Josh Awotunde pops No. 17 shot put in the world this year in his 2024 opener in L.A.!!!!!!!!

In his first competition since August, Delsea’s Josh Awotunde threw the shot 70-2 ¼ Saturday at the USATF L.A. Grand Prix at UCLA’s Drake Stadium in Los Angeles.

That’s No. 17 in the world this year and No. 6 among American men in his first meet since Aug. 19, when he placed 11th in qualifying at the World Championships at Nemzeti Atlétikai Központ in Budapest, Hungary.

It was his best throw since July 16, 2023, when he hit 70-10 ¾ at the Silesia Kamila Skolimowska Memorial Diamond Discipline meet at Stadion Śląski, in Chorzów, Poland.

Awotunde threw his PR 73-1 ½ when he placed 3rd as part of a U.S. sweep at the 2022 World Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. That’s No. 21 in world history and No. 12 all-time U.S.

He hit the 70-2 ¼ Saturday on his first throw and then added a 70-1 ¾ on his 2nd. He also had a 69-5 ¼ in his series.

Here’s a look at all of Awotunde’s 70-foot throws – all since May of 2021 (Note that some meets do not make field series information available so there could be some non-winning throws over 70 feet I don’t know about. But if there are, it would only be one or two):

73-1 ½ … World Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 17, 2022 [5th throw] [3rd]
72-11 ½ … World Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 17, 2022 [1st throw] [—]
72-10 ¾ … World Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 17, 2022 [6th throw] [—]
72-6 ¼ … U.S. Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 9, 2023 [4th throw] [2nd]
71-3 ½ … Memorial Borisa Hanžekovića, Fountains, Zagreb [N/A/] [3rd]
71-2 ¼ … World Championships, Eugene, Ore., July 17, 2022 [2nd throw] [—]
72-2 … Meeting Città di Padova, Stadio Colbachini, Padovad, Poland, Sept. 5, 2021 [N/A] [place]
71-8 … U.S. Olympic Trials, Eugene, Ore., June 18, 2021 [6th throw] (5th place]
71-2 ¼i … World Athletics Indoors, Belgrade, Serbia, March 19, 2022 [3rd throw] (5th)
71-2 ¼ … Gyulai István Memorial, Székesfehérvár, Hungary, July 6, 2021 [4th throw] (3rd)
71-1 ½ … Golden Games, Walnut, Calif., May 9, 2021 [6th throw] [2nd place]
70-11 ¾ … World Athletics Indoors, Belgrade, Serbia, March 19, 2022 [5th throw] [2nd]
70-11 ½ … USATF Golden Games, Walnut, Calif., April 16, 2022 [5th throw) [2nd]
70-10 ¾ … USATF Golden Games, Walnut, Calif., April 16, 2022 [4th throw) [—]
70-10 3/4 … Silesia Kamila Skolimowska Memorial, Stadion Śląski, Chorzów, Poland, July 16, 2023 [5th]
70-7 … U.S. Championships, Eugene, Ore., June 27, 2022 [3rd throw] [3rd]
70-6 ½ … Gyulai István Memorial, Székesfehérvár, Hungary, July 6, 2021 [6th throw] [—]
70-6 ¼i … American Track League, Louisville, Ky., Feb. 12, 2022 [3rd throw] [1st]
70-3 ½ … USATF Golden Games, Walnut, Calif., April 16, 2022 [3rd throw] [—]
70-2 ½i … American Track League, Louisville, Ky., Feb. 12, 2022 [1st throw] [—]
70-2 1/4 … USATF L.A. Grand Prix, Los Angeles, May 18, 2024 [1st throw] [4th]
70-1 3/4 … USATF L.A. Grand Prix, Los Angeles, May 18, 2024 [2nd throw] [-]
70-0 ½ … Kamila Skolimowska Memorial, Stadion Śląski, Chorzów [N/A] [3rd]
70-0 ¼ … USATF Golden Games, Walnut, Calif., April 16, 2022 [2nd throw] [—]
70-0 ¼ … World Athletics Indoors, Belgrade, Serbia, March 19, 2022 [2nd throw] [—]

Two PRs, three meet records and a N.J. #1 performance for Sianni Wynn at the BCSL Championships!!!!!!!!

Sophomore Sianni Wynn recorded two PRs and destroyed three meet records Saturday on her home track at the rainy Burlington County Scholastic League Liberty Division meet.

Despite the usual weekly Saturday rainy conditions, Wynn won the 100-meter dash in 11.76, the 200 in 23.85 and her newest event and the 400-meter hurdles, in 1:01.55.

Wynn’s 11.76 broke the meet record of 12.16 that Wynn ran last year. Sherron Lawson of Willingboro ran a hand-timed 12.1 in 1996 that was also listed as co-meet record because it’s lower than the 12.16, even though the 12.16 is intrinsically faster. Wynn has run 11.65 this spring, which is No. 8 in South Jersey history and No. 2 in New Jersey this year.

Wynn’s 23.85 was her first time under 24 seconds. Her previous PR was 24.11 at the Camden County Championships earlier this month at Haddon Township. Her time is No. 1 in New Jersey this year and equals No. 8 in New Jersey and No. 3 in South Jersey history. It’s 9th-fastest ever by a South Jersey alum, although like her 100 time and most times at early season meets with no wind guage it’s not eligible for record purposes. Her 23.85 broke Wynn’s own meet record of 24.20 from last year.

Wynn’s only previous intermediates race was a 1:03.13 at the Camden County Championships. Her 1:01.55 is No. 5 in the state this year and No. 3 in South Jersey, behind Eastern soph Natalie Dumas [59.80 at the South Jersey Elite at Delsea earlier this month] and Ocean City’s Sophia Curtis [1:00.11 at South Jersey Elite]. Dumas and Wynn are the top two sophomores in New Jertsey and No. 1 and No. 4 among U.S. sophomores according to the MileSplit national database. Wynn ran below the FAT Liberty Division meet record of 1:01.77 set by Willingboro’s Danielle Myrics in 2001. Shawnee’s Mandie Dulin will continue to be listed as co-meet record holder with Wynn with her hand-timed 1:01.4 from 1996.

Wynn is now the No. 1 sophomore in New Jersey in the 100, 200 and 400 [54.24] and No. 2 in the intermediates.

RIVERSIDE’S JAMIR BROWN WINS FOUR EVENTS AND BREAKS FOUR MEET RECORDS IN BCSL FREEDOM DIVISION!!!!!!!!!!

It’s pretty hard to have a better day than Jamir Brown had at Pennsauken on Saturday.

Brown, a senior at Riverside, not only won four events in the BCSL Freedom Division meet, he broke four Freedom Division meet records along the way.

➡️ Brown won the 200-meter dash in a personal-best 21.96 in what was his first open 200 since his freshman year. That broke the Freedom Diision fat meet record of 22.66 set in 1999 by Burlington Township’s Tim Carlock. Carlock’s teammate, Louis Smith, had a hand-timed 21.9 in 1997 that is intrinsically faster than Carlock’s 22.66. His 21.96 is No. 3 in New Jersey Group 1 this year.

➡️ Brown won the long jump with a PR 23-3. That broke the meet record of 23-0 set by Burlington Township’s Smith, also in 1997. Brown’s previous PR was a 23-0 ½ to win the County Open at Northern Burlington last weekend. That 23-3 is No. 1 in New Jersey Group 1 this year and No. 4 state-wide.

➡️ Brown won the 400-meter hurdles in a big PR of 53.69, which snapped the meet record of 53.70 set in 1999 by eventual Meet of Champions winner Harran Williams of Delran. Brown’s previous PR was a 54.42 as a Delran sophomore at 2022 West Philly Nationals at Franklin Field. His 53.69 is No. 1 in New Jersey Group 1 this year, No. 1 in South Jersey and No. 3 in the state.

➡️ And he won the 100-meter hurdles in 14.05, which breaks the hand-timed meet record of 14.1 shared by Aaron Biddle of Bordentown in 1998 and Palmyra’s Will Brown in 2006. The fat meet record was 14.45 by Palmyra’s 14.45 in the 2019 prelims. Jamir Brown is already N.J. No. 2 in the highs at 13.67 from Delsea earlier this month.

In South Jersey Group 1 history, Brown now ranks No. 1 in the 100-meter hurdles, No. 3 in the 400-meter hurdles, No. 8 in the long jump and No. 13 in the 200.

Maple Shade outscored Riverside 214-136 to win the Freedom Division team title. Palmyra scored 275 points to top Burlington City [67] in the Independence Division team race. The Willingboro boys won 161-122 over Burlington Township to win the Liberty Division, and Cinnaminson defeated Delran 197-124 to win the Patriot Division title

16 South Jersey athletes qualify for NCAA Division 1 Regionals!!!!!!

Sixteen South Jersey men and women have earned spots in the NCAA Division 1 Outdoor Track Championships preliminary rounds.

The prelims are scheduled for May 22-25, with the East Region at the University of Kentucky in Lexington and the West Region at the Universiity of Arkansas in Fayetteville. The NCAA Championships June 5-8 at Hayward Field at the University of Oregon in Eugene.

Some 48 individuals and 24 relay teams per event in each region qualify for regionals. Incredibly, the official NCAA instructions do not say how many athletes per event qualify for nationals, saying only: “The qualifiers out of these two regions will compete in the 2024 NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships.” But I THINK the top 12 in each region per individual event advance to nationals. You’d think the NCAA might want to put that in their instructions? Maybe? Track is the best sport but honestly the people running it are idiots.

Anyway, here’s a look at the qualifiers for D-1 prelims. For links to the complete qualifier lists, click here.

East Regional
Women
Dennisha Page: Wilson grad now at Tennessee has blossomed into one of the top sprinters in the world in her first year at Tennessee after spending her first three years at Rutgers. Page is No. 28 in the world in the 100 at 11.10, No. 15 among Americans and No. 8 among collegians, and in the 200 she’s No. 11 in the world, No. 7 among U.S. women and No. 6 among collegians. Page will also run on Tennessee’s top-seeded 400-meter relay team, which is ranked 6th in the world at 42.42.

Halima Scott: Delaware senior Scott, who ran for Wilson while attending Camden Big Picture Learning Academy, ran 53.38 in the 400 to place 3rd in the Coastal Athletic Association Championships at Elon, N.C. Her lifetime best is 53.01 from last year’s CAA meet (when the CAA was the Colonial Athletic Association) is the Delaware school record. Scott and Page ran together at Wilson and are sisters.

Shelby Whetstone: Lenape’s Whetstone, a Rutgers senior, qualified for her first NCAA meet with a big PR of 2:05.81 at the Big Ten Championships in Ann Arbor, Mich. That’s No. 2 in Rutgers history and 9th-fastest ever by a South Jersey woman.

Jailya Ash: Back in March, Ash, a UConn senior from Eastern, ran a lifetime-best 13.29, setting the Huskies school record. This will be Ash’s 2nd trip to NCAA prelims. She raced in the NCAA East prelims in 2022 in Bloomington, Ind., as well.

Aliya Garozzo: Paul VI graduate from Sicklerville set a UPenn school record when she ran 56.34 to win the Ivy League title earlier this month at Princeton. She’s the No. 10 in the East Regional and ranked 21st among U.S. women. The only South Jersey athletes to ever run faster are Rancocas Valley’s Tonya Lee [55.78 in 1996] and Winslow’s Krystal Cantey [56.21 in 2007]. Garozzo will also run on Penn’s 1,600-meter relay team, which is the No. 5 seed with its Ivy League-record 3:29.29 on the Quakers’ home track at the Penn Relays.

Claudine Smith: Atlantic City graduate, now a Rutgers senior, returns to NCAAs in the triple jump after competing in the 2021 East Regionals in Jacksonville. Smith jumped a season-best 41-6 in an early-season meet in Tampa, has a collegiate PR of 41-10 from an indoor meet at the Armory in February 2023 and a lifetime best of 42-2 from her win at the 2019 Meet of Champions at Northern Burlington (with no wind guage).

Fatimah Owens: A Towson senior from Millville, Owens qualified with a lifetime-best 171-5 in the discus when she placed 2nd at the Coastal Athletic Association meet at Elon, N.C., last weekend. That’s the best throw by a South Jersey woman since Sylvia Galarza – also from Millville – threw 174-2 in the 2016 USATF National Club Championships at Franklin Field, which was the final time she ever threw the disc, according to World Athletics.

Men
Austin Gabay: Gabay, a Duke junior from Cinnaminson, earned a top-20 seed in the 1,500 with a PR 3:40.73 at a home meet in Durham, N.C., last month. That’s 4th-fastest in South Jersey history. This is Gabay’s 4th trip to NCAAs, including two in cross country. He ran the 1,500 last May in East prelims in Jacksonville, Fla.

Bryce Tucker and Premier Wynn: We’ll list Tucker and Wynn together because they’re two of the fastest freshmen in NCAA Division 1 in the 400-meter hurdles, they were teammates at Pennsauken, they’re among the top Americans in the Under-20 division and they both PR’d this spring with times separated by 11-100ths of a second. Tucker, a freshman at Rutgers, won the Big Ten Conference title last week in 50.61 and Wynn, a freshman at Norfolk State, was 2nd in the MEAC Championships in 50.72.

Micah Wood: Another Rutgers intermediate hurdler, Rancocas Valley’s Wood ran a PR 51.12 in the prelims of the Big Ten Championships last weekend in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Noah Kriesman: When the indoor season began, the Cherry Hill East grad and Rutgers sophomore had a PR of 15-7 from the MAAC indoor Championships in February of 2023. He sat out the 2023 outdoor season and resurfaced at Rutgers, where he improved steadily culminating in a 17-3 ½ clearance in a meet in Columbia, S.C., in April, the best jump ever by a South Jersey alumni. That’s an improvement of 20 ½ inches since January.

Lucciano Pizarro: Cherokee grad at Penn State hit a shot put season-best 62-4 in a meet in Coral Gables, Fla., in April, which makes him the No. 14 seed at East prelims. Pizarro has a lifetime best 65-0 ¾ from last year’s Big Ten Championships in Bloomington, Ind.

Kevin Burr: In only his 2nd year throwing the javelin, Rancocas Valley’s Burr threw 225-0 twice this spring at Tennessee, making him the No. 2 freshman in the East Regional (behind Mississippi’s Jake Railey, who threw 228-1) and the No. 3 freshman in all of the NCAA.

West
Women
Tionna Tobias: Versatile Winslow graduate, now a senior at Iowa, qualified for NCAA prelims in both the long jump and hurdles. She ran 13.18 in March in Gainesville and long jumped 21-4 ¼ at the same meet. Tobias placed 9th in the long jump at indoor NCAAs in March in Boston. She competed in the heptathlon last year at NCAAs after winning the Big 10 Championships but did not contest any multi-events this spring. Tobias is also an alternate on Iowa’s 400-meter relay team, which has run 44.07 this year.

Leah Howard: Like Burr, Texas Tech’s Howard is one of the top freshman javelin throwers in the country. Howard, another Millville graduate, PR’d at 164-4 earlier this month at the Big 12 Championships in Waco, Texas, and she’s 5th among freshmen in the West Regional and 9th in NCAA Division 1.

Sophia Curtis quad leads Ocean City to Cape May County title; John Paul Forster triple leads O.C. boys!!!!!!

Ocean City senior Sophia Curtis put together a quick quad win Thursday at the Cape May County Championships, winning the long jump, triple jump and 400-meter hurdles and anchoring the winning 1.600-meter relay, all in under two hours.

Curtis won the intermediates in 1:02.04, the long jump with a PR 17-8 1/2 – this was her first major meet long jumping since outdoor states last year – and the triple jump with a 39-1 ¾. She joined Grace Tedesco, freshman Carly Godfrey and Kai Linthicum to run 4:12.50 in the 4-by-4, anchoring in 59.21.

Curtis was state Group 3 champ last year and 6th-place finisher at West Philly Nationals in the intermediates and two-time Meet of Champions winner and 4th-place finisher in Boston Nationals in the triple jump.

Ocean City won the team title 167-73 over 2nd-place Middle Township, with Lower Cape May Regional 3rd with 58 points.

Ocean City junior Naomi Nnewihe put together an unusual and impressive triple, winning the 100 in 12.84, the 200 in 26.08 and the sho put with a 31-10 ¼.

Other Ocean City winners: Godfrey in the 400 [PR 59.69], junior Chloe Care in the 800 [PR 2:25.95], junior Maeve Smith in the 1,600 [5:16.12] and 3,200 [11:20.09], junior AnnaMaria Marczyk in the high hurdles [PR 16.68] and sophomore Callie Duff in the high jump [4-10].

For Middle Township, senior Camille Harris won the discus [97-0], sophomore Haylie Rowlands won the pole vault with a 7-6 clearance and freshman Allison Nagle won the javelin at 85-11.

The Ocean City boys won the team title 230-41 ½ over Middle Township.

Junior John Paul Forster tripled the high jump [5-4], long jump [PR 20-0 ¾] and triple jump [PR 40-2 ½].

Other Red Raider winners: Sophomore Jude Govern in the 200 [PR 23.55], senior Talon Fischer in the 400 [52.61]junior Kal Heyman in the 800 [PR 2:04.34], freshman Keenan Neuman in the 1,600 [4:40.74], senior Matt Hoffman in the 3,200 [9:31.12], junior Ryan Davis in the 110 highs [16.14] and 400 intermediates [1:01.61], junior Anthony Gasparovic [141-8 discus], junior Grady Hanson [44-3 shot put] and junior Anthony DeRose [132-3 javelin].

For Middle, junior Aidan Hippen won the 100 [PR 11.53] and sophomore Noah Nagle won the pole vault [10-6]

EGG HARBOR TWP.’S MICHAELA POMATTO BREAKS STOCKTON DISCUS RECORD THREE TIMES, 10TH-BEST IN NCAA DIVISION 3!!!!!!!!

Egg Harbor graduate Michaela Pomatto broke the Stockton University discus record Thursday.

Then she broke it again. And then she broke it again.

Pomatto, a Stockton junior, had the series of her life on Day 2 of the All-Atlantic Region Track and Field Championships in Cortland, N.Y., with three throws over 150 feet, including a 154-8 on her 5th attempt.

She solidified her already very good chances to qualify for the NCAA Division 3 Championships by moving up from 15th to 10th on the TFRRS performance list. The top 22 on the list qualify for nationals, scheduled for next Thursday through Saturday atg Doug Shaw Memorial Stadium in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

When the spring season began, Stockton’s record was 147-5 by Clearview graduate Audra Schappell from 2005 in a meet that I’ve never been able to identify.

Pomatto broke that mark with a 149-3 on April 19 at the Paul Donahue Invitational at Widener University in Chester, Pa.

After throwing 139-7 and a near-PR 148-0 on her first two attempts Thursday, Pomatto broke the school record for the first time with a 150-6 on her 3rd throw. She topped it with a 151-9 on her 4th and then broke the record again with a 154-8 on her final attempt. She fouled on her 6th.

Senior Makenna King of St. John Fisher in Pittsford, N.Y., won the event with a 161-7 on her final throw even though Pomatto had three of the four-best throws in the competition.

King jumped from the No. 14 spot on the Track and Field Race Reporting Service list up to No. 4, but Pomatto is in a safe spot with the qualifying window ending at midnight Thursday.

Pomatto is now only five feet off the all-time N JAC record of 159-10 set by Rowan’s Kathy Darling of Milford, Del., in 2001, before she transferred to Johns Hopkins and became an NCAA Division 1 All-America.

Pomatto began her track career at Ursinus, where she set the school record of 130-4 at the 2022 Larry Ellis Invitational in Princeton.

WOODSTOWN’S MOLLY LODGE SHATTERS ROWAN 400-METER HURDLES SCHOOL RECORD WITH #7 TIME IN NCAA DIVISION 3!!!!!!!!

Woodstown graduate Molly Lodge broke the nine-year-old Rowan University intermediate hurdles record Thursday afternoon.

Lodge, a Rowan junior, won the 400-meter hurdles at the All-Atlantic Region Track and Field Championships in Cortland, N.Y., in 1:01.33, breaking the record of 1:01.49 set by Melirah Searcy of Edison when she won the intermediates at the 2015 New Jersey Athletic Conference in Mahwah.

Lodge lowered her PR from 1:02.01 from last year’s NJAC Championships, also in Mahwah. Her 2024 season best was 1:02.26, which she ran last month at the Larry Ellis Invitational at Princeton Universitry’s Weaver Stadium.

Lodge was already in good shape as far as qualifying for the NCAA Division 3 Championhips. Her 1:02.26 ranked 13th, and the top 22 performers qualify for nationals. But her 1:01.33 moves her up to seventh on this year’s Division 3 list.

The NCAA Division 3 Championships are scheduled for next Thursday through Saturday at Doug Shaw Memorial Stadium in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

Lodge never ran the intermediate hurdles at Woodstown or as a Rowan freshman. Her first intermediate hurdles race ever was just 14 months ago at the Washington & Lee Carnival in Lexington, Va., where she ran 1:04.46. By the end of May last year she had qualified for NCAAs and finished 17th in the country.

Lodge is already a three-time All-America as part of various Rowan relay teams. On Wednesday, she was the leadoff leg on Rowan’s 4-by-400, which ran 3:48.08, which is No. 10 in Division 3. The top 16 relay teams qualify for nationals.

Rancocas Valley girls smash 30-year-old Burlington County shuttle hurdles record!!!!!!

Rancocas Valley’s shuttle hurdles team of juniors Cecilia King, junior Kaylie Peacock and Aniya Wilkins and senior Nevaeh Lott broke a 30-year-old Burlington County record Wednesday and ran the 7th-fastest time in South Jersey history.

R.V. won the varsity shuttle hurdles within the Red Devil Frosh/Novice & Varsity Relay Showcase on their home track in Mount Holly with a time of 1:01.59.

They broke the Burlington County record of 1:02.0 hand-timed set by Moorestown’s Shavonna Ross, Meredith Elwell, Liza Comila and Shaatich Rivers at the 1994 Long Branch Relays. Their time is fastest by a South Jersey school since Eastern ran 59.52 in 2019 at the Don Danser Relays at Lenape. Jailya Ash, Jewel Ash, Abigail Brocco and Analiese Bulgin ran on that team.

Winslow senior Dominique Clement, junior Ma’Syiah Brawner, senior Sierra Handy and senior Djassi Dean placed 2nd in 1:02.99, which is No. 17 in South Jersey history and No. 12 on the all-time Camden County list. It’s Winslow’s fastest time since they ran 1:00.18 at the 2014 Carl Lewis Relays at Willingboro.

ALL-TIME S.J. GIRLS SHUTTLE HURDLES
59.00 … Edgewood, 1999
59.52 … Eastern, 2019
59.79 … Pennsauken, 1999
1:00.14 … Buena, 2012
1:00.18 … Winslow Twp., 2014
1:01.17 … Woodrow Wilson, 2012
1:01.59 … Rancocas Valley, 2024
1:01.68 … Winslow Twp., 2002
1:01.6h … Woodrow Wilson, 2005
1:01.94 … Edgewood, 1998
1:02.0h … Moorestown, 1994
1:02.16 … Wilson, 2003
1:02.51 … Mainland Regional, 2018
1:02.59 … Paul VI, 2018
1:02.68 … Mainland Reg., 2018
1:02.86 … Edgewood, 2001
1:02.99 … Winslow Twp., 2024
1:03.62 … Absegami, 2017
1:03.70 … Lenape, 2008
1:03.73 … Highland, 1998
1:03.79 … Camden, 2015

Down to final chance in 4-by-4, Rowan women – with Molly Lodge, Jasmine Pope and Nevaeh Lorjuste – run huge NCAA Division 3 qualifier!!!!!!

Down to their final chance to qualify for NCAA Division 3 Nationals, Rowan’s 1,600-meter relay team – with three South Jersey legs – came up huge Wednesday at the AARTFC Championships in Cortland, N.Y.

Junior Molly Lodge of Woodstown, junior Jasmine Pope of Pennsauken, senior Kat Pederson from Hillsborough and junior Nevaeh Lorjuste from Triton ran 3:48.08 and placed 2nd to Rochester at the All-Atlantic Region Track and Field Championships. Rochester ran 3:47.72.

The Rowan women were ranked 26th in D-3 going into the race and only the top-16 teams in each relay qualify for nationals. But the 3:48.08 moved the Profs all the way up to 10th and an almost certain lane at nationals.

Rowan’s previous-fastest time this year was a 3:51.30 with Lodge, Pope, Pederson and Lorjuste at the New Jersey Athletic Conference Championships in Galloway Township earlier this month.

Rochester had already run 3:47.30 this spring, so Rowan leapfrogged 16 schools to move into the No. 10 spot on the TFRRS Division 3 list, which is used to determine the qualifiers for nationals. The AARTFC is essentially a last-chance meet. The qualifying deadline is the end of the day Thursday. As of now the qualifying cutoff for the 4-by-4 is 3:49.70, so Rowan made it by over a second and a half.

Lodge and Pope handled the first two legs for Rowan – three-turn stagger so no splits for their legs because you’d need a timing system for every lane – and then Pederson split 56.30 and Lorjuste 56.22.

The time is Rowan’s fastest in 10 years, since Jessalynn Wright of Cherokee, Jamie Thompson from South Brunswick, Tashay Wilson from Hillside and Melirah Searcy of Edison set the school record of 3:44.60 at the 2014 NCAA Division 3 Championships at Selby Stadium at Ohio Wesleyan University in Delaware, Ohio (your humble scribe’s alma mater).

The NCAA Division 3 Championships are scheduled for next Thursday through Saturday at Doug Shaw Memorial Stadium in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

The top 22 in each individual event qualify for nationals, and with less than a day before the qualifying cutoff Lodge is 13th in the 400-meter hurdles [1:02.26], Anna Sasse of Williamstown is 20th in the steeplechase [10:48.66] and Isabelle Deal of Washington Township is 12th in the shot put [45-8] and 15th in the javelin [135-8].

Also in the 4-by-4, The College of New Jersey ran 3:56.10 and placed 6th with freshman Kelsey Thomas running the 3rd leg.

https://tf.tfrrs.org/lists/4517/2024_NCAA_Division_III_Outdoor_Qualifying_List?gender=f#event33

With three sophs and a junior, Rancocas Valley smashes Burlington County 4-by-200 record with fastest time in New Jersey this year!!!!!!

Sophomore Xavier Bancroft, sophomore Julian Coppage-Seepersaud, junior David Smith and sophomore Thomas Howard Jr. broke the Burlington County 800-meter relay record and ran the 7th-fastest time in South Jersey history Wednesday on their home track in Mount Holly.

Pushed by Winslow, R.V. ran 1:27.43, which broke the Burlington County record of 1:27.75 set by Willingboro’s Akeem Adiatu, Antonio Abney, Daquon Brow and Jusson Boyd at 2007 Greensboro Nationals at North Carolina A&T.

It’s also fastest in New Jersey this year.

Winslow, with senior Kenneth Everett Jr., junior Jayden Poteat, senior Darrell Jackson Jr. and junior Cameron Miller, placed 2nd in 1:28.38. That’s No. 3 in New Jersey this year.

The 4-by-2 was one of a handful of varsity races held during a mostly freshman and novice meet – the Red Devil Frosh/Novice Finale and Varsity Relays.

Rancocas Valley’s previous school record was 1:28.23 set at the 2015 Woodbury Relays by JeSean Foster, Dyson Scott, Shaun Ellis-Bradley and Sterling Pierce.

Here’s the all-time South Jersey sub-1:28 list
1:24.49 … Winslow Twp., 2003
1:24.90 … Camden, 2004
1:26.05 … Camden, 2000
1:26.68 … Camden, 1997
1:26.74 … Pennsauken, 2023
1:27.38 … Paul VI, 2016
1:27.43 … Rancocas Valley, 2024
1:27.52 … Woodrow Wilson, 1996
1:27.66 … Oakcrest, 2011
1:27.68 … Pennsauken, 2016
1:27.69 … Oakcrest, 2012
1:27.74 … Pleasantville, 1994
1:27.75 … Willingboro, 2007
1:27.80 … Pleasantville, 1999
1:27.84 … Winslow Twp., 2002
1:27.90 … Winslow Twp., 2008
1:27.96 … Williamstown, 2015
1:27.98 … Camden, 2002

And the all-time Burlington County Top 10
1:27.43 … Rancocas Valley, 2024
1:27.75 … Willingboro, 2007
1:28.23 … Rancocas Valley, 2015
1:28.0h … Willingboro, 1979
1:28.40 … Cherokee, 2008
1:28.44 … Lenape, 1996
1:28.64 … Rancocas Valley, 2014
1:28.79 … Willingboro, 1999
1:28.6h … Willingboro, 1982
1:28.73 … Rancocas Valley, 2022