Grand Valley State and No. 3
West Texas A&M.
The second-ranked Lakers captured the program’s 21st consecutive GLIAC title with 248 points. Three Lakers turned in season bests that sit in the top-10 of the Descending Order List:
Kayce Rypma in the steeplechase (No. 9, 10:41.29);
Taryn Chapko in the 800 (No. 10, 2:09.97);
Carly Livingston in the pole vault (No. 10, 4.05m/13-3½).
The third-ranked Lady Buffs claimed the Lone Star Conference crown for the third straight year with 290 points. The triple jump was the biggest point grabber on the national scene as three athletes sit within the top-10 on the Descending Order List.
Taylor Nellums led the trio as she took over the national lead with a jump of 13.52mw (44-4¼), followed by
West Texas A&M jumped three spots to No. 2 after capturing the program’s first Lone Star Conference title and picked up seven top-5 nationally ranked efforts.
Benjamin Azamati led the way with his two golds in the 100 and 200, along with a new NCAA DII record in the 200 (20.13). He also ran the second leg of the second-fastest 4×100 of the season (40.04c/39.92A). Other Buffs with nationally prominent performances are
Tyrin Lewis in the 110H (No. 2, 13.62cw/13.58A),
Guillaume Devries in the high jump (No. 2, 2.17m/7-1½),
Dhanushka Sandaruwan in the long jump (No. 2, 7.84mw/25-8¾),
Loic Rodrigues in the decathlon (No. 3, 7483) and
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Rochester, N.Y.
Also Receiving Votes: Matthew Boling, Georgia; Devin Dixon, Texas A&M; Gleb Dudarev, Kansas; Emmanuel Ihemeje, Oregon; Eliud Kipsang, Alabama; Thomas Mardal, Florida; Jo’Vaughn Martin, Florida State; Micah Williams, Oregon
NEXT: May 20
Cunningham, who hails from Winfield, Alabama, is back on the Watch List for the first time since March 24. He is currently ranked in a tie for second among collegians in the 110H at 13.28, a mark that he turned in at the UF Tom Jones Memorial Invitational in mid-April.
Harrison, who hails from Huntsville, Alabama, has competed twice since the last Watch List and left his mark each time. Just a few weeks ago at the LSU Alumni Gold, Harrison soared a wind-legal 8.44m (27-8¼) in the long jump to become the sixth-best performer in collegiate history and take over the national lead in that event. Then on May 1, Harrison cleared 2.30m (7-6½) in the high jump at the LSU Invitational and topped the national leaderboard in that event, to