Hostetler, Wheating Slated for Hayward Debuts at Oregon Relays

The Ducks host the Oregon Relays, presented by Oregon Community Credit Union, this Friday and Saturday at Historic Hayward Field. Featured events begin at 7 p.m. Friday and 11 a.m. Saturday. The lower sections begin at 3 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. Saturday, with the main high school competition getting underway at 1:40 p.m. Saturday. Approximately 2,300 college, professional and high school competitors are entered in the 2010 Oregon Relays.
TELEVISION/WEB CAST
The Oregon Sports Network will webcast the collegiate portions of the Oregon Relays, presented by Oregon Community Credit Union, on www.GoDucks.com. Friday’s web window will be between 6 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday’s web window will be from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. A subscription to the O-Zone is required to watch the webcast. The high school portion of the Oregon Relays will be shown on www.runnerspace.com.
RESULTS
For live results, schedules and accepted entry lists, check www.goducks.com. Final results will also be posted on www.GoDucks.com.
FEATURED SECTIONS
Though competition will be ongoing all weekend, the Oregon Relays will have two featured sections, Friday from 7-9:30 p.m. and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Here’s a glance at the entries from those featured sections:
Friday
Women’s Javelin (6:30 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Rachel Yurkovich (Nike)
The women’s javelin (6:30 p.m.) is worth showing up 30 minutes ahead of the featured section with school and Pac-10 record-holder Rachel Yurkovich scheduled to throw. The two-time NCAA champion and four-time Pac-10 champ, who now competes for Nike, will be making her 2010 Hayward Field debut.
Women’s 1,500 Meters (top section, 7 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Jordan Hasay and Alex Kosinski (Oregon), Jemma Simpson (OTC Elite), Sarah Bowman (New Balance), Lauren Hagans (asics).
Hasay ranks fourth in the NCAA in the 1,500 and should be in a fast race against professionals Simpson, Bowman and Hagans.
Men’s 1,500 Meters (top section, 7:15 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Andrew Wheating, Matthew Centrowitz and A.J. Acosta (Oregon), Lee Emanuel (New Mexico), Russell Brown, Stephen Pifer and Ian Dobson (OTC Elite) and Jermaine Mays (Great Britain).
Wheating’s 2010 Hayward debut comes against the NCAA indoor mile champion Emanuel, a host of talented pros from OTC Elite and Great Britain, and teammate Centrowitz, whose PR is less than half a second off the school record.
Women’s 5,000 Meters (7:20 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Nicole Blood and Mattie Bridgmon (Oregon), Lauren Fleshman and Julia Lucas (OTC Elite).
Men’s 10,000 Meters (8:30 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Galen Rupp (Nike), Michael Maag, Danny Mercado, Diego Mercado and Luke Puskedra (Oregon), Simon Ndaringu and Matthew Kisorio (Kenya).
If the weather cooperates, Rupp, the 14-time All-American and six-time NCAA champion for Oregon in 2008-09, could take a shot a breaking Meb Keflezighi’s 2001 American record of 27:13.98.
Saturday
Men’s Hammer (11:30 a.m.)
Notable Entrants: Jordan Stray (Oregon), James Rogan (Idaho).
Event features two of the NCAA West Region’s top throwers. Rogan is 11th nationally, while Stray is No. 13.
Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles (12:00 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Nick Karren (Utah State), Nigel Joseph (Colorado State), David Klech, Eric Hersey and Marshall Ackley (Oregon).
Karren (No. 14 nationally) and Joseph (No. 33 nationally) challenge a trio of Ducks.
Men’s Javelin (12:30 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Cyrus Hostetler, Alex Wolff and Mike Simmons (Oregon), Trent Mazanec (Wichita State), Brock Solverson (Concordia, Wis.), John Hetzendorf (unattached).
The featured field event of the relays has three of the nation’s top nine throwers (No. 3 Wolff, No. 6 Simmons, No. 9 Mazanec), a Division II thrower at 230 feet (Solverson) and a post-collegian at 236 (Hetzendorf), not to mention the 2010 debut of Pac-10 and school record-holder Cyrus Hostetler.
Women’s 100 Meter Hurdles (12:30 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Christie Gordon (Idaho), Brianne Theisen and Lyndsay Pearson (Oregon).
Gordon, 20th nationally in the event, goes against Theisen, the UO school record-holder, and Pearson.
Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles (12:50 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Ashton Eaton (Oregon), Paul Dittmer (Idaho), Todd McKown (Wichita State).
The 110 hurdles features three of the West’s best in Eaton (No. 13), Dittmer (No. 23) and McKown (No. 30).
Women’s 800 Meters (1:10 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Zoe Buckman (Oregon), Sarah Bowman (New Balance), Lauren Hagans (asics), Jessica Pixler (Seattle Pacific).
Collegians Buckman and Pixler, an NCAA D-II mile champion who set the school 800 record of 2:04.89 less than two weeks ago, go up against pros Bowman and Hagans.
Women’s Hammer (1:15 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Sarah Grimm (Utah), Nicole Luckenbach (Eastern Washington), Gabby Middles (Idaho), Caressa Simms and Chandra Andrews (unattached).
Deep field finds three of the nation’s top 25 collegians, including No. 5 Grimm, No. 12 Luckenbach and No. 24 Midles, competing against a pair of post-collegians who have gone over 200 feet (Sims and Andrews).
Men’s 800 Meters (1:20 p.m.)
Notable Entrants: Andrew Wheating, Elijah Greer and Travis Thompson (Oregon), Elias Koech, Matt Scherer and Christian Smith (OTC Elite).
Andrew Wheating, in one of his last signature races at Hayward Field, and teammates Elijah Greer and Travis Thompson will be in a fast field with a trio of OTC Elite runners.
SECTIONS WORTH NOTING
Those coming earlier on Friday might want to show up for the women’s long jump (4:15 p.m.) to watch Wichita State’s La’Taish Brown, ranked 12th in the country, and Oregon’s Brianne Theisen. Brown has a season-best of 20-10.5, while Theisen’s PR is 20-3.75 (wind-aided).
For those interested in the high school schedule, there is a brief session Friday night from 5-6 p.m. and another short session Saturday from 10-11:05 a.m.
The majority of the high school events come on Saturday beginning at 1:40 p.m. and continuing to the last event at 7:30 p.m.
RELAY RECORDS FALL
In one of the more overlooked accomplishments this spring, all four of the active women’s relays record have fallen within the last two months. That’s the outdoor 4x100 and 4x400 meter marks, and the indoor 4x400 meter and distance medley relays. The outdoor 4x400 time fell April 24 at the Penn Relays - 3:32.34, which broke a 15-year-old school record.
OREGON IN THE RANKINGS
Oregon has numerous student-athletes ranked on the national and regional descending order lists. These lists are important because they are the sole basis for selection to the NCAA West Regional May 27-29 in Austin, Texas. The top 48 individuals in each region are eligible for selection (combined events will be the top 24 nationally on the descending order list). See p. 6-7 for the complete list.
For the women, Brianne Theisen is tops in the heptathlon (5,942), while Melissa Gergel is tied for No. 1 in the pole vault (14-3.25). Zoe Buckman ranks second in the nation in the 1,500 meters (4:12.80). After Buckman, Oregon ranks fourth (Jordan Hasay/4:14.67), 10th (Anne Kesselring/4:18.80) and 13th (Nicole Blood/4:20.20) in the 1,500. Amber Purvis is fourth nationally in the 200 meters (23.00w) and 16th nationally in the 100 (11.38w). Claire Michel is sixth nationally in the 3,000 meter steeplechase (10:14.84). The Ducks’ 4x400 meter team in third in the nation (3:32.34), while the 4x100 relay team is seventh (44.13).
For the men, Ashton Eaton leads the country in the decathlon (8,310w), is fourth in the long jump (25-10.25w), seventh in the 110 hurdles (13.64w) and 16th in the 100 (10.34w). Alex Wolff ranks third nationally in the javelin (240-8), while Mike Simmons is sixth in that event (234-0). Jordan Stray is 12th nationally in the hammer (217-5). Jordan McNamara is No. 14 nationally in the 5,000 meters, while Matthew Centrowitz is No. 16 at that distance (13:47.73).
PAC-10 ATHLETES OF THE WEEK
Oregon has garnered five Pac-10 athlete of the week awards thus far in 2010:
4/12 Men’s Track Ashton Eaton
4/12 Women’s Track Amber Purvis
4/19 Men’s Field Alex Wolff
4/26 Men’s Track Mac Fleet
4/26 Women’s Track 4x400 Relay
JOHNSON, POWELL PROMOTED
Veteran assistants Robert Johnson and Andy Powell have been promoted to associate head coaches for the Oregon track and field programs, Associate Athletic Director Vin Lananna announced on April 21. Effective immediately, Johnson assumed the role of associate head coach of women’s track and field and Powell became associate head coach of men’s track and field/men’s and women’s cross country.
PENN RELAYS REVIEW
At the 116th Penn Relays, the Oregon men brought home a pair of wins in the 4xmile (Fleet, Maag, Acosta, Centrowitz) and distance medley relays (Centrowitz, Barlow, Fleet, Wheating), plus a runner-up finish in the 4x800 relay. It was the Ducks’ first ever wins at the Penn Relays. The women placed second in the 4x400 meter and distance medley relays, and were third in both the 4x800 and 4x1,500 meter relays. Also, the women’s 4x400 meter relay team (Youngblood, Baker, Williams, Purvis) broke a 15-year-old school record, running 3:32.34, which was the third-fastest time in the nation this season.
UCLA DUAL MEET REVIEW
No. 3 Oregon won six of the eight field events, including sweeps in hammer and javelin, and Ashton Eaton won the 100 and 200 meters as the Ducks defeated UCLA 92-71 in a dual meet April 17 before 5,209 fans at Historic Hayward Field. It was the third straight year the Ducks have prevailed against the Bruins. Jordan Stray led the sweep in the hammer with a personal-best throw of 217-5, while junior Alex Wolff went 240-8 on his third attempt to win the javelin and senior Mike Simmons was second at 234-0 in his first competition in two years. David Klech, who transferred to Oregon from UCLA in 2007, notched his collegiate best in the high jump in winning at 7-0.5. The Ducks had winners in the pole vault (Colin Witter-Tilton, 17-1.5), long jump (Vernell Warren, 24-0.25), triple jump (Brian Schaudt, 47-8.5), 110 hurdles (Eric Hersey, 14.39), 1,500 (Mac Fleet, 3:46.62), 400 meters (Chad Barlow, 47.33) and 4x400 meter relay (3:10.94). Eaton’s performances were impressive. The Ducks’ do-it-all senior from Bend, Ore., took the 100 meters in 10.52 seconds that was just .05 off the meet record, before coming back later in the meet to capture the 200 in a personal-best 21.03. That time ranks as the eighth-fastest at Oregon.
PEPSI TEAM INVITATIONAL REVIEW
Oregon’s men’s and women’s teams recorded an impressive sweep at the Pepsi Team Invitational before 5,321 fans on April 10. The women used wins by Amber Purvis in the 100 and 200, Anne Kesselring in the 800, Jordan Hasay in the 5,000, Claire Michel in the steeplechase, Brianne Theisen in the high jump, Jordan Roskelley in the pole vault, Jamesha Youngblood in the long jump and Sara Cole in the hammer to score 212 points. No. 1 Texas A&M was second (179.5) followed by Missouri (141) and No. 13 Washington (129.5). For the men, wins came from Ashton Eaton in the 110 hurdles and long jump, Mac Fleet (800), Matthew Centrowitz (1,500), David Klech and Danny Marconi (high jump) and Jordan Stray (hammer). The men scored 186 points, followed by Texas A&M with 151, Washington with 132, Illinois with 109 and Missouri with 103.
TEXAS RELAYS REVIEW
Senior Ashton Eaton set a PR in the decathlon March 31-April 1 at the Texas Relays, scoring 8,310 points. Unfortunately, for the second time in his career, what would have been the school record was nullified by extremely high winds in the 110 hurdles (plus-4.9 meters per second). Regardless, Eaton’s score leads the nation and was the fourth highest all-conditions mark in collegiate history. Junior Brianne Theisen won the heptathlon, scoring a wind-aided 5,942 points. Senior Marshall Ackley took seventh in the decathlon with 7,074 points.
STANFORD INVITATIONAL REVIEW
Wins by Jordan Hasay (1,500), Alex Wolff (javelin), Melissa Gergel (pole vault), David Klech (high jump) and the women’s 4x100 meter relay team highlighted Oregon’s performances at the March 26-27 Stanford Invitational. Gergel won the women’s pole vault in a jump off, clearing an outdoor best 14-3.25 to edge Stanford’s Katerina Stefandi. Hasay ran 4:14.69 to edge Washington star Katie Follett, who finished in 4:15.04, by less than half a second. Hasay’s time was just .17 off her personal best, 4:14.50, that she ran as a high schooler at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Trials in Eugene. As it was, Hasay’s first outdoor race as a Duck ranked fifth all-time on the school’s 1,500 career list. Wolff opened his 2010 season with a win in the men’s javelin, throwing 229-7 to clip Chris Reno of Brigham Young by two inches. Klech won the high jump with a clearance at 6-10.25, his best height since high school. The team of Mandy White, Amber Purvis, Keshia Baker and Michele Williams won the women’s 4x100 meter relay in 44.38. That time was the third-fastest 4x100 relay in school history.
PREVIEW REVIEW
Ten meet records were set, plus an attendance record of nearly 6,000 people, at the season-opening Oregon Preview on March 20 at Hayward Field.
Meet records set by Oregon competitors:
? Women’s 4x100 relay (Mandy White, Amber Purvis, Keshia Baker and Jamesha Youngblood), 44.30 ? second fastest time in school history
? Melissa Gergel, women’s pole vault, 14-1.25
? Jamesha Youngblood, 400 hurdles, 59.95
? Amber Purvis, women’s 400 meters, 53.96
? Jordan McNamara, men’s 3,000 meters, 7:53.63
? Claire Michel women’s 2,000 meter steeplechase, 6:55.17
Other records:
? OTC Elite newcomer Sally Kipyego won the women’s 1,500 meters in 4:10.71 to break Marla Runyan’s 2000 record of 4:11.44.
? Former Duck Britney Henry, women’s hammer, 216-9.
? Billy Nelson, men’s 2,000 meter steeplechase, 5:44.59.
? The OTC Elite, men’s 4x400 meter relay (Tyler Mulder, Elias Koech, Mark Wieczorek and Matt Scherer), 3:08.45.
Other UO highlights included Matthew Centrowitz’ win in the men’s 1,500 meters (3:48.97), senior Michael Maag, making his Oregon debut, was fourth in that race in 3:51.75. Senior Zoe Buckman was second in the women’s 1,500 meters in a PR 4:12.80 (No. 4 all-time). Jasmine Kelly set a PR in winning the women’s high jump at 5-10. Britton Nelson threw a personal best 219-8 to win the men’s javelin. Jordan Stray won the men’s hammer with a throw of 209-8, his best distance in two years.
WOMEN WIN NCAA INDOOR TITLE; EATON SETS WORLD RECORD
The Women of Oregon won their first NCAA Indoor Track and Field national title, while Ashton Eaton set the world record in the heptathlon to lead the men for a tie for second at the 2010 NCAA Indoor Championships March 12-13 in Fayetteville, Ark.
Eaton thrilled the Randall Tyson Center crowd by not only winning the heptathlon for the second straight year, but also by scoring 6,499 points to break Dan O’Brien’s 17-year-old world and American record (6,474). The women had national champions in the pentathlon by Brianne Theisen and the 4x400 relay team (Jamesha Youngblood, Keshia Baker, Michele Williams, Amber Purvis). Other point scorers for the women included Melissa Gergel ? second in the pole vault, Keshia Baker ? second in the 400 meters, Jordan Hasay ? fourth in the mile, Amber Purvis ? fourth in the 200, Nicole Blood ? fifth in the 3,000, Anne Kesselring ? sixth in the mile, and the second-place distance medley relay team (Kesselring, Williams, Zoe Buckman, Hasay). The Ducks scored 61 points, with Tennessee second with 36.
In addition to Eaton, the men won the distance medley relay on Andrew Wheating’s tremendous kick on the mile leg, which was preceded by A.J. Acosta, Chad Barlow and Travis Thompson. Others scoring for the men included Mac Fleet ? second in the mile, Wheating ? second in the 800, Acosta ? fourth in the mile, and the sixth-place 4x400 meter relay team (Matt Butcher, Eaton, Thompson, Barlow). Florida won the men’s title with 57 points, while Oregon and Texas A&M were tied at 44.
EATON’S WORLD HEPTATHLON RECORD
Senior Ashton Eaton accomplished what’s become an extremely rare feat -- breaking a world record as a collegian. He did that March 12-13 in the heptathlon at the NCAA Indoor Championships in Fayetteville, Ark. Eaton bettered Dan O’Brien’s 1993 mark by 25 points.
All-time World heptathlon list:
1. 6,499 Ashton Eaton USA 2010
2. 6,476 Dan O’Brien USA 1993
3. 6,438 Roman Sebrle CZE 2004
4. 6,424 Tomas Dvorak CZE 2000
5. 6,418 Christian Plaziat FRA 1992
OREGON EARNS 31 ALL-AMERICA AWARDS
Oregon led the nation with an astounding 31 All-America certificates earned at the 2010 NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships.
The national championship Oregon women’s team earned 17 All-America awards, while the runner-up men captured 14. Among those honored was senior Nicole Blood, whose selection in the 3,000 meters was her eighth career All-America certificate, which is tied for the second-most in UO women’s history with Kathy Hayes and trails only Leann Warren’s 10.
Also earning All-America awards for the women were national champion Brianne Theisen in the pentathlon, as well as members of the national championship 4x400 meter relay team, Keshia Baker, Amber Purvis, Michelle Williams and Jamesha Youngblood.
Other All-Americans were Purvis (60 meters, 200 meters), Baker (400 meters), Jordan Hasay (mile, distance medley relay), Anne Kesselring (mile, distance medley relay), Williams (distance medley relay), Melissa Gergel (pole vault), Zoe Buckman (distance medley relay) and Mattie Bridgmon (5,000 meters).
On the men’s side, national champion and new world record holder for the heptathlon Ashton Eaton led the way. Eaton was also honored for the 4x400 meter relay team. The members of the national champion distance medley relay team, A.J. Acosta, Chad Barlow, Travis Thompson and Anderw Wheating made the list, as did Mac Fleet (mile), Wheating (800 meters), Acosta (mile), Barlow (4x400 meter relay), Matt Butcher (4x400 meter relay), Thompson (4x400 meter relay), Elijah Greer (800 meters) and Luke Puskedra (5,000 meters).
LANANNA, JOHNSON HONORED
Vin Lananna and Robert Johnson were recognized honored by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) as recipients of National Women’s Coach and Assistant Coach of the Year, respectively, for the 2010 indoor track & field season in Division I.
Lananna, in his fifth year as Oregon’s Associate Athletic Director for track & field, helped the Ducks capture their first NCAA women’s indoor crown in school history. Oregon claimed 61 points in the meet, 25 more than nearest competitor Tennessee. The margin of victory was the largest in NCAA Indoor Championship history since Texas scored 60 points to top the 30 managed by runner-up Louisiana State in 1998. In February, Oregon also claimed its first MPSF Championship.
Johnson is in his fifth year as an assistant coach at Oregon and concentrates his coaching on sprints, hurdles and horizontal jumps. Winning this award for the second-straight year, Johnson’s athletes contributed 23 team points to the Ducks’ first-ever capture of the NCAA team title. Oregon’s 4x400-meter relay of Jamesha Youngblood, Keshia Baker, Michele Williams, and Amber Purvis won an NCAA crown for the first time, clocking a school-record 3:32.97. In addition, Baker would finish second in the 400 meters at the national meet in 51.63 and Purvis, just a sophomore, took fourth place in the 200 (23.21).
OREGON’S NCAA CHAMPIONS
The 2010 Women’s Indoor Track & Field title was the 17th national championship in school history. The others are men’s outdoor track & field in 1962, 1964, 1965, 1970 and 1984, women’s outdoor track & field in 1985, men’s indoor track & field in 2009, men’s cross country in 1971, 1973, 1974, 1977, 2007 and 2008, women’s cross country in 1983 and 1987, and men’s basketball in 1939. The championship was the first for an Oregon women’s program since cross country’s win in 1987, and the fourth women’s title overall.
A CHAMPIONSHIP TRADITION
Oregon has won five of the last seven Pac-10 titles in men’s track and field, including three in a row. The Ducks have conference men’s track and field titles in 1923, 1934, 1965, 1967, 1978, 1979, 1986, 1990, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2008 and 2009. On the women’s side, Oregon’s Pac-10 crowns came in 1991, 1992 and 2009.
OFF-TRACK ACTIVITIES
For the fourth year in a row, the Starting Block will take place prior to every home meet and is geared to get kids moving and staying active. The concept features a high-energy, dynamic space for youth designed for fun and interactive activities that offers youth a chance to practice their athletic skills and learn more about the sport.
15 TO JOIN TEAM IN 2011
Fifteen high school stars, including the national boys leader in the javelin, Sam Crouser, and the 2009 Pan American Junior Games girl’s champion at 5,000 meters, Sarah Andrews, have signed National Letters of Intent to join the Oregon’s track and field teams next season.
The seven men are throwers Crouser of Gresham, Ore., and Jacob Budwig of Fowler, Calif., decathlon state record-holder Dakotah Keys of Sweet Home, Ore., distance runners Parker Stinson of Austin, Texas, and Colby Alexander from Strongsville, Ohio, and middle distance standouts Cole Watson of Rogue River, Ore., and Brian Shrader of Flagstaff, Ariz.
Among the eight women are two New Yorkers in Phyllis Francis (Laurelton) and Megan Patrignelli (Monroe) and three Californians, Lauryn Newson (Richmond), Chizoba Okodogbe (Antioch) and Kortney Ross (San Diego). The class is rounded out by Andrews from The Woodlands, Texas, English Gardner of Voorhees, N.J., and Laura Roesler from Fargo, N.D.


