Delsea’s Ava Reardon, Absegami’s Josephine Buxton both throw well but just miss javelin finals at NCAA Division 3 Championships!!!!!!!!

Delsea’s Ava Reardon and Absegami’s Josephine Buxton both threw well in the javelin at the NCAA Division 3 Championships Saturday, although they both fell just a bit short of earning 1st-team All-America honors.

Reardon placed 10th with a 138-10 and Buxton was 13th at 135-9 at Veterans Memorial Stadium in La Crosse, Wisc.

The top eight finishers earn 1st-team All-America honors, and 8th place was 141-3.

Reardon threw within an inch of her PR of 138-11, which she set in Charlottesville last month. She had three solid throws, opening at 133-6, then 136-7 and then the 138-10.

Buxton opened with a 130-6 and followed with her 135-9 before fouling on her 3rd attempt. The cutoff for qualifying for the final and three more throws was 139-5, so both were very close.

Reardon, a transfer from Georgian Court in Lakewood, is a junior and Buxton is a freshman, and they finished 5th and 7th among returning throwers. Buxton, who PR’d with a 145-2 in the NJAC Championships in Mahwah earlier this month, was the top freshman at NCAAs and the top freshman in Division 3 this year.

Curtis Thompson continues outstanding season, wins USATF Throws Fest with another 270-plus bomb!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Big throw by Curtis Thompson late Saturday night at the USATF Throws Fetsival in Tucson.

Thompson won the javelin against a strong field with a 272-1 on his 1st throw of the competition.

That is his 16th-best throw all-time, his 24rd lifetime throw of at least 270 feet and his 4th-best 1st throw of a competition. His two-best throws this year have come on his 1st throw. He bombed a 279-11 – No. 3 in the world this year – at the Oklahoma Throws Series World Invitational in Ramona, Okla., last month.

Thompson has thrown over 270 feet in each of his last three meets.

Thompson, a five-time U.S. champion and two-time Olympian, graduated from Florence High in 2014.

Thompson ranks 3rd in U.S. history with his PR 287-11 at last year’s Texas Relays in Austin. That’s the best throw by an American since Breaux Greer’s 299-6 in Indianapolis in 2007.

Former Penn (and Georgia) NCAA champion Marc Anthony Minichello, the No. 7 all-time American with a 275-11 last month in Des Moines, Iowa, placed 2nd with a 266-7 on his 2nd throw. Minichello, who attended Wyoming Area High School in Exeter Borough, outside Scranton, is world No. 6 and U.S. No. 2 behind Thompson with his 275-11.

Thompson has a 20-6 all-time record in head-to-head matchups with Minichello.

279-11

Curtis Thompson All-Time 270-Foot Throws
287-11 … Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, March 28, 2025 [2nd throw]
287-9 … American JavFest, East Stroudsburg [Pa.] South High School, July 9, 2022 [2ndthrow]
286-2 … NACAC, Freeport Stadium, Grand Bahamas, Freeport, Bahamas, Aug. 17, 2025 [2nd throw]
284-4 … World Championships, Tokyo, Sept. 18, 2025 [1st throw]
282-8 … NACAC, Freeport Stadium, Grand Bahamas, Bahamas, Aug. 20, 2025 [3rd throw]
279-11 … Oklahoma Throws Series World Invitational, Ramona, Okla., April 10, 2026 [1stthrow]
279-10 … World Championships, Tokyo, Sept. 18, 2025 [3rd throw]
277-11 … World Championships qualifying, Tokyo, Japan, Sept. 17, 2025 [2nd throw]
277-8 … Drake Relays, Drake Stadium, Des Moines, Idaho, April 23, 2026 [5th throw]
276-11 … Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, March 28, 2025 [3rd throw]
276-4 … NACAC, Freeport Stadium, Grand Bahamas, Bahamas, Aug. 20, 2022 [3rd throw]
275-2 … USATF Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 31, 2025 [4th throw]
274-11 … Athletissima, La Pontaise, Lausanne, Switzerland, Aug. 26, 2022 [1st throw]
273-4 … American JavFest, East Stroudsburg [Pa.] South High School, July 9, 2022 [1stthrow]
272-5 … Olympic Trials, Hayward Field, Eugene, June 23, 2024 [1st throw]
272-1 … USATF Throws Festival, Roy P. Drachman Stadium, Tucson, Ariz., May 23, 2026 [1st throw]
271-11… Olympic Trials, Hayward Field, Eugene, July 4, 2016 [1st throw]
271-10 … Spitzen Leichtathletik, Luzern, Switzerland, Aug. 30, 2022 [3rd throw]
271-9 … Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, March 28, 2025 [4th throw]
271-7 … Olympic Trials, Hayward Field, Eugene, June 21, 2021 [6th throw]
271-0 … American JavFest, East Stroudsburg [Pa.] South High School, July 13, 2024 [1st throw]
270-6 … USATF Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 31, 2025 [6th throw]
270-3 … Kamila Skolimowska Memorial Invitational, Silesian Stadium, Chorzów, Poland, Aug. 6, 2022 [2nd throw]

ROWAN SCORES 5TH-MOST POINTS IN MEET HISTORY, PLACES 2ND FOR BEST FINISH AT NCAA DIVISION 3 NATIONALS IN 42 YEARS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It took one of the greatest performances in NCAA Division 3 history to deny Rowan a national championship.

Rowan scored 85 points this weekend in the NCAA Division 3 Championships, 5th-most in meet history under the current scoring system, which went into effect in 1985 and enough to win the last 17 national titles. But you can’t play defense in track and field, and host Wisconsin-La Crosse scored a record 106 to lock up its 3rd straight win and 18th overall.

The 2nd-place finish is Rowan’s best since they won their 5th straight national title in 1984.

This is Rowan’s 5th straight top-5 finish and 15th overall. The Profs won five straight outdoor titles from 1980 through 1984.

Rowan’ 85 points are the most ever by a non-winning team under the current scoring system. Mount Union scored 100 when the Purple Raiders placed 2nd to Rowan in 1984 at Carleton, Minn., but that’s when the NCAA scored 12 places instead of the current eight.

The previous high for a 2nd-place team under the current scoring system was 76 by Lincoln University of Lower Oxford Township, Chester County, in the 1993 meet in Berea, Ohio.

So this was an all-time performance by the Profs. Just not quite enough to topple mighty Wisconsin-La Crosse on its home track, a mile east of the Minnesota border.

Rowan competed short-handed after indoor national 3,000 and 5,000 national champion Seth Clevenger  scratched from the meet with an injury and Rowan’s deep crew of four long jumpers failed to score on Thursday. That put Rowan in a hole it never recovered from, although the Profs kept things close all weekend.

Rowan set five school records and scored 21 points in the high jump, 14 in the two relays, 14 in the 200, 11 in the high hurdles, 10 in the javelin, six in the 100, five in the 800 and four in the intermediates.

In the high jump, freshman David Brown from Edison won at 7-0 ½, sophomore Noah Wampole from Radnor took 3rd at 6-11 ½ and junior Jamile Gantt from Paulsboro was 4th with a 6-10 ¼ clearance.

Junior Dametrius Hester from Mahwah contributed 10 points with a win in the javelin with the No. 2 throw in Division 3 history, 245-10, and Rowan added a couple seconds on Saturday with the 400-meter relay team – including Kingsway’s Evan Corcoran, Penns Grove’s Eli Hendricks and Eastern’s Rajahn Dixon – running 39.56, No. 5 in D-3 history, and senior hurdler Kwaku Nkrumah running 13.76 in the 110-meter highs. Senior Jason Agyamang added three points in the hurdles in 6th place.

Also Saturday, Dixon, Hendricks and Corcoran went 2-4-8 in the 200, giving Rowan an additional 14 points, Corcoran was 3rd in the 100 in 10.30, Glassboro’s Dallas Hohney placed 4th in the 800 in 1:49.68 and Sterling’s Samuel Agbessi placed 6th in the 400-meter hurdles in 52.21. The Profs closed out the meet with a school-record and the 15th-fastest time in D-3 history in the 4-by-4.

The school records came in the 4-by-1 , 4-by-4, 100-meter dash, 200-meter dash and javelin.

The only seniors who scored are hurdlers Jason Agyemang and Kwaku Nkrumah and sprinter Evan Corcoran. Everyone else has additional outdoor eligibility.

Most points in meet history
[current scoring system, since 1985]
106 … Wisconsin-La Crosse, 2026 [1st]
101 … Wisconsin-La Crosse, 2004 [1st]
97 … Wisconsin-La Crosse, 1993 [1st]
91 … North Central [Ill.], 1998 [1st]
85 … Rowan, 2026 [2nd]
80 … Lincoln [Pa.], 1995 [1st]

Here’s a look at Rowan’s top-10 finishes in meet history:
Rowan Top-10 Finishes
2nd … 1978
2nd … 1979
1st … 1980
1st … 1981
1st … 1982
1st … 1983
1st … 1984
8th … 1985
9th … 1996
T8th … 1997
5th … 1998
8th … 2012
T7th … 2017
3rd … 2018
4th … 2021
T5th … 2022
T3rd … 2023
T3rd … 2024
3rd … 2025
2nd … 2026

Woodbury’s Marquise Young, Sterling’s Samuel Agbessi, Glassboro’s Dallas Hohney help Rowan run 15th-fastest 4×4 in NCAA Division 3 history!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rowan’s 1,600-meter relay team, with freshman Marquis Taylor of Woodbury, sophomore Samuel Agbessi of Sterling and junior Dallas Hohney of Glassboro, ran the 15th-fastest time in NCAA Division 3 history at the D-3 Championships Saturday in La Crosse, Wisc.

The Profs placed 3rd in 3:08.24, with the top four teams all running sub-3:09. The race produced the three-fastest times in Division 3 this year.

Rowan broke the school record of 3:08.74 that it set at the 2023 NCAA Championships in Rochester with Sterling’s Marquise Young, Nana Agyemang from Parsippany, Sterling’s Jah’mere Beasley and Amara Conte from Ferris High in Jersey City.

SUNY-Geneseo won the race in 3:07.62, 6th-fastest in D-3 history, and Wisconsin La Crosse was 2ndin 3:08.20, 13th-fastest on the all-time D-3 list.

Taylor and Agbessi ran the first two legs, getting the btaon to Toms River North’s Teddy Wilson, who split 47.07. Hohney anchored in 46.22.

RAJAHN DIXON FROM EASTERN, ELI HENDRICKS FROM PENNS GROVE PLACE 2ND, 4TH IN 200 AT NCAA DIVISION 3 CHAMPIONSHIPS WITH TWO-FASTEST TIMES IN ROWAN HISTORY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rajahn Dixon from Eastern and Eli Hendricks blazed speedy 200-meter dash times, placing 2nd and 4th Saturday in the 200-meter dash at the NCAA Division 3 Championships at La Crosse, Wisc.

Dixon and Hendricks, seeded just 12th and 7th, ran the two-fastest 200 times in Rowan history, Dixon placing 2nd in 20.76 and Hendricks 4th in 20.86. Senior Evan Corcoran, racing soon after he took 3rd in the 100, placed 8th in 21.31.

The race was held with a legal 1.7 wind reading.

The previous school record was 20.91, which Sterling’s Jah’mere Beasley ran at the 2022 National Championships in Geneva, Ohio.

Dixon’s time is 21st-fastest in NCAA Division 3 history. Hendricks is No. 45.

Top-seeded Kai Smith of Salisbury [Md.] won the race in 20.42, making him 3rd-fastest in NCAA Division 3 history.

Dixon’s 20.76 is 6th-fastest ever by a South Jersey high school alum, and Hendricks’ 20.86 is 8th-fastest. Dixon is fastest from Camden County since Olympic gold medalist Dennis Mitchell. Hendricks is fastest ever from Salem County.

With 14 points in the 200, Rowan increased its total to 79, 12 behind leader Wisconsin-La Crosse and 24 more than 3rd-place Wisconsin-Oshkosh.

The full list of sub-21 sprinters is below.

19.75 … Carl Lewis [Willingboro], June 19, 1983, Indianapolis

20.09 … Dennis Mitchell [Edgewood], June 2, 1989, Provo, Utah

20.51 … Ajani Dwyer [Washington Twp.], Feb. 28, 2026, Indianapolis

20.61 … John Stone [Mainland Reg.], May 22, 1999, Atlanta [-0.4]

20.64 … Bruce Owens [Deptford], May 29, 2010, Greensboro, N.C. [1.1]
20.76 … Rajahn Dixon [Eastern], May 23, 2026, La Crosse, Wisc. [1.7]

20.83 … Todd Dutch [Washington Twp.], May 7, 2005, Columbus, Ohio
20.86 … Eli Hendricks [Penns Grove], May 23, 2026, La Crosse, Wisc. [1.7]

20.88 … Kevin Holloway [Palmyra], April 21, 1979, Bloomington, Ind.

20.90 … Jack Pierce [Woodbury], May 23, 1984, Cape Girardeau, Mo.

20.91 … Jah’mere Beasley [Sterling], May 26, 2022, Geneva, Ohio [1.9]
20.94 … Jayden Poteat [Winslow], May 16, 2026, Elon, N.C.
20.97 … Matt Rose [Bordentown], May 24, 1987, Villanova, Pa.

Sterling’s Samuel Agbessi earns All-America honors with 5th-place finish in 400 hurdles at NCAA Championships!!!!!!!!!!!

Sterling’s Sam Agbessi, a Rowan sophomore, earned All-America honors in the 400-meter hurdles Saturday in his 1st individual race ever at an NCAA Championships.

Agbessi ran 52.21 and placed 5th at the Division 3 Nationals in La Crosse, Wisc. On Thursday, in his NCAA debut, he ran a leg on Rowan’s 1,600-meter relay team, which qualfied for the final later Saturday.

Agbessi is Rowan’s 1st NCAA medalist in the 400-meter hurdles since Anthony Salemo from Ramsey High placed 2nd in the 2018 meet in 51.06 in his final collegiate race, also on the La Crosse track.

Agbessi never broke 55 at Sterling and ranked 22nd in New Jersey as a high school senior in the spring of 2023. But now he’s an NCAA Division 3 All-America with a chance at a 2nd All-America performance later Saturday.

With Agbessi’s four points, Rowan increased its total to 65 in 2nd place behind host La Crosse, which now has 86. Rowan is 16 ahead of 3rd-place Wisconson Oshkosh.

Rowan’s Dallas Hohney from Glassboro earns 1st All-America honor with fast 4th-place in 800 at NCAA Division 3 Nationals!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Glassboro’s Dallas Hohney, who barely qualified for the final, placed 4th in the 800 Saturday in the NCAA Division 3 Championships in La Crosse, Wisc.

Hohney, a Rowan junior, ran 1:50.46 in the qualifying rounds on Friday, earning the 9th and final spot in the final.

On Saturday, he ran 1:49.68, not far off his PR and school-record 1:49.26 from the NJAC Championships in Mahwah earlier this month.

Hohney is the first Rowan half-miler to place at nationals since Nick Neville was 6th in the 2018 meet on the same track. His 4th-place finish is best by a Rowan 800 runner since Brad Leak from Union took 3rd at the 1993 meet in Berea, Ohio, in 1:52.34 after a 1:50.01 in the trials.

This is Hohney’s 1st All-America honor. He qualified for the 400 at indoor nationals but did not finish the race.

With Hohney’s five points in the 800, Rowan is up to 61 points, trailing only host Wisconsin La Crosse, who has 86 through 16 of 21 events.

KINGSWAY’S EVAN CORCORAN TAKES 3RD IN 100 AT DIVISION 3 NATIONALS WITH ROWAN SCHOOL RECORD AND 5TH-FASTEST TIME EVER BY A SOUTH JERSEY SPRINTER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

What a race Saturday by Kingsway’s Evan Corcoran at the NCAA Division 3 Championships!

Cororan – the No. 13 seed – ran a lifetime-best 10.30 with legal wind and placed 3rd in the 100-meter dash in La Crosse, Wisc. The wind reading was 2.0 meters per second, the maximum allowable for a performance to be considered for record and performance-list purposes.

Corcoran, a Rowan senior, posted the 20th-fastest time in NCAA Division 3 history and broke the Rowan record of 10.32 set last month by teammate Rajahn Dixon from Eastern at a meet in Glassboro.

His time is 5th-fastest on the all-time South Jersey alumni list and 2nd-fastest in the last 20 years, behind Washington Township’s Ajani Dwyer, who ran 10.06 last month in Gainesville. It’s No. 12 on the all-time New Jersey alumni list.

After Corcoran’s race, 2nd-ranked Rowan was up to 56 points, trailing only top-ranked Wisconsin La Crosse, the host school, who had 80.

Corcoran is Rowan’s first 100-meter dash medalist at D-3 Nationals since 1979, when another Gloucester County sprinter – Paulsboro’s Charles Cooper – placed 4th in the 1979 meet in Berea, Ohio, with a hand-timed 10.8 for Glassboro State. Corcoran’s 3rd-place finish is best ever by a Rowan or Glassboro State sprinter. Cooper was 4th 47 years ago and Joe Taylor from Manalapan was 4th at the 1978 meet in Grand Rapids, Mich.

Earlier Saturday, Corcoran ran on Rowan’s 2nd-place 400-meter relay team, whose 39.56 is 5th-fastest in Division 3 history. He’s now a four-time All-America.

All-Time South Jersey Alumni 100-Meter Dash List
9.86 … Carl Lewis [Willingboro], Aug. 25, 1991, Tokyo [+1.2]
9.91 … Dennis Mitchell [Edgewood], Sept. 7, 1996, Milan, Italy [+1.2]
10.06 … Ajani Dwyer [Washington Twp.], April 4, 2026, Gainesville [+0.2]
10.27 … Barry Douglas [Willingboro], May 4, 1996, Fairfax, Va. [+1.3]
10.30 … Evan Corcoran [Kingsway], May 23, 2026, La Crosse, Wisc. [+2.0]
10.32 … John Stone [Mainland Reg.], April 15, 2000, Charlotte, N.C. [+1.7]
10.32 … Malachi James [Burlington City], May 16, 2025, Winston-Salem, N.C. [+0.6]
10.32 … Rajahn Dixon [Eastern], April 11, 2026, Glassboro [+0.3]
10.35 … Jamar Ervin [Camden], June 7, 2000, Piscataway [+2.0]
10.41 … Damiere Byrd [Timber Creek], June 9, 2011, Old Bridge [+0.1]

ROWAN’S 4×1 WITH EVAN CORCORAN, ELI HENDRICKS, RAJAHN DIXON RUNS 5TH-FASTEST TIME IN NCAA DIVISION 3 HISTORY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rowan’s 400-meter relay team raced to the 5th-fastest time in NCAA Division 3 history and placed 2ndSaturday at the Division 3 Championships in La Crosse, Wis.

Rowan, with Kingsway’s Evan Corcoran, Penns Grove’s Eli Hendricks and Eastern’s Rajahn Dixon in the lineup, ran 39.56 and placed 2nd to national record holders Wisconsin-Oshkosh, whose 39.25 broke its own meet record of 39.66 set last year in Geneva, Ohio.

Oshkosh set the national D-3 record of 38.96 last week, also at La Crosse. The only D-3 schools to run faster than Rowan did Saturday are Oshkosh twice this year and Wisconsin La Crosse with a 39.36 in the same race Oshkosh ran 38.96 and also at La Crosse with a 39.53 last May.

So the four-fastest D-3 times ever run have been on the same track in Western Wisconsin a mile east of the Minnesota border along the Mississippi River.

Rowan broke its own school and NJAC record of 39.72, which the Profs ran at last year’s nationals in Geneva with Bridgeton’s Shamar Love, Highland’s Robert McKinney, Hendricks and Corcoran. That was No. 5 in D-3 history.

Madaijoudou Diawara from Toms River North led off for Rowan, followed by Corcoran, Hendricks and Dixon.

The 2nd-place finish gave Rowan 39 points, three behind La Crosse, which was 3rd in the 4-by-1.

Rowan’s time ranks 44th on the 2026 U.S. list

Down to his final attempt, Rowan’s Demetrius Hester wins javelin national title with 2nd-best throw in NCAA Division 3 history!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Down to his final attempt and needing a lifetime best to move into the lead, Rowan junior Dametrius Hester bombed the 2nd-longest javelin throw in NCAA Division 3 history Saturday to win his first national title after two top-three finishes.

After three throws, Hester led the javelin at the Division 3 Championships in La Crosse, Wisc., with a 236-11, but moments later senior Liam Bourasisa of Fitchburg [Mass.] State – who had a PR of 227-8 coming into the meet – took the lead with a shocking 241-3, a nearly 14-foot PR and the No. 5 throw in D-3 history.

After that improbable throw, Hester had three chances to reclaim the lead, but after a 239-7 on his 4thattempt and a 231-0 on his 5th, he was down to one last chance.

Hester, who set his PR of 240-9 at the NJAC Championships earlier this month in his hometown of Mahwah, would need to PR to win.

And he did.

On his final throw of the season, Hester threw the javelin 245 feet, 10 inches to deny Bourassa to become Rowan’s first national javelin champion since Matawan’s Ed Colleton in 1998 in St. Paul, Minn.

The only superior throw in D-3 history happened 13 years ago in the same meet at the same track. Deptford’s Tim VanLiew of Rutgers-Camden won the 2013 D-3 title with a 247-10, which remains the meet record and top throw in Division 3 history.

Hester’s throw is No. 7 on the all-time New Jersey alumni list. It’s also No. 7 among U.S. men this year.

Hester placed 3rd as a freshman at the 2024 D-3 meet in Myrtle Beach, S.C., with a throw of 213-3. He was 2nd last year in Geneva, Ohio, at 218-4.

On Saturday, Hester opened with a 206-2 and then a 225-5 before his 236-11 temporarily moved him into the lead. Bourassa’s 2nd-best throw was a 231-7 on his final throw, so Hester accounted for four of the six-best throws of the competition.

Hester is Rowan’s 2nd national champion of the weekend. Freshman David Brown from Edison won the high jump at 7-0 ½ on Friday. Hester’s 10 points gave Rowan 31 through the javelin, five fewer than leader and host Wisconsin La Crosse.

Hester is Rowan’s fourth javelin national champion.

Converted baseball player Mike Juskus, who never competed in track at Hopatcong High School, won in 1978, 1980 and 1981 and also won the 1981 Division 1 title back when the D-3 winners were invited to the D-1 meet. Burlington City’s Mike Boone won the javelin in 1992 and Colleton won in 1998.