Huskers Gear Up for Four Road MeetsHuskers Gear Up for Four Road Meets
Track and Field

Huskers Gear Up for Four Road Meets

The Nebraska track and field team will head to Austin, Texas this week for the Texas Relays. The meet will kick off with combined events at 11 a.m. on Wednesday. Thursday will begin with the conclusion of combined events at 10 a.m., followed by field events at 11 a.m. and track action beginning at 4:30 p.m. The Texas Relays will resume on Friday with field events starting at 9 a.m. and action on the track at 9:35 a.m. The meet will commence with field events on Saturday at 10 a.m. and track events at 10:40 a.m.

Live results of the Texas Relays can be followed at http://relays.texassports.com.

The Big Red will also compete at the Florida Relays (March 28-30), Stanford Invitational (March 29-30) and Mike Fanelli Track Classic (March 28-30). A portion of the women’s team will compete in Gainesville, Florida, while the distance squad will split up and compete in both Palo Alto and Hayward, California. Live results for all meets can be followed at Huskers.com.

Huskers in the NCAA Rankings
After just one week of the outdoor season, several Huskers have already made their mark in the NCAA Top 100 in their respective events. Burger Lambrechts Jr. set the tone at the Herm Wilson Invitational in the shot put with a toss of 60-11 1/2 (18.58m). Lambrechts Jr.’s toss gave him the 10th best throw in the nation so far this season and he is the highest ranked Husker after that toss. Tyler Loontjer is also in the top-20 at 18th in the pole vault with a clearance of 16-10 (5.13m) over the weekend. Alex Meyer and Kristina Insingo lead the women’s team and are both in the top-30. Meyer is 26th in the discus after she earned a mark of 170-0 (51.82m) at the Herm Wilson Invitational. Insingo currently has the 28th-best mark in the nation in the shot put with a distance of 50-2 1/2 (15.30m).

Men in the Top 100

Rank Student-Athlete Event Time/Mark
10 Burger Lambrechts Jr. Shot Put 60-11 1/2 (18.58m)
18 Tyler Loontjer Pole Vault 16-10 (5.13m)
33 Mason Hericks 100m 10.47w (+3.1)
38 Burger Lambrechts Jr. Discus 173-9 (52.97m)
41 James Joycey Hammer Throw 195-4 (59.55m)
42 Eric Garner Javelin 208-8 (63.60m)
49 Vincent Ohlman 110m Hurdles 14.39w (+2.6)
62 Grady Leonard Shot Put 55-8 1/2 (16.98m)
66 Zach Podraza Javelin 199-10 (60.90m)
68 Sadio Fenner 3,000S 9:39.75
76 Nick Coghill Discus 167-5 (51.02m)
78 Tony Nou 400m 47.98
80 Spencer Powell Pole Vault 15-7 3/4 (4.77m)

Women in the Top 100

Rank Student-Athlete Event Time/Mark
26 Alex Meyer Discus 170-0 (51.82m)
28 Kristina Insingo Shot Put 50-2 1/2 (15.30m)
36 Chanel Freeman 100m Hurdles 13.79 (+1.3)
49 Anna Purchase Hammer Throw 190-11 (58.20m)
58 Zionn Pearson Long Jump 19-2 1/2 (5.85m)
58 Jamesha Western Shot Put 48-5 1/2 (14.77m)
80 Kiara Hobson Triple Jump 39-3 (11.96m)
83 Andy Jacobs Pole Vault 12-4 3/4 (3.78m)
91 Shelby Brown Discus 155-5 (47.38m)

2019 Men’s Outdoor Season Outlook
The Husker men are coming off a 2018 outdoor season where they finished tied for 40th at the NCAA Outdoor Championships and finished third at the Big Ten Outdoor Championships. Nebraska will look to replace three Big Ten Champions in Antoine Lloyd (110-meter hurdles), Nick Percy (discus) and Kaiwan Culmer (triple jump). Lloyd and Percy were also first-team All-Americans. Luke Siedhoff earned first-team All-America accolades last season and will look to continue his success in the 110-meter hurdles this season after finishing seventh at the NCAA Championships in 2018. The men’s team is starting the outdoor season with momentum after claiming the 2019 Big Ten Indoor Championship. Mayson Conner, the Big Ten Indoor Freshman of the Year, was the most successful freshman high jumper in the country this indoor season and earned first-team All-America honors with a jump of 7-3 3/4 (2.23m) to finish seventh at the NCAA Indoor Championships. Jared Seay also competed at the NCAA Indoor Championships and finished fourth in the heptathlon with 5,847 points to earn first-team All-America status. Seay’s fourth-place finish was the best finish at the NCAA Championships by a Husker heptathlete since 2012. Senior Elijah Lucy will provide leadership after claiming the Big Ten indoor title in the long jump with a leap of 25-2 (7.67m). Freshman sensation George Kusche will also be an athlete to watch this outdoor season after setting two indoor school records - in the mile (3:59.61) and 3,000 meters (7:57.16o).

2019 Women’s Outdoor Season Outlook
The Big Red women tied for fifth at the Big Ten Championships last season and return a handful of athletes with NCAA Outdoor Championship experience and several point scorers from the 2018 Big Ten Outdoor Championships. Senior Brittni Wolczyk is a two-time second-team All-American in the javelin and has made it to the NCAA Championships in each of her three seasons. She was the 2017 Big Ten champion and is a two-time silver medalist. Raynesha Lewis qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in the long jump last year, and Jasmine Barge was a second-team All-American in the 400-meter hurdles in 2017. Sydney Otto missed last season with an injury but qualified for nationals in the javelin as a freshman in 2017. The NU women will be looking to replace triple jump standout Angela Mercurio. The 2019 Big Ten indoor champion and second-team All-American exhausted her outdoor eligibility last year. Lewis, Ieva Turke and Shylia Riley will lead the Huskers’ horizontal jumps. Lewis finished 19th in the long jump at the 2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships. Riley was the Big Ten indoor long jump runner-up this year, while Turke was third in the triple jump and fourth in the long jump. On the track, Lakayla Harris ran the fifth-fastest wind-legal time (11.45) in NU history in the 100 meters last year. Harris claimed fourth (100 meters) and fifth (200 meters) at the 2018 Outdoor Big Ten Championships. Barge is one of the top returning 100-meter and 400-meter hurdlers in the Big Ten. The Huskers are ranked 49th in the preseason USTFCCCA Rankings.

Conner Named B1G Freshman of the Year
Nebraska high jumper Mayson Conner was named the Big Ten Men’s Indoor Freshman of the Year after a vote by the league’s head coaches. Conner is the first Husker male track and field athlete chosen as the Big Ten Freshman of the Year since NU joined the conference in 2011-12.

The McCool Junction native was the Big Ten champion in the high jump and earned first-team All-America honors after finishing seventh at the NCAA Indoor Championship. Conner cleared 7-3 3/4 (2.23m) at both meets, which is tied for the ninth-best mark in school history.

Conner was the top freshman high jumper in the nation at the NCAA Championships and became the first true freshman Husker male to earn first-team All-America honors in an individual event at the NCAA indoor meet since Bobby Carter in the long jump in 2010.

Pepin Named B1G and USTFCCCA Men’s Midwest Region Coach of the Year
Nebraska track and field head coach Gary Pepin was named the Big Ten Men’s Indoor Coach of the Year and the USTFCCCA Midwest Region Coach of the Year.

The Big Ten honor marked Pepin’s sixth selection as Big Ten Coach of the Year since the Huskers joined the conference in 2011-12, and it is his 28th all-time conference coaching accolade. The 2019 Big Ten men’s indoor title was Pepin’s 73rd career conference title and 43rd indoors. He has guided the Husker men to three Big Ten indoor titles in the last five seasons.

Pepin, in his 39th year as head coach at Nebraska, has also been honored as region coach of the year 11 times in the past 15 years. Of his 11 region coaching honors, this is the third time Pepin has been honored as the men’s indoor coach of the year (2005 and 2015).

Four Huskers Win B1G Titles; Men Claim Championship
Angela Mercurio, Lakayla Harris, Mayson Conner and Elijah Lucy all won individual Big Ten indoor titles, and the Nebraska men’s track and field team won the 2019 Big Ten Indoor Championship this season.

The Husker men entered the final day of the Big Ten Championships with an 11-point lead and led the entire day until Indiana took a 90-89 lead with only the 4x400-meter relay remaining. However, the Huskers’ relay team of Givon Washington, Tony Nou, Elijah Lucy and Isaiah Hutchinson ran a season-best of 3:09.12 to finish fifth, while Indiana finished eighth in 3:11.71. The Huskers finished with 93 points, and Indiana had 91, giving NU its first team crown since 2016.

The Husker men won their 67th all-time conference title and 38th indoors with the victory. It was the fifth Big Ten title for the Husker men since joining the conference in 2012. For legendary head coach Gary Pepin, it marked his 73rd career conference title and 43rd indoors.

Mercurio earned the triple jump crown for the first time in her career, posting a jump of 42-7 (12.98m) on her fourth attempt to win the event for her third-career Big Ten medal. Mercurio took first place in the triple jump in five of six meets this season.

Harris won the gold medal in the 60 meters with a personal-best time of 7.26. Her time ranked third in school history. Harris was the runner-up last year but topped her personal best by .12 seconds to take the title as a senior. She became the first Husker women’s track athlete to win a Big Ten championship in a running event since 2013. She followed that with the bronze medal in the 200 meters later in the afternoon after posting a personal-best time of 23.54, the third-fastest time in school history.

Conner was crowned the high jump champion after clearing a personal-best 7-3 3/4 (2.23m), which put him in a tie for ninth in school history and No. 11 in the nation this season. Conner had the competition locked up as the only jumper to clear 7-2 1/4 (2.19m), and he was perfect through that height. The McCool Junction native went on to achieve a new personal best and give the Husker men the Big Ten indoor high jump title for the fifth time in the last six years.

Lucy earned the gold medal in the long jump for the first time in his career after finishing fourth at each of the three previous Big Ten indoor meets. Lucy jumped a personal-best 25-2 (7.67m) on his final attempt, though he didn’t need it as four of his jumps on the day would have won the competition. He finished on top by more than one foot.

Nebraska’s Big Ten Indoor Champions
Mayson Conner, High Jump
Elijah Lucy, Long Jump
Lakayla Harris, 60 Meters
Angela Mercurio, Triple Jump

Husker Men Tabbed Indoor Dual Meet Champions
The Nebraska men’s track and field team was named the indoor dual meet champions by Track & Field News Magazine for the first time in the program’s history.

Following a strong performance at the Mark Colligan Memorial, where the Huskers scored 172 points to sweep the meet, the Huskers surged from No. 4 to No. 1 in the final rankings of the indoor season. The Huskers posted a 3-0 record in dual meets to top Indiana (1-0) and Texas A&M (2-0) for the top spot. The NU women came in at No. 4 in the final women’s rankings.

To be ranked, a team must compete in one or more dual meets (defined as a scored meet between four or fewer teams) during the indoor season. Teams are ranked on wins and losses, marks, and strength and depth of dual meet schedule. Teams are rewarded for taking dual meet competition seriously.

The Nebraska men won the absolute - indoor and outdoor combined - dual meet championship in 2017. This year’s NU men’s squad is the top-ranked team in the USTFCCCA Midwest Region and has several event groups that rank among the best in the nation. The men’s high jump is the No. 1 unit in the nation, while the 60-meter hurdles is ranked third, the shot put is ranked fourth, long jump is seventh and pole vault is ranked ninth.