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NCAA Men's Formchart - 3/10/2025

Published by
DyeStat.com   Mar 10th 2025, 3:35pm
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DyeStat Men's NCAA Division 1 Indoor Formchart

DIVISION 1 PERFORMANCE LIST 

Compiled by Jack Pfeifer of Lake Oswego, Ore./Photo by Bobby Goddin

Name   School   Yr   PR

60 Meters

1 Kanyinsola Ajayi, Auburn, So, 6.51

2 Ajani Dwyer, Penn State, Fr, 6.54

3 JC Stevenson, USC, Jr, 6.50

4 Jordan Anthony Arkansas Fr 6.54

5 Israel Okon, Auburn, Fr, 6.52

6 Malachi Snow Texas Tech So 6.53

7 David Foster Cal Sr 6.54

8 Travis Williams, USC, Sr, 6.55

Ajayi, third as a freshman in the outdoor NCAA 100 a year ago and an Olympian for Nigeria, false-started in the SEC final. Then Dwyer, a promising freshman from Washington Township, N.J., did the same in the Big Ten final. Did they learn their lesson? Snow, a transfer from San Jose State to Texas Tech, is attempting the 60/60H double. Fellow freshmen Anthony and Okon went 1-2 at the SEC. Stevenson won the Big Ten over teammate Williams. 

200 Meters

1 Makanakaishe Charamba, Auburn, Sr, 20.13

2 Carli Makarawu, Kentucky, Jr, 20.20

3 Cameron Miller, Purdue, Sr, 20.27

4 Jaiden Reid LSU So 20.27

5 Jamarion Stubbs Alabama State Jr 20.36

6 Trayvion White-Austin Arizona Sr 20.50 

7 Johnnie Blockburger, USC, Sr, 20.34

8 Demar Francis Baylor Sr 20.47

Charamba and Makarawu both ran for Zimbabwe in the Paris Olympics. Miller won the Big Ten, White-Austin the Big 12. Wanya McCoy of Florida (7th last year) went down in the SEC final and was scratched from the field.

400 Meters

1 Nathaniel Ezekiel, Baylor, Sr, 44.74

2 Auhmad Robinson, Texas A&M, Sr, 45.07

3 Will Floyd Georgia So 45.24

4 William Jones USC Jr 45.24

5 Jayden Davis Arizona State So 44.95

6 Judson Lincoln IV, Va Tech, Jr, 45.55

7 Jacob Andrews USC So 45.56

8 Jake Palermo Penn State Fr 45.65

Robinson and Lincoln were 2-3 a year ago, but Lincoln pulled up at the finish of the ACC 200. Wil he be ready to run? Ezekiel ran the 400H for Nigeria in Paris. Floyd, who transferred to Georgia from Stanford in the off-season, PR’d twice at the SEC, where he ran 2nd to Robinson. USC’s Johnnie Blockburger, who ran 45.45 in the early season, is running only the 200.   

800 Meters

1 Aidan McCarthy Cal Poly/SLO Jr 1:45.19

2 Matthew Erickson Oregon Sr 1:46.58

3 Koitatoi Kidali Oregon Fr  1:46.55

4 Tinoda Matsatsa, Georgetown, So, 1:45.21

5 Dan Watcke Villanova Fr 1:46.32

6 Abdullahi Hassan, Miss State, Sr, 1:45.53

7 Darius Kipyego, Iowa State, Sr, 1:46.56

8 Kyle Reinheimer, Washington, Sr, 1:46.45

Hassan transferred from Wisconsin in the off-season. Rivaldo Marshall, the defending champion, left Iowa for Arkansas in the off-season but failed to make the field. Newcomer Kidali has run 1:42 outdoors. He finished 2nd to teammate Erickson at the Big Ten. Matsatsa won the Big East over freshman Watcke. 

Mile

1 Nathan Green, Washington, Jr, 3:50.74

2 Fouad Messaoudi, Oklahoma State, Sr, 3:52.66

3 Abel Teffra, Georgetown, Sr, 3:52.44

4 Colin Sahlman N Arizona Jr 3:52.82

5 Steven Jackson, Boston College, Sr, 3:52.71

6 Harrison Witt Princeton Sr 3:52.87

7 Reuben Reina Arkansas Jr 3:53.95

8 Simeon Birnbaum, Oregon, So, 3:52.81

Green, the 2023 outdoor champion, tries to extend Washington’s streak of consecutive NCAA indoor and outdoor mile championships to six. The season’s fastest two qualifiers, Ethan Strand and Gary Martin, opted for the 3k. After Green, it’s wide open. Birnbaum missed the Big Ten.

3,000 Meters

1 Ethan Strand, North Carolina, Sr, 7:30.15

2 Gary Martin Virginia Jr  7:36.09  

3 Parker Wolfe, North Carolina, Sr, 7:30.23

4 Liam MurphyVillanovaSr 7:35.47

5 Marco Langan, Villanova, Jr, 7:36.87

6 Habtom Samuel, New Mexico, So, 7:39.39

7 Ishmael Kipkurui, New Mexico, Fr, 7:40.06

8 Colin Sahlman, Northern Arizona, Jr, 7:40.41

Wolfe, who was 3rd in last year’s Olympic Trials 5k, and Murphy went 2-4 a year ago. It took a stunning 7:40 to make the top 16. Strand and Martin both ran 3:48 miles this winter but opted out of that race for the 3k.  

5,000 Meters

1 Liam MurphyVillanova Sr 13:10.42

2 Habtom Samuel, New Mexico, So, 13:04.92

3 Rocky Hansen, Wake Forest, So, 13:14.43

4 Patrick Kiprop, Arkansas, Sr, 13:11.67

5 Brian Musau, Oklahoma State, So, 13:11.29

6 Dylan Schubert, Furman, Sr, 13:17.89

7 Marco Langon Villanova So 13:14.11

8 Yaseen Abdalla Arkansas Sr 13:09.99

Samuel was runnerup in last fall’s NCAA cross country championships behind Graham Blanks of Harvard. Blanks has since turned professional. Most of the contenders skipped their conference 5k, ran just the 3. 

60-Meter Hurdles

1 Johnny Brackins, USC, Sr, 7.43

2 Ja’Kobe Tharp, Auburn, So, 7.48

3 Malachi Snow, Texas Tech, So, 7.46

4 Jaqualon Scott, Texas A&M, Jr, 7.51

5 Antoine Andrews, Texas Tech, Jr, 7.52

6 Vashaun Vascianna Arkansas Jr 7.52

7 Jamar Marshall Jr. Houston Sr 7.56

8 Jason Holmes, NC A&T, Jr, 7.54

Brackins and Scott finished 2-3 a year ago indoors, while freshmen Tharp and Snow were 2-4 outdoors. Since then, Snow transferred from San Jose State to Texas Tech. Snow won the Big 12 over teammate Andrews while Tharp edged Scott at SEC.

4x400 Seasonal Best

1 Texas A&M, 3:02.21

2 Arkansas, 3:03.51

3 USC, 3:03.57

4 Arizona State, 3:03.57

5 Baylor, 3:04.47

6 Florida, 3:02.80

7 Georgia 3:04.11

8 Virginia Tech, 3:03.99

No college team has ever broken 3:00 indoors; will it happen this winter? The current CR is 3:00.77 seven years ago by a USC lineup that included Rai Benjamin and Michael Norman. A&M and Florida were 2-3 a year ago behind ASU. SC finished 2nd at the Big Ten but was disqualified. A&M and Arkansas were 1-2 at SEC. 

Distance Medley

1 Washington 9:14.10

2 North Carolina 9:17.19

3 Oregon 9:21.23

4 Georgetown 9:19.24

5 Virginia 9:14.19

6 Oklahoma State 9:16.24

7 Wisconsin 9:20.15

8 Virginia Tech 9:19.88

Washington broke the CR on its home track, then won the Big Ten. Oklahoma State won in 2024 over Georgetown and Virginia. In winning a qualifying mid-season race by .03, Oregon made the field and Arkansas did not. 

High Jump

1 Tyus Wilson Nebraska Sr 7-4 ½

2 Kyren Washington Oklahoma So 7-4 ½ 

3 Caleb Snowden Ark-Pine Bluff Sr 7-3 ¾

4 Antrea Mita Houston So 7-5

5 Scottie Vines Arkansas Fr 7-6 

6 Kason O’Riley Texas State Sr 7-4 ½ 

7 Tito Alofe Harvard So 7-3 ¾

8 Arvesta Troupe Ole Miss Jr 7-3 ¼

Vines was national prep leader last year for De Beque HS in Colorado. He cleared 7-6 this winter but managed just 6-11 at SEC. Snowden was 2nd indoors and 3rd outdoors last year for Pine Bluff, while Wilson was runnerup outdoors and 4th indoors. Washington PR’d to win SEC. Mita won Big 12. USC has two jumpers in the field. 

Pole Vault

1 Hunter Garretson Akron Sr 18-10 ¾ 

2 Simen Guttormsen Duke Sr 18-7 ¼

3 Aleksandr Solovyov Texas A&M Fr 19-0 ¼

4 Kyle Rademeyer South Alabama Sr 18-9 ½

5 Clayton Simms Kansas Sr 18-4 ¾

6 Scott Toney Washington Sr 18-4 ½

7 Sean Gribble Texas Tech Fr 18-6 ½ 

8 Tyler Burns Cal Jr 18-5 ¼ 

Incoming Russian vaulter Solovyov, a 19-footer, no-heighted at SEC. Simms was 2nd outdoors in 2024. Rademeyer and Garretson were 1-2 outdoors in 2023. Garretson has done 19-1 ½. Guttormsen competed in the Paris Olympics for his native Norway last year along with his older brother, Sondre. When he was at Princeton, Simen was runnerup twice at the Heps, while Sondre won NCAA titles in ’22 and ’23. Rademeyer, the outdoor NCAA champ in ’23, was African champion for his native South Africa. 

Long Jump

1 JC Stevenson USC Jr 26-9 ¾

2 Johnny Brackins USC Sr 26-2 ¾

3 Nikaoli Williams Oklahoma Sr 26-3 ¾

4 Jayden Keys Georgia Fr 26-0 

5 Micah Larry Georgia So 25-11 ½ 

6 Greg Foster Princeton Jr 25-8 ¼ 

7 Uroy Ryan Arkansas Fr 25-10 ¼ 

8 Camryn O’Bannon UCLA Jr 25-10 ¼ 

Stevenson was surprise winner at last year’s Outdoor championships, jumping 26-11 ¾ to upset the form chart. He lost to his teammate Brackins at Big Ten. Can anyone in the field beat either Trojan? Newcomer Keys was surprise SEC champ, where Florida’s Malcolm Clemons finished 10th and failed to Q for nationals. Arkansas hopes for points from Ryan or Henry Kiner (25-8 1/4). 

Triple Jump

1 Jonathan Seremes Missouri So 55-8 ¼ 

2 Luke Brown Kentucky Jr 55-4 ¼ 

3 Brandon Green Oklahoma Jr 55-3 ½ 

4 Apalos Edwards Arkansas Sr 54-6 

5 Viktor Morozov Illinois Jr 53-7 ¾

6 Alexandre Malanda Kent State Sr 53-5 ¾ 

7 Goodness Iredia South Florida Jr 53-4 ¼  

8 Praise Aniamaka Purdue Sr 53-5 ½ 

Brown was runnerup a year ago. OU’s Green was 3rd outdoors and 6th indoors in ’24. French newcomer Seremes, list leader, defeated Brown and Green at SEC, all within 5 inches of one another.  

Shot Put

1 Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan Ole Miss Jr 69-3 ¼ 

2 Jason Swarens Wisconsin Sr 66-5

3 Christopher Licata South Carolina Sr 65-9 ¾ 

4 Dylan Targgart South Carolina Sr 65-7

5 Thomas Kitchell North Carolina Sr 67-2

6 Ralford Mullings Oklahoma Jr 65-4 ¼

7 Fred Moudani Likibi  Cincinnati Sr 67-8

8 Tyler Sudduth Illinois Sr 64-8 ¾ 

Robinson-O’Hagan is defending champion. Swarens was runnerup outdoors, while Targgart was 3rd in both meets a year ago. Moudani slipped to 3rd at conference. 

Weight Throw

1 Kenneth Ikeji Harvard Sr 78-0 ¼ 

2 Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan Ole Miss Jr 79-10 ¾

3 Daniel Reynolds Wyoming Sr 82-2 ¾ 

4 Ryan Johnson Iowa So 80-8 ¼ 

5 Jeremiah Nubbe Virginia Jr 78-6 ½

6 Trey Knight Cal State/Northridge Sr 81-7 ¼

7 Terrell Webb SE Louisiana Sr 77-6 

8 Texas Tanner Air Force Jr 76-11 ¾ 

Ikeji won the weight a year ago indoors along with the 2023 outdoor hammer for the Crimson. Knight was runnerup a year ago. Reynolds won the Mountain West for the Cowboys, Johnson the Big 10, Nubbe the ACC. 

Heptathlon

1 Peyton Bair Mississippi St Jr 6104

2 Jip de Greef Illinois So 6046

3 Jack Turner Arkansas Sr 5869

4 Edgar Campre Miami Jr 5777

5 Ben Barton BYU Jr 5944

6 Abraham Vogelsang Iowa Fr 5882

7 Kenneth Byrd Louisville Fr 5903

8 Alexander Jung Kansas Sr 5797

Bair, Campre (PR 5903) and Turner (PR 6000) were 2-3-4 last year outdoors in the dec behind Texas’s Leo Neugebauer. Houston’s Grant Levesque, Big 12 champion for Houston (5971), withdrew. De Greef is a newcomer from the Netherlands.  

Team Projection

1 USC 50

2 Arkansas 41

3 Auburn 32 

4 Texas A&M 29

5 North Carolina 28

6 Villanova 25

7 Washington 24

8 Oklahoma 23

9 Oregon 21

10 Ole Miss 19



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