Who's #1: No One Is Safe At NCAA Prelims
Who's #1: No One Is Safe At NCAA Prelims
It’s simple.
Finish in the top-12 in your respective preliminary region to advance to the NCAA Championships in Eugene. In some events, it’s far more difficult than others. The depth of, say, the men’s 10,000m in the west region may make someone’s head explode (As we’ve been saying since after Stanford Invite, *Sucks to be a 10k runner in the west*). But as with most championship racing styles, tactics may outweigh seed times and the Jacksonville/Austin humidity will not be forgiving. Not to scare ya’ll, but racing at regionals is hard. These are four events that we believe may result in the most upsets/surprises and will be oh so exciting to watch this weekend.EAST PRELIMS ENTRIES | WEST PRELIMS ENTRIES
West Women's 1500m
Shelby Houlihan is the defending NCAA 1500m Champion and looks quite flawless this outdoor season. However, she’s entered in the 1500/5K double, will she try her hardest to conserve energy for Saturday evening’s 5K? Outside the top-12, No. 14 Natalja Piliusina of Oklahoma State should not be overlooked. The 2013 NCAA Champion did not race in 2014, but is back and will carry her experience to Eugene. Armed with a 4:09 1500m PB, watching these two champions collide could be the race of the weekend.01 Shelby Houlihan SR Arizona State 4:11.06 02 Sara Sutherland SR Colorado 4:13.56 03 Elise Cranny FR Stanford 4:14.05 04 Raquel Lambdin SR UC Davis 4:17.09 05 Abby Regan SR Wash State 4:17.52 06 Rebecca Mehra SO Stanford 4:17.67 07 Sarah Feeny FR Utah 4:18.24 08 Hannah Richardson JR Kansas 4:18.43 09 Ashley Windsor JR Cal Poly 4:18.54 10 Maddie Alm JR Colorado 4:18.84 11 Ashley Maton JR Oregon 4:19.05 12 Raquel Hefflin SR UC Riverside 4:19.23
No. 20 Molly Hanson of Wisconsin was a finalist in Eugene last spring and holds a 4:15 personal best to her name. No. 25 Alli Cash of Oregon qualified to NCAAs last year, and her teammate No. 33 Nikki Hiltz was an indoor mile finalist for the Ducks.
East Men’s 800m
The 800m in the east region is like the SEC final. Brandon McBride, 2014’s indoor/outdoor National Champion vs. Ryan Schnulle, last year’s runner up, vs. Keffri Neal, last year’s third-place finisher. Oh plus LSU’s Julian Parker who took all of them down in that championship final. There are only three NON-SEC players in the top-12 descending order list, but it’s never really that easy making it to Eugene.01 Brannon Kidder JR Penn State 1:45.58 02 Brandon McBride JR Miss State 1:45.87 03 Alex Amankwah SR Alabama 1:45.91 04 Craig Engels SO Mississippi 1:46.13 05 Julian Parker SR LSU 1:46.17 06 Andres Arroyo SO Florida 1:46.49 07 Jacopo Lahbi SO Alabama 1:46.79 08 Ryan Schnulle JR Florida 1:46.89 09 Jesse Garn JR Binghamton 1:47.03 10 Blair Henderson SO LSU 1:47.03 11 Dylan Capwell SO Monmouth 1:47.24 12 Keffri Neal SR Kentucky 1:47.38
Outside of the top-12 seed times, there are five men who qualified for the 800m at NCAA indoors with slower outdoor qualifiers:
No. 16 Joseph White, Georgetown
No. 20 Clayton Murphy, Akron (Finished third)
No. 21 Tre’tez Kinnaird, Indiana (Finished eighth)
No. 41 Edose Ibadin, Hampton
No. 45 Paul Duffey, Northeastern
And not to mention guys who qualified for the 2014 outdoor championships:
No. 29 Otniel Teixeira, Florida State
No. 34 Henry Tufnell
East Women's 10K
The ladies in the east have two clear favorites in Tennessee’s Chelsea Blaase and Syracuse’s Margo Malone. Blaase’s minimal racing this track season, only cementing her 10K time at Stanford Invite and finishing third in the SEC Championship 5K, should be to her advantage. After finishing fourth in the NCAA indoor 5K and 10th in cross country, she’s a national contender staying under the radar, for now.
01 Chelsea Blaase SO Tennessee 32:28.39 02 Margo Malone JR Syracuse 32:29.89 03 Joanna Thompson SR NC State 33:07.27 04 Caroline Kellner JR Cornell 33:32.07 05 Bethany Sachtleben SR George Mason 33:32.53 06 Molly Seidel JR Notre Dame 33:39.70 07 Katie Gillespie SR West Virginia 33:45.56 08 Sinead Haughey SR Furman 33:53.34 09 Melanie Brender SR Michigan State 33:53.49 10 Amanda Behnke SO Indiana 33:59.60 11 Alexis Wiersma SO Michigan State 34:00.23 12 Emily Stites JR William and Mary 34:03.43
Outside the top-12, we’re looking at a lot of talent that could surprise the field:
No. 14 Megan Curham of Princeton finished 18th in NCAA cross country and 10th in the indoor 5K. She swept both the 5K/10K at the Ivy league Championships and is only focusing on the 10K in the region. No. 21 Mara Olson of Butler is having a great first season running the 10K. She’s qualified for the last three NCAA championships (indoor and outdoor) and won the Big East title in 34:27 for her 10K debut. No. 24 Laura Nagal of Providence was a valuable member of the Friars NCAA XC title in 2013, finishing 27th. She’s got an impressive resume (9:01 3K, 15:42 5K, 33:46 10K), she just hasn’t been on the scene, until recently.
West Men's 10K
We’ve said it one thousand times and we aren’t trying to scare you (Scott Fauble) but it sucks to be a 10K runner in the west. Here’s why:01 Jason Witt SR BYU 27:54.25 02 Marc Scott SO Tulsa 28:30.33 03 Craig Lutz SR Texas 28:33.48 04 Futsum Zienasellassie JR No. Arizona 28:35.76 05 Matt McElroy SR No. Arizona 28:36.53 06 Nate Jewkes SR Southern Utah 28:43.18 07 Kemoy Campbell SR Arkansas 28:45.84 08 Scott Fauble SR Portland 28:50.44 09 Garrett Sweatt SO Stanford 28:51.56 10 Tim Rackers JR Tulsa 28:52.57 11 Pierce Murphy JR Colorado 28:52.70 12 Hayden Hawks JR Southern Utah 28:53.12
Clearly, there are some NCAA Champions and All Americans outside of the top-12:
No. 15 Edward Cheserek, Oregon
No. 16 Eric Jenkins, Oregon
No. 25 Tyer Byrne, Northern Arizona
No. 29 Ryan Dohner, Texas
No. 30 Malachy Schrobilgen, Wisconsin
No. 38 Ammar Moussa, Colorado