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Hogs fall to Georgia, but still clinch tie for SEC West title

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
ATHENS, Ga. — Arkansas nearly endured a game that included five lead changes and a two-hour weather delay Friday at Foley Field, but Georgia came up with a 10th-inning game-winning single by LJ Talley to defeat the Hogs, 8-7, and even up the three-game series.

The loss snaps Arkansas’ four-game winning streak and is its first extra-inning loss of the season.

With one game remaining in the regular-season, Alabama’s 3-0 win over Ole Miss allowed the Hogs to clinch at least a tie for the SEC West will still be up for grabs going into the final day as the Hogs’ lead is one game with one to play.

Friday’s game between the Razorbacks and Bulldogs was a bit of a roller coaster early on.

A combined 11 runs were scored between the two teams before thunderstorms moved into the area in the fifth and forced everyone off the field for more than two hours.

Arkansas starting pitcher Kacey Murphy battled through giving up five runs in the first two innings and had held Georgia scoreless going into the fifth before the weather forced him out of the game.

Murphy had retired nine of the final 10 batters he faced and left the game with his team up 6-5, but even at only 72 pitches, the weather delay was too long to allow him to come back.

Murphy finished with four strikeouts and only one walk over four innings, while facing 19 batters in his 12th start of the year.

Friday night was Murphy’s first outing of four innings or less since March 7.

After the rain cleared, Georgia went on to score two in the fifth off the first Hog pitcher out of the bullpen, Cody Scroggins. A two-run home run by Michael Curry gave the Bulldogs a 7-6 lead.

Scroggins was relieved by junior Barrett Loseke before the start of the sixth inning after just one inning of work.

Loseke held down the Georgia offense for the next four frames, helping to send the game into extras.

Loseke only gave up two singles in those four innings, but gave up a lead-off double to Keegan McGovern to lead off the 10th, which eventually led to the game-winning run.

Offensively, the Razorbacks totaled 10 hits with eight players recording at least one. Junior Eric Cole led all Razorbacks going 3-for-4 with two RBIs and two runs scored.

It’s his 10th game this year with three or more hits and 20th multi-hit game of the year.

Cole came through with RBI singles in the second and third innings to keep the Hogs going in the back-and-forth battle early on.

His hit in the third, at the time, provided the go-ahead run for the Hogs to make it 6-5, but it was the last lead Arkansas held for the remainder of the game.

Freshman Heston Kjerstad hit his 11th homer of the year in the top of the first inning, a two-run line drive home run down the right-field line.

It’s his first home run since May 6 and puts him alone at second on the team just one behind Cole.

He later added a third RBI on a groundout that tied the game at 7-7 in the eighth. Kjerstad has eight hits in his last six games, including seven RBIs.

Up Next

Arkansas and Georgia will finish the 2018 regular season with a rubber match on Saturday at Foley Field.

First pitch is set for 11 a.m. and will be broadcast on the SEC Network.

Dave Neal (PxP) and Mike Rooney (Analyst) will have the call for the national audience.

Hogs roll to 2-0 shutout over DePaul in first regional game

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
FAYETTEVILLE — Behind a complete-game showing from Mary Haff and a crowd of nearly 2,000 fans at Bogle Park, Arkansas posted a 2-0 win Friday evening over DePaul in the program’s first-ever NCAA Tournament home game.

The team improves to 40-15 on the season, marking the program’s first 40-win campaign since 2000.

With her effort, Haff is now the single-season wins leader in program history with 27 victories in the circle.

Friday’s regional opener was played in front of 1,985 fans, the fourth-largest home attendance in team history.

Up Next

The Razorbacks advance to Saturday’s 1-0 game to face Wichita State at 1:30 p.m.

The winning team of the matchup will advance to Sunday’s regional final while the losing team will return to the field at 6:30 p.m. for an elimination game.

While Haff was holding DePaul (35-16) to two hits, the Razorbacks scored the only two runs of the game in the third inning.

With pinch runner Carley Haizlip on second after a Kayla Green walk and subsequent wild pitch, Haydi Bugarin singled up the middle to open the scoring.

She moved up to second on the throw, advanced to third on a groundout and came around to score on an RBI single by senior Autumn Buczek.

Green reached base three times Friday with two walks and a hit by pitch.

Haff entered the game tied with Heather Schlichtman (2001) for most wins by an Arkansas pitcher in a single season.

She secured the record for herself with her 18th complete game and 11th shutout of the season.

Haff now has eight games with at least seven strikeouts and no walks. She struck out eight DePaul hitters Friday and didn’t walk anyone. Haff didn’t allow a hit until the fifth inning.

NCAA Fayetteville Regional | Tournament Central
Friday, May 18

Game 1: Wichita State 8, Oklahoma State 2
Game 2: Arkansas 2, DePaul 0

Saturday, May 19

Game 3: Arkansas vs Wichita State (H) | 1:30 p.m.
Game 4: Oklahoma State vs DePaul (H) | 4 p.m.
Game 5: TBA vs TBA | 6:30 p.m.

Sunday, May 20

Game 6: TBA vs TBA | 1:30 p.m.
Game 7: TBA vs TBA | 4 p.m. (if necessary)

Kim fires a 72 in first round of NCAA Championship

STILLWATER, Okla. — Arkansas’ Dylan Kim posted an even-par 72 in round one of the 2018 NCAA Women’s Golf Championships in Stillwater on Friday.

The second-ranked Razorbacks battled tough conditions at Karsten Creek Golf Club and finished the day with a 308 and are tied for 16th in the first of four rounds of stroke play.

Kim’s round of 72 has her tied for 11th in the 132-player field. She opened her day on the back nine of the golf course and counted one birdie, one double bogey and seven par holes to turn 1-over.

Her string of par holes stretched to 12 in a row before she birdied the final hole moving back to even for the day.

Although scores were higher than head coach Shauna Taylor might have liked, the Razorbacks are still in a good position of achieving their goal of making the two cuts to match play.

The first cut after three rounds of stroke play pairs the field down from 24 teams to 15 teams. The top-15 play one final round of stroke play and the top-8 teams move on to match play in the marathon event.

Arkansas is one shot out of the top-15 and just seven shots behind the top-8 teams.

From Shauna Taylor:

“We got off to a little bit of a rough start. This is a championship golf course that demands precision, that demands patience. If you get it out of position the goal is to not make two mistakes in a row and we did that a couple of times today. We didn’t have our best stuff today, but this is a long week and we are in a fine position to accomplish our goals.

“This team is old and veteran. They know what to do. It’s not like we can reinvent the wheel. The hay is in the barn and they just have to go out and trust their preparation. I think we’ll have a great day tomorrow.”

Arkansas will open the day in the 7:30 a.m. tee times as the field flips from round one.

The Razorbacks

Place Player Score vs. Par
T11 Dylan Kim (2) 72 E
T68 Kaylee Benton (4) 77 +5
T76 Alana Uriell (3) 78 +6
T104 Maria Fassi (1) 81 +9
T126 Cara Gorlei (5) 86 +15


The Field

Place Team Score vs. Par
1 Southern California 291 +3
2 Alabama 292 +4
3 UCLA 294 +6
4 Kent State 296 +8
5 Duke 298 +10
6 Northwestern 299 +11
T7 Louisville 301 +13
T7 Arizona 301 +13
T7 Florida State 301 +13
T10 Florida 303 +15
T10 Washington 303 +15
12 Auburn 304 +16
T13 Colorado 306 +18
T13 Wake Forest 306 +18
15 Oklahoma 307 +19
T16 Stanford 308 +20
T16 Arkansas 308 +20
18 Texas 309 +21
19 Ohio State 310 +22
20 Furman 312 +24
21 Baylor 313 +25
22 Arizona State 314 +26
23 Virginia 315 +27
24 Ole Miss 320 +32

Schultz advances in Dallas to FINA Diving World Cup next month

DALLAS —Arkansas rising sophomore diver Brooke Schultz clinched a national title at the USA Diving Senior National Championships on Friday in the 3-meter synchro, along with Murphy Bromberg of Texas, as the pair posted 287.40 points to take first and secure a spot on Team USA at next month’s FINA Diving World Cup.

The pair held a second-place position in the preliminary round, and trailed in the finals through rounds one and three.

The duo leaped from third to first in the fourth round, securing 72.00 points off of their most successful dive, a back 2 1/2 pike to secure their first place finish.

The World Cup appearance marks the first World Cup competition for Schultz as she will make an appearance in Wuhan, China this June.

The Fayetteville native finished 25th at the 2017 FINA World Championships last summer in the 3-meter springboard.

This past spring, Schultz claimed Arkansas’ third national title, and first since 1985, with a school and personal-record 399.45 points in the three-meter finals of the 2018 NCAA Division I Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships.

In conference competition, Schultz took the first and second Southeastern Conference titles in school history in the one and three-meter springboard.

Synchronized Women 3m Springboard (Final)

  1. Samantha Bromberg | Brooke Schultz, 287.40
  2. Krysta Palmer | Alison Gibson, 262.20
  3. Sarah Bacon | Kristen Hayden, 259.50
  4. Alison Gibson | Maria Coburn, 254.97
  5. Anne Fowler | Carolina Sculti, 235.08
  6. Kyndal Knight | Joslyn Oakley, 205.98

Big seventh inning lets Hogs preserve win over Bulldogs

VIDEO FROM ESPN SEC NETWORK
ATHENS, Ga. — Trailing 4-2 heading into the 7th inning, Arkansas put up a six-run frame, punctuated by a go-ahead two-run homer by Luke Bonfield, and was able to hold on for the final two innings for an 8-6 series-opening victory over Georgia on Thursday night.

Arkansas (37-15, 18-10) scored all of its runs in the first and seventh innings, en route to its fourth-consecutive conference victory.

In the big seventh inning, the Razorbacks sent 10 batters to the plate, utilizing five hits, three being singles, along with the homer by Bonfield and a triple by Dominic Fletcher.

PHOTO BY RAZORBACK SPORTS COMMUNICATIONS

It was Bonfield’s eighth long ball of the year and second in as many games. He finished the game 1-for-3 with two runs scored and the two RBIs, He also extends his hitting streak to four games and the two RBIs marks his eighth multi-RBI game this year.

With the win, Arkansas holds it’s one-game lead in the SEC Western Division, as the Ole Miss Rebels won their game tonight as well.

The Hogs now have 18 wins in conference play, matching their total from a year ago.

The victory is also Arkansas’ sixth straight over Georgia and 10th in its last 11 games in the series. In five of their last six games against the Bulldogs, the Hogs have scored eight or more runs.

The Hitting

The Arkansas batters in spots 1-6 accounted for all 11 of the team’s hits Thursday night. Casey Martin, Heston Kjerstad, and Dominic Fletcher all turned in multi-hit games.

Martin went nearly perfect at the plate, going 4-for-5 with four-consecutive singles in his first four at-bats.

It was Martin’s second four-hit game of the season, his last coming on Feb. 17 against Bucknell, where he went 4-for-6 with five RBIs.

The Lonoke, Arkansas native has at least one hit in 16 of his last 21 games and has notched two hits or more nine times over that same span. In his last eight games, Martin is hitting .412 (14-for-34) with five multi-hit games.

Fletcher also continued his strong hitting tear in conference play, going 2-for-5 with a triple and a run scored. The three-bagger came right after Bonfield’s home run in the seventh inning and was the second triple of his career.

In his last 15 games, Fletcher is hitting .386 (22-for-57) with 12 RBIs and seven extra-base hits.

The Pitching

Junior right-hander Blaine Knight locked up his ninth win of the year, remaining undefeated, with a six-inning outing and just two earned runs allowed.

Arkansas caught the error bug early on as it committed three errors, its sixth game with three or more errors this year.

The two earned runs given up by Knight were only solo homers from Cam Shepherd in the second and Adam Sasser in the fourth. Knight ended up only giving up one hit in his final 2.1 innings, striking out two in the sixth.

Sophomore Matt Cronin made his second appearance in as many games and ended up with his 10th save of the year after pitching the final 2.2 innings.

Cronin faced 11 batters and allowed just one run on three hits. He finished the game with a 1-2-3 bottom of the ninth and is now just three saves away from tying the Arkansas all-time single-season saves record set by Colby Suggs in 2013.

Up Next

Arkansas and Georgia will play game two of the three-game series on Friday at 2 p.m. at Foley Field.

Originally scheduled for 6 p.m., the threat of inclement weather forced the game time to be moved up four hours.

The game will still be televised online on SEC Network+.

Hogs set to host NCAA softball regional this weekend

FAYETTEVILLE — Hosting the program’s first-ever NCAA Regional, Arkansas’ softball team continues its postseason Friday afternoon against DePaul.

The team’s NCAA opener will begin at 4 p.m. and be televised on the SEC Network.

2018 NCAA Fayetteville Regional | Tournament Central | Game Notes
Friday, May 18 – 4 p.m. (Bogle Park)
1:30 p.m. – Oklahoma State (38-20) vs Wichita State (30-21)
4 p.m. – No. 13 Arkansas (39-15) vs DePaul (35-15)

Arkansas in the NCAA Tournament

For the first time in program history, Arkansas will host the NCAA Tournament as the No. 13 national seed.

This marks the program’s eighth NCAA appearance, and second under head coach Courtney Deifel.

The Razorbacks are one of 13 SEC teams in the NCAA Tournament, and one of nine to play the opening round on its home field.

Against the Field

Friday’s NCAA opener against DePaul marks just the second meeting between the two teams, and first since 1998.

The Razorbacks are tied with Oklahoma State, 7-7, in that all-time series, and own a 5-4 edge over Wichita State.

Last Time Out

Arkansas bowed out of the SEC Tournament with a 3-1 loss to No. 12 South Carolina in the semifinals.

Senior A.J. Belans drove in the team’s lone run with a sac fly in the top of the sixth inning. She finished the week with four RBI.

What a Run

In the program’s best showing at the SEC Tournament since 2001, Arkansas posted wins over No. 19 Kentucky and No. 8 Georgia, the tournament’s No. 2 seed.

The team’s eight runs against Georgia were the program’s record for runs in an SEC Tournament game.

SEC All-Tournament Team

For their output during the SEC Tournament, Mary Haff and Katie Warrick earned spots on the all-tournament team. In three appearances, Haff was 2-0 with a 1.08 ERA. At the plate, Warrick hit .444 with two doubles and scored twice.

Freshman Duo Recognized

Both Mary Haff and Hannah McEwen were recognized when SEC year-end honors were released. Each earned spots on the All-SEC Second Team and SEC All-Freshman Team. Haff was 10-5 with 87 strikeouts during league play while McEwen hit .293 with 13 RBI.

Down to the Top 10

Mary Haff has been named a top-10 finalist for the Schutt Sports/NFCA Division I National Freshman of the Year. She enters the NCAA Fayetteville Regional with a 26-6 mark in the circle and 226 strikeouts. She is one of three pitchers on the list. The top-three finalists will be named May 23.

A Look at the Stat Sheet

Arkansas enters the weekend fourth in the SEC and tied for 34th in the NCAA with 53 home runs. The team also ranks seventh nationally in strikeout-to-walk ratio (4.69) and 36th in team ERA (2.27). The Razorbacks are just outside of the top 50 nationally with a .451 slugging percentage.

Game time for Friday matchup with Bulldogs changed

ATHENS, Ga. — Due to the potential of heavy rain and thunderstorms expected to move through the Athens area on Friday, sixth-ranked Arkansas and 16th-ranked Georgia have moved up first pitch for game two of their series to 2 p.m.

The Arkansas-Georgia series is still set to run from May 17-19 at Foley Field and tonight’s game is still scheduled for a 6 p.m. start on SEC Network+. Friday’s game two will be on SEC Network+ as well. Saturday’s series finale will remain at 11 a.m. on the SEC Network.

Arkansas-Georgia Series Schedule (All Times Central)
Game 1 – 6 p.m./SECN+
Game 2 – 2 p.m./SECN+
Game 3 – 11 a.m./SEC Network

As part of the Wildcard Weekend coverage, the SEC Network will be providing SEC Bases Loaded coverage on Thursday night (May 17), beginning at 6 p.m. with whip-around coverage of all seven league games.

It doesn’t matter now if you like or hate it, LR solidly in picture

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With the agreement for Arkansas to continue playing a few games in Little Rock, the time has come to move on.

That decision is made. Debating it now is pointless.

There were some arguments made that probably weren’t quite what they were made out to be:

• Since an ever-increasing number of students at the UA are from Texas, it’s questionable how many will go to a game in Little Rock.

• It’s also questionable how many big-time donors would pull their contributions if no football game is played in Little Rock. I don’t doubt the threat was made, but I do question whether they would follow through with it. Big business people are negotiators and many people start by making a ridiculous claim they know they won’t follow through with to establish their end of the parameter.

• Not playing in Little Rock will hurt Central Arkansas recruiting doesn’t really matter in today’s world. Maybe 20 years ago, yes, but not as things are today.

• Most fans south of the Bobby Hopper Tunnel wouldn’t abandon the Razorbacks if a game is never played in Little Rock again. They’ll still watch on television, buy officially licensed apparel and read the information. Today’s world of college athletics is more about selling luxury boxes at games, the television contract and apparel sales than filling out the seats. Nobody will admit that, of course.

The bottom line to ALL of this is none of it matters if the football team wins 9 or 10 games in a season every few years.

And that’s what nobody wants to say publicly. Everyone has to play the political game.

This latest agreement is written so everyone can say, “well, we gave it our best shot and it’s somebody else’s fault.”

The state and War Memorial Stadium folks can blame it on the athletic department in Fayetteville, who can blame the SEC or even the NCAA.

As in most agreements, look at the money.

The UA is guaranteed $2.1 million in 2019, $2.3 million in 2021 and $2.5 million in 2023 and there has to be a minimum of 47,000 tickets sold per game.

If these benchmarks aren’t met, the two parties agree to negotiate “in good faith” for 60 days to resolve the issues.

The same goes with the stadium having to make improvements that are not going to be cheap or easy to complete.

If there is good news, it’s that the stadium has about 18 months to hit these benchmarks. Far be it from me to put a number on what that’s going to cost.

Playing a single game in Little Rock every other year the weekend after Thanksgiving won’t bring the football department to it’s knees financially … if the revenue benchmarks are met.

As for potential losses in recruiting, well, that’s a story we won’t know the answer to until near the end of the agreement. Remember, the Hogs can’t host recruits at games in Little Rock and who knows if a waiver is even possible.

From a political standpoint, this was the best solution possible.

There will be folks on both sides of the issue that say it isn’t enough.

But there is now a path for the UA to not play any games that count in Little Rock.

Whether that path widens or shrinks is now clearly in the hands of the fans, particularly those in the parts of the state wanting the games to continue at War Memorial.

If the fans are willing to buy the tickets, the games will continue. That is very, very clear in the agreement.

And it said nothing about coming in off the golf course when the game starts.

 

Hogs’ women’s team qualifies 22 for NCAA preliminary

FAYETTEVILLE — Following the SEC Outdoor Championships last weekend, the No. 9 Arkansas women’s track and field team secured 22 entries into the NCAA West Preliminary Round in Sacramento, California, on May 24-26 at Hornet Stadium hosted by Sacremento State University.

The NCAA West Preliminary meet is one of two regional events, which serve as the first round of the NCAA Outdoor Championships.

Athletes gain entry into the competition by having one of the top-48 best marks of the region (East or West) in their respective events. In order to advance to the final round in Eugene, Oregon an athlete must finish among the top-12 best (per region) in their respective events.

Razorback Entries

The 22 Razorback entries represent a balanced mix of sprints, relays, distance and field events. In the sprints, Arkansas will compete in the 100-meters, 200-meters, 400-meters, and 100-meter hurdles.

In the distance events, it’ll be the 1,500-meters, 5,000-meters, and 3,000-meter steeplechase while off the track, pole vault, and long jump will highlight Arkansas’ representation in the field events.

Both the 4-x-100-meter relay and 4-x-400-meter relay will be at the meet entering with the fourth-best mark in each event.

Arkansas’ multi Taliyah Brooks posted a mark which qualified her straight through to the NCAA meet in Eugene, Ore.

Year-by-Year Entry Count (National Finish)
• 2017 – 28 (6th)
• 2016 – 37 (1st)
• 2015 – 26 (4th)
• 2014 – 21 (9th)
• 2013 – 22 (8th)
• 2012 – 26 (24th)
• 2011 – 20 (14th)

Solo Double Duty
Four Razorbacks, Baylark (100/200), Kiara Parker (100/200) and Maddy Reed (1,500/5K) will pursue final round qualification in two events apiece. Brooks, competing in the open long jump during the West Preliminary will attempt to add a second event in the NCAA meet having already secured her spot at the meet in the heptathlon.

Event Breakdown
100 Meters
Kiara Parker
Jada Baylark

200 Meters
Kiara Parker
Jada Baylark

400 Meters
Morgan Burks-Magee

1,500 Meters
Nikki Hiltz
Carina Viljoen
Maddy Reed

5,000 Meters
Maddy Reed

100 Meter Hurdles
Janeek Brown

3,000 Meter Steeplechase
Devin Clark
Rachel Nichwitz
Regan Hime

4-x-100 Meter Relay
Taliyah Brooks, Kiara Parker, Jada Baylark, Janeek Brown

4-x-400 Meter Relay
Kiara Parker, Morgan Burks-Magee, Jada Baylark, Sydney Davis

Pole Vault
Lexi Jacobus
Tori Hoggard
Rylee Robinson
Elizabeth Ramos-Mata
Morgan Hartsell

Long Jump
Taliyah Brooks

Heptathlon (Through to NCAAs in Eugene)
Taliyah Brooks

Hogs quality 37 for NCAA prelim; highest number in West

FAYETTEVILLE — With all eyes set on the NCAA Championships, Arkansas heads to Sacramento, California, next weekend with a passel of Hogs entered in the NCAA West Preliminary meet slated to run May 24-26 at Hornet Stadium hosted by Sacramento State University.

The NCAA West Preliminary meet is one of two regional events, which serve as the first round of the NCAA Outdoor Championships.

Athletes gain entry into the competition by having one of the top-48 best marks of the region (East or West) in their respective events.

In order to advance to the final round in Eugene, Oregon an athlete must finish among the top-12 best (per region) in their respective events.

Razorback Entries
Arkansas will make the cross country trek to the 2018 NCAA West Prelims with 37 entries (in 18 of 21 events) — the most of any men’s program in the country for the third-consecutive year.

Two of those entries, combined events performers Derek Jacobus and Gabe Moore, automatically pass on through to Eugene off their best decathlon scores from earlier this season.

This is the second-straight season for Moore to advance to the NCAA meet in the decathlon, and the third-straight for Jacobus who punched his ticket to the show in his lone appearance this season at the SEC Outdoor Championships this past weekend.

Arkansas will boast two or more decathletes at NCAA Championships for a third-straight year (fifth-time since 2012 – 2018, 2017, 2016, 2013, 2012) and is the ninth-straight year that the Razorbacks will be represented in the decathlon.

Arkansas also has multiple entries in the 200-meters, 400-meters, 1,500-meters, 3,000-meter steeplechase, 5,000-meters, 10,000-meters,110-meter hurdles, 400-meter hurdles, high jump, long jump including five entries in 10k.

Arkansas is also one of 16 schools to qualify both the 4-x-100-meters and 4-x-400-meter relays for the regional meet this year and have accomplished the feat every year of regional format that began in 2010.

Year-by-Year Entry Count (National Finish)
• 2018 – 35 (TBD)
• 2017 – 35 (4th)
• 2016 – 41 (2nd)
• 2015 – 17 (3rd)
• 2014 – 29 (T-9th)
• 2013 ¬ 29 (3rd)
• 2012 – 38 (8th)
• 2011 – 26 (T-10th)

Relay Royalty

In the current regional format that began in 2010, Arkansas is one of only four programs that have advanced a 4-x-100-meter relay and 4-x-400-meter relay to the prelim every year.

The other schools who have accomplished the feat are Florida, LSU, and Texas A&M.

Five Events with Three Hogs

At the West prelims, five out of the 18 events in which Arkansas has entries will feature three Razorbacks on the line or on the runway.

Coach Chris Bucknam’s crew boasts tremendous depth in the 200-meters, 5,000-meters, 10,000-meters, 400-meter hurdles, and long jump.

Returning NCAA Qualifiers (Final Round)

Ten Razorbacks from the 2017 NCAA outdoor fourth-place team return to guide a new group towards national success.

Qualifiers from last years outdoor championships include Kenzo Cotton, Roy Ejiakuekwu, Obi Igbokwe, Jack Bruce, Travius Chambers, Kemar Mowatt, Jamarco Stephen, Harrison Schrage, Derek Jacobus, and Gabe Moore.

2018 NCAA West Preliminary Event Breakdown
100-meters
Kenzo Cotton

200-meters
Kenzo Cotton
Roy Ejiakuekwu
Kevin Harris

400-meters
Obi Igbokwe
Jamarco Stephen

1,500-meters
Cameron Griffith
Ethan Moehn

5,000-meters
Jack Bruce
Gilbert Boit
Ryan Murphy
Cameron Griffith
Austen Dalquist

10,000-meters
Austen Dalquist
Gilbert Boit
Andrew Ronoh
Matt Young
Ryan Murphy

110-meter hurdles
Shakiel Chattoo
Larry Donald

400-meter hurdles
Kemar Mowatt
Travius Chambers
Larry Donald

3,000-meter steeplechase
Kyle Hosting
Carter Persyn

4-x-100 meter relay
Roy Ejiakuekwu, Kemar Mowatt, Kevin Harris, Kenzo Cotton

4-x-400 meter relay
Jamarco Stephen, Obi Igbokwe, Ejiakuekwu, Mowatt

High Jump
Rubin Owens
Brendon Rivera

Long Jump
Harrison Schrage
Rubin Owen
Laquan Narin

Triple Jump
Rubin Owens

Discus Throw
Erich Sullins

Hammer Throw
Erich Sullins

Javelin
Alex Springer

Decathlon (Through to NCAA’s in Eugene)
Derek Jacobus
Gabe Moore