Notre Dame track and field will send eight competitors to next
week's NCAA outdoor championship
May
24, 2002
Track And Field Sends Eight Competitors To NCAA Outdoor Championship
Irish set to contend for a number of individual titles next week in Baton
Rouge, La.
NOTRE DAME, Ind. -- (5-24-02) The University of Notre Dame men's and
women's track and field teams continued to take a step forward toward
national prominence this season. The women's team captured their first-ever
BIG EAST Championship team title at this season's indoor meet and the men's
distance group solidified its standing as one of the best in the country.
The 2001-02 track and field season is coming to an end, but both Irish teams
will be well represented at next week's NCAA Championship in Baton Rouge,
La. (May 29 - June 1).
The Irish women will send a record six competitors to the NCAA outdoor
meet this season. Previously, the most the women's team had sent to an NCAA
meet in the same year were two different competitors (in 1999 and 2000).
This season, an exceptionally strong sprint group has led the way. Led
by two-time All-American senior Liz Grow, the Irish have the ability to
score a number of team points in the 400 meters and both sprint relays.
Grow will enter the meet next week with the sixth-best time in the 400
field. Her 52.05 time recorded at this year's BIG EAST outdoor meet is both
a personal best and school record. Grow became the first Irish women's
sprinter to earn All-America honors at last season's NCAA indoor meet,
finishing eighth. She moved up to fourth at the indoor meet in 2002, earning
the highest-ever finish by a Notre Dame female athlete at the NCAA track and
field level.
Making her third appearance at the NCAA outdoor meet in the 400 meters,
Grow is looking for her first outdoor All-America honor. The 400 meters will
not be her only chance at reaching that goal. Grow will join her fellow
sprinters on both the 4x100 and 4x400 relays.
The Irish women's sprint corps has improved dramatically this season,
led by Notre Dame speed coach John Millar. The appearance by both relays
this season marks the first spots any Irish women's relay has earned at the
outdoor championship, and just the second and third overall (the 4x400 relay
team finished ninth at this year's NCAA indoor competition).
The 4x100 team of Tameisha King, Grow, Ayesha Boyd and Kymia Love enters
the meet next week with the ninth-best time (44.30), behind LSU, USC, Texas,
Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina, TCU and Illinois, respectively.
Moving up to the 4x400 event, the Irish team changes a bit but their
place in the field is the same. The group of Boyd, Kristen Dodd, Love and
Grow are ninth in the field (3:34.46), behind South Carolina, Texas, UCLA,
USC, Miami (Fla.), Tennessee, Georgia and Seton Hall. The Irish faced both
Seton Hall and Miami at this season's BIG EAST outdoor meet, finishing
fourth behind the Hurricanes (first) and Pirates (third).
Tameisha King will join Grow by competing in multiple events at the NCAA
Championship. T. King has regained her long jump form from two years ago,
when she was a freshman All-American and competed for the U.S. Junior
National Track and Field team. The junior is in position for All-America
honor once again, jumping 6.50m at last weekend's Georgia Tech Invitational
to put her seventh in the field for next week.
Freshman distance standout Lauren King also has qualified for the 2002
NCAA Outdoor Championship, becoming the first Irish rookie runner to appear
in three NCAA Championship events in her first season. She earned
All-America honors at the 2001 NCAA Cross Country Championships (27th) and
followed up with an impressive performance in the indoor mile at the
national meet (missing out on advancing to the finals by one spot). L. King
will run the 1500 meters next week, entering the field with the sixth-best
time (4:17.33 - school record).
The men's team will send two competitors familiar with national
competition into action next week. Senior distance all-stars Ryan Shay and
Luke Watson will represent the Irish, both in two different events, at the
NCAA outdoor meet.
Shay has his eyes set on becoming the first Notre Dame repeat NCAA
individual champion since Greg Rice in 1937 and 1939 (two miles). Easily
distancing the field to win the 10,000 meters last season, Shay returns in
2002 with the third-best time in the field (28:39.43). His competition will
be Tom McArdle from Dartmouth (28:18.21) and Boaz Cheboiwoth (the 2001 NCAA
Cross Country individual champion) from Eastern Michigan. Shay recorded his
10,000-meter time very early in the season (March 29) and has focused much
of the late season on training for the national 10,000 meter race. Shay
easily lapped the field at the BIG EAST outdoor meet, claiming his third
consecutive conference 10,000-meter title.
One of the most decorated athletes ever to compete at Notre Dame, Shay
has earned All-America honors nine times in his career. He has qualified for
the 10,000 meters every season he has competed in track and field at Notre
Dame, making him the first-ever Irish athlete to appear in four-straight
NCAA track and field championships. He finished seventh in 1999 and 2000, in
additon to claiming the title last season.
Shay will not be done with competition at the meet when the 10,000
meters is completed. He also will be one of the favorites in the 5,000
meters. He enters the field with the sixth-best time (13:35.08 - school
record) and earned All-America honors at the NCAA indoor meet in the same
event. The 5,000 meters does take place after the 10,000 race, so fatigue
could play a factor.
Fortunately Shay will not be alone in the 5,000 field. Watson will be
able to run alongside his teammate with the 11th-best time (13:44.92) in the
field. The 2002 BIG EAST Outdoor Championship Most Outstanding Track
Performer (with victories in both the 3,000-meter steeplechase and the 5,000
meters), Watson will be looking for his fourth career All-America honor at
next week's meet (cross country 2000, 2001 and distance medley relay, 2000).
He will have two chances to earn that accolade, as he will run both the
5,000 meters and steeplechase. Watson will be among the favorites in the
steeplechase, carrying the fourth-fastest qualifying time (8:37.61) into the
race.
Schedule of Events (in which Notre Dame will compete) at the NCAA
Championship:
Wednesday, May 29
6:45 p.m. - Women's 4x100 Relay Prelims
8:15 p.m. - Men's 3,000-meter Steeplechase Prelims
Thursday, May 30
6:35 p.m. - Women's 400 meters Prelims
7:30 p.m. - Women's Long Jump Trials and Finals
8:00 p.m. - Women's 1,500 meters Prelims
8:35 p.m. - Women's 4x400 Relay Prelims
9:15 p.m. - Men's 10,000 meters Finals
Friday, May 31
7:10 p.m. - Women's 4x100 Relay Final
8:45 p.m. - Men's 3,000-meter Steeplechase Final
Saturday, June 1
7:30 p.m. - Women's 400 meters Final
8:10 p.m. - Women's 1,500 meters Final
8:40 p.m. - Men's 5,000 meters Final
9:35 p.m. - Women's 4x400 Relay Final
Alan Wasielewski, Publicity Assistant
University of Notre Dame Sports Information
112 Joyce Center, Second Floor
Notre Dame, IN 46556
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