No. 3 Men's @RazorbackTF Set To Host Tyson Invite

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – After a week off from competition, the reigning SEC Indoor Track Champions and No. 3 Arkansas men’s track and field team will host a solid field of competitors for the Tyson Invitational at the Randal Tyson Track Center (Feb. 13-14). The Razorbacks will also be sending several student-athletes to Seattle to compete at the Husky Classic.

2015 TYSON INVITATIONAL

DATE

Friday-Saturday, Feb. 13-14, 2015

VENUE

Randal Tyson Track Center (5,000+) | Fayetteville, Ark.

MEET INFO

Schedule of Events | Accepted Entries | List of Athletes (By Team) | Heat Sheets

LIVE RESULTS

FlashResults

LIVE VIDEO

SEC Network+ (Day 2 – Coverage Starts at Noon)

ARKANSAS STATS

2015 Performance Lists | Indoor Record Book

SOCIAL

Twitter | Facebook | Promo Video

 

2015 HUSKY CLASSIC

DATE

Friday-Saturday, Feb. 13-14, 2015

VENUE

Dempsey Indoor | Seattle, Wash.

MEET INFO

Schedule of Events | Heat Sheets

LIVE RESULTS

Live Results

LIVE VIDEO

Flotrack ($)

UP NEXT
After the Tyson Invitational, the Razorbacks will host the Arkansas Open and send a few student-athletes to South Bend, Ind. to compete at the Alex Wilson Invite on Saturday, Feb. 21.

SEC NETWORK+ BROADCAST
Fans will be able to watch the Razorbacks in action during the Tyson Invite, as the second day of the competition (Saturday) will feature live streaming video on SEC Network+ and the WatchESPN App. Saturday’s coverage will begin at 12 p.m.

LAST TIME OUT | RAZORBACK INVITE
In their last outing the No. 3 Razorbacks competed at the 2015 Razorback Invite (Jan. 30-31). A late surge on day two gave Arkansas the team title. The Razorbacks picked up the win with 85.5 points, edging second place No. 2 Florida (85 points) by a half of a point.

Senior Andrew Irwin won the pole vault with a mark of 5.45m/17-10.5, while freshman Noah Gilfillan finished 10th with a personal best 4.75m/15-7.

In the 60 meter preliminary, sophomore Eric Hawkins (6.88 – PR), junior Anthony Blakely (6.98) and junior Ryan Green (6.99) all qualified and will move onto the semifinals on Saturday afternoon.

The distance medley relay team of sophomore Cale Wallace, freshman Kenzo Cotton, junior Ryan Thomas and senior Kemoy Campbell earned a third-place finish with a time of 9:32.43, less than a second behind second-place Stanford (9:32.08).

In the 800 meter invitational, junior Ryan Thomas finished in second place (1:49.20), while senior Patrick Rono took third in 1:49.35. Freshman Austen Dalquist placed third in the mile invitational with a time of 4:02.46, which is a new personal-best for the rookie.

Sophomore Clive Pullen went home with a second-place finish in the triple jump with his mark of 51-5.75, while freshman Rubin Owens set a new personal-best with his mark of 49-4.5. Sophomore Omar McLeod was dominant in the 60 meter hurdles and took home the event title with a time of 7.73 in the finals.

In heptathlon action, sophomore Brad Culp finished in fourth place with 5,085 points and senior Nathanael Franks tied for fifth with 5,047 points. Franks set a personal-best in the pole vault during the event with a mark of 14-5.25.

USTFCCCA RANKINGS
On Monday (Feb. 9) the United States Track & Field/Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) released its third regular season edition of the NCAA Division I National Team Computer Rankings and the Arkansas men’s track and field team checked in at No. 3 for the third consecutive week.

The USTFCCCA also released the third regular season NCAA Division I Regional Rankings and the Razorbacks moved down a spot into the No. 2 slot in the South Central Region.

The national team rankings are compiled by mathematical formulae based on national descending order lists. The purpose and methodology of the rankings is to create an index that showcases the teams that have the best potential of achieving the top spots in the national team race. Rankings points do not equate with NCAA Championships team points. Preseason rankings included marks from 2014, and the National Team Computer Rankings will continue to do so through the third regular-season edition.

Men’s Indoor Track & Field National Team Computer Rankings (Top 25)
1. Oregon
2. Florida
3. Arkansas
4. Texas A&M
5. Penn State
6. LSU
7. Nebraska
8. Georgia
9. Texas
10. Stanford
11. Villanova
12. Virginia Tech
13. Tennessee
14. Texas Tech
15. Alabama
16. Baylor
17. Oklahoma State
18. Wisconsin
19. Akron
20. Purdue
21. Florida State
22. Houston
23. Michigan State
24. BYU
25. Kennesaw State

Men’s Indoor Track & Field Regional Rankings (Top 15) | South Central Region
1. Texas A&M
2. Arkansas
3. Texas
4. LSU
5. Houston
6. Texas State
7. Baylor
8. TCU
9. Arkansas State
10. Stephen F. Austin
11. Sam Houston State
12. Lamar
13. Southeastern Louisiana
14. UTSA
15. UT Arlington

SEC WEEKLY HONOR
Two-time NCAA pole vault champion Andrew Irwin was named Southeastern Conference Field Athlete of the Week by the league on Jan. 13. That marked the fifth time in his career that Irwin has earned a SEC weekly honor (2 – indoor; 3 – outdoor).

The senior turned in a strong showing in his opening pole vault competition of the 2015 season at the Arkansas Invitational (Friday, Jan. 9). Irwin captured the pole vault event with a winning mark of 18-1, which currently ranks as the second-best men’s pole vault mark in the nation this season.

BY INVITE ONLY
The USA Track & Field (USATF) and the US Olympic Committee (USOC) invited Arkansas men’s track and field assistant coach Travis Geopfert and junior Jarrion Lawson to participate in a Jumps Initiative Camp at the Chula Vista Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, Calif. In early December 2014.

The USATF Jumps Initiative was designed to help top collegiate horizontal jumps athletes and coaches by identifying physical, biomechanical, and technical components that are related to performance outcomes and injury prevention.

The USATF and the USOC hope that the information received from this camp will help with training design for the 2015 season, plus introduce student-athletes to the range of USATF and USOC sport science resources that will be available to them as a post-collegian.

Lawson’s stellar 2014 indoor/outdoor track season helped him get the invite. He finished 2nd at the Outdoor USA National Championships and won the 2014 NCAA Indoor title after dominating the field with a world-leading 27-6.5 jump, a huge final leap that took him a foot further than his competitors. With his mark, Lawson ranks No. 4 all-time in NCAA history and No. 7 in all-time U.S. history. Lawson’s jump just missed the NCAA Championship meet record of 8.48 set by the legendary Carl Lewis in 1981.

SOLID RECRUITING
Arkansas, the 2013 national champion, is looking to reclaim its spot atop the Division I indoor track & field mountain. The Razorback recruiting class for this season was ranked seventh in the country by Track & Field News.

This is the sixth recruiting class for Bucknam and his staff. The last three signing Arkansas track and field signing classes have ranked inside the top 10 in the nation.

The initial wave of future Razorbacks includes Stephen Mugeche (Blue Springs, Mo./Blue Springs HS), Laquan Nairn (Nassau, Bahamas/St. Johns College HS), Carlton Orange Jr. (Memphis, Tenn./Memphis University HS), Brendon Rivera (Edinburg, Texas/Robert Vela HS), Frankline Tonui (Nakuru, Kenya/Iowa Central Community College) and Joshua Washington Jr. (Woodbridge, Va./Richard Bland College).

A LOOK BACK AT THE 2014 INDOOR SEASON
Head coach Chris Bucknam and his team took the SEC Championship last season, marking the third-consecutive indoor title for the program, and finished second at the 2014 NCAA Division I Indoor Championships in Albuquerque, N.M. The Razorbacks scored 54 points over the two-day national meet, just eight points behind Oregon and 18 points ahead of third-place Florida.

The Razorbacks earned 19 All-American honors last season, highlighted by a pair of national champions in Jarrion Lawson (long jump) and 2014 SEC Freshman Runner of the Year Omar McLeod (60-meter hurdles). Lawson’s NCAA-leading jump of 27-6.5 took down his previous personal record of 26-2.75 (set at the 2014 Tyson Invitational). With his mark, Lawson ranks No. 4 all-time in NCAA history and No. 7 in all-time U.S. history. Lawson’s jump just missed the NCAA Championship meet record of 8.48 set by the legendary Carl Lewis in 1981. He currently ranks No. 2 all-time in Arkansas history. McLeod recorded a top-finishing time of 7.58 in the 60-meter hurdles for the title in his first-ever NCAA Championship. McLeod’s time followed an NCAA-leading performance in the prelims (a school-best 7.57).

At the SEC Indoor Championships, the Razorbacks scored 121 points, earning three individual titles (high jump – Anthony May; long jump – Raymond Higgs; 5000m – Solomon Haile). Arkansas also had five events earn a silver medal (60m hurdles, pole vault, long jump, triple jump and 5000m).

 

For the latest information on Arkansas men’s track and field, follow @RazorbackTF on Twitter.

 

 

 

Fayetteville, the “Track Capital of the World”, will be at the center of the track and field universe on the weekend of March 13-14 as the Razorbacks will host the 2015 NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships at the Randal Tyson Track Center, the home of the “Fastest Indoor Track in the World”. Since the facility’s opening in 2000, Arkansas and the Randal Tyson Track Center have hosted the event 11 times, including nine straight seasons and 11 of the last 13 championships.

A two-day, all-session ticket to the NCAA Indoor Championships is $40 for reserved seating and $30 for general admission adult ticket.

Season tickets and NCAA all-session passes are available online at HERE, by contacting the Razorback Athletics Ticket Center via phone at (800) 982-HOGS or in person at the Razorback Athletics Ticket Center, located just east of Baum Stadium at 1295 S. Razorback Rd. in Fayetteville.