were. Mother and daughter Lucy agreed. They had the same round face and blue eyes. It still puts a smile on my face to think of the two women sharing an aisle on the airplane with 20-year-old me. While I can no longer travel with my mother, we sure shared some fun adventures together to Hawai’i, Mexico, and Europe.

In reading Women in a Golden State, I see my mother in so many of the poems. Sharon Langley’s poem, “I Saw My Mom Today,” reminds me that I only need to look in the mirror to see my mother: “Purse. Pucker, now pose. / That’s her smile for sure. / I saw my mom today.”

Thanks to Gunpowder Press editors Diana Raab and Chryss Yost, there’s a collection of 175 poems that share the concerns of Women in a Golden State and the anthology my mother would be included in if she were a living poet.

Children Left Alone After Mothers Arrested in Immigration Raids



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