2019 NCAA DI OTF Final Site Championships USTFCCCA Notes June 5-8 -- Austin, Texas -- Mike A

2019 NCAA DI OTF Final Site Championships USTFCCCA Notes June 5-8 -- Austin, Texas -- Mike A

2019 NCAA DI OTF Final Site Championships USTFCCCA Notes June 5-8 -- Austin, Texas -- Mike A. Myers Stadium 98th men’s national championship, 38th women’s national championship Meet Summary Ongoing USTFCCCA Recap … http://www.ustfccca.org/2019/06/featured/meet-recap-2019-ncaa-di-outdoor-tf-championships Records and Leaders Collegiate Records (2) Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles: Grant Holloway, Florida, 12.98 (0.8) ​ Previous: Renaldo Nehemiah, Maryland, 5/6/1979 Men’s 4x100 Relay: Florida, 37.98 ​ Raymond Ekevwo, Hakim Sani Brown, Grant Holloway, Ryan Clark (Florida State also superior to previous record at 38.08) Previous: Houston, 38.17, 2018 NCAA (Eugene) Championship Final Site “Meet” Records (5) Men’s 200 Meters: Divine Oduduru, Texas Tech, 19.73 (0.8) ​ (Previous: 19.87 (1.4), John Capel, Florida, 1999 Boise -and- 19.87 (0.7), Lorenzo Daniel, Mississippi State, 1988 Eugene) Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles: Grant Holloway, Florida, 12.98 (0.8) ​ (Previous: Daniel Roberts of Kentucky, 13.06 (0.9) in the semifinal [heat 1] superior to previous meet record) Previous: Devon Allen, Oregon, 13.16, 2014 (Florida’s Grant Holloway also clocked an equal time to the previous record in semifinal heat 2) Men’s 4x100 Relay: Florida, 37.98 ​ Raymond Ekevwo, Hakim Sani Brown, Grant Holloway, Ryan Clark (Florida State also superior to previous record at 38.08) Previous: Houston, 38.17, 2018 NCAA (Eugene) Men’s Pole Vault: Chris Nilsen, South Dakota, 5.95/19-6¼ ​ (also cleared MR 5.90/19-4¼) Previous: Nilsen, 5.83/19-1½, 2018 Men’s Javelin: Anderson Peters, Mississippi State, 86.62/284-2 (round 3) ​ (also MR 84.70/277-11 on first attempt) Previous: Peters, 82.82/271-9, 2018 Stadium Records (11) Men’s 100 Meters: Divine Oduduru, Texas Tech, 9.86 (0.8) ​ Previous: Mario Burke, Houston, 9.98 (1.3) [semifinal] Previous to meet: Richard Thompson, LSU, 10.00, 2008 (Texas Tech’s Divine Oduduru and Florida’s Hakim Sani Brown clocked a superior 9.96 in the semifinal, but was wind-aided [2.4]) Men’s 200 Meters: Divine Oduduru, Texas Tech, 19.73 (0.8) ​ Previous: Divine Oduduru, Texas Tech, 19.97 (2.0) [semifinal] Previous to meet: Elijah Hall, Houston, 20.11, 2018 (Five in the semifinal clocked times superior to the previous record) Men’s 800 Meters: (also FacR Bryce Hoppel, Kansas, 1:45.26 [semifinal]) Previous to : Michael Saruni, UTEP, 1:45.82, 2017 (Texas A&M’s Devin Dixon [1:45.67] also superior to previous record in semifinal]) Men’s 10,000 Meters: Clayton Young, BYU, 29:16.60 ​ Previous: Alistair Cragg, Arkansas, 29:22.43, 2004 (Top five finishers clocked times superior to previous record) Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles: Grant Holloway, Florida, 12.98 (0.8) ​ Previous: Daniel Roberts, Kentucky, 13.06 (0.9) [semifinal] Previous to meet: Larry Wade, 13.13, 2004 Men’s 4x400 Relay: Texas A&M, 2:59.05 ​ Previous: USA, 2:59.86, 2006 Men’s Pole Vault (equaled): Chris Nilsen, South Dakota, 5.95/19-6¼ ​ Previous: Renaud Lavillenie, France, 2018 Women’s 200 Meters: Angie Annelus, Southern California, 22.35 (1.3) [semifinal] ​ (LSU’s Sha’Carri Richardson clocked 22.37 in semifinal heat 2) Previous: M. Ahoure/Kamaria Brown, 22.50, 2015 Women’s Steeplechase: Allie Ostrander, Boise State, 9:44.32 [semifinal] ​ Previous: Ida Nilsson, Northern Arizona, 9:48.29, 2004 Women’s 10,000 Meters: Weini Kelati, New Mexico, 33:10.84 ​ Previous: Aliphine Taliamuk, Wichita State, 33:31.54, 2012 Women’s 100 Meter Hurdles: Janeek Brown, Arkansas, 12.53 (1.1) [semifinal] ​ Previous: Nichole Denby, Texas, 12.62, 2004 World Leaders (4) Men’s 100 Meters (equaled): Divine Oduduru, Texas Tech, 9.86 (0.8) ​ Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles: Grant Holloway, Florida, 12.98 (0.8) ​ (also WL Daniel Roberts, Kentucky, 13.06 (0.9) [semifinal]) Men’s 4x100 Relay: Florida, 37.97 ​ Men’s 4x400 Relay: Texas A&M, 2:59.05 ​ World U20 Leaders (3) Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles: Eric Edwards, Oregon, 13.49 (2.0) [semifinal] ​ Women’s 100 Meters (equaled): Sha’Carri Richardson, LSU, 10.99 (0.6) [semifinal] ​ Women’s 200 Meters: Sha’Carri Richardson, LSU, 22.37 (1.3) [semifinal] ​ (Richardson is the first in World U20 history to clock sub-11 and sub-22.4 in the same day) Collegiate Leaders (15) Men’s 100 Meters: Divine Oduduru, Texas Tech, 9.86 (0.8) ​ Men’s 200 Meters: Divine Oduduru, Texas Tech, 19.73 (0.8) ​ Men’s 400 Meters: Kahmari Montgomery, Houston, 44.23 ​ Men’s 800 Meters: Bryce Hoppel, Kansas, 1:44.41 ​ Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles: Grant Holloway, Florida, 12.98 (0.8) ​ (also Daniel Roberts, Kentucky, 13.06 (0.9) [semifinal]) Men’s 4x100 Relay: Florida, 37.97 ​ (Florida State’s 38.08 also superior to previous CL) (also CL Florida, 38.35 [semifinal]) Men’s 4x400 Relay: Texas A&M, 2:59.05 ​ (also CL Texas A&M, 3:01.26 [semifinal]) ​ ​ Men’s Long Jump: JuVaughn Harrison, LSU, 8.20/26-11 (0.7) ​ Men’s Javelin: Anderson Peters, Mississippi State, 86.62/284-2 ​ Men’s Decathlon: Johannes Erm, Georgia, 8352 ​ Women’s 200 Meters: Angie Annelus, Southern California, 22.35 (1.3) [semifinal] ​ Women’s 100 Meter Hurdles: Janeek Brown, Arkansas, 12.53 (1.1) [semifinal] ​ Women’s 400 Meter Hurdles: Anna Cockrell, Southern California, 56.05 [semifinal] ​ Women’s Long Jump: Yanis David, Florida, 6.84/22-5¼ ​ Women’s Hammer: Camryn Rogers, California, 71.50/234-7 ​ Attendance Wednesday: 7,742 Thursday: 8,156 Friday: (tba) Men’s Team Race FINAL SCORES 1. Texas Tech, 60 (First national championship in program history [previous best finish: 5th in 2018]… first national crown for a men’s sport aTexas Tech a men’s sport athletics department) HEAD COACH: Wes Kittley ​ 2. Florida, 50 (11th-consecutive podium finish and eighth-straight finish as champion or runner-up) HEAD COACH: Mike Holloway ​ 3. Houston, 40 (second-consecutive third-place finish for the first time in program history) HEAD COACH: Leroy Burrell ​ 4. Georgia, 32½ (defending national champions record second podium finish in program history) HEAD COACH: Petros Kyprianou ​ Remaining scoring chances before final day (possible total points [current total + max based on entries in event]): Texas Tech 11 (112), Florida 8 (88), BYU 8 (88), Houston 7 (76), Texas 5 (60), Oregon 5 (54), Texas A&M 5 (51), North Carolina A&T 4 (40) … many tied at 3, but Georgia, already with 22 points can possibly score 50. After Decathlon finish on Thursday (7 of 21 events scored): Mississippi State 24, Georgia 22, BYU 21, LSU 18, Kansas 11, Kennesaw State 10, South Dakota 10, Texas 10 After Wednesday (6 of 21 events scored): Mississippi State 24, BYU 21, LSU 18, Georgia 12, Kansas 11, Kennesaw State 10, South Dakota 10, Texas 10 Track Qualifying Leaders from Semifinals: Texas Tech (7), Houston (7), Florida (6), Texas ​ A&M (5), BYU (5), Oregon (4), Texas (4), North Carolina A&T (4), South Carolina (3), Arkansas (3), Florida State (2), Indiana (2), Arizona (2), Coppin State (2), Iowa (2) Men’s Individual Scoring 1. Divine Oduduru (JR), Texas Tech, 21½ points (1st 100, 1st 200, 3rd 4x1) 2. JuVaughn Harrison (SO), LSU, 20 points (1st HJ, 1st LJ -- first in meet history to sweep combo of events) 3. Cravon Gillespie (SR), Oregon, 16¾ points (2nd 100, 2nd 200, 6th 4x100) 4. Denzel Comenentia (SR), Georgia, 16 points (2nd SP, 5th DISC, 5th HT) 5. Grant Holloway (JR), Florida, 14½ points (1st 110H, 1st 4x1, 2nd 4x4) Hakim Sani Brown (SO), Florida, 14½ points (3rd 100, 3rd 200, 1st 4x1) Women’s Team Race Remaining scoring chances before final day (possible total points [current total + max based on entries in event]): Southern California 10 (94), Arkansas 9 (101), Oregon 7 (78), Texas A&M 7 (74), LSU 7 (68), Colorado 6 (56), Florida 5 (58), Alabama 5 (57), Florida State 5 (56), BYU 5 (50), Texas 5 (50), Miami (Fla.) 5 (48) After javelin on Friday (6 of 21 events scored): Arkansas 15, Stanford 15, Arizona State 12, Washington 12, Ohio State 11, California 10, New Mexico 10, Oregon 10, Florida 10 After Thursday (5 of 21 events scored): Arkansas 15, Arizona State 12, Washington 12, Ohio State 11, California 10, New Mexico 10, Oregon 10, Florida 10 Daily Notes Friday, June 7 Weather 2:30 p.m. (heptathlon, women’s javelin start): 93 degrees, mostly sunny, 64 dewpoint (95 heat index, 38% humidity), winds: NW @ 3 7:00 p.m. (main program start): 92 degrees, sunny, 67 dewpoint (96 heat index, 44% humidity), winds: N @ 9 9:25 p.m. (men’s 5000m final): 82 degrees, clear and humid, 68 dewpoint (63% humidity), winds: N @ 7 Men’s High Jump (scheduled 7:00 p.m. start) 7:00 start, approx. 8:55 end 1. JuVaughn Harrison, LSU, 2.27m/7-5 ¼ (1) CL/PR outdoor ​ 2.10, 2.15, 2.18, 2.21, 2.24, 2.27, 2.30 [xxx] 2. Tejaswin Shankar, Kansas State, 2.27m/7-5 ¼ (2) CL ​ 2.10, 2.15 (2), 2.18 (2), 2.21, 2.24, 2.27 (2), 2.30 [xxx] 3. Shelby McEwen, Alabama, 2.24m/7-4 ¼ 2.15 (2), 2.18, 2.21, 2.24, 2.27 [xxx] JuVaughn Harrison won the high jump to become the first athlete to ever win both the high jump and long jump in the same year. He also is the first LSU Tiger to win the high jump.

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