Anybody know where I can find the 1990 NCAA indoor results, both men and women? Any help would be great.
Anybody know where I can find the 1990 NCAA indoor results, both men and women? Any help would be great.
anyone?
1,401 words
4 June 1990
USA Today
FINAL
11C
English
(Copyright 1990)
TRACK & FIELD NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS Final results of the meet, Thursday through Saturday at Durham, N.C. (distances meters unless noted):
MEN - Team scores: 1. Louisiana State, 44 points. 2. Arkansas, 36. 3. Baylor, 34. 4. Florida, 33 1/2. 5. Oregon, 27. 6. Brigham Young, 25. 7. Auburn, George Mason, Southwest Texas, 24. 10. UCLA, 22. 11. Alabama, Texas A&M, Tennessee, 21. 14. Texas, 19 1/2. 15. Georgetown, Nebraska, 17.
100: 1. Leroy Burrell, 9.94, wind-aided. (Burrell ran meet record 10.01 in semifinals.) 2. Andre Cason, Texas A&M, 10.19. 3. Frank Fredericks (South Africa), Brigham Young, 10.23. 4. Olapade Adeniken (Nigeria), Texas-El Paso, 10.23. 5. James Trapp, Clemson, 10.23. 200: 1. Michael Johnson, Baylor, 20.31. 2. Frank Fredericks (South Africa), Brigham Young, 20.32. 3. Olapade Adeniken (Nigeria), Texas-El Paso, 20.43. 400: 1. Steve Lewis, UCLA, 45.19. 2. Seymour Fagan (Jamaica), Auburn, 45.37. 3. Gabriel Luke, Rice, 45.44. 800: 1. Mark Everett, Florida, 1:44.71, meet record.
2. George Kersh, Mississippi, 1:45.69. 3. Terril Davis, Baylor, 1:45.98. 1,500: 1. Bob Kennedy, Indiana, 3:40.42. 2. Bill Mullaney (Ireland), Providence, 3:40.59. 3. Johan Boakes (Great Britain), Arkansas, 3:40.76. 3,000 steeplechase: 1. Mark Croghan, Ohio State, 8:36.19. 2. Danny Lopez, Oregon, 8:36.86. 3. James Gibson, Yale, 8:40.21. 5,000: 1. John Trautman, Georgetown, 14:07.77. 2. John Nuttall (Great Britain), Iowa State, 14:09.07. 3. Reuben Reina, Arkansas, 14:10.99. 10,000: 1. Shannon Butler, Montana State, 28:38.45. 2. Terry Thornton (Great Britain), LSU, 28:39.37. 3. Jonah Koech (Kenya), 28:40.67. 110 hurdles: 1. Chris Lancaster, Indiana State, 13.45. 2. Steve Brown, Wake Forest, 13.60. 3. Mark Crear, Southern Cal, 13.65. 400 hurdles: 1. McClinton Neal, Texas- Arlington, 49.23. 2. Steve Neal, Manhattan, 49.89. 3. Kelly Carter, Auburn, 50.09. 4x100 relay: 1. Alabama (Richard Beattie, Eduardo Nava, Bradley McCuaig, Clive Wright), 38.87. 2. Arizona, 38.89. 3. Baylor, 38.98. 4x400 relay: 1. Baylor (Daniel Fredericks, Todd Thompson, Tony Miller, Michael Johnson), 3:01.86. 2. Auburn, 3:03.72. 3. Nebraska, 3:04.20. High jump: 1. Charles Austin, Southwest Texas, 7-7 3/4. 2. Tony Barton, George Mason, 7-6 1/2. 3. Rick Noji, Washington, 7-6 1/2. Long jump: 1. Llewellyn Starks, LSU, 26-5 3/4. 2. Edrick Floreal (Canada), Arkansas, 26-4 1/4. 3. Dion Bentley, Florida, 25-10. Triple jump: 1. Edrick Floreal (Canada), Arkansas, 56-6 1/2. 2. Festus Igbinoghene (Nigeria), Mississippi State, 54-2 3/4. 3. Joe Greene, Ohio State, 53-10 1/4. Shot put: 1. Shane Collins, Arizona State, 66-3 1/4. 2. C.J. Hunter, Penn State, 63-11. 3. Simon Williams (Great Britain), LSU, 61- 5 1/2. Discus: 1. Kamy Keshmiri, Nevada-Reno, 207-1. 2. John Nichols, LSU, 195-11. 3. Brian Blutreich, UCLA, 190-9. Javelin: 1. Patrik Boden (Sweden), Texas, 261-10. (Boden set meet record 265-6 in qualifying). 2. Vince Labosky, Kansas, 256. 3. Siggy Matthiasson (Iceland), Alabama, 245-8. Hammer: 1. Scott McGee, Oregon, 217-8. 2. Mike Morales, UC-Irvine, 215-11. 3. Per Karlsson (Sweden), Brigham Young, 212-2. Pole vault: 1. Istvan Bagula (Hungary), George Mason, 18-4 1/2. 2. Kelly Riley, Arkansas State, 18- 1/2. 3. Simon Arkell (Australia), New Mexico, 18- 1/2. Decathlon: 1. Drew Fucci, Southwest Texas, 7,922 points. 2. Brian Brophy, Tennessee, 7,779. 3. Ricky Barker, Texas A&M, 7,762. WOMEN - Team scores: 1. Louisiana State, 53 points. 2. UCLA, 46. 3. Wisconsin, 42. 4. Arizona State, 34. 5. Alabama, 29. 6. Tennessee, 28. 7. Indiana, 26. 8. Villanova, Florida, Texas, 25. 11. California, 23. 12. Illinois, 22. 13. Florida State, 21. 14. North Carolina, 19. 15. Kansas State, 18.
100: 1. Esther Jones, LSU, 11.14, wind-aided. 2. Celena Mondie-Milner, Illinois, 11.22. 3. Beatrice Untondu (Nigeria), Texas Southern, 11.45. 200: 1. Esther Jones, LSU, 22.49. 2. Carlette Guidry, Texas, 22.62. 3. Celena Mondie-Milner, Illinois, 22.66. 400: 1. Maicel Malone, Arizona State, 51.13. 2. Diane Dunrod (St. Kitts), Alabama, 51.25. 3. Wendy Watson, Oklahoma, 51.41. 800: 1. Suzy Favor, Wisconsin, 1:59.11, meet record. 2. Jasmin Jones, Tennessee, 2:00.24. 3. Meredith Rainey, Harvard, 2:00.48. 1,500: 1. Suzy Favor, Wisconsin, 4:08.26, meet record. (old record, 4:09.85, Favor, 1987.) 2. Jasmin Jones, Tennessee, 4:09.45. 3. Stephanie Best, Cornell, 4:09.85. 3,000: 1. Sonia O'Sullivan (Ireland), Villanova, 8:56.27. 2. Mary Hartzheim, Wisconson, 9:04.10. 3. Maureen Hartzheim, 9:05.37. 5,000: 1. Valerie McHovern (Ireland), Kentucky, 15:45.72. 2. Laurie Gomez, N.C. State, 16:02.69. 3. Whitney Ball, Appalachian State, 16:13.20. 10,000: 1. Janet Haskin, Kansas State, 33:49.72. 2. Lisa Stone, Baylor, 33:51.50. 3. Christi Constantin, Georgetown, 33:55.57. 100 hurdles: 1. Lynda Tolbert, Arizona State, 12.84 wind-aided. 2. Cinnamon Sheffield, LSU, 13.00. 3. Tananjalyn Stanley, LSU, 13.03. 400 hurdles: 1. Janeene Vickers, UCLA, 55.40. 2. Kim Batten, Florida State, 55.45. 3. Rosey Edeh (Canada), Rice, 56.25. 4x100 relay: 1. LSU (Tananjalyn Stanley, Dawn Boles, Cinnamon Sheffield, Esther Jones), 43.99. 2. Illinois. 3. UCLA, 44.30. 4x400 relay: 1. Florida (Kim Mitchell, Anita Howard, Dorchelle Webster, Tasha Downing), 3:30.41. 2. Alabama, 3:30.99. 3. North Carolina, 3:32.17. Long jump: 1. Sheila Hudson, California, 22-1. 2. Dana Boone, Virginia, 20-7 3/4. 3. Pam Smith, Northeast Louisiana, 20-7 3/4. Triple jump: 1. Sheila Hudson, California, 46-0 3/4. (U.S. record, Old record 45-5 1-4 by Hudson). 2. Donna Crumety, St. Joseph's, 44-8 1/4. 3. Alexa Wills, Army, 43-6 1/2. High jump: 1. Angie Bradburn, Texas, 6-2 3/4. 2. Amber Welthy, Idaho State, 6-2 3/4. 3. Holly Kelly, Florida State, 6- 1/2. Shot put: 1. Tracie Millett, UCLA, 53-7. 2. Christy Barrett, Indiana State, 53-2 3/4. 3. Katrin Koch, Indiana, 51-1 1/2. Discus: 1. Tracie Millett, UCLA, 183- 9. 2. Rachel Lewis, Minnesota, 165-5. 3. Cathy James, Brigham Young, 164-11. Javelin: 1. Ashley Selman, Southern Cal, 186-3. 2. Paula Berry, Oregon, 174- 9. 3. Nora Rockenbauer, 172-8. Heptathlon: 1. Gea Johnson, Arizona State, 6,132 points. 2. DeDe Nathan, Indiana, 5,855. 3. Jamie McNeair, Purdie, 5,799.
PREFONTAINE CLASSIC Friday at Eugene, Ore. (distances meters unless noted): MEN - 200: 1. Cunlin Zhao, China, 20.94. 2. Jianming Cai, China, 21.17. 3. Zhong Chen, China, 21.30. Mile: 1. Maurice Smith, 3:57.36. 2. Brendan Mathias, 3:58.83. 3. John Quade, 3:59.52. 5,000: 1. Joe Falcon, 13:20.49. 2. Doug Padilla, 13:25.22. 3. Steve Plasencia, 13:26.42. 4. Terry Brahm, 13:28. 5. Gerard Donakowski, 13:31.52. 10,000: 1. Alberto Salazar, 29:09.22. 2. Rob Pierce, 29:13.33. 3. Art Boileau, 29:17.24. 3,000 steeplechase: 1. Aaron Ramirez, 8:36.98. 2. Dan Nelson, 8:37.35. 3. Ivan Huff, 8:38.76. Triple jump: 1. Carlos Gambetta, Brazil, 50-5 1/2. 2. Dmitri Piterman, 50-3 1/4. Pole vault: 1. Kory Tarpenning, 18-10 1/4. 2. David Hodge 18-2 1/2. 3. Greg Duplantis and Scott Huffman, 18-2 1/2. Hammer: 1. Lance Deal, 248-9. 2. Jim Driscoll, 239-4. WOMEN - 200: 1. Felicia Amajal, 23.90. 2. Shaomei Liu, China, 24.26. 800: 1. Charmaine Crooks, Canada, 2:03.04. 2. Julie Jenkins, 2:03.34. 3. Alisa Harvey- Hill, 2:03.35. 2,000: 1. Svetlana Kitova, Soviet Union, 5:41.11. 2. Debbie Bowker, Canada, 5:41.32. 3. Gina Procaccio, 5:43.58. 7. Paula Ivan, Romania, 6:11.33. Javelin: 1. Karin Smith, 211-6, meet record. 2. Deanna Carr, 160-7. Discus: 1. Connie Price, 193. 2. Penny Neer, 191-2.
These are indoor results?
No -- outdoor --- the NCAA doesn't contest the indoor 100m -- nor the Javelin, for that matter!
Martin
Martin, the guy wanted INDOOR results from 1990!
I've seen an indoor disc comp once...from one end of field house into net at other end.
Martin, thanks for the results but I actually was looking for indoor. Any idea on those?
Inquiring mind ...
I can get those tomorrow when I get back to my desk - and our news archive.
Patience - not to mention the ability to read complete sentences (I need to work on that, it seems) - is a virtue.
Martin - with apologies to inny/outy, although it was all in good humour!
Martin, no harm, no foul.
Things we've been tossing around make me wonder what's been the most outrageous indoor t & f event ever held? I've seen an undercover 6 mile and 4 x mile.
in high school I saw a 4 x 3200!
Martin, thanks for the help.
overreactor wrote:
in high school I saw a 4 x 3200!
You made that up didn't you, just to post something?
can someone please post full xc results from 92? thanks i will be forever indebted to you guys.
Thanks for the 1990 outdoor results, even if they were not requested. Great, great meet which I remember well. Most memorable is Johnny Trautman's stirring 5k to end his college career. It was one of the most incredible last laps I have ever seen. It was a brutally hot humid night, and guys were walking for 3/4 of the race. The guy ran that last 400 like a demon and closed in something like 52. Inspiring!
SPORTS
UT wins NCAA track
Bert Rosenthal
AP
995 words
11 March 1990
Austin American-Statesman
FINAL
C1
English
(Copyright 1990)
INDIANAPOLIS - The University of Texas women, sparked by the fastest 1,600-meter relay clocking in indoor history, won its third NCAA Track and Field team championship in five years and Arkansas' men claimed their seventh straight title Saturday night at the Hoosier Dome.
The Lady Longhorns' 1,600-meter quartet, led by Carlette Guidry, clocked 3 minutes, 32.01 seconds. While the time was far superior to the world record of 3:34.38, set by West Germany's national team in 1981, it will not count as a world record because anchor runner Sandie Richards is from Jamaica. To be eligible for world record consideration, all four runners must be from the same country.
The Texas women, who had won the title in 1986 and 1988, finished with 50 points in becoming the first three-time women's champion. The irrepressible Guidry was responsible for 30 of those points.
First, she won the 200 Friday night in 23.28 seconds. Then she took the 55 in 6.66 and ran the second leg on the relay team in 51.7, the fastest of the Texas foursome that also included Kellie Roberts and Nicole Ates.
"It's the first time we ran together as a group," Guidry said. "Coach (Terry Crawford) told me earlier it was possible I might run it.
"She came up to me after the 55, asked me how I felt and I said I was fine."
Prior to the championships, Guidry had been bothered by a strained left knee, an injury that kept her out of the recent Southwest Conference Championships.
"The knee held up fine this week," Guidry said.
Wisconsin finished a distant second among the women with 26 points. Then came Florida with 20 1/2, and Arizona State and California with 20 apiece.
In the men's competition, Arkansas accumulated 44 points, with the help of victories by Reuben Reina in the 3,000 meters and defending champion Edrick Floreal in the triple jump.
Texas A&M was the men's runner-up with 36 points. Florida finished third with 29 points and was followed by George Mason with 26, and Louisiana State and Brigham Young with 24 each.
Reina, bursting into the lead with 500 meters remaining, was timed in 7 minutes, 56.62 seconds. Floreal took the triple jump for the second consecutive year with a leap of 54 feet, 10 3/4 inches. Each victory was worth 10 points.
Arkansas' other points came in the mile, where Eric Henry finished second and Johan Boakes was fifth; in the triple jump, with Gary Johnson taking third, and in the 3,200-meter relay, with a second-place finish.
The Razorbacks' seven team victories tied them for the all-time indoor lead with Texas-El Paso. The Miners won in 1974-76, 1978 and 1980-82.
UT's Richards also finished a close second in the women's 400 behind Maicel Malone of Arizona State. Malone led all the way in winning in 51.97, only five-hundredths of a second off the collegiate record of 51.92 set by Natasha Kaiser of Missouri in this meet last year. Richards, the Southwest Conference champion, tried to catch Malone at the tape, but her lunge was late and she finished in 51.99.
Harvard's Meredith Rainey broke one of the oldest collegiate track records in the book, winning the women's 800 meters in 2 minutes, 2.77 seconds. Rainey's time bettered the mark of 2:02.9 set by Mary Slaney of Colorado on Feb. 2, 1978, at San Diego.
Sheila Hudson of California smashed the American indoor record in the women's triple jump with a leap of 45 feet, 9 inches. Hudson's leap was six inches farther than the previous record of 45-3, set by Yvette Bates in 1987.
Suzy Favor, Wisconsin's indestructible senior, continued her remarkable unbeaten streak in NCAA competition, winning the women's mile.
It was Favor's sixth victory without a loss in NCAA individual races, indoors or outdoors, and her second straight triumph in the mile. She was timed in 4 minutes, 38.19 seconds.
Later, she was to try and complete a distance double in the 3,000 meters.
Favor ran her usual smart race, controlling the pace most of the way, before surging away from the field with less than 100 meters remaining.
Although runner-up Geraldine Hendricken of Providence finished less than a second behind Favor, it was not that close at the finish. Hendricken was about six meters back.
Only Vicki Huber of Villanova, in 1988, has won the difficult mile and 3,000 double.
While Favor's victory was expected, Gabriel Luke's in the men's 400 was not.
Luke, of Rice, ran a career-best in upsetting defending champion Tyrone Kemp of Florida in 45.79, only one-hundredth of a second off Kemp's collegiate record of 45.78.
Kemp led from the outset and still was in front as they neared the finish line. But Luke, a sophomore from Sugar Lands, outlunged Kemp for the surprise victory.
Kemp, the overwhelming favorite, was timed in 45.85.
Baylor's 1,600-meter relay team of Tony Miller, Todd Thompson, Etheridge Green and Michael Johnson, won with a time off 3:06.49, almost two seconds ahead of George Mason's 3:08.37. Texas A&M was fourth in 3:08.57.
Texas A&M's Mike Stulce won the shot put for the second consecutive year, with a meet-record 70-6 1/4, the best throw in the world this year.
The Aggies' Andre Cason took the 55-meter dash in 6.07, with Houston's Leroy Burrell second in 6.17. It was the second year in a row Burrell was runnerup in the dash after winning the long jump Friday night.
Try the below link--full results of scorers for both men and women.
For Wisconsin's women, Suzy won the mile and 3000, and Lisa Payne was 3rd in the LJ for the Badgers 26 pts.
No Hartzheims placed.
http://www.ncaa.org/news/1990/19900314.pdf
Also, it appears that the indoor javelin was indeed NOT contested in 1990, despite it being a spectator favorite (depending on where you're sitting).
Martin,
Do you have any Prefontaine results from the late 70's?
I think the first year was '76..
thanks