Robertson Paces Rebels At SEC Indoor Championships
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Senior
Isiah Young successfully defended his SEC 200 meter title and finished
runner-up in the 100 meters to lead Ole Miss on the final day of the
2013 Southeastern Conference Outdoor Championships Sunday.
With
his performances, Young was the men’s high points scorer at the meet
with 18.5 points and earned the SEC Commissioner’s Trophy. He is Ole
Miss’ first Commissioner’s Trophy outdoor recipient since Barnabas
Kirui in 2010.
Young helped the No. 16 nationally
ranked Rebel men score 39 team points and finish eighth overall. The
Rebel women scored nine points to place 14th overall.
“We
had some good performances, but by and large it was not the outcome
that we expected,” said first-year head coach Brian O’Neal.
Arkansas
claimed the 2013 SEC outdoor title for the men with 152.5 team points,
while Texas A&M won the women’s title in its first year in the
league with a total of 117 points.
Young, a 2012
London Olympian, ran a sensational 20.20 to blow away the eight-man
field and win his second straight 200-meter league title, earning 10
team points for Ole Miss. That time set a track record at Missouri’s
Audrey J. Walton Stadium and is the best in the NCAA and No. 3 in the
world this year. It was just off his school record of 20.16 from last
year’s U.S. Olympic Trials.
The Junction City,
Kan., native nearly pulled off the sprint double with a narrow defeat
in the 100 meters. He crossed the line in 10.14, just two-hundredths of
a second behind winner Diondre Batson of Alabama (10.12). By himself,
Young scored 18 of the Rebels’ 39 team points on the weekend.
“After
I lost the 100, I had to refocus and just stick to my plan in the 200
and that’s to run my own race,” said Young after his title run. “At
SECs, it seems like after I get a couple races out of the way I’m ready
for the 200. I was able to take advantage of the competition and the
weather today, and I should run faster as the year goes on.”
Young
is the first Rebel to win back-to-back 200-meter titles since Tony Dees
in 1983 and 1984 and the first 100-meter runner-up since Greg Saddler
in 1994.
Sophomore Sam Kendricks placed runner-up
in the SEC outdoor pole vault for the second straight year and earned
eight team points for Ole Miss. The current world leader at 19-0.75,
Kendricks turned in a clearance of 18-1 to finish second to Arkansas’
Andrew Irwin.
Senior Morris Kersh leapt to a
personal-best 51-9 to place fourth in the men’s triple jump and earn
five team points. That mark moves him into a tie for ninth place in
school history and into the top 20 in the NCAA this year.
Sophomore
Robert Semien finished fourth in the men’s 110-meter hurdle final with
a strong run of 14.21 against a headwind of -2.1. It’s his highest SEC
finish in his two-year career.
The men’s 4x100
relay squad of Montez Griffin, Anthony Branch, Creighton Serrette and
Young placed seventh in 39.85, which ranks that unit fourth-best in
school history.
Sophomore Malcolm Davis turned in
a 10th-place result in the high jump with a clearance of 6-8.75. It was
tied for the seventh-best clearance, but he dropped to 10th based on
misses.
Earlier in the weekend, freshman Peyton Moss scored a point for the men with an eighth-place result in the decathlon.
On
the women’s side, the 4x100 meter relay squad of Shari Russell, Destiny
Lundy, Jasmine Williams and Asia Cooper came in fifth place with a time
of 45.48, notching four points for the Rebels.
Senior
Marci Morman placed 10th in the triple jump (40-11.75), while Haley
Cutright set a new personal best in the 5,000 meters with a 16:43.54 to
place 11th. That time keeps Cutright second-best in school history.
Earlier
in the weekend, junior Mary Ashton Nall earned a fourth-place result in
the heptathlon to score five points for Ole Miss.
“Obviously,
the SEC is the crown jewel of track & field conferences,” O’Neal
said. “If you don’t step up, you’ll get run out of the building. We
need more of our men and women to believe that they can compete in this
league. We will learn from this experience.”
Next
up is the NCAA East Preliminary Round May 24-25 in Greensboro, N.C. The
NCAA will accept the top 48 athletes in each individual event (except
the women’s heptathlon, men’s decathlon and 10,000 meter run) and the
top 24 relays from the East region. Those athletes will compete for the
right to participate in the NCAA Outdoor Championships (June 5-8 in
Eugene, Ore.).
FINAL TEAM STANDINGS
MEN
1. Arkansas – 152.5
2. Florida – 123
3. Texas A&M – 118
4. LSU – 72.5
5. Georgia – 56
6. Alabama – 52
7. Kentucky – 46
8. Ole Miss – 39
9. Auburn – 37
9. Missouri – 37
11. Mississippi State – 33
11. Tennessee – 33
13. South Carolina – 16
WOMEN
1. Texas A&M – 117
2. LSU – 112
3. Arkansas – 109
4. Florida – 106
5. Georgia – 87
6. Missouri – 49
7. Kentucky – 46
8. South Carolina – 41
9. Tennessee – 38.5
10. Mississippi State – 35
11. Auburn – 32.5
12. Alabama – 20
13. Vanderbilt – 16
14. Ole Miss – 9
SUNDAY AGATE
MEN
100 Meter Final
2. Isiah Young – 10.14 (8 points)
200 Meter Final
1. Isiah Young – 20.20 (10 points)
5,000 Meters
21. Seumas O’Reilly – 14:56.06
110-Meter Hurdle Final
4. Robert Semien – 14.21 (5 points)
4x100 Meter Relay
7. Ole Miss (Griffin, Branch, Serrette, Young) – 39.85 (2 points)
4x400 Meter Relay
10. Ole Miss (Oliver, Griffin, Serrette, Branch) – 3:13.62
High Jump
10. Malcolm Davis – 6-8.75
Pole Vault
2. Sam Kendricks – 18-1 (8 points)
Triple Jump
4. Morris Kersh – 51-9 (5 points)
Discus
17. Onyi Afoaku – 155-4
18. Hunter Harrison – 154-4
WOMEN
5,000 Meters
11. Haley Cutright – 16:43.54
24. Kayleigh Skinner – 17:12.44
34. Kelsey Breathitt – 17:28.15
39. McKenna Coughlin – 17:36.79
4X100 Meter Relay
5. Ole Miss (Russell, Lundy, J. Williams, Cooper) – 45.48 (4 points)
4x400 Meter Relay
12. Ole Miss (Alexander, Cooper, J. Williams, Hellberg-Jonsen) – 3:49.20
Triple Jump
10. Marci Morman – 40-11.75
18. Shari Russell – 36-10.5
20. Deonna Walton – 36-0.75
THURSDAY-SATURDAY AGATE
MEN
100 Meter Prelims 3. Isiah Young – 10.05Q (SR)
200 Meter Prelims 2. Isiah Young – 20.71Q 17. Anthony Branch – 21.35
800 Meter Prelims 32. Loren Newsom – 2:00.07
1,500 Meter Prelims 16. Riley Young – 3:57.92
10,000 Meters 16. Ian Carter – 31:44.69
110-Meter Hurdle Prelims 7. Robert Semien – 14.14Q
400 Meter Hurdle Prelims 12. Dante Oliver – 53.47
Long Jump 10. Malcolm Davis – 24-3.75
Shot Put 12. Onyi Afoaku – 52-7.25
Javelin 11. Benjamin Lapane – 195-5
Decathlon 8. Peyton Moss – 6,543 (1 point)
WOMEN
100 Meter Prelims 13. Asia Cooper – 11.71
200 Meter Prelims 22. Jasmine Williams – 24.54
1,500 Meter Prelims 26. Amy McCrory – 4:41.39
10,000 Meters 13. Kayleigh Skinner – 35:06.76 20. Katie Breathitt – 36:17.91
100-Meter Hurdle Prelims 10. Taryn Hartfield – 13.79 13. Racquel Moses – 14.36 15. Mary Ashton Nall – 14.49
400 Meter Hurdle Prelims 13. Sofia Hellberg-Jonsen – 1:01.14 22. Kiannah Alexander – 1:02.89 24. Racquel Moses – 1:05.04
3,000-Meter Steeplechase 9. Haley Cutright – 10:50.58 11. Anne Threlkeld – 10:56.24 12. Kelsey Breathitt – 11:00.30 14. McKenna Coughlin – 11:11.29
Long Jump 10. Allegra Wells – 19-10.75 11. Marci Morman – 19-8.25 22. Deonna Walton – 17-11.5
Hammer Throw 18. Jazmin Miller – 159-4
Heptathlon 4. Mary Ashton Nall – 5,397 (5 points) Fabia McDonald – DNF
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