Ryan Calhoun in the triple jump at 12.63m (41-5¼) and
Chase Hall in the 100 at 11.44.
Mohawk Valley CC jumped into the National TFRI for the first time this season at No. 2. The Hawks recorded 17 national top-10 marks this past weekend, including a pair of national leaders from
Andy Hadasz in the 100 (11.44) and 200 (23.44), as well as the top hammer throw from
Jason Januario at 35.23m (125-7).
Mineral Area College dropped one spot from No. 2 to No. 3 to no fault of its own. The Cardinals added or improved 10 national top-10 marks this past weekend, including the top-4 marks in the 10,000 meters:
Wyatt Elliott (No. 1, 33:49.47),
Flomena Asekol in the 1500 (4:30.12c),
Kimeone McLeod in the 100H (13.68c),
Victoria Villanueva in the pole vault (3.52m/11-6½) and
Luisarys Toledo in the heptathlon (5251).
Former No. 1
South Plains (Texas) is now ranked No. 2. The Lady Texans added or improved upon 11 national top-10 marks. South Plains (Texas) saw a few national leaders come out of the weekend:
Rosemary Chukwuma in the 100 (11.23w) and the 4×100 relay (45.29).
Joniar Thomas amassed 5132 points in the heptathlon to cement her No. 2 standing in the NJCAA.
Third-ranked
Barton County CC held steady from Week 1. Out of the 21 national top-10 marks that the Cougars have, they added or improved 10 of them this past weekend.
Shaylinn Aver (No. 1, 5:21.37),
Kelly Kibler (No. 2, 5:22.76) and
Emily Fetzer (No. 3, 5:24.72). Two-time National Athlete of the Week
Mia Tolbert also bettered her national lead in the 200 to 27.23 and pushed her seasonal best in the 100 to 13.54.
Mineral Area College didn’t budge from its position in the passenger seat. The second-ranked Cardinals added or improved nine national top-10 marks this past weekend, including three national-leading efforts:
Jaylyn Woodley in the 100 (13.49),
Haley Hernandez in the 10,000 (44:00.30) and
Sophia Welch in the 100H (17.13).
Mohawk Valley CC jumped into the National TFRI for the first time this season at No. 3. The Hawks added five national top-10 marks to their ledger this past weekend, including a national-leading effort from
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Celebrating A Century of NCAA Track & Field Championships
LSU’s Duhaney Destroyed NCAA 200 Field In 1992
Dahlia Duhaney picked a good time to run her fastest 200 meters – the final of the 1992 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championships at Texas Memorial Stadium in Austin.
The LSU senior easily won in 22.80, her first sub-23 clocking.
How easily? Duhaney’s winning margin of 0.44 seconds remains the meet’s largest in the event.
At least one aspect of the meet was much closer – the team competition. While Duhaney led a 1-4 finish in the 200 for LSU that clinched the team crown, the 168 combined points for LSU (87) and runner-up Florida (81) remain the highest by two teams – men or women – since the current scoring system began in 1985.