Anonymous | Posted: 26 Feb 2000 | Updated: 10 May 2011

No. 9 Women and No. 20 Men Win Mountain West Conference Indoor Titles

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (February 26) - After dominating the WAC in the 90s, the track teams picked up right where they left off with victories in the MWC, as the men won their 11th consecutive indoor conference title and the women brought home their sixth-straight. Following the meet, men's coach Willard Hirschi and women's coach Craig Poole were named the MWC coaches of the year.

The women, powered by dominant finishes in the distance events, took first with 229 team points. They were followed by UNLV (91.5), San Diego State (89), and Colorado State (85). The men won with 193 team points, ahead of Wyoming (142), Colorado State (142), and Air Force (111). Kyle Grossarth led the way for the Cougars, scoring 32 points on his way to being named Meet High Point Winner.

Kirsten Bolm led the scoring on the women's side, picking up the 60-meter title in 6.20 seconds and the long jump title with an NCAA automatic-qualifying jump of 21'-2.75", setting a new BYU indoor record. Bolm also finished fourth in the 200 meters with a time of 24.12, rounding out the competition with 25 points and earning Women's Outstanding Performer honors.

BYU's women won 11 of 17 events on the weekend, led by its talented distance runners. Cougar runners took at least the top two spots in each distance event, and their 99 points alone would have been enough to win the team title for BYU. Lindsay Nadauld won the 800 meters (2:13.12), Tara Haynes was the mile champion (4:58.41), Sharolyn Shields placed first in the 3,000 meters (9:51.70) and Marty Hernandez won the 5,000-meter title (17:33.65). Shields' time was a Fieldhouse record and NCAA provisional mark.

Other event champions were Jeana Bingham, the nation's fourth-ranked high jumper (5'-11.25"), Sara Higham, setting a new indoor school record in the pole vault (12'-3.5"), triple jumper Kristel Berendsen (41'-10"), and the mile and distance medley relay teams. Holly Gibbons was impressive in the 400 meters, finishing second while setting a new personal-best time of 55.19, the second-fastest in BYU indoor history.

"There was a real positive, upbeat feeling floating around all weekend," said Coach Poole. "We decided to run to a theme this weekend, which was 'run with heart' and the girls did just that. It was a Herculean team effort, as was evidenced by the fact that we had scoring across the board. The only event we didn't score in was the 60 meters, and even there, Misty [Jorgenson] set a new personal-best."

Competition was a little closer on the men's side, but the Cougars were able to emerge with a 51-point margin of victory, thanks largely to the all-around efforts of senior Kyle Grossarth. After placing second in the pentathlon in the first day of competition, Grossarth picked up the remainder of his 32 points on fourth-place finishes in the 400 meters and 60-meter hurdles and a third-place finish in the long jump.

The outcome was in doubt when a series of injuries to Mao Tjiroze, David Chesser and Scott Cummings meant a loss of a handful of points in the middle distance races. The misfortune was followed by a false start by Thobias Akwenye in the 60 meters, taking him out of the race he was a favorite to win. "When Thobias jumped the gun, it looked pretty dark," said Coach Hirschi. "We had some incredible individual performances that made up for our bad luck, however. Andrew Sorenson almost stayed home but ended up taking second in the 800, which was one of the most shocking performances I've seen in 35 years of coaching. I thought we'd be lucky to win after all the team points we lost due to injury. It was just a remarkable team effort."

Akwenye came back to help make up for the temporary absence of All-American sprinter Kenneth Andam, as he won the 200 meter title in an NCAA provisional time of 21.17. Other event wins came from Randy Himes in the 60-meter hurdles (7.95), high-jumper Marc Chenn (7'-1") and pole-vaulter Alan Gulledge (17'4.5"). Jim Roberts, the nation's top ranked shot-putter, finished second with a toss of 64'5.25".

The Mountain West Conference meet was the Cougars' last before the NCAA Indoor Championships , March 10-11 in Fayetteville, Ark.

TEAM SCORES

Women-

1. BYU 229

2. UNLV 91.5

3. San Diego St. 89

4. Colorado St. 85

5. Wyoming 82.5

6. New Mexico 39

7. Utah 32

8. Air Force 15

Men-

1. BYU 193

2. Wyoming 142

3. Colorado St. 142

4. Air Force 111

5. Utah 36

6. New Mexico 26

MWC HONORS

Women-

Coach of the Year- Craig Poole, BYU

Outstanding Performer- Kirsten Bolm, BYU

Freshman of the Year- Anna-Lee Walcott, BYU

Meet High Point Winner: Aja Frary, SDSU (26 pts)

Men-

Coach of the Year- Willard Hirschi, BYU

Outstanding Performer- Jason Gervais, WYO

Freshman of the Year- Ben Marvin, CSU

Meet High Point Winner- Kyle Grossarth, BYU (32 pts)

Recent Stories

Image
Five BYU women receive CSC Track and Field Academic All-District honors.
Five BYU women receive Track and Field Academic All-District honors

Five BYU women’s track and field athletes were awarded Academic All-District honors by College Sports Communicators,…

Image
Claire Seymour and Meghan Hunter compete in the 800-meters at the 2023 NCAA West Preliminary.
Women's track & field break two relay records, secure six more national qualifiers

BYU women’s track and field piled up six more national qualifiers, including two record-setting relay teams, during…