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2009 NCAA
Division III
Men's and Women's
Indoor Track and Field
Championships
CLICK HERE FINAL RESULTS
CLICK HERE for complete PHOTO GALLERIES
CLICK HERE for archived VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS
Historic Men's Tie, Wartburg's
First National Title Highlight 2009 NCAA Division III Indoor Track
Nationals
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Sumer Rohrs won her third consecutive national title and set a national
meet record in the 55 hurdles. |
The first team tie in the history
of Division III Track and Field and a historic women's national
championship by Wartburg College highlighted the 2009 NCAA Division III
Indoor Track and Field National Championships at Rose-Hulman Institute
of Technology on Friday and Saturday.
Wisconsin-La Crosse earned its eighth men's
national championship in the past nine seasons, but fellow conference
foe Wisconsin-Oshkosh captured its first team national title as each
squad tallied 32 points. The tie marked the first shared team
championship in the history of Division III Track and Field.
Wartburg College earned its first ever team
women's championship with a steady performance that featured a pair of
first-place honors.
The 4-x-400 meter relay team featuring
Nevada Morrison, Kelsey Steffens, Chelsey Jacobs and Hannah Baker
entered the final event needing to defeat the Wisconsin-La Crosse squad
to secure the national title and won the event in a time of 3:50.10.
Akeye Aimable added a triple jump national title with a leap of 39' 6".
Wisconsin-La Crosse placed second in the women's
team standings, followed by Wisconsin-Oshkosh, Illinois Wesleyan and
Tufts.
On the men's side, Whitworth recorded a
third-place finish with McMurry and Buena Vista rounding out the team
top five.
The 2009 championships were perhaps the
most balanced in the event's 25-year history, as 20 different
institutions claimed at least one individual national title in the 30
events.
Frostburg State senior hurdler Sumer Rohrs
was named the United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches
Association Track Athlete of the Meet to lead the individual effort.
Rohrs claimed her third career 55-meter high hurdles national
championship and established a national record with a time of 7.97
seconds.
Wisconsin-La Crosse senior Caitlin Schetter
earned top Field Athlete honors by the USTFCCCA for her performance.
Schetter won the long jump with a leap of 18' 10" and claimed runner-up
honors in the triple jump at 39' 5".
On the men's side, Wisconsin-Oshkosh senior
William Kaul was named the USTFCCCA Men's Track Athlete of the Meet.
Kaul claimed the 5,000-meter run title with a time of 14:31.46 and was
the anchor on the meet record setting distance medley relay squad
featuring Nate Stmiest, Ben Zill and Ben Wizner as Oshkosh set a
Division III national mark of 9:56.79.
The Men's Field USTFCCCA Athlete of the
Meet was Todd Wildman from Trinity University in Texas. Wildman
claimed the first ever men's Pentathlon title with a score of 3,859
points. Wildman was also runner-up in the men's high jump (6' 9
3/4") and placed seventh in the 55-meter high hurdles.
Other running event men's national
champions during day two of competition included Stephen Headley of
Springfield College in the 55-meter dash (6.24 seconds); Hanneus Ollison
of McMurry University in the 400-meter dash (48.33); Jimmy O'Brien of
Ohio Northern in the 800-meter run (1:53.34); Peter Kosgei of Hamilton
College in the mile run (4:08.58); William Brown of Montclair State in
the 55-meter hurdles (7.39 seconds); and the 4-x-400 meter relay team of
Joe Reed, Fred Romer, Sean Daly and Eric Theiss from Oneonta State in a
time of 3:17.19.
Men's field event national champions on day
two of competition included Alex Samma of Connecticut College in the
triple jump (49' 5 1/2"); Bobby Riley of Wisconsin-La Crosse in the shot
put (57' 5 1/2"); Cody Stelzer of Whitworth in the high jump (6' 11");
and Jake Winder of North Central in the pole vault (17' 1 1/2").
First-day men's national champions
included Eric Bertsksen of Buena Vista
University with a long jump leap of 24' 9" and Sam Johnson of
Wisconsin-Eau Claire in the weight throw with a toss of 65' 0 3/4".
Other second-day women's track event
titleists included Judy Bataille of Heidelberg in the 55-meters (7.02
seconds); Robin Yerkes of Roanoke in the 400-meters (56.09); Ashley
Graybill of St. Norbert in the 800-meters (2:09.95); Ayla Mitchell of
Wisconsin-Oshkosh in the mile run (4:54.66); and Elise Tropiano of
Amherst in the 5,000-meters (16:58.84). Monique Riddick of
Montclair State added a national title in the shot put (47' 2 1/2").
The first day of the women's competition
including six national champions, including the first ever in the newly
added Pentathlon. Ashley Huston of Hardin-Simmons became the inaugural
Pentathlon champion with a score of 3,725 points in the 55-meter
hurdles, high jump, shot put, long jump and 800-meter run.
The distance medley relay squad
from Tufts University added a national title, with Amy Wilfert,
Halsey Stebbins, Jackie Ferry and Stephanie McNamara recording a time of
11:46.77 to top St. Thomas by less than one-tenth of a second.
Other national champions
included Schetter in the long jump at 18'
10" to top teammate Katie Fondow by less than one inch; Julia Hopson of
Fredonia State with a weight throw toss of 59' 10 1/2"; Marlee Berg of
Westfield State with a high jump leap of 5' 6 1/2"; and Rachel Secrest
of North Central College with a pole vault mark of 12' 8" to win a
four-way tie for first place based on number of misses. Anna Heim
of Moravian, Hayley Suckow of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and Alecia Ellingstad
of Wisconsin-La Crosse also cleared 12' 8".
A total of 446 student-athletes from 134 colleges in 27
states competed in the two days of action at Rose-Hulman Institute of
Technology.
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trademark of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
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