TENNESSEE’S KEVIN BURR FROM RANCOCAS VALLEY RECORDS 7TH-BEST JAVELIN THROW BY AN AMERICAN THIS YEAR!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rancocas Valley’s Kevin Burr Jr., a sophomore at Tennessee, opened his 2025 season with a javelin PR and the 6th-best mark ever by a South Jersey high school alum.

Competing at his home track in Knoxville, Burr fouled on his first attempt before unloading a 240-1 on his 2nd throw.

That’s No. 6 in Tennessee history and best in 11 years, since Kyle Quinn threw 256-10 at the 2014 Tennessee Relays.

His previous PR was a 234-6 last May in the NCAA East Prelims in Lexington, Ky. That earned him a spot at the NCAA Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore., where he placed 11th, was the only freshman in the field of 24 throwers and became the Vols’ first javelin All-America since Quinn placed 10th in 2013.

Burr’s mark puts him 11th in NCAA Division 1 so far this year, No. 4 in the SEC, 5th in the NCAA Division 1 South Region and No. 7 among U.S. men, according to the World Athletics database. No. 1 on that list is Curtis Thompson from Florence with a world-leading 287-11.

Here’s my best attempt at an all-time New Jersey 240-foot list:

287-11 … Curtis Thompson [Florence], March 28, 2025, Austin
261-2 … Vince Labosky [Holy Cross], June 15, 1990, Norwalk, Calif.
261-2 … Tim VanLiew [Deptford], May 21, 2016, Tucson, Ariz.
259-7 … Bob Roggy [Holmdel], June 7, 1986, Eugene, Ore.
251-6 … Chris Mirabelli [Holy Cross], April 29, 2017, Philadelphia
250-11 … John Amabile [Wall Twp.], May 31, 1987, Piscataway
260-2 … Gerard Langlois [Madison Central], June 10, 1995, Piscataway
249-6 … Bobby Smith [Hopatcong], July 6, 2008, Eugene, Ore.
249-9 … Cade Antonucci [Holy Spirit], June 9, 2021, Eugene, Ore.
241-4 … Brandon Anthony Heroux [Westfield], June 7, 2012, Des Moines, Iowa
240-1 … Kevin Burr [Rancocas Valley], April 5, 2025, Knoxville, Tenn.

YASHAHYA BROWN RUNS FASTEST RUTGERS HURDLES TIME IN 41 YEARS!!!!!!!!!!!!

In his second lifetime race over the 110-meter 42-inch hurdles, Rutgers freshman Yashahya Brown from Washington Township matched the fastest time by a Rutgers hurdler in 41 years Friday.

Brown placed 4th in the 110-meter highs in 13.82 with a (barely) legal 2.0 meters-per-second tailwind at the South Florida Invitational at the USF Soccer and Track Stadium in Tampa.

His time is 3rd-fastest in Rutgers history and fastest since May of 1984, when Rutgers Hall of Famer Boris Prendergrass from Kennedy High in the Bronx, the 1982 U.S. junior national champion, ran 13.75 in a meet at Villanova. The only other hurdler in school history faster than Brown is Eugene Norman, who ran 13.64 in a meet in Tilsonburg, Ontario, in July of 1983.

Brown’s time is also tied for 9th-fastest ever by a South Jersey high school alum over the 42-inch barriers.

He’s now 6th-fastest in the Big Ten Conference and fastest among Big Ten freshmen.

In his only previous college race Brown ran 14.13 last weekend in Coral Gables, Fla. His time is 34th currently in NCAA Division 1 and 3rd-fastest among freshmen, behind only Francisco Marques of Grand Canyon [13.69 in Long Beach last weekend] and Jayden Keys of Georgia [13.73 in Gainesville last weekend].

All-Time South Jersey Alumni List
12.94 … Jack Pierce [Woodbury], June 22, 1996, Atlanta
13.12 … Anwar Moore [Camden], May 5, 2007, Modesto, Calif.
13.43 … Isaac Williams [Willingboro], April 16, 2016, Walnut, Calif.
13.48 … Sincere Rhea [St. Augustine], May 12, 2023, Raleigh, N.C.
13.51 … Martin Booker [Camden], June 7, 1986, Indianapolis
13.54 … Sultan Tucker [Delsea], May 22, 2004, St-Martin, France
13.77 … Jeffrey Young [Camden], May 11, 2022, Bloomington, Ind.
13.81 … Anthony Acklin [Triton], May 13, 2005, Cedar Falls, Iowa
13.82 … John Sease [Willingboro], March 26, 1982, El Paso, Texas
13.82 … Yashahya Brown [Washington Twp.], April 11, 2025, Tampa
13.84 … Jusson Boyd [Willingboro], April 15, 2011, Greensboro, N.C.

Delsea’s Matthew Littlehales, Cherokee’s Ben Realley, NBC’S Liliah Gordon, Ocean City’s Maeve Smith star as 544 runners race at Cherokee’s Night of 3200s!!!!!!

Delsea junior Matt Littlehales ran the 6th-fastest 3,200 time in Gloucester County history Thursday night at Cherokee.

Littlehales ran a huge negative-split 9:12.43 in the 23rd and final section at Cherokee’s Night of 3200s and edged junior Brody Watt of Bernards, who ran 9:13.99.

Cherokee sophomore Ben Realley and Haddonfield junior Benjamin Andrus also broke 9:20, Realley with a PR 9:15.93 and Andrus with a PR 9:17.23.

Littlehales fell just about two seconds short of older brother Andrew Littlehales’ school record of 9:10.39, which he ran at 2022 South Jersey Group 3 sectionals at Delsea. The only faster juniors on the all-time Gloucester County list are Peyton Shute of Woodbury [9:11.11 in 2023] and Kyle Rakitis of Kingsway [9:14.93 in 2021].

Littlehales came through 1,600 meters in 4:46.21 but then split 68.39, 69.85 and 68.48 before splitting 59.52 on his final lap to out-kick Watt, a 1:52 half-miler. Watt closed in 61.32.

So Littlehales was out in 4:46.21 and back in 4:26.24!

Realley’s 9:15.93 is fastest by a Burlington County sophomore since Shawnee’s David Forward ran 9:10.28 at the 2008 Meet of Champions at South Plainfield and 3rd-fastest among all South Jersey sophomores. He also had big negative splits – out in 4:45.25, back in 4:30.70, closing in 62.47. And Andrus was out in 4:45.51 and back in 4:31.73, closing in 63.25.

Littlehales’ previous PR was 9:26.75 indoors at the Ott Center in January. Realley’s previous PR was 9:21.01 from last April at Holmdel. That’s the South Jersey freshman record. Andrus’s previous PR was 9:31.31 at Delsea last May.

Other South Jersey runners under 9:30: Haddonfield junior Luke Andressen [9:24.49], Haddonfield junior Peter Simpson [9:26.23], Cinnaminson junior Jacob Wickersham [9:26.79] and Cherokee senior Liam Tindall [9:29.87].

The event produced the 43-fastest times in New Jersey this year.

The top female finisher was Northern Burlington senior and Foot Locker finalist Liliah Gordon, who ran 10:25.86. Ocean City senior Maeve Smith ran a PR 10:39.76, just missing the school and Cape May County record of 10:39.15, set at the 2014 Meet of Champions in South Plainfield. Her time is No. 19 in South Jersey history. Her previous PR was 10:50.72 at this meet last year.

Holy Cross junior Julia Flanagan PR’d with a PR 10:53.75, which is No. 6 in Burlington County history. Flanagan ran 10:57.62 last month at the indoor Meet of Champions at Ocean Breeze. Also under 11 were Ocean City senior Chloe Care [10:57.04], Paul VI junior Macy Huber [10:59.94] and Cherokee junior Alyssa Suriano [10:59.99 in her first lifetime 3,200].

There were a total of 544 finishers in 23 races.

A smoking hot early 400 hurdles performance by Aliya Garozzo, 9th-fastest in NCAA Division 1!!!!!!

Paul VI’s Alyssa Garozzo ran the 9th-fastest intermediate hurdles time in NCAA Division 1 Saturday in her second 400IH race since transferring to Duke.

Garozzo, a Duke senior, ran 56.54 at the Jim Click Shootout in Tucson, the 3rd-fastest time in Duke history and only 20-100ths off her lifetime-best 56.34, which she ran in May as a junior at Penn at Heps in Princeton. That stands as the University of Pennsylvania school record.

Lauren Hoffman, who represented the Phillipines in the 2024 Olympics in Paris, set the Duke record of 55.47 in the prelims of the 2022 NCAA Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene. She went on to place 3rd in the final in 55.58. No. 2 on the all-time Duke list is Skyla Wilson, who ran 56.05 when she won last year’s ACC Championships in Atlanta. Wilson and Garozzo were teammates at Penn in 2021 and 2022. In fact, it was Wilson’s Penn school record that Garozzo first broke last March with a 57.97 in Gainesville.

The only New Jersey women to run faster than Garozzo are world record holder and Olympic gold medalist Sydney McLaughlin of Union Catholic [50.37 in Paris in 2024], Tonya Lee of Rancocas Valley [55.78 in Walnut, Calif., in 1996] and Winslow Township’s Krystal Cantey [56.21 in Gainesville in 2007].

Garozzo ran 57.16 in Raleigh a week earlier in her first race for Duke. She also PR’d in the flast 400 this spring with a 52.54, which is No. 16 in NCAA Division 1 and 6th-fastest all-time by a South Jersey quarter-miler.

Catching up with Amherst All-America sprinter Cody Pierce from Mainland Regional!!!!!!

Once in a while, a notable South Jersey runner, jumper or thrower falls through the cracks and I totally whiff on his college accomplishments.

Cody Pierce falls squarely in this category.

Pierce graduated from Mainland Regional in the spring of 2022 after a fine high school career. He won the 200 at the South Jersey Group 3 sectionals at Delsea with a wind-aided 21.71 and was 2nd in the 400 with a 49.12.

His best finish at a state meet was in the indoor 400 in the winter of 2022, where he ran 50.06 and was 2nd to Pennsauken’s Bryce Tucker. His wind-legal 200 PR was a 22.39 at 2021 states at Pennsauken.

Fast forward to college.

Pierce entered Amherst in the fall of 2022 and had PRs of 22.43 and 50.68 indoors as a freshman. He dropped to 49.41 that spring (he didn’t run any wind-legal 200s outdoors as a freshman).

He dropped his 200 PR to 22.02 in January of 2024 and then smashed both PRs at the NESCAC (New England … something … something Athletic Conference?) meet at Tufts in Medford last April, placing 3rd in the 200 with a wind-legal 21.48 and 3rd in the 400 with a 48.44.

This past indoor season he won the New England Division 3 title in Boston at 200 meters with a 21.57 and was 5th in the 400 at 48.48. He followed that by winning the 200 at the NEICAAA Championships in Roxbury, Mass., in 21.75. (No, I have no clue what NEICAAA is and it doesn’t say anywhere … New England Intercollegiate Athletic Something Association?)

Pierce qualified for NCAAs in the 200 and placed 15th in the country, then earned All-America honors by running a 49.34 second leg on Amherst’s 4th-place DMR team, which ran 9:55.70, with Nick Edwards-Levin running 3:04.83 on the 1,200, Ben Davis 1:53.95 on the 800 and Parker Boyle anchoring in 4:07.59.

He hasn’t run any open races this spring yet but he did run a leg on Amherst’s 400-meter relay team that ran 41.49 this past Saturday in a home meet. That’s No. 19 in NCAA Division 3 so far this year.

Pierce is the indoor school record holder in the 200 with that 21.57, and he was on the 400-meter relay team that set a school record of 40.96 last spring in Williamstown, Mass.

Next for Amherst this weekend is the Coffey Invitational in Northampton, Mass., and the Silfen Invitational, in New London, Ct.

Winslow girls run fastest 800-meter relay in New Jersey this year at Deptford!!!!!!

Winslow’s sophomore Jordyn Cato, junior Olivia Okaro, sophomore Cinniya Robinson and sophomore Skyhe Seamon ran the fastest 800-meter relay in the state this year Saturday in Deptford.

Winslow ran 1:40.97, their fastest outdoor time in six years at the Deptford Spartan Relays. Indoors, Winslow ran 1:39.66 at Armory Nationals with a slightly different lineup – freshman Jasmine Jackson to Okaro to Seamon to Robinson. That’s 6th-fastest in state history indoors.

Of the 14-sub-1:41 times in South Jersey history, Winslow now has seven.

Kingsway was 2nd in 1:43.26, the 2nd-fastest time in the state this year. Freshman Talia Griscom, sophomore Norah Brown, freshman Naomi Haller and senior Jonnelle Lewis ran for the Lady Dragons.

All-Time South Jersey 800-Meter Relay List
1:38.43 … Winslow Twp., 2018
1:39.21 … Eastern, 2003
1:39.59 … Winslow Twp., 2012
1:39.67 … Winslow Twp., 2019
1:39.67 … Timber Creek, 2023
1:39.78 … Willingboro, 2024
1:40.10 … Timber Creek, 2024
1:40.25 … Rancocas Valley, 2019
1:40.30 … Winslow Twp., 2017
1:40.46 … Eastern, 2019
1:40.62 … Winslow Twp., 2003
1:40.72 … Egg Harbor Twp., 2018
1:40.5h … Woodrow Wilson, 2006
1:40.91 … Winslow Twp., 2004
1:40.97 … Winslow Twp., 2025
1:41.10 … Washington Twp., 1999
1:41.1h …. Camden, 1995
1:41.33 … Camden, 2009
1:41.2h … Willingboro, 1994
1:41.40 … Winslow Twp., 2005
1:41.2h … Camden, 2006
1:41.54 … Willingboro, 1999
1:41.56 … Highland, 1998
1:41.59 … Eastern, 2002
1:41.70 … Paul VI, 2019
1:41.5h … Pleasantville, 1995
1:41.5h … Woodrow Wilson, 2005
1:41.81 … Willingboro, 1995
1:41.7 … Wilson, 2008
1:41.85 … Deptford, 2015
1:41.86 … Willingboro, 2000
1:41.87 … Camden, 2001
1:41.88 … Winslow, 2013
1:41.91 … Winslow, 2018
1:41.97 … Moorestown, 1999
1:41.9h … Willingboro, 2003

Kate Inglis of Moorestown shatters Catholic University 5,000 record at George Mason!!!!!!

Moorestown’s Kate Inglis smashed the Catholic University 5,000-meter run record.

Inglis, a senior at the NCAA Division 3 school in Washington, D.C., school, ran 17:28.32 and placed 7th in a field of Division 1 runners at the Dalton Ebanks Invitational at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va.

Inglis broke her own school record of 17:37.32 that she set in April of 2023 in a meet at Bucknell.

A week earlier, Inglis ran a PR 4:41.21 for 1,500 meters in a meet at Towson, which is No. 5 in school history. Her previous 1,500 PR was a 4:43.62 in a meet at Towson in April of 2023.

Inglis is now No. 1 in the Landmark Conference in the 5,000 and No. 3 at 1,500 meters. She’s also No. 27 in NCAA Division 3.

She’s also the school record holder in the steeplechase [11:07.96 in 2023 at Widener] and No. 8 in school history in the outdoor 800 [2:23.11 in 2023 at Towson]. Indoors, she’s the school record holder at 3,000 meters [10:07.75 in 20024 in Medford, Mass.] and 5,000 [17:53.44 in 2025 also in Fairfax], No. 6 in the mile [5:09.14 in Landover, Md.]

In the same 5,000 race, Catholic senior Georgia Nussey PR’d at 18:25.32, which is 4th in the Landmark and 7th-fastest in school history. Nussey, a Haddonfield graduate, is the school record holder in the 10,000 at 38:18.73

At Moorestown, Inglis had PRs of 5:20.47 and 11:50.38.

PREMIER WYNN RUNS HUGE 200 PR, 9TH-FASTEST EVER BY A SOUTH JERSEY SPRINTER!!!!!!

Pennsauken’s Premier Wynn, a sophomore at Norfolk State, ran a huge 200 PR Saturday and one of the fastest times ever by a South Jersey native.

Wynn placed 2nd at the Norfolk State Invitational on his home track in 20.91. He was the top collegian in the race, finishing behind only Chidi Okezie, a Philadelphia-born Nigerian, graduate of the since-closed New Media Technology Charter School and two-time medalist at the African Championships and former World Under-20 champ in the 400. Okezie won the race in a lifetime-best 20.72.

Wynn’s previous PR was a 21.25 six weeks ago in his final indoor meet, the MEAC Championships in Virginia Beach. This was his first outdoor 200 as a collegian. His previous outdoor PR was a wind-aided 21.55 when he won the state Group 4 title in June of 2023 in Somerset. His previous wind-legal outdoor PR was 21.57 a week later at the Meet of Champions on the same track into a 1.6 meters-per-second headwind.

His 20.91 is No. 3 in the MEAC and No. 9 in the NCAA Division 1 Southeast Region. He’s No. 1 in the MEAC and 2 in the region in the 400 hurdles.

My all-time South Jersey alumni list shows 11 runners from South Jersey who’ve run sub-21 fully automatic with legal wind, and Wynn is tied for 9th on that list. If you see a mistake or omission please let me know in the comment section!

Wynn’s primary event is the 400-meter hurdles, and he’s got a PR of 50.78 from last June when he placed 2nd at the U.S. Under-20 Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. That’s 6th-fastest on the all-time South Jersey list. Wynn just missed that PR in his first 400IH race this spring, when he ran 50.70 last month in Tampa. He’s also run 46.64 for the flat 400.

19.75 … Carl Lewis [Willingboro], June 19, 1983, Indianapolis
20.09 … Dennis Mitchell [Edgewood], June 2, 1989, Provo, Utah
20.55 … Ajani Dwyer [Washington Twp.], March 29, 2025, Baton Rouge, La.
20.61… John Stone [Mainland Reg.], May 22, 1999, Atlanta
20.64 … Bruce Owens [Deptford], May 29, 2010, Greensboro, N.C.
20.83 … Todd Dutch [Washington Twp.], May 7, 2005, Columbus, Ohio
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
20.91 … Premier Wynn [Pennsauken], April 5, 2025, Norfolk, Va.
20.97 … Matt Rose [Bordentown], May 24, 1987, Villanova, Pa.

Willingboro girls run fastest 4-by-4 so far this year in New Jersey at Deptford!!!!!!

The Willingboro girls ran the fastest 1,600-meter relay in New Jersey this year Saturday at the Deptford Spartan Relays.

Sophomore Maya Bolden, junior Aaliyah Robinson, junior Kaila Speight and senior Nester Wea ran 3:54.65 in cold and rainy conditions.

Bolden led off with a 59.19 split, junior Robinson ran 56.71, Speight ran 1:00.68 and senior Wea anchored in 58.09.

Winslow also ran sub-4 with a 3:54.59. Sophomore Tristan Hughes, sophomore Jordyn Cato and junior Leeya Joseph ran the last three legs. The “Pioneer Timing” results only show “A. Arango” as the leadoff runner, which could be either freshman, Adaiah or Amariah. There’s no way to know. First names would be nice, “Pioneer Timing.”

Willingboro and Winslow are the only New Jersey schools under four minutes so far this spring, according to the MileSplit rankings. Indoors, Winslow ran 3:44.74 and Willingboro ran 3:53.07.

AJANI DWYER TEARS IT UP IN FLORIDA RELAYS 100 WITH 5TH-FASTEST UNDER-20 TIME IN THE WORLD THIS YEAR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Washington Township’s Ajani Dwyer, in his 2nd 100-meter dash as a collegian, ran one of the fastest times ever by a New Jersey sprinter Saturday.

Dwyer, a freshman at Penn State, ran a wind-legal 10.19 at the Florida Relays at Percy Beard Track in Gainesville. He won his section of the race easily but finished 7th overall without the benefit of racing head-to-head with the top sprinters in the country.

He dropped his PR from 10.32, which he ran at West Philly Nationals in June. He ran 10.21 at Group 4 sectionals last June at Pennsauken, but there was no wind guage at the facility, so it’s considered wind-aided.

But there was a wind guage in Gainesville, and Dwyer had only a 0.2 meters-per-second tailwind. Interestingly, Dwyer did not get into the fastest heat, which was wind-aided at 2.2 meters-per-second. So he was the only sprinter among the top nine finishers that got a legal wind reading and wasn’t assisted by an illegal tailwind.

Dwyer’s time is 2nd-fastest in Penn State history, behind only Ivory Coast Olympian Cheickna Traore of Snyder High School in Jersey City, who ran 10.15 in the NCAA East First Round in Lexington, Ky., last May.

The performance makes Dwyer the No. 3 freshman in college track this spring, behind LSU football and track star Jelani Watkins [10.01] and Adekalu Fakorede of Mississippi State and Nigeria [10.11].

Dwyer’s time is tied for 5th-fastest ever by a New Jersey high school graduate, and three of the four ahead of him are Olympians. In South Jersey history, only Olympic gold medalists Carl Lewis and Dennis Mitchell have run faster.

Dwyer is the fastest South Jersey sprinter over 100 meters since Mitchell ran 10.11 in Eugene in 2001. Ironically, earlier in the day on the same track, Pleasantville’s Gabriel Moronta ran 400 meters in 45.31, 2nd-fastest by a South Jersey runner since Mitchell back in 1986.

Dwyer ran a wind-aided 10.27 last weekend in Baton Rouge in his first college 100 and also ran 20.55 for 200 meters with a legal 0.0 wind. He didn’t run the 200 this weekend in Florida.

Dwyer is now the fastest New Jersey native on the all-time U.S. Junior [Under 20] list. Willingboro’s Lewis ran 10.21 in June of 1980 in Knoxville two weeks before turning 19, and Mitchell ran 10.21 in Starkville, Miss., at 18 in May of 1985.

Here’s a look at the all-time New Jersey sub-10.30 club:

9.86 … Carl Lewis [Willingboro], Aug. 25, 1991, Tokyo, Japan [+1.2]
9.91 … Dennis Mitchell [Edgewood], Sept. 7, 1996, Milan, Italy [+1.2]
10.12 … Mario Heslop [Franklin Twp.], April 9, 2022, Atlanta [-1.3]
10.15 … Cheickna Traore [Snyder], May 24, 2024, Lexington, Ky. [+0.7]
10.19 … Michael Garvin [Don Bosco], April 4, 2009, Austin, Texas [+1.6]
10.19 … Ajani Dwyer [Washington Twp.], April 5, 2025, Gainesville, Fla. [+0.2]
10.21 … Nadále Buntin [J.P. Stevens], May 13, 2023, Bloomington, Ind. [+1.0]
10.23 … Ashhad Agyapong [Trenton], June 7, 2008, Holmdel [+0.0]
10.24 … Renaldo Nehemiah [Scotch Plains-Fanwood], June 26, 1979, Västerås, Sweden [+1.0]
10.27 … Barry Douglas [Willingboro], May 4, 1996, Fairfax [+1.3]
10.28 … Malachi James [Burlington City], June 12, 2024, Pennsauken [+0.3]

10.32 … Ajani Dwyer [Washington Twp.], June 13, 2024, Philadelphia [-1.4]