Despite Jenna Prandini pulling out of the meet with illness (http://www.oregonlive.com/trackandfield/index.ssf/2015/05/oregon_star_jenna_prandini_wit.html), the Oregon women have a 38 pt lead (78-40) through 7 events. Prandini is two-time NCAA lj champ, set the record at 10.92 at Mt Sac in the 100m, and also ran 22.42 there, so she is a legitimate shot to score 30 pts on her own at nationals, but her teammate, Jasmine Todd, looks to do a great job in replacing her pts, with 11.12 for the fastest qualifier in the 100m, the fastest qualifier in the 200m, and a 2nd in the lj. The Oregon men are also in first, prior to the 10k, with 51 to 45 for UCs at 3:43.00 or better (he ran 3:41.85) in the first heat. Oregon qualified three guys (Gregorek, Winn, Haney) in the slow, second heat (3:51--Stanford\'s Sean McGorty was the only other qualifier from the second heat) but doesn\'t have its big guns in the 1500m or 10000m. But Oregon didn\'t qualify anyone in the men\'s 800m with Alexander missing by less than half a second and Franzmair and Hornsby by more. Colorado was 1-2 in the steeple with Winter and Theroux. Andre DeGrasse of USC qualified first at 20.03 with -.1 wind in the 200m!! With a good tailwind, that\'s worth significantly under 20. Stanford and Colorado took 16 pts each in the men\'s 10000m, with Ammar Moussa winning, and Oregon took a disappointing 2 pts. The Oregon men are still in first, after the 10k, with 53 to 50 for UCLA, so the lead is slim.