Jan 18 | 12:00 AM

2nd

Natalie Lopez | Posted: 19 Jan 2019 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Natalie Lopez

Multiple PRs highlight BYU's strong finish at Air Force Team Challenge

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PROVO, Utah – All-American Andrea Stapleton-Johnson set an NCAA leading mark in the high jump as multiple personal records and BYU top-10 all-time finishes contributed to the Cougars’ strong performance at the Air Force Team Challenge on Friday at the Cadet Field House.

“Both the men’s and women’s team at this meet performed exceptionally well,” BYU head coach Ed Eyestone said. “We came into the meet with big goals. Those goals were that we wanted to win both the men’s and women’s competition. We came close on the women’s side and on the men’s side we got wins in almost every event group.”

At its first scored meet of the 2019 season, the BYU men’s track and field team finished in first place with 163 points while the women’s team took second with 111 points.

All-American Stapleton-Johnson earned the NCAA leading mark in the women’s high jump as she cleared a personal-best 1.87m/6-1.5 on Friday. With her mark, Stapleton-Johnson also moved up to No. 2 all-time in the BYU record book for the high jump.

“Andrea established herself as a force on the national scene in the women’s high jump,” Eyestone said. “She’s looking better with each competition so I’m very excited for her.”

The women’s 400m event was led by All-American Brenna Porter with a career-best time of 53.90. Porter also claimed her spot on the BYU all-time list with the second-best 400m time in BYU history. Porter previously broke the school record in the 500m (1:11.58) at the BYU Indoor Invite earlier this season.

Clark Brown clocked 6.76 for a new personal record and first-place finish in the 60m. Along with Brown’s performance, Eyestone was also impressed with the women’s 60m event. In her second collegiate meet, freshman Jaslyn Gardner took first (7.64) and Haley Rogers followed close behind for a second-place finish (7.76).

Both the men’s and women’s teams delivered strong first-place finishes in the mile. Talem Franco led the men’s team as he crossed the finish line with 4:17.10 on the clock. Clayson Shumway took second with a time of 4:18.32. Maddie Cannon won the women’s mile with a career-best time of 5:04.16.

For the third indoor meet in a row, Tomi Adegoke won the men’s long jump event. At Friday’s meet, Adegoke took first with a mark of 7.12m/23-4.50.

Eyestone was pleased to see powerful competition from the throwers. Jefferson Jarvis earned first place in the shot put with his season-best throw of 17.99m/59-0.25 and Sable Lohmeier set a personal record of 16.42m in the weight throw.

Other top performances include Michael Bluth in the 200m (second place, 21.52), Patrick Parker in the 800m (second place, 1:51.71) and first-place finishes for the men and women in the mile relay. 

“It’s fun to see all the hard work of the coaches and athletes paying off in an event like this,” Eyestone said. “Track and field is so much of an individual pursuit so it was fun to participate in a scored meet. We really are raising the tide as a whole team.”

Full stats from the Air Force Team Challenge can be found here.

The Cougars will continue on the road next at three different meets on Friday, Jan. 25, and Saturday, Jan. 26. Multiple event groups will travel to New York to compete in the Dr. Sanders Invitational at the Armory Track and Field Center. Others will attend the UW Invite in Seattle at the Dempsey Indoor Track. The remaining athletes will compete in Ogden at the Weber State Indoor Meet in the Stromberg Complex. Live stats and meet information can be found on the BYU track and field schedule page two days before the meet.

 

 
Braden Taylor | Posted: 16 Jan 2019 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Braden Taylor

Cougars ready for Air Force Team Challenge

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PROVO, Utah — BYU track and field will compete in its first scored meet of the 2019 season at the Air Force Team Challenge at the Cadet Field House on Friday, Jan. 18.

“It’s fun for us to go into a competition knowing that we’re going to compete against some good teams and it’s one of the few meets that we’ll compete in that is scored,” BYU head coach Ed Eyestone said. “I think we’ll do well. We had some really good performances last week and we’ll have some athletes competing for the first time this season.”

The Cougars will compete against the men’s and women’s teams from Air Force Academy, Colorado State and Grand Canyon University. This marks the ninth-straight year BYU has competed at the U.S. Air Force Academy during the indoor track and field season.

Eyestone is excited to see the pole vault event group consisting of Raul Rios, Jameson Shirley and Stephen French back in action. All three cleared at least 16-feet last week with Rios setting a career-best 5.20m/17-0.75.

All-American Clayson Shumway will make his season debut competing in the mile. Shumway finished the 2018 outdoor season earning first-team All-America honors after taking seventh place in the 3000m steeplechase.

A week after clocking the fifth-fastest 60m in BYU history, true-freshman Jaslyn Gardner will be joined by one of the Cougars’ top returning sprinters Haley Rogers in her debut. Rogers ran the squad’s fastest 200m during the 2018 indoor season with a time of 24.60.

Eyestone was impressed with Abram Schaap’s performance at the BYU Indoor Invite as an unattached athlete and is looking forward to seeing him in uniform this Friday. Schaap took second in the 300m (34.02) while also running a 6.99 in the 60m. Freshman Easton Bianchi will compete in uniform and make his BYU debut after clocking a 6.95 in the 60m as an unattached athlete last week.

All-American Andrea Stapleton-Johnson and Jacob Foutz will look to continue their hot starts to the 2019 indoor season. Stapleton-Johnson cleared 1.83m/6-0 in the high jump last week which gives her the third-best clearance in the NCAA Division I so far this season. Foutz has beaten or matched his career best in the weight throw each of the three meets he’s competed in this season and now holds the eighth-best mark in school history (19.52m/64-0.5).

“We’re going to go battle,” Eyestone said. “With the athletes we have, I think that we have a good chance to win the meet on both the men’s and women’s side.”

Follow @byutrackfieldxc on Instagram and @BYUTFXC on Twitter for team updates from the meet. Live results can be found on the BYU track and field schedule page on the day of the meet. The schedule of events and meet information can be found on goairforcefalcons.com.