Glassboro’s Dallas Hohney, now at Rowan, opens season with 800 win at Ocean Breeze; Woodstown’s Cole Lucas of Marist PRs in 3rd!!!!!!

Glassboro High’s Dallas Hohney, who ran 1:50.71 for Rider last year, has resurfaced at hometown Rowan University and opened his indoor season with a 1:54.99 win at the Fastrack Season Opener Saturday at Ocean Breeze.

That’s 9th-fastest in NCAA Division 1 through opening weekend.

Hohney won the 1st section of the race and sophomore Joaquin Bell-Andrade of Marist University in Poughkeepsie won the 2nd section in the exact same time, so since they were in separate races they were credited with a tie for 1st.

Hohney ran 1:50.71 at the Ott Center in January, 3rd-fastest in Rider history, and in the spring placed 2nd in the MAAC Championships in Lawrenceville in 1:53.64.

Hohney also ran as fast as 47.64 last year – the Rider indoor school record – so will fit right in on Rowan’s 4-by-4. He ran a 50.67 leg Saturday on a 3:17.55 team that also included Eastern’s Rajahn Dixon [50.29], Teddy Wilson [47.30] and Nicholas Garman 49.30].

Rowan’s indoor 800 record is 1:52.63 by Nick Neville when he placed 2nd at the 2018 NJAC meet at Ocean Breeze.

In the same meet, Woodstown’s Cole Lucas, a freshman at Marist, had an outstanding first college race placing 3rd behind Hohney and Bell-Andrade with an indoor-PR 1:55.15. Lucas ran only 28-100ths of a second off his high school PR 1:54.87 from Group 1 sectionals this past May at Pennsauken. It’s an indoor PR by more than five seconds.

In college debut, Willingboro’s Nester Wea wins two events and moves into all-time Towson top-10 in both!!!!!!!!

Nester Wea moved into the Towson all-time top-10 in two events in her collegiate debut Saturday.

Wea, a freshman from Willingboro, won the 60-meter dash in 7.57 and the 200 in 24.24 at the Youree Spence Garcia Invitational at Ocean Breeze in her first college meet.

Both times are indoor PRs for Wea and both are No. 6 in school history.

Wea’s 60 time is fastest by a Towson freshman since Crystal Johnson ran 7.50 at Ocean Breeze in February 2019, and her 200 time is fastest ever by a Towson freshman. Johnson ran 24.37 at Boston University in 2019.

Wea had indoor PRs of 7.82 in the 60 and 24.59. She ran 7.82 in March of 2024 in Boston and 24.59 in Boston in March of 2025. Her overall wind-legal 200 PR outdoors is 23.89 at the state Group 2 meet in South Plainfield this past May.

Wea was a 13-time Meet of Champions medalist at Willingboro and an 11-time state champion

Ella Karp from Washington Township opens college career with best throw by UConn freshman in nine years!!!!!!!!

UConn’s Ella Karp from Washington Township popped the best shot put by a Huskies freshman in nine years Saturday in her first college meet.

Karp threw a lifetime-best 45-9 ¾ and finished 1st in the Harvard Classic at Gordon Track in Cambridge, Mass.

That’s the best throw by a Connecticut freshman since Divine Oladipo threw 53-10 ¼ in a meet in Birmingham, Ala., in February 2017.

Karp’s previous PR was a 45-1 ¼ to win the Tri-County Conference meet this past May at Delsea. Her indoor PR was 43-3 ¾ when she placed 2nd at Easterns this past March at the Armory.

Karp opened with a 42-11 ½ and after a foul a 43-1 ¾. After a 42-11 ½ she closed with two 45-footers – a 45-2 ½ for her first PR of the day and then the 45-9 ¾ on her final attempt.

Another UConn freshman from South Jersey, Brook-lyn Roberts from Winslow, was 5th with a throw of 41-1 ¾ on her 3rd attempt. She won the state Group 3 title at the Bubble in February when she set her lifetime-best 43-5.

Maeve Smith takes 7th, Liliah Gordon 12th at Under-20 Championships in Oregon!!!!!!

Villanova freshman Maeve Smith from Ocean City placed 7th in the USATF Under-20 Championships Saturday and Penn State freshman Liliah Gordon from Northern Burlington was just behind her in 12th.

Smith ran 22:52 over 6,000 meters at Glendoveer Golf Course in Portland, Ore., and Gordon ran 23:27.

Smith was the 6th freshman finisher and the Wildcats’ 7th finisher at the Big East Championships in Ashland, Neb., where ‘Nova placed 2nd.

Gordon was the 12th freshman finisher in the Big Ten Championships in East Lansing, Mich., where the Nittay Lions placed 2nd.

Only athletes who don’t turn 21 before Jan. 1 are eligible for USATF Under-20 events.

PREMIER WYNN RUNS 4TH-FASTEST 300 IN TENNESSEE HISTORY, 6TH-FASTEST EVER BY A NEW JERSEY SPRINTER IN FIRST MEET FOR VOLS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

In his first race competing for Tennessee, Premier Wynn ran the 4th-fastest 300 in Vols history Saturday in Nashville.

Wynn, a  Pennsauken graduate and junior transfer from Norfolk State, ran 33.05 at the Vanderbilt Winter Challenge and placed 2nd to sophomore teammate Saad Hinti, the Moroccan 400-meter hurdles record holder.

That’s 1 1/2 200s at 22.03 pace.

Terry McDaniel set the Tennessee 300 record of 32.68 when he placed 2nd to Lorenzo Daniel [29.60] of Mississippi State at the 1986 SEC Championships in Baton Rouge, La. [converted from 29.99 for 300 yards] and Emmanuel Bynum ran 32.83 at the 2024 Clemson Invitational. Hinti’s time Saturday is 3rd-fastest in school history. (Daniel, a 1988 Olympian, was the world’s fastest 200 runner in 1988 with a 19.87.)

Wynn had run only one previous college 300, and that was one year ago today in Lynchburg, Va., where he ran 34.76.

Wynn’s time is 6th-fastest ever by a New Jersey runner and 3rd-fastest by a South Jersey sprinter, behind Olympic gold medalists and Willingboro track club teammates Carl Lewis [32.18 in 1984] and Dennis Mitchell [32.22 in 1988].

Wynn was the MEAC champion at 400 meters last spring in Norfolk at 46.53 after a lifetime-best 46.00 in the trials. He ran 50.70 in the 400-meter hurdles in Tampa last spring and has a 400IH PR of 50.58 from the 2024 USATF Under-20 Championships in Eugene. The 46.00 is 6th-fastest ever by a South Jersey runner and the 50.70 is 7th-fastest

I cobbled together an all-time New Jersey 300-meter dash list because why wouldn’t I? Some great names on here!

32.04 … Andrew Valmon [Manchester Twp.], Jerez de la Frontera, Spain, 1990
32.18 … Carl Lewis [Willingboro], London, 1984
32.22 … Dennis Mitchell [Edgewood], Jerez de la Frontera, Spain, 1988
33.00 … Clayton Parros [Seton Hall Prep], Boston, 2015
33.01 … Jordaine Johnson [East Orange], New York, 2025
33.05 … Premier Wynn [Pennsauken], Nashville, 2025
33.48 … Charles Cox [Monmouth Regional], Blacksburg, Va., 2010
33.50 … Zyaire Clemes [Trenton], New York, 2014
33.62 … Clayton Gravesande [Franklin Twp.], Blacksburg, Va., 2013
33.62 … Taylor McLaughlin [Union Catholic], New York, Jan. 31, 2015

BUTLER’S AUSTIN GABAY FROM CINNAMINSON RECORDS FASTEST 3,000 EVER BY A SOUTH JERSEY RUNNER!!!!!!!!

Austin Gabay ran the fastest 3,000 ever by a South Jersey runner Saturday at Boston University.

Gabay, a Cinnaminson graduate and now a senior at Butler, ran 7:56.98 in the Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener. His previous PR was 7:58.94 on the same track in February 2024 while competing for Duke.

Gabay came through 1,600 meters in 4:15.00 and closed in 62.67 for his final 400 and 2:06.21 over his final 800.

The previous South Jersey 3,000 record was 7:57.65 by Absegami’s Ford Palmer in New York in 2017.

The only other South Jersey runner to go sub-8 was Ocean City’s John Richardson, who ran 7:59.26 in Seattle in 2008.

Butler does not have an all-time top-10 on its web site, so no way to know where that performance ranks in Butler history.

7:56.98i … Austin Gabay [Cinnaminson], Dec. 6, 2025, Boston
7:57.65i … Ford Palmer [Absegami], Jan. 28, 2017, New York
7:59.26i … John Richardson [Ocean City], Feb. 16, 2008, Seattle
8:01.24i … Samuel Gerstenbacher [Schalick], Feb. 26, 2023, Boston
8:01.79i … Austin Gabay [Cinnaminson], Jan. 26, 2024, Boston
8:0487i… Kevin Antczak [Mainland Regional], Feb. 10, 2024, Boston
8:07.88i … Noah Deckert [Delsea], Feb. 2, 2024, Boston
8:09.59i … Karl Savage [Eastern], Jan. 23, 2004, Johnson City, Tenn.
8:10.01i … Jon Vitez [Haddonfield], Feb. 9, 2013, Princeton
8:10.69i … Sebastien Reed [Pitman], March 6, 2022, Boston

HADDONFIELD BOYS TEAR IT UP WITH 9TH-PLACE TEAM FINISH AT NIKE CROSS NATIONALS IN OREGON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

What an astonishing performance by the Haddonfield boys Saturday with a 9th-place at the Nike Cross Nationals!

Haddonfield, the first South Jersey school to qualify for the boys championship race, had four runners in the top 60 and scored 286 points.

Haddonfield beat the 3rd-, 6th and 9th-ranked teams in the DyeStat national rankings. Haddonfield went into the race ranked 16th.

They’re only the 2nd New Jersey public school ever to place in the top 10 at Nike Cross Nationals. West Windsor-Plainsboro North with the legendary Rosa twins was 5th in 2008.

As they have been all year, Haddonfield was led by their senior quartet of Luke Andresen, Peter Simpson, Ben Andrus and Ryan Gibson.

Andresen ran 15:59 over the 5,000-meter course at Glendoveer Golf Course in Portland, Ore., Simpson ran 16:11, Andrus 16:21 and Gibson 16:26. Michael Sinnes came up big as Haddonfield’s 5th man, running 17:07.

Senior Brandon Stoner and junior A.J. Blum also raced for Haddonfield.

Those five counted 22-38-48-59-119 in team scoring, and Haddonfield averaged 16:25 on a course that was muddy and waterlogged after it rained all day on Friday.

Christian Brothers Academy of Middletown Township, Ocean County, ranked 2nd nationally placed 3rd with 110 points, behind Niwot (Colo.) with 61 and Herriman (Utah) with 97.

Moorestown’s Hannah Byrd-Leitner opens college career with 5th-best pole vault ever by a Virginia freshman!!!!!!

Hannah Byrd-Leitner, a freshman at Virginia and a three-time Meet of Champions pole vault champ for Moorestown, started off her college career by placing 3rd in the Liberty Kickoff in Lynchburg, Va.

Byrd-Leitner cleared 12-9 ½, which is only two inches outside the all-time Virginia top-10 and only 2 ½ inches off her indoor PR of 13-0, which she set when she won the state Group 3 title at the Bubble this past February.

Byrd-Leitner cleared 11-3 ¾ on her 1st attempt, 11-9 ¾ on her 2nd and 12-9 ½ on her 1st. She went out at 13-3 ½, which would have been a lifetime best. She cleared 13-2 outdoors when she won the 2024 Meet of Champions at Pennsauken.

Her 12-9 ½ clearance is 5th-best all-time by a Virginia freshman.

https://www.athletic.net/TrackAndField/meet/625181/results/f/4/pv?tab=field-series

12-9 ½

Vermont’s Sydney Greenidge from Riverside runs huge PR in Boston in first collegiate meet!!!!!!

Vermont freshman Sydney Greenidge from Riverside opened her college career with an impressive 60-meter dash Saturday.

Greenidge ran 7.93 and placed 3rd at Boston University’s Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener.

That’s the fastest time by a Vermont freshman since at least 2010, which is as far back as TFRRS goes. Vermont doesn’t have any top-10 lists on its web site.

Greenidged’s high school PR was a 7.62 for 55 meters in a meet this past January at Ursinus. That converts to an 8.31 for 60 meters, so you can see what a big-time performance this was. A 7.93 converts to 7.39 for 55 meters.

Greenidge is not listed on Vermont’s roster, so but it’s not the most common name so I’m assuming it’s the same one.

JAMIR BROWN RUNS 5TH-FASTEST HURDLES TIME IN SYRACUSE HISTORY WITH PR IN 1ST RACE FOR ORANGEMEN!!!!!!!!

In his first race for Syracuse, Riverside’s Jamir Brown ran the 5th-fastest 60-meter hurdles time in school history.

Brown, who set the NCAA Division 3 record of 7.72 a year ago today at Ocean Breeze in his first race for Rowan, ran a lifetime-best 7.71 in the trials of the Greg Page Relays Saturday morning at historic Barton Hall on the campus of Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.

The final is scheduled for early Saturday afternoon.

Brown set the NCAA Division 3 record over the 110-meter highs with a 13.60 in the trials of the NJAC Championships last May in Ewing.

Brown’s time is fastest ever by a Burlington County hurdler, breaking a tie with Willingboro’s Isaac Williams, who ran 7.72 in Houston in 2015.

Syracuse does not have an all-time top-10 list on its web site, but I cobbled this together in anticipation of Brown’s arrival at Syracuse. It’s No. 4 all-time by a South Jersey hurdler and tied for 9th-fastest in New Jersey history.

All-Time Syracuse List
7.49 … Jarret Eaton, 2012
7.61 … Jaheem Hayes, 2023
7.65 … Freddie Crittenden, 2017
7.69 … Angelo Goss, 2018
7.71 … Jamir Brown, 2025
7.74 … Matt Moore, 2018
7.75 … Donald Pollitt II, 2014
7.81 … Amadou Gueye, 2013
7.82 … Emanuel Joseph, 2025
7.85 … Richard Floyd, 2018
7.86 … Tyler Garland, 2020
7.87 … David Gilstrap, 2017
7.91 … Anthony Vazquez, 2024
7.93 … Brevin Sims, 2021
7.94 … David Peters, 2025

All-Time New Jersey Alumni 60-Meter Hurdles List
7.46 … Jeff Porter [Franklin Twp.], Feb. 1, 2014, Mondeville, France
7.50 … Renaldo Nehemiah [Scotch Plains-Fanwood], March 10, 1989, Madrid, Spain
7.50 … Anwar Moore [Camden], Feb. 24, 2008, Boston
7.52 … Jack Pierce [Woodbury], Feb. 25, 1995, Fairfax, Va.
7.55 … Devon Hill [Trenton], March 10, 2012, Nampa, Idaho
7.64 … Sincere Rhea [St. Augustine], Jan. 25, 2025, Lubbock, Texas
7.66 … Cory Poole [East Orange], Feb. 14, 2020, Clemson, S.C.
7.69 … Guy Rose [Wayne Hills], Feb. 24, 2001, State College, Pa.
7.71 … Chris Serrao [East Brunswick], Jan. 11, 2025, Philadelphia
7.71 … Jamir Brown [Riverside], Dec. 6, 2024, Staten Island
7.72 … Isaac Williams [Willingboro], Jan. 9, 2015, Houston
7.73 … Todd Matthews [Notre Dame], Feb. 17, 2001, Blacksburg, Va.