BRIGHTON, MASSACHUSETTS, March 07-09 — Our coverage of the NCAA Indoor is divided into 4 parts: men’s track & field and women’s track & field. Event reports will be added over the next few days.
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HJ | PV | LJ | TJ | SP | Wt | Pent |
High Jump: Rachel Glenn (Arkansas) 6-6¾ (2.00) CR
With a stunning Collegiate Record at the SEC Championships and an undefeated campaign, Texas A&M’s Lamara Distin earned favorite’s status and more. Being the No. 2 jumper on the world list tends to do that for you. For the ultra-consistent Jamaican to lose would take a monumental, perhaps unthinkable, effort.
Arkansas soph Rachel Glenn dared to think it. The SEC runner-up to Distin with a lifetime best of 6-4¼ (1.94), she was the NCAA outdoor champion back in ’21 for South Carolina. The next year she placed 3rd at NCAAs, both in and out. But in ’23, she missed the whole year to injury.
The depth of the competition was quite impressive, with 8 clearing 6-2 (1.88). The only perfect slates at that point belonged to Glenn, Distin and Georgia’s Elena Kulichenko.
Things got complicated at 6-3¼ (1.91). Only Glenn cleared on her first attempt. Clearing on second were Kulichenko, Texas Tech frosh Temitope Adeshina, and Distin.
At 6-4¼ (1.94) Glenn went over first to tie her PR. Distin also cleared her first, while Kulichenko and Adeshina went out and ended up 3rd and 4th.
When the bar moved to 6-5½ (1.97), Glenn missed her first and Distin cleared. To any observer it looked like the match was basically over. Glenn had never gone that high in her life. So when she made it over on her second, Arkansas fans erupted.
Next came the CR height, 6-6¾ (2.00). Distin would win if they both struck out. No one logically expected Glenn to clear her third lifetime best of the day, but she did, leaving the bar jiggling and becoming the 10th American to join the 2-meter club. Distin, the pressure on, gave it her best three times, but she had to accept 2nd. Glenn then took three shots at 6-7½ (2.02) — why not? — before she celebrated.
“It was really just about making it to the next bar and pushing through,” Glenn said. “That’s really what I was thinking.” /Jeff Hollobaugh/
(March 09)
1. **Rachel Glenn (Ar) 6-6¾ (2.00) =CR, =absolute CR; AmCR, absolute AmCR (=CR, absolute CR Lamara Distin [TxAM-Jam] ’24; old AmCR 6-6/1.98 Destinee Hooker [Tx] ’09; old absolute AmCR 6-6¼/1.99 Brigetta Barrett [Az] ’13) (=3, =3 A; in/out: =7, x A)
(5-8¾, 5-10¾, 6-¾, 6-2, 6-3¼, 6-4¼=PR, 6-5½ PR [2] [=4, =4 C], 6-6¾, 6-7½ [xxx]) (1.75, 1.80, 1.85, 1.88, 1.91, 1.94, 1.97 [2], 2.00, 2.02 [xxx]);
2. Lamara Distin’ (TxAM-Jam) 6-5½ (1.97) (x, =4 C)
(6-¾, 6-2, 6-3¼ [2], 6-4¼, 6-5½, 6-6¾ [xxx]) (1.85, 1.88, 1.91 [2], 1.94, 1.97, 2.00 [xxx]);
3. *Elena Kulichenko’ (Ga-Cyp) 6-3¼ (1.91)
(5-10¾, 6-¾, 6-2, 6-3¼ [2], 6-4¼ [xxx]) (1.80, 1.85, 1.88, 1.91 [2], 1.94 [xxx]);
4. ***Temitope Adeshina’ (TxT-Ngr) 6-3¼
(5-8¾, 5-10¾, 6-¾ [2], 6-2 [3], 6-3¼ [2], 6-4¼ [xxx]) (1.75, 1.80, 1.85 [2], 1.88 [3], 1.91 [2], 1.94 [xxx]);
5. *Bara Sajdoková’ (Il-CzR) 6-2 (1.88); 6. tie, Roschell Clayton’ (Vill-Jam) & *Jenna Rogers (Nb) 6-2 (Clayton =PR); 8. ***Rose Yeboah’ (Il-Gha) 6-2 =PR; 9. Sanaa Barnes (Aub) 6-¾ (1.85) =PR; 10. **Lilian Turban’ (Hi-Est) 6-¾; 11. Charity Hufnagel (Ky) 6-¾; 12. *Destiny Masters (Wich) 6-¾; 13. *Miracle Ailes (Al) 5-10¾ (1.80); 14. **Sharie Enoe’ (KsSt-Grn) 5-8¾ (1.75); 15. **Alyssa Jones (Stan) 5-8¾;… nh—Cierra Allphin (BYU).
Pole Vault: Hana Moll (Washington) 15-1 (4.60)
It finally happened. For the first time in NCAA Indoor history, a frosh won the pole vault. Hana Moll showed she is ready for the big leagues (as if 9th at the Worlds last year didn’t establish this) by dominating the competition in her first-ever collegiate championship.
Yet it didn’t actually come easy. An impressive 9 women cleared 14-5¼ (4.40), but only 3 did so on their first attempts, and none of them was Moll. Riley Felts of Charlotte and Olivia Lueking of Oklahoma led the competition at that point, and Rutgers junior Chloe Timberg also got ahead of Moll, who cleared it on her second.
At 14-7¼ (4.45), Felts stayed clean. Moll cleared on her first to move to 2nd, and Timberg and High Point’s Sydney Horn also cleared, tied for 3rd. Lueking and four others went out.
The next height (14-9/4.50), saw Moll and Felts clear on their first tries. Timberg passed after one miss, and Horn passed altogether. With 4 left in the competition, the bar was raised to 14-11 (4.55).
Felts missed her first try, and would ultimately go out at that height. Moll cleared on her first, finally taking the lead. Timberg missed twice and was done. Horn missed twice and passed her last attempt.
Moll would win with a first-attempt clearance at 15-1 (4.60), but it only became official when Horn missed her sole chance and ended up in a tie with Timberg for 3rd. Moll then had the bar moved to the Olympic standard, 15-6¼ (4.73), and on her first of three attempts came very close to clearing.
“It feels amazing,” said the yearling. “I came in wanting to win and have a good time, and I accomplished both of those things so I’m really happy.” /Jeff Hollobaugh/
(March 08)
1. ***Hana Moll (Wa) 15-1 (4.60)
(13-7¼, 14-1¼, 14-5¼ [2], 14-7¼, 14-9, 14-11, 15-1, 15-6¼ [xxx]) (4.15, 4.30, 4.40 [2], 4.45, 4.50, 4.55, 4.60, 4.73 [xxx]);
2. Riley Felts (UNCC) 14-9 (4.50) PR
(13-7¼, 14-1¼, 14-5¼, 14-7¼, 14-9, 14-11 [xxx]) (4.15, 4.30, 4.40, 4.45, 4.50, 4.55 [xxx]);
=3. *Sydney Horn (HPt) 14-7¼ (4.45)
(13-7¼, 14-1¼, 14-5¼ [2], 14-7¼ [2], 14-11 [xxp], 15-1 [x]) (4.15, 4.30, 4.40 [2], 4.45 [2], 4.55 [xxp], 4.60 [x]);
=3. *Chloe Timberg (Rut) 14-7¼ (4.45)
(13-7¼, 14-1¼ [2], 14-5¼, 14-7¼ [2], 14-9 [xpp], 14-11 [xx]) (4.15, 4.30 [2], 4.40, 4.45 [2], 4.50 [xpp], 4.55 [xx]);
5. *Olivia Lueking (Ok) 14-5¼ (4.40) (Abadie PR); 6. tie, *Heather Abadie’ (TxAM-Can) &*Tori Thomas (Il) & 14-5¼ (4.40) PR; 8. Jessica Mercier (In) 14-5¼; 9. ***Molly Haywood (Bay) 14-5¼ =PR; 10. ***Alencia Lentz (Bay) 14-1¼ (4.30); 11. tie, Nastassja Campbell (Wa) & *Marleen Mulla’ (SD-Est) 14-1¼; 13. tie, Ka’Leila Abrille (UCLA) & **Tessa Mudd (Prin) 13-7¼ (4.15); 15. tie, ***Mason Meinershagen (Ks) & ***Eva Lowder (WaSt) 13-7¼.
Long Jump: Sydney Willits (Iowa State) 22-1½ (6.74)
An epic battle made the long jump an event to remember, as unheralded Sydney Willits of Iowa State, only 5th in the Big 12, scored a monster PR and stole the win on her final attempt.
It all started innocently enough, as the junior heptathlete popped a PR 21-6 (6.55) in round 1. That put her in the lead, as the event’s big names, Ackelia Smith of Texas, Claire Bryant of Florida and Alyssa Jones of Stanford, all fouled.
Smith, the ’23 Outdoor champ and No. 1 seed, got just one legal jump in and wound up 12th. In round 2 the others started finding their steps, Jones hitting 21-4¾ (6.52), Bryant 21-2¾ (6.47). Willits returned to mortal status, reaching 20-8½ (6.31). In round 3, Bryant spanned a 21-4¾ of her own to move to 2nd on the tiebreaker. Willits fouled.
With the order rearranged for round 4, Jones popped a 21-10¼ (6.66) to take the lead. Bryant fouled and Willits answered with a modest 20-11¼ (6.38). In round 5, after both Jones and Bryant fouled, Willits stunned with a 21-11 (6.68) effort that retook the lead.
The final round alone was worth the price of admission. Baylor’s Alexi Brown improved to 21-3¼ (6.48) but stayed in 5th. Arkansas’s Nia Robinson improved to 21-6¼ (6.56) and stayed in 4th. Jones closed out with a 20-10½ (6.36). Then Bryant popped a big 22-¼ (6.71) to take the lead — getting two thumbs up from teammate Parker Valby on her way to a Collegiate Record in the 5000.
That left only one attempt for Willits. The 21-year-old Illinois native made the most of it, flying past her previous best and absolutely everyone’s expectations to land at 22-1½ (6.74) for the win.
“Coming in I was ranked 12th, so I wasn’t really expecting anything other than improving,” said Willits. “I knew I had a big jump in me. When I had the lead taken from me, I just told myself, ‘I need to respond’ I composed myself, pulled out a big jump, and it was amazing.” /Jeff Hollobaugh/
(March 08)
1. *Sydney Willits (IaSt) 22-1½ (6.74) PR
(21-6 PR, 20-8½, f, 20-11¼, 21-11 PR, 22-1½) (6.55, 6.31, f, 6.38, 6.68, 6.74);
2. Claire Bryant (Fl) 22-¼ (6.71)
(f, 21-2¾, 21-4¾, f, f, 22-¼) (f, 6.47, 6.52, f, f, 6.71);
3. **Alyssa Jones (Stan) 21-10¼ (6.66)
(f, 21-4¾, f, 21-10¼, f, 20-10½) (f, 6.52, f, 6.66, f, 6.36);
4. *Nia Robinson (Ar) 21-6¼ (6.56) PR
(f, 21-2½, 21-4, 20-4¼, 21-3½, 21-6¼) (f, 6.46, 6.50, 6.20, 6.49, 6.56);
5. Alexis Brown’ (Bay-Hai) 21-3¼ (6.48)
(20-11¼, 20-3, f, 20-3¾, 19-9¾, 21-3¼) (6.38, 6.17, f, 6.19, 6.04, 6.48);
6. ***Ida Breigan’ (UTSA-Nor) 20-11¼ (6.38); 7. ***Elizabeth Ndudi (Il) 20-10 (6.35); 8. ***Aaliyah Foster’ (Tx-Jam) 20-10 (6.35); 9. Tionna Tobias (Ia) 20-9 (6.32); 10. Funminiyi Olajide’ (SMU-GB) 20-9 (6.32); 11. Victoria Gorlova’ (VaT-Rus) 20-8½ (6.31); 12. *Ackelia Smith’ (Tx-Jam) 20-4½ (6.21); 13. *Tacoria Humphrey (Il) 20-4¼ (6.20); 14. Joniar Thomas’ (TxAM-Grn) 20-½ (6.11); 15. *Emilia Sjöstrand’ (SJSt-Swe) 19-10¾ (6.06); 16. ***Sophia Beckmon (Il) 19-9 (6.02).
Triple Jump: Rūta Lasmane (Texas Tech) 47-5¾ (14.47) CL
Georgia’s Mikeisha Welcome, Texas Tech’s Anne-Suzanna Fosther-Katta, San Jose State’s Emilia Sjöstrand and Auburn’s Simone Johnson were all finalists last year, but here they would have to land in the wake of Texas Tech’s Rūta Lasmane, who bounced to victory with a huge Latvian Record.
Sjöstrand started the party with a 45-¼ (13.72) first-round jump, but Lasmane answered with 45-9¾ (13.96) to take the lead. From there, she increased her advantage on successive jumps, 46-8¾ (14.24) in round 2 and then the PR 47-5¾ (14.47) in round 3.
Try though they did, the chasers could not catch the Red Raider, despite Lasmane’s fouling her final 3 jumps.
Sjöstrand was secure in 2nd, but in round 5 Welcome stretched to 44-8¾ (13.63) to increase her hold on 3rd. Virginia Tech’s Victoria Gorlova responded with 44-9½ (13.65) to bump Welcome down to 4th, but she would soon be displaced in round 6 after Welcome returned the favor and went 44-11¾ (13.71).
Cheered to have finally landed a national title — on three prior occasions she placed 3rd indoors or out — Lasmane said, “I just feel so relieved. I felt like this was a long time coming. Me and my coaches have been working so long for this moment, and I’m just so blessed, relieved and happy to finally get the title.”
Looking to the future, she said, “I think this is a good mark to know my ability to go into outdoor season with the confidence that I can jump even better and win more. Especially since outdoor is my favorite of the two.” /Brian Russell/
(March 09)
1. Rūta Lasmane’ (TxT-Lat) 47-5¾ (14.47) NR (4, x C; in/out: 6, x C)
(45-9¾, 46-8¾, 47-5¾, f, f, f) (13.96, 14.24, 14.47, f, f, f);
2. *Emilia Sjöstrand’ (SJSt-Swe) 45-¼ (13.72)
(45-¼, 43-3, 44-7½, 43-9¼, f, 42-9½) (13.72, 13.18, 13.60, 13.34, f, 13.04);
3. Mikeisha Welcome’ (Ga-StV) 44-11¾ (13.71)
(44-2¾, 44-4¾, 42-11, 44-3¼, 44-8¾, 44-11¾) (13.48, 13.53, 13.08, 13.49, 13.63, 13.71);
4. Victoria Gorlova’ (VaT-Rus) 44-9½ (13.65) PR
(44-6¾, 44-2½, 44-2, 44-2, 44-9½, f) (13.58, 13.47, 13.46, 13.46, 13.65, f);
5. *Rhianna Phipps’ (Nb-Jam) 44-7 (13.59) PR (42-10¼, 43-10, 42-8, 41-4¼, 42-5¼, 44-7) (13.06, 13.36, 13.00, 12.60, 12.93, 13.59); 6. **Darja Sopova’ (Il-Lat) 44-6¾ (13.58) PR (f, 43-3, 44-6¾, f, f, f) (f, 13.18, 13.58, f, f, f); 7. ***Winny Bii’ (OkSt-Ken) 44-½ (13.42) (43-7¾, 43-4½, 42-10¾, 43-2¼, 43-8¾, 44-½) (13.30, 13.22, 13.07, 13.16, 13.33, 13.42); 8. *Temitope Ojora’ (USC-GB) 43-9¼ (13.34) (f, 43-8½, f, 43-3, 43-9¼, f) (f, 13.32, f, 13.18, 13.34, f); 9. ***Xiamara Young (SDi) 43-6 (13.26); 10. Anne-Suzanna Fosther-Katta’ (TxT-Fra) 43-5 (13.23); 11. *Simone Johnson (Aub) 43-2½ (13.17); 12. **Shantae Foreman’ (Clem-Jam) 43-2¼ (13.16); 13. *Rachela Pace’ (Fres-Mlt) 42-9 (13.03); 14. *Busola Akinduro’ (Cal-Can) 42-3½ (12.89); 15. ***Daniela Wamokpego (Ia) 41-6½ (12.66).
Shot: Mya Lesnar (Colorado State) 60-9½ (18.53)
Colorado State junior Mya Lesnar came into Boston as the list leader after her PR 62-8 (19.10) at the Mountain West Championships.
But Lesnar’s road to the title got off to a hairy beginning. After the first round, she was buried in 11th with a poor 50-4¾ (15.36), while the medal positions were held by Oregon junior Jaida Ross (60-½/18.30), Ole Miss senior Jalani Davis (59-6¾/18.15) and Texas frosh Nina Ndubuisi (59-3½/18.07, her best of the night). Weight winner Davis had no more fair throws the rest of the way.
Lesnar’s second toss was also unimpressive, a 55-8¼ (16.97) that only pushed her up to 6th. A foul in the third left her sweating qualification, and indeed, she was pushed down to 7th, just making the cut for three more throws.
Finally, she returned to form in round 4 with a 60-9½ (18.53). That mark held up for the win, although Ross gave her a scare later in the round with 60-7¼ (18.47). Lesnar added a 60-5¼ (18.42) in round 5. Davis’s first throw clung to bronze.
“It was a little rocky,” Lesnar said. “Not every competition is gonna be the way you expect it to go, but I did my thing and it was cool. My composure was good and I stayed calm. There was no reason to freak out and I was trying to figure out my cues, and stay focused.”
This season saw great improvement for Lesnar, who before December had cracked 17 meters (55-9¼) only three times. It was her first NCAA indoors.
“It was great, I love the environment here,” said the daughter of pro wrestling star Brock Lesnar. “I fed off the energy from the start and I was able to compete against some great competition, so it was a fun time.” /Lee Nichols/
(March 09)
1. *Mya Lesnar (CoSt) 60-9½ (18.53)
(50-4¾, 55-8¼, f, 60-9½, 60-5¼, f) (15.36, 16.97, f, 18.53, 18.42, f);
2. *Jaida Ross (Or) 60-7¼ (18.47)
(60-½, f, f, 60-7¼, f, 59-4¾) (18.30, f, f, 18.47, f, 18.10);
3. Jalani Davis (Ms) 59-6¾ (18.15)
(59-6¾, f, f, f, f, f) (18.15, f, f, f, f, f);
4. ***Nina Ndubuisi’ (Tx-Ger) 59-3½ (18.07)
(59-3½, f, f, f, 59-2, f) (18.07, f, f, f, 18.03, f);
5. **Alida Van Daalen’ (Fl-Neth) 58-2½ (17.74); 6. *Jayden Ulrich (Louis) 57-9¾ (17.62); 7. **Mine De Klerk’ (Nb-SA) 56-1¾ (17.11); 8. *Chrystal Herpin (Tx) 56-1 (17.09); 9. MyeJoi Williams (Al) 54-9¼ (16.69); 10. Marilyn Nwora (Tx) 54-7¼ (16.64); 11. KeAyla Dove (NTx) 54-1 (16.48); 12. Jasmine Mitchell (Ms) 53-8½ (16.37); 13. *Gabby Morris (CoSt) 53-3¾ (16.25); 14. Paige Low (Ok) 53-3 (16.23); 15. MaKayla Mason (Duke) 51-7 (15.72); 16. ***Mensi Stiff (Ms) 51-3 (15.62).
Weight — Jalani Davis (Mississippi) 81-4½ (24.80)
Janali Davis’s ambition to repeat as champion was only superseded by her quest for the Collegiate Record. In what would be her last chance to pass Brittany Riley’s 83-10¼ standard, let alone the Mississippi school record of 83-10 set by Shey Taiwo in ’22, it didn’t take Davis long to distance herself from the field in the early rounds.
Davis, Minnesota’s Shelby Frank and Davis’s Ole Miss teammate Jasmine Mitchell went 1-2-3 in 2023, so a nice 72-8 (22.15) toss by Mitchell to lead round 1 reminded all that she would not be a pushover after a modest 70-¼ (21.34) by Davis and 71-4¾ (21.76) by Clemson’s Marie Forbes.
Round 2 was a different story, as Davis set the tone with her 75-11 (23.14), as neither Mitchell nor Forbes improved. Thereafter Davis never looked back as she padded her lead in round 3 with a huge 81-4½ (24.80).
Frank finally got on board in round 4 as she moved into 2nd with her 74-5½ (22.69), pushing Mitchell down to 3rd and Forbes off the podium. The top 3 would remain the same throughout, with only VCU’s Guðrún Hallgrímsdóttir overtaking Forbes for 4th.
With nearly a 7-foot advantage, Davis tried her best to attack Riley’s record, but did not improve. She fouled in 4 and 6 and registered a 75-¾ (22.88) in round 5 as the top 3 replicated their positions from 2023.
With her victory, Davis ensured that a Connie Price-Smith-coached Rebel was in the winner’s circle for the third consecutive year and in the process becoming the first back-to-back winner since Louisville’s D’Ana McCarty in ’10.
Davis said afterwards, “My demeanor is down because I really wanted to get the national record of 83-10, so I really wanted that, but it’s all good. It’s a record for a reason, so you have to do something crazy to get that record.” /Brian Russell/
(March 07)
1. Jalani Davis (Ms) 81-4½ (24.80) (x, 9 C)
(70-¼, 75-11, 81-4½, f, 75-¾, f) (21.34, 23.14, 24.80, f, 22.88, f);
2. *Shelby Frank (Mn) 74-5½ (22.69)
(67-9¾, 70-11¼, f, 74-5½, 71-6¼, 73-1¾) (20.67, 21.62, f, 22.69, 21.80, 22.29);
3. Jasmine Mitchell (Ms) 72-8 (22.15)
(72-8, f, 71-9½, 70-2¼, f, f) (22.15, f, 21.88, 21.39, f, f);
4. *Guðrún Hallgrímsdóttir’ (VaC-Ice) 72-5 (22.07)
(f, 70-1½, 70-1¾, 69-7, 72-5, 70-1½) (f, 21.37, 21.38, 21.21, 22.07, 21.37);
5. Marie Forbes’ (Clem-Jam) 71-4¾ (21.76); 6. ***Giavonna Meeks (Vand) 71-3½ (21.73); 7. Olivia Roberts (Wi) 71-2¾ (21.71); 8. *Sara Killinen’ (VaT-Fin) 70-7¾ (21.53); 9. *Chloe Lindeman (Wi) 70-7¼ (21.52); 10. Chandler Hayden (Al) 70-1½ (21.37); 11. **Monique Hardy (KsSt) 69-6¼ (21.19); 12. Tara Simpson-Sullivan’ (Rice-GB) 68-7¾ (20.92); 13. Amber Simpson’ (Il-GB) 67-11¾ (20.72); 14. *Kenna Curry (ND) 67-3½ (20.51); 15. Foluke Olujide-Ajibade (Pitt) 67-3¼ (20.50); 16. ***Anthonett Nabwe (Mn) 65-10½ (20.08).
Pentathlon: Jadin O’Brien (Notre Dame) 4497
A repeat victory by Jadin O’Brien was far from a sure thing. It was, in her words, “a lot of trials and tribulations.”
Two weeks ago, with a wrapped hamstring, she won the ACC and wholeheartedly thanked everyone on the Notre Dame staff that she was even there. That was just to qualify for this meet.
60H: The best news for O’Brien was that she appeared here without any wrap, unlike her ACC performance. USC’s Allie Jones — season leader at 4528 — was fastest at 8.20, but O’Brien showed clear promise with a near-PR 8.35.
HJ: O’Brien dropped from 4th to 7th after a 5-6½ (1.69) as surprising Destiny Masters of Wichita State took control after clearing 6-½ (1.84). Many eyes were on Charity Hufnagel, known as Griffith when she scaled 6-4 (1.93) for a stunning win in last year’s NCAA Outdoor, but she settled for just 5-10 (1.78) here.
SP: O’Brien was tops at 47-¾ (14.34), a good 33 points better than she had in last year’s winning performance. While she moved up in the standings, O’Brien was looking at a new leader in Ball State’s Jenelle Rogers, who shocked many with her 6018 score in last year’s NCAA heptathlon.
LJ: Rogers increased her lead from 3 to 72 points with a PR 20-7¼ (6.28), and that was over Masters as O’Brien was in 3rd another 9 back after a 19-11 (6.07), her best since injuring her hamstring in early February.
800: O’Brien got her first lead in the final event as her 2:13.30 here put the final touch on a 4497 score that was 15 digits off her 4512 from last year. Rogers PRed at 4430, just 3 points up on Texas’s Kristīne Blaževiča, as Jones finished 4th (4369). /Howard Willman/
(March 08)
1. *Jadin O’Brien (NDm) 4497
(8.35, 5-6½/1.69, 47-¾/14.34, 19-11/6.07, 2:13.30);
2. Jenelle Rogers (Ball) 4430 PR (=10, x AmC)
(8.50, 5-8¾/1.75, 45-9¾/13.96, 20-7¼/6.28, 2:24.08);
3. *Kristīne Blaževiča’ (Tx-Lat) 4427
(8.45, 5-7¾/1.72, 40-9½/12.43, 20-4¼/6.20, 2:13.19);
4. Allie Jones (USC) 4369
(8.20, 5-4¼/1.63, 41-2½/12.56, 20-8/6.30, 2:16.43);
5. *Eliza Kraule’ (Rice-Lat) 4353 PR
(8.45, 5-8¾/1.75, 39-3¾/11.98, 20-10½/6.36, 2:22.74);
6. *Destiny Masters (Wich) 4338 PR
(8.32, 6-½/1.84, 38-1¼/11.61, 19-10¾/6.06, 2:25.62);
7. *Angel Richmore’ (Ok-Swe) 4320 PR
(8.77, 5-8¾/1.75, 46-3½/14.11, 19-9¾/6.04, 2:23.09);
8. Avery McMullen (Co) 4259 PR; 9. *Pippi Lotta Enok’ (Ok-Est) 4209; 10. *Alaina Brady (NDm) 4101; 11. Charity Hufnagel (Ky) 4059; 12. ***Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (Cinc) 4040; 13. Lydia Bottelier (Pitt) 4000; 14. Olivija Vaitaityte’ (OkSt-Lit) 3988; 15. Brianna Smith (Duke) 3923;… dnf—Annika Williams (Or).