Supposedly he's heading back to Oregon later this month. Does this count as a new record? Discus.
Supposedly he's heading back to Oregon later this month. Does this count as a new record? Discus.
I don’t think it is because it’s out of season
Jim Ryun ran 3:33.1 way back when, but it was in the summer so it didn’t count if I’m not mistaken, that’s why the college record is Ngusue’s 3:34
Though I think Oregon will take the 3:31.4 as a school record
To be the NCAA record it has to be at Regionals or Nationals. (NCAA meets)
It's a post-season collegiate record by 2 seconds.
The previous post-season records were 3:33.07 by Kip Cheruiyot (1986), and 3:33.1h by Jim Ryun (1967). Kind of bittersweet to wipe them off the boards but it's well deserved by Hocker.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_collegiate_records_in_track_and_field#Men
What about the tall fella from Oregon?
Is it faster than the 3:30.56 Bernard Lagat ran while at Washington State?
cramister wrote:
I don’t think it is because it’s out of season
Jim Ryun ran 3:33.1 way back when, but it was in the summer so it didn’t count if I’m not mistaken, that’s why the college record is Ngusue’s 3:34
Though I think Oregon will take the 3:31.4 as a school record
You are right on both counts.
Oregon lists Prandini's 22:18, run out-of-season at Nationals, as the school record for the 200.
Orey Gone wrote:
What about the tall fella from Oregon?
Yea, idk why Wheating's 3:30 in Monaco isn't on the list actually. Probably someone needs to update it but if you include that then it isn't a post-season collegiate record anyways, my bad
It’s not even a University of Oregon record, let alone an NCAA record.
Orey Gone wrote:
What about the tall fella from Oregon?
Interestingly, he's on the USTFCCCA list of out-of-season bests (along with Hocker's 3:31), but he isn't on the TFN list b/c he'd graduated. (He's not on the Oregon all-time list, either.)
This post was removed.
Star wrote:
It’s not even a University of Oregon record, let alone an NCAA record.
Well I guess you could make the argument for both because Wheating had graduated before his 3:30.90, and Lagat turned pro in 1998 before his 3:30.56 in 1999 while Hocker has done neither of those things so far. But yes using the loosest definition of "collegiate record" he would be beat in both respects
Javman wrote:
DISCUSS, you retard.
Everyone please say hello to the newbie on the way out the door. With the use of the word “retard” and ability to be easily angered, you’ll fit in well here.
In parallel with Wheating and Lagat, Joachim Cruz ran 1:41.77, a fraction off Coe's WR the summer after UO (also won Olympic gold).
Is TFNews being inconsistent in accepting HSRs from summer after gradation but not collegiates?
Lol, quite ironic post and you won’t understand why.
This post was removed.
Everyone, welcome Javman to Letsrun.com lol discus
habs wrote:
Star wrote:
It’s not even a University of Oregon record, let alone an NCAA record.
Well I guess you could make the argument for both because Wheating had graduated before his 3:30.90, and Lagat turned pro in 1998 before his 3:30.56 in 1999 while Hocker has done neither of those things so far. But yes using the loosest definition of "collegiate record" he would be beat in both respects
This was mainly why I asked the question, most of the post-NCAA season marks/records have come the summer when runners graduated. Thank you everyone for the responses, the answer to my question is a definitive, "no."
I only say "Moran" wrote:
Javman wrote:
DISCUSS, you retard.
Moran.
Thats’s right, who’s the retard now? Huh? Huh? Huh?
Javman wrote:
DISCUSS, you retard.
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