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NCAA Women's Formchart - 3/10/2025Published by
DyeStat Women's NCAA Division 1 Indoor Form Chart Compiled by Jack Pfeifer of Lake Oswego, Ore./Bobby Goddin photo Name School Yr PR 60 Meters 2 Kaila Jackson Georgia Jr 7.12 7 Success Umukoro Texas Tech Sr 7.13 8 Victoria Cameron Tarleton State Fr 7.14 Defrand won the Big Ten. Jackson, runner-up a year ago, had a slow start to her season but showed up at SEC with big win. Lyston, the defending champion, was 2nd in that race. Two surprising freshmen, Mayberry and Cameron, are picked 4-8. Cameron, who won the WAC, also plays for Tarleton’s soccer team. Oregon’s Mays was 3rd indoors and 4th outdoors a year ago. Godbless ran in the Olympics for Nigeria. 200 Meters 1 JaMeesia Ford South Carolina So 22.34 3 Niesha Burgher UTEP Sr 22.39 5 Brianna Howard Texas Tech Sr 22.67 8 Anya Jackson Arkansas Fr 22.87 Ford won the title a year ago as a freshman. She took the 2025 list lead after a slow start to her season. Mays, 3rd last year outdoors and indoors, lost to Burgher this winter and lost to Defrand at Big Ten. Freshman Mayberry won Big 12. 400 Meters 1 Aaliyah Butler Georgia Jr 49.78 2 Isabella Whittaker Arkansas Sr 49.90 3 Ella Onojuvwevwo LSU Jr 51.06 4 Kaylyn Brown Arkansas So 50.70 5 Rachel Joseph Iowa State Jr 50.88 6 Dejanea Oakley Georgia Jr 50.90 7 Savannah Sutherland Michigan Sr 51.74 Five Olympians from Paris in this field, including two medalists -- Brown gold and silver for the U.S., Yemi John of USC bronze for Great Britain, all in relays – plus Ella Onojuvwevwo of LSU for Nigeria in the 4x4, Sutherland in the IH final for Canada and Whittaker a member of the U.S. relay pool. Whittaker arrives at Arkansas after graduating from Penn with a year of eligibility remaining. Sutherland was NCAA 400 hurdles champion two years ago for Michigan. A freshman in 2024, Brown did not even make this final last year but kept getting better as the season went along, eventually running 49.13, getting 4th in the Olympic Trials and running multiple legendary relay legs in Paris. Off to a slow start this winter, she ran a strong 3rd to Butler and Whittaker at SEC. 800 Meters 1 Juliette Whittaker Stanford Jr 1:59.44 2 Michaela Rose LSU Sr 2:00.25 3 Roisin Willis Stanford Jr 1:59.93 4 Sanu Jallow-Lockhart Arkansas Jr 1:59.77 5 Meghan Hunter BYU Sr 2:00.21 6 Hayley Kitching Penn State Sr 2:01.14 7 Gladys Chepngetich Clemson So 2:01.39 8 Victoria Bossong Harvard Sr 2:00.79 Whittaker was 7th in Paris and she swept the NCAA titles last year indoors and out. She is joined by two other past NCAA champions, Rose (outdoor champ in ’23, indoor runnerup last year) and Whittaker’s Stanford ‘mate Willis, indoor winner in ’23, outdoor runnerup last spring. Jallow-Lockhart ran in the Olympics for Gambia. Hunter did not run at Big 12. Mile 1 Wilma Nielsen Oregon Jr 4:25.78 2 Margot Appleton Virginia Sr 4:25.03 3 Laura Pellicoro U Portland Sr 4:25.60 4 Silan Ayyildiz Oregon Jr 4:23.46 5 Amina Maatoug Washington Sr 4:26.39 6 Judy Kosgei Clemson So 4:26.32 7 Melissa Riggins Georgetown Sr 4:24.98 8 Chloe Foerster Washington Jr 4:26.54 Last year’s indoor and outdoor champion, Maia Ramsden of Harvard, turned professional. Ayyildiz, a transfer from South Carolina to Eugene, set the collegiate record this winter. Her teammate Nielsen, a transfer from Washington, won the Big 10. 3,000 Meters 1 Riley Chamberlain BYU Jr 8:40.89 2 Doris Lemngole Alabama So 8:41.83 3 Amy Bunnage Stanford So 8:43.82 4 Silan Ayyildiz Oregon Jr 8:46.33 5 Pamela Kosgei New Mexico Fr 8:44.62 6 Ceili McCabe West Virginia Sr 8:45.97 7 Lexy Halladay-Lowry BYU Sr 8:40.60 8 Elise Stearns N Arizona Sr 8:41.07 Halladay-Lowry, Lemngole and McCabe are all steeplechasers outdoors. Lemngole is reigning NCAA champion while McCabe ran the steeple for Canada in the Paris Olympics. Aussie Bunnage was 4h in the XC championships in the fall for Stanford. 5,000 Meters 1 Doris Lemngole Alabama So 14:52.57 2 Hilda Olemomoi Florida Sr 14:52.84 3 Lexy Halladay-Lowry BYU Sr 14:57.63 4 Amy Bunnage Stanford So 15:00.75 5 Pamela Kosgei New Mexico Fr 15:00.36 6 Paityn Noe Arkansas So 15:11.27 7 Grace Hartman NC State Jr 15:19.72 8 Lucy Jenks Georgetown Sr 15:15.58 Lemngole, Halladay-Lowry and Olemomoi all finished in the top 5 a year ago and broke 15 minutes at BU in December. Kosgei and Bunnage are not far behind. 60-Meter Hurdles 1 Myreanna Bebe Tennessee Sr 7.95 2 Naomi Krebs Texas Tech Jr 7.96 3 Layla Anderson Tennessee Sr 7.98 4 Aaliyah McCormick Oregon Jr 7.97 5 Aasia Laurencin Michigan Sr 7.97 6 Oneka Wilson Clemson Jr 7.95 7 Jaiya Covington Texas A&M Jr 8.01 8 Micaela De Mello WSU Sr 8.00 With only one finalist returning from 2024 (McCormick, 7th), this event is wide open. De Mello, the lone returning outdoor finalist (also 7th), is past South American champion from Brazil. She won the MPSF. Bebe, a transfer from Iowa, was surprise SEC champ. McCormick won Big 10 over Laurencin by .005. 4x400 Seasonal Best Arkansas lost some of its stars but rebuilt with the addition of transfer Isabella Whittaker. South Carolina is defending champion after the disqualification of the Razorbacks in last year’s indoor final. Tennessee was 2nd outdoors, Texas 3rd, Georgia 4th. Georgia won SEC. Distance Medley BYU led five teams under the collegiate record at Washington. They are defending champions as well as cross country champions last fall. This event crucial to the team race. High Jump 1 Rachel Glenn Arkansas Jr 6-6 2 Elena Kulichenko Georgia Sr 6-4 ¾ 3 Jenna Rogers Nebraska Sr 6-4 ¼ 4 Rose Yeboah Illinois So 6-3 ½ 5 Temitope Adeshina Texas Tech So 6-4 6 Alyssa Jones Stanford Jr 6-2 ¼ 7 Bara Sajdokova Illinois Sr 6-2 ¼ 8 Cheyla Scott South Carolina Jr 6-2 ¼ Once upon a time, a 6-foot clearance meant sure points in an NCAA women’s high jump. No longer. Kulichenko tied with Yeboah for last year’s outdoor title, while the multitalented Glenn won indoors on her way to a spot in the Olympics. Rogers beat Yeboah at Big Ten, Glenn beat Kulichenko at SEC, Adeshina won Big 12, Jones ACC. Kulichenko was 7th in Paris for Cyprus. Pole Vault 1 Amanda Moll Washington So 16-1 ¼ 2 Hana Moll Washington So 15-9 ¼ 3 Molly Haywood Baylor So 15-1 ½ 4 Tori Thomas Illinois Sr 15-0 5 Chloe Timberg Rutgers Sr 15-5 ¾ 6 Julia Fixsen Va Tech Sr 15-0 ¼ 7 Olivia Lueking Oklahoma Sr 15-0 ¾ 8 Sydney Horn High Point Sr 15-0 The greatest college women’s vault field ever assembled, with eight 15-footers. Hana Moll won indoors a year ago, Timberg outdoors, but Hana’s sister, Amanda, has become the first collegiate 16-foot vaulter. Timberg finished behind the Molls and Thomas at Big Ten. Long Jump 1 Tacoria Humphrey Illinois Sr 22-9 ¼ 2 Alexis Brown Baylor Sr 22-3 ¾ 3 Sophia Beckmon Illinois So 22-0 ¼ 4 Alyssa Jones Stanford Jr 21-8 5 Jasmine Akins Oklahoma Sr 21-8 ¾ 6 Prestina Ochonogor Tarleton State Fr 21-9 ½ 7 Funminiyi Olajide Arkansas Sr 21-10 ¾ 8 Anthaya Charlton Florida Jr 22-10 ¾ Humphrey is the best of Illinois’s excellent stable of four jumpers in this field. Jones finished 3rd a year ago. Last year’s surprise champion, Sydney Willits of Iowa State, is redshirting. Akins won SEC over Olajide; Charlton, who jumped big early, was 4th. Triple Jump 1 Winny Bii Texas A&M So 45-11 ¾ 2 Emilia Sjostrand San Jose State Sr 45-11 ¾ 4 Simone Johnson San Jose State Sr 45-2 ½ 5 Agur Dwol Oklahoma Jr 45-1 ½ 6 Shantae Foreman Clemson Jr 45-5 7 Tamiah Washington Tx Tech So 44-3 ½ 8 Machaeda Linton LSU Jr 44-6 ¼ A wide open event. San Jose teammates Sjostrand and Johnson went 1-2 at the Mountain West while Bii won the SEC over Dwol and Linton. Ojora won the Big Ten, Foreman the ACC, Washington the Big 12. Shot Put 1 Axelina Johansson Nebraska Sr 63-4 ¼ 2 KeAyla Dove Houston Sr 63-10 ¼ 4 Mya Lesnar Colorado State Sr 62-5 5 Jayden Ulrich Louisville Sr 60-4 ½ 6 Elizabeth Tapper Michigan So 59-11 7 Treneese Hamilton Alabama Jr 59-6 ¼ 8 Melanie Duron Texas State Jr 59-9 Lesnar, the defending champion, was beaten outdoors a year ago by Ross, Johansson and Ulrich. That indoor loss Ross suffered to Lesnar was her only defeat of the 2024 season to a collegian, as she went on to set the collegiate record outdoors, make the Olympic team and finish 4th in the Games. Nebraska’s Johansson, representing Sweden, also made the Olympic final, finishing 10th. Johansson beat Ross at the Big Ten. Weight Throw 1 Giavonna Meeks Cal So 77-4 ¾ 2 Shelby Frank Texas Tech Sr 76-11 ¼ 3 Anthonett Nabwe Minnesota So 79-5 ½ 4 Sara Killinen Va Tech Sr 74-8 ¼ 5 Chloe Lindeman Wisconsin Sr 76-3 6 Phethisang Makhethe Illinois Jr 75-10 7 Gudrun Hallgrimsdottir VCU Sr 73-7 ¼ 8 Kenna Curry North Dakota Sr 75-0 ½ Meeks transferred from Vanderbilt to Berkeley over the off-season, while Frank, runnerup a year ago, left Minnesota for Texas Tech. Hallgrimsdottir was 4th a year ago. Pentathlon 1 Pippi Lotta Enok Oklahoma Sr 4593 2 Jadin O’Brien Notre Dame Sr 4580 3 Sofia Iakushina Texas A&M Fr 4556 4 Lucie Kienast Illinois Fr 4405 5 Izzy Goudros Harvard Sr 4313 6 Pauline Bikembo Iowa Fr 4330 7 Angel Richmore Oklahoma Sr 4271 8 Maddie Pitts Penn State Jr 4229 O’Brien is defending champion, while Enok was outdoor heptathlon champion in ’23. There are many newcomers from overseas, including Bikembo (France), Iakushina (Russia) and Kienast (Germany). Team Projection 1 Oregon 44 2 Stanford 43 3 Arkansas 42 4 Georgia 39 5 Illinois 36 6 BYU 32 7 USC 29 8 Texas Tech/Washington 28 10 LSU 24
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