Distance Runners Flock to Stanford Invite

EUGENE –The University of Oregon track and field teams will take full advantage of this week’s spring break window, and will send many of their top distance runners to the Stanford Invitational, Friday-Saturday, March 30-31 at Cobb Track and Angell Field in Stanford, Calif.
This week's tentative Duck contingent of 20 runners (7W, 13 M) offers several of UO’s most decorated athletes, including five All-Americans – senior Dana Buchanan, junior Galen Rupp, sophomores Shadrack Kiptoo-Biwott and Rebekah Noble and freshman A.J. Acosta and another with NCAA experience in redshirt junior Michael McGrath. That group of aforementioned runners also includes six returning Pac-10 Championships scorers (3W, 3M), and several other new faces that will also contend for top-eight finishes when the Pac-10 meet returns to Stanford in mid-May.
The past decade, the meet has emerged as one of the nation’s top invitationals, especially in the distance races, thanks largely to the direction of current Duck director of track and field Vin Lananna who served a similar role as Stanford’s head mentor from the fall of 1992 through the spring of 2003.
After this weekend, the Duck men and women return home to Hayward Field in Eugene and renew their famed scored meet tradition in the 18th annual Pepsi Team Invitational, Sat., April 7. The meet features three other of the nation’s top programs – Kansas State, Washington and USC – and will run from 11:40 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.
On the men’s side in the Pepsi showdown, the Trojans, Ducks and Huskies finished first, second and fourth in the Pac-10 Championships last year, while the respective women’s teams placed third, fifth and seventh in the ’06 league clash. At the NCAA level, all three Pac-10 men’s and women’s programs finished top-25 in the nation outdoors last year in Sacramento (USC M-9th, W-2nd; Oregon M-12th, W-11th; Washington M-22nd, W-21st) as well as the Kansas State men (11th).
Last weekend in the ASU Clif Bar Invitational in Tempe, Ariz., a trio of Duck javelin throwers jumped up UO’s all-time lists. Sophomore All-American and national collegiate leader Rachel Yurkovich threw her second personal best in as many weeks and notched her first school record (189-11). In the same event, sophomore Ashley McCrea (166-8) and senior Ryan Brandel (225-7) both moved to sixth all-time for the Ducks, respectively with their personal records (PR’s). Other top marks came from senior hammer throwers Britney Henry (206-3) and Brian Richotte (209-0), juniors Phil Alexander (200m, 21.33) and Marcus Dillon (200m, 21.43), sophomore Jared Huske (110m hurdles, 14.32) and freshmen Chad Barlow (400m, second, 47.25) and Kara Meeuwsen (javelin, 144-10).
STANFORD INVITATIONAL MEET INFORMATION
Friday
First Event: 8:45 a.m. – Women’s 5,000m (Section 5)
Last Event: 8:35 p.m. (approx.) – Women’s 10,000m (Section 2)
Saturday
First Collegiate Event: 12:05 p.m. – Women’s 1,500m (High School races prior)
Last Event: 9:31 p.m. – Men’s 10,000m
Top Collegiate Teams: Alabama, Arkansas, Baylor, Boston College, Brown, Butler, BYU, Colorado, Columbia, Florida State, Georgetown, Illinois, Indiana, Iona, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma State, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina State, Penn State, Stanford, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and Wake Forest. The Pac-10 will be represented with all ten of the conference members competing including Arizona, Arizona State, California, Oregon, Oregon State, UCLA, USC, Washington, Washington State. Local universities include Sacramento State, UC Davis, and Santa Clara.
Live Results: www.GoStanford.com
TENTATIVE OREGON ENTRIES
Tentative Oregon Women’s Events (* listed alphabetically)
800m: Zoe Buckman
1,500m: Nicole Blood, Dana Buchanan, Rebekah Noble
5000m: Zoe Nelson, Lauren Zaludek
10,000m: Keara Sammons
* Note: All entries are tentative and some athletes are entered in multiple events and may not compete in every race.
Oregon Women's Weekend Preview
Freshman Nicole Blood is one of the nation’s most versatile collegiate distance talents after a decorated prep career in both cross country and track and field. Indoors in ’07, the Simi Valley, Calif., product clocked NCAA provisional marks in the mile (4:46.73) and 3,000m (9:29.87) and was also a U.S. junior national champion as a prep in the 5,000m outdoors in ’05 and in cross county in ’06. Fellow frosh Keara Sammons ran an NCAA provisional mark of her own in the 5,000m indoors in Seattle at the end of February (16:31.71) – a mark that moved her to third all-time indoors for UO. Sophomore Zoe Nelson was a Pac-10 Championships scorer in the 10,000m last spring (eighth) and also finished ninth the next day in the 5,000m. Sophomore Rebekah Noble will make her 1,500m season debut and owns a best of 4:24.49 from the Stanford Invitational in 2006. The returning NCAA 800m outdoor champion claimed her second NCAA runner-up 800m indoor finish last month at the University of Arkansas thanks to an indoor personal best of 2:04.70. Two weekends ago in the Oregon Preview, she followed with a winning 800m time of 2:04.74 in her outdoor opener – a mark that ranks third nationally. Blood, Noble and All-America senior Dana Buchanan – an NCAA indoor provisional qualifier herself in 2006 with her mile best of 4:44.58 – also ran on an NCAA provisional qualifying distance medley in ’07 (11:18.29) that ranks second all-time in UO history.
Tentative Oregon Men’s Entries (* listed alphabetically)
800m: Ryan Waite
1,500m: A.J. Acosta, A.J. Casteel, Duke Wasteney, Andrew Wheating, James (J.K.) Withers
5,000m: A.J. Acosta, Michael McGrath, Scott Wall, Chris Winter
10,000m: Shadrack Kiptoo-Biwott, Galen Rupp, Jon Thomas, Patrick Werhane
* Note: All entries are tentative and some athletes are entered in multiple events and may not compete in every race.
Oregon Men's Weekend Preview
The Duck men’s cross country team won its first Pac-10 men’s cross country championship since 1995 at Stanford last October, and this weekend will return much of its young and talented squad to ‘The Farm’, including several others not listed here that may compete unattached. In the 800m, freshman Ryan Waite ranked third nationally among preps in 2006 with his personal best of 1:50.67, and also broke 1:51.00 in the 2006 Nike Outdoor Nationals last June (third, 1:50.92). Junior A.J. Casteel transferred from nearby Lane Community College and joined the team in the spring. The Wilsonville, Ore., native owns 800m and 1,500m bests of 1:51.7 and 3:52.2, respectively, and was an All-American for his top-three finishes in the NWAACC Championships 1,500m in 2006 (third) and ’05 (second). In March, freshman A.J. Acosta was tabbed an All-American indoors in the NCAA Championships mile (13th) and was the fastest freshman during the 2007 collegiate regular season with his personal best (4:00.37) that also moved him to third all-time for UO. The Oceanside, Calif., native led preps as a senior in ’06 in the 1,500m (3:45.73), mile (4:03.96), 3,200m (8:42.36) and 2-mile (8:46.32), and claimed the Foot Locker prep national cross country title in the fall of ’05. Several Ducks will step up and focus fully on the 5,000m for the first time – redshirt junior and sub-4:00 miler Michael McGrath and sophomore and two-time World Junior Championships steeplechaser Chris Winter. Sophomore Scott Wall was an NCAA provisional qualifier indoors in the 3,000m in ’07 (8:02.86) and last raced the 5,000m as a frosh in ’05 and was a U.S. junior qualifier (personal best 14:30.18). The 10,000m entry lists include junior Galen Rupp who moved to third all-time for UO in 2005 with his U.S. junior record (28:15.52). The Portland, Ore, native is a one-time NCAA runner-up – tying UO’s highest ever NCAA 10,000m finish - and a two-time Pac-10 runner-up in the same event. Redshirt sophomore Shadrack Kiptoo-Biwott, an All-Pac-10 First Team pick last fall in cross country for UO on the Stanford Golf Course, ran his 5,000m best (13:55.18) in the Stanford Invitational last spring as an unattached entry. Several of UO’s new middle distance faces – including freshman Andrew Wheating – ran on four of the fastest distance medley times in school history earlier in ‘07, and those NCAA provisional qualifying times follow:
All-Time Oregon Men's Distance Medley Rankings (Indoor)
1. Michael McGrath, Marcus Dillon, Andrew Wheating, A.J. Acosta, 9:37.95
2. Michael McGrath, Marcus Dillon, Andrew Wheating, Galen Rupp, 9:39.43
3. A.J. Acosta, Dillon, A.J. Casteel, Michael McGrath, 9:41.64, 2007
4. Duke Wasteney, Phil Alexander, Ryan Waite, Wheating, 9:42.06
OREGON REGIONAL QUALIFIERS / NATIONAL RANKINGS
Women’s Event – Name, Year, Season Best, Date
800m – Rebekah Noble, So., 3rd, 2:04.70, 3/17
Pole Vault – Emily Enders, Sr., 23rd-tie, 3.80m, 3/17
Pole Vault – Eniko Eros, Fr., 23rd-tie, 3.80m, 3/17
Hammer – Britney Henry, RSr., 6th, 62.89m, 3/23
Javelin – Rachel Yurkovich, So., 1st, 57.90m, 3/24
Javelin – Ashley McCrea, So., 6th, 50.81m, 3/24
Javelin – 42nd, Kar Meeuwsen, Fr., 44.17m, 3/24
* Complete national rankings are available at www.trackshark.com at the http://www.trackshark.com/rankings/d1women.php URL address.
Men’s Event – Name, Year, Season Best, Date
1,500m – Michael McGrath, RJr., 3:44.25, 3/17
4x400m – Marcus Dillon, Phil Alexander, Zach Ancell, Chad Barlow, 3:09.87, 3/24
Pole Vault – David Moore, RSr., 9th-tie, 5.05m, 3/17
Shot Put – Mark Lewis, RSo., 40th, 16.83m, 3/17
Hammer – Brian Richotte, Gr., 7th, 63.71m, 3/23
Javelin – Ryan Brandel, Sr., 4th, 68.77m, 3/24
Decathlon – Ashton Eaton, Fr., 6,977, 3/23
* Complete national rankings are available at www.trackshark.com at the http://www.trackshark.com/rankings/d1men.php URL address.
2006 STANFORD INVITATIONAL REWIND
STANFORD, Calif. (3/31-4/1/06) – The Duck distance corps scored six regional qualifying marks in last season’s trip to the Stanford Invitational. The first evening, Zoe Nelson and Sarah Pearson scored regional qualifying marks in their 5,000m outdoor season debuts, and finished 25th (16:50.60) and 26th (16:50.64), respectively. Three of UO’s 1,500m entries competed in the top two sections and dipped below the regional qualifying mark of 4:27.80. Graduate student and first-year Duck Amber McGown led the corps (fourth, 4:21.30) and lowered her personal best by 2.51 seconds. Another first-year Duck, Dana Buchanan (ninth, 4:23.88), clipped three seconds off her former personal best (4:26.10), and Rebekah Noble kicked to her current personal best (15th overall, 4:24.49) in the next section. On the men’s side, Chris Winter made his official debut for UO in the steeplechase (seventh, 9:04.74) and met the regional mark of 9:07.00. In the 5,000 meters, redshirt athlete Shadrack Kiptoo-Biwott ran unattached in the ‘A’ section (fifth, 13:55.81) and bettered his previous personal best of 13:57.
2007 MEN’S SEASON PREVIEW
Oregon has unquestionably positioned itself among the nation’s top men’s teams with its first string of five consecutive top-two Pac-10 Championships team finishes dating back to 1965. The Men of Oregon’s recent fortunes at the NCAA level have proven equally bright with top-15 NCAA outdoor finishes five of the past six years, and its first three top-10 NCAA indoor team finishes in that same stretch. This year, a new generation of future greats will team with several of Oregon’s greatest athletes to extend the tradition of the nation’s most recognized program.
Senior pole vaulter Tommy Skipper is only the second Duck to ever win four NCAA track titles, and is the Pac-10 and school record holder (19-0), Duck indoor holder (18-8 3/4) and a USA Championships medalist both outdoors and indoors. Junior Galen Rupp was an NCAA 10,000m runner-up as a freshman in 2005, and added a pair of All-America awards indoors in ’06 and ’07 in the 3,000m and 5,000m. Last fall, he became the fifth Duck runner since 1980 to finish top-10 in the NCAA Cross Country Championships with his sixth-place effort. Keeping true to tradition, UO’s championship experience reaches the span of the track and is shared by a pair of All-America sprinters – redshirt senior Jordan Kent (4x100m, 4x400m) and sophomore Derrick Jones (4x100m) – redshirt senior Colin Veldman (hammer) and redshirt junior Michael McGrath (mile).
TOP MEN’S NEWCOMERS
UO’s men’s recruiting class – ranked third nationally by Track and Field News magazine – is anchored by one of its deepest groups of new distance runners ever. Freshmen A.J. Acosta (1,500m, 2-mile), twins Eric and Matthew Dettman (distance medley relay) and Diego Mecado (10,000m) were national champions in 2006, and the group also includes seven Foot Locker Championships qualifiers. Two other freshmen — Ryan Waite and Andrew Wheating — ran 800m legs on NCAA provisional distance medley relay teams indoors in ‘07. A pair of sprint transfers from Lane Community College, juniors Phil Alexander and Marcus Dillon, teamed with freshmen Chad Barlow and Ashton Eaton to run three NCAA provisional times indoors in the 4x400m. UO’s field event corps has been equally boosted with five pole vaulters that arrived with personal bests in the 16-foot range, and All-America hammer thrower Brian Richotte who transferred from Radford and ranked 15th in the U.S. in 2006 (223-3).
2007 WOMEN’S SEASON PREVIEW
The UO women also enjoyed a ground-breaking first season under the guidance of director of track and field Vin Lananna in 2006 and look to raise the bar even higher in ’07. The Ducks made a return to the national spotlight with an 11th-place finish and five All-America honors in the 2006 NCAA Outdoor Championships — their best tallies in each category since 1993. Earlier in the year, UO’s first-ever All-America indoor recipients in the distance medley relay (seventh) and 800m (Rebekah Noble, second) keyed the Ducks to their third, top-25 NCAA indoor team finish. The Ducks took added pride in their Pac-10 Championships fifth-place team finish and their highest score in a decade (97 points).
In 2006, sophomore Rebekah Noble cruised to Pac-10, Regional and NCAA wins outdoors in the 800m and was a narrow NCAA runner-up indoors. She later added her second straight U.S. junior title and a World Junior Championships 800m bronze medal – Team USA’s first top-three event finish. Oregon’s national-class field event corps is paced by Britney Henry who ranks fifth all-time on the collegiate hammer throw list. In ’06, she claimed her first All-America honors in 2006 and is a two-time NCAA qualifier and three-time USA Championships participant. Sophomore javelin thrower Rachel Yurkovich was an All-American as a freshman after she won Pac-10 and West Regional titles in the trademark Duck event. Senior Emily Enders also made an NCAA outdoor trip in ’06 thanks to her second top-five regional finish and will try to become only the second Duck pole vaulter to qualify for three NCAA Outdoor Championships. Two other young Ducks followed their lead and made their NCAA debuts in ’06 — junior Kasey Harwood (400m hurdles) and redshirt sophomore Kalindra McFadden (heptathlon). Harwood sped to the four fastest times of her career in the Pac-10 and West Regional meets in ’06, and McFadden led collegiate freshmen on the national heptathlon list (5,428).
TOP WOMEN’S NEWCOMERS
Oregon’s women's newcomer class, ranked eighth nationally by Track and Field News magazine, welcomes several capable of immediate contributions in the Pac-10, Regional and NCAA Championships. The UO sprint corps features junior transfer Kavina Hall and freshman Keshia Baker who should vie for Pac-10 points in various events. The distances welcome a trio of freshmen — Nicole Blood, Keara Sammons and Bria Wetsch — that were top-12 Foot Locker Championships finishers and national-class track performers. The jumps unit added several of the Pac-10’s top signees in Hungarian junior national pole vault champion Eniko Eros, Oregon and Washington high jump state champions Emily Gillespie and Jasmine Kelly, and horizontal jumper Katie Gallagher — a Canadian junior national triple jump runner-up in 2006 and a two-time World Youth Championships long jump participant.
2007 MEN’S INDOOR WRAP-UP
In February, junior Galen Rupp continued to rewrite the UO record books with new school records in the 3,000m and 5,000m (7:54.19 / 13:38.62) and placed fourth and third, respectively, in the NCAA Indoor Championships to help the Ducks finish in a tie for 19th place. That team place also stood as UO’s fifth top-20 NCAA indoor finish ever, and all of which have come the past six years. Graduate student and Radford University transfer Brian Richotte made his second NCAA trip in the weight throw and first for the Ducks (11th, 67-8 3/4). He competed in five indoor meets — all with marks of 67-4 or better. For comparison’s sake, UO’s previous school record (67-7) was set by former NCAA qualifier Adam Kriz in 2003. All-America freshman A.J. Acosta also represented UO in the NCAA Indoor Championships (13th) after he ran the nation’s top mile time by a freshman (4:00.37) and moved to third all-time for Oregon. Senior Tommy Skipper ranked third nationally in the pole vault (18-1) but unfortunately missed the NCAA Championships with a calf muscle strain. UO’s distance medley relay ran four NCAA provisional marks that rank top-five in school history, including a school record of 9:37.95 by Acosta, Dillon, and juniors A.J. Casteel and Michael McGrath. Other NCAA provisional marks during the indoor slate came from junior Phil Alexander (400m, 47.18), McGrath (mile, 4:02.58), Acosta (3,000m, 8:02.80), sophomore Scott Wall (3,000m, 8:02.86) and freshman Ashton Eaton (heptathlon, 5,370).
2007 WOMEN’S INDOOR WRAP-UP
The Duck women’s team tied for 21st in the recent NCAA Indoor Championships and featured three All-America performances. Sophomore Rebekah Noble repeated second in the NCAA 800m with a new personal best (2:04.70). The two-time U.S. junior champion became the first Duck female distance runner, and third Duck female overall, to score multiple indoor All-America honors in her career after she also took second as a freshman in ‘06. Redshirt senior Lauryn Jordan wrapped up her collegiate eligibility and broke her indoor school record in the long jump three times indoors. She was an NCAA qualifier with her final personal best (20-6 1/2), and earned All-America honors with her ninth-place NCAA finish (20-1 1/2). All-America senior Britney Henry placed eighth in her NCAA Championships weight throw debut (66-7). The Spokane, Wash., native entered the year with a school record of 61-1 1/4, and topped that with +65-foot throws in all four regular season meets, including a best of 68-4 1/2. UO’s other women’s NCAA qualifier, senior pole vaulter Emily Enders, added 6 1/2 inches to her best qualifying mark of the season (13-6 1/4) in the final weekend of the regular season. That mark moved her to third all-time for UO, and scored her first NCAA indoor trip that later led to a tie for 13th place with her second-best career mark (13-1 1/2). Other Ducks with NCAA provisional marks indoors included the 4x400m relay of junior Kavina Hall, Noble, sophomore Leah Worthen and freshman Keshia Baker (3:37.48) which ran school records three times indoors in ’07, the distance medley of senior Dana Buchanan, Baker, Noble and freshman Nicole Blood (11:19.58 – UO #2 all-time), Blood (mile, 4:46.73; 3,000m, 9:29.87), freshmen Keara Sammons (5,000m, 16:31.71 – UO #4) and Eniko Eros (pole vault, 12-11 3/4), and Jordan (pentathlon, school record 3,957).
OREGON TRACK CLUB ELITE MAKES DEBUT
Eugene track and field fans can cheer on another ‘home’ team on Hayward Field this season with the addition of the Oregon Track Club Elite post-collegiate program under the guidance of Frank Gagliano. The long-time Georgetown mentor most recently headed the Nike Farm Team in Stanford, and in 2004, worked with 32 athletes who competed in the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials - including two Olympians – Jonathan Riley (5,000m) and Nicole Teter (800m).
COACHING PROFILES
Associate Athletic Director Vin Lananna returns for his second season as director of track and field, and was already very familiar with the confines of Hayward Field. The former Stanford head coach guided the league rival Cardinal men’s and women’s cross country and track and field programs to five NCAA team titles and 35 top-10 NCAA team finishes in his 11-year career from 1992-2003.
Other members of the 2006-07 track and field staff include assistant athletic director Michael Reilly, assistant coaches Kelly Blair LaBounty (women’s hurdles, decathlon/heptathlon, second year), Lance Deal (throws, fifth year), Robert Johnson (jumps, women’s sprints, second year), Andy Powell (men’s distances, second year), Dan Steele (men’s sprints, hurdles, pole vault, fifth year), volunteer coaches Jennifer Ashcroft (pole vault, first year), Akobundu Ikwuakor (men’s sprints, first year), Maurica Powell (women’s distances, second year) and Cari Soong (throws, first year) and director of operations Colleen Wrenn.
HAYWARD FIELD – AMERICA’S FAVORITE HOME FOR TRACK & FIELD
At the heart of the recent buzz in Track Town, USA is venerable Hayward Field – the centerpiece of the community’s and University’s successful bid for the 2008 U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials. Founded in 1919, the facility has welcomed nine NCAA Championships since 1962 – the most in modern history – along with six U.S. championships and three Olympic Trials. On the northeast side of the facility, Powell Plaza was unveiled in 2005 as a grand entranceway for spectators, and its external displays detail Oregon’s rich track and field tradition. A new, four-lane, 400-meter warm-up track was added on the southwest edge of the track in 2006, and a new walkway for the west grandstands was completed in the winter of 2006. A new lighting system will officially be unveiled for the Oregon Invitational distance carnival, Fri., April 20, and other improvements are planned in the next year in the lead-up to the ’08 Olympic Trials.
QUALIFYING 101
Over the course of the 2007 outdoor campaign, Duck individuals will try to meet regional qualifying event standards as they bid for invitations to the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Regional event standards are based on the 100th best performance nationally from 2006, and all conference champions are also automatically invited to their respective regional. Qualifiers then compete head-to-head in their respective regional among four national sites that host two-day meets on Fri.-Sat., May 25-26, with the Ducks hosting the meet for the second time in three years.
Except for the 10K and heptathlon/decathlon (which still operate on an automatic/provisional standard system similar to the indoor season), the top-five finishers from each individual regional event and top three relay placers automatically advance to the NCAA Championships, nearly two weeks later (June 6-9 in Sacramento, Calif.). Besides the automatic advancers from each regional, an additional 6-8 athletes nationally per individual event are invited by the NCAA Championships selection committee based on a season performance list (in case of injury, illness, etc.) as long as that athlete finished top eight in the regional.
A list of various regional and national qualifying standards is available in the STATISTICS dropdown link at the top of the www.GoDucks.com track and field page.
OTHER UPCOMING MEETS AT HISTORIC HAYWARD FIELD
Near the end of April, the Ducks host their biggest home stop of the year, the Oregon Invitational (Fri.-Sat., 4/20-21), and welcome many of the nation's fastest and strongest. Distance fans can look forward to a high-powered Friday evening Distance Carnival for races 1,500 meters through 10,000 meters on the well-lit famous oval. Saturday's schedule will feature elite track races and field events spread throughout the afternoon, including a 3 1/2-hour High Performance Event window in the late afternoon showcasing several of the meet's top performers. The Oregon Twilight (Sat., 5/5) concludes the UO regular season schedule two weeks later, and the evening meet will be optimal for athletes seeking an opportunity to tune-up for the championship season or achieve NCAA and USA qualifying performances.
GET YOUR TICKETS
Fans are streaming to Hayward Field in record numbers lately. The Oregon Preview in mid-March featured a meet record 5,699 spectators that easily surpassed the previous record of 4,291 from last year. The Ducks also set an attendance record ’06 for the Oregon Invitational (Sat. - 6,389, old mark 5,177, 1987), and welcomed the second-largest crowds to the Pepsi Team Invitational (5,004, record 6,149, 1987) and Oregon Twilight (4,776, record 6,392, 1987). Oregon single-day regular season home meet ticket prices for 2007 follow: $9 for reserved seats, $6 for adult general admission (GA), $4 for kids (ages 2-18) and senior citizen GA (ages 62 and older), $4 individually for group rates of 10 or more or $15 for the Family Ticket Price deal (2 adults and 3 children). Tickets are also now available for the NCAA West Regional, Fri.-Sat., May 25-26, and ticket prices follow: All-Session (Fri.-Sat). - Reserved $20, Adult GA $15, Senior Citizen/Child $10, College Student $10; Single-Day: Reserved $12, Adult GA $10, Senior Citizen/Child $7, College Student $7. Ticket are available online at www.GoDucks.com or call the Duck ticket office at 1-800-WEB-FOOT or (541) 346-4461 for more information.
TRACK TOWN WELCOMES BACK WEST REGIONAL
In the heart of the collegiate postseason slate, Oregon fans old and young can look forward to the NCAA West Regional Championships (Fri.-Sat., 5/25-26) as the West Coast's top athletes from Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Washington will vie for top-five individual finishes and top-three relay placings to earn bids to the NCAA Outdoor Championships two weeks later.
HAYWARD FIELD IN A NEW LIGHT
Hayward Field will host its first official meet under its new lighting system in the distance carnival portion of the Oregon Invitational, Fri., April 20. Eight 110-foot light poles have been placed the past several months via cranes, along with an additional lighting system that is fixed to the top of west and east grandstands. Approximately 540 metal halide 1,500-watt lamps are powered by a new transformer, which sits beneath the west grandstand, next to a generator that can provide exit lighting for spectators in case of an emergency. New wiring also is in place for future improvements to the stadium's press box and sound system. The lighting system can be set at tree different settings, and will likely use 60 foot-candles for evening track meets and 30 foot-candles for practice.
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