NCAAs: A Weekend That Won't Soon Be Forgotten
NCAAs: A Weekend That Won't Soon Be Forgotten
Seeing the Ducks systematically dismantle a good Florida team with just one brand of athlete was a beauty to behold. We knew that Cheserek and Jenkins would do their thing (ok, maybe not the whole Jenkins over Ches thing), but to have all of the other pieces execute and score points where they did is a testament to not only Powell and head coach Robert Johnson, but also to the kids themselves.
This group scored 70 points (74 total with thrower Greg Skipper) not by running for themselves, but by believing in the often overlooked team aspect of track and field. That was the narrative all along with this team- it’s why Cheserek switched events a year after dominating the 3k/5k, it’s why top Ivy Leaguers Will Geoghegan and Johnny Gregorek came to Oregon, and it’s why 5th year senior Parker Stinson came back to school with just an indoor season left in his eligibility. Fast times and individual titles are great, but it’s the team titles that they hang from the rafters. How perfect that this team’s goals all came together on the campus of Arkansas, a school that made distance-heavy track teams fashionable during the 80s and 90s.
Florida coach Mike Holloway gave an excellent definition of “luck” as it pertains to outcomes in sport. “Luck is where preparation meets opportunity,” said Holloway, which seems to perfectly sum up any fortune that Harter’s Razorbacks may have benefitted from this weekend. It may have been fortunate that collegiate record holder Demi Payne no-heighted in the pole vault, giving Sandi Morris a clear path to victory. It also could be argued that “fortune” allowed the Razorbacks to score in every event that they were entered in, totaling 63 points, third most in history.
Dominique Scott's boyfriend, Cameron Efurd, proposes after NCAAs. ©Carlton Efurd
“Dominique finished the night with two victories, and a diamond ring, so now she’s planning a wedding,” her coach said with a smile.