espnW

espnW: WOMEN + SPORTS SUMMITPresented by Lexus
 
  • Women's Basketball 
    • 2013 WNBA Draft 
    • 2013 NCAA Tournament 
    • 3 To See 
    • Total Access: Tennessee 
  • College Sports
  • Commentary
  • More Sports
  • Watch
    • The Word
    • espnW on ESPN3
    • More Video
  • Athlete's Life
    • espnW Blogs
    • Journeys & Victories
    • In the Game with Robin Roberts
    • espnW Summit
  • Nine For IX
    • Watch The Trailer
    • Robin Roberts on IX films
    • Title IX is Mine
    • Mosaic: Be Part of History

Andrew Riley wins close 100 meters

Jun 9, 2012 1:34 AM ETAssociated Press
  • Recommend
  • Tweet
  • Comments
  • Email
  • Print

DES MOINES, Iowa -- For a precious few seconds following the men's 100 meters at the NCAA outdoor championships, nobody knew whether Illinois' Andrew Riley, Auburn's Harry Adams or Florida State's Maurice Mitchell would be declared the winner.

Well, almost nobody. Riley knew his lean was just enough to make him a national champion.

Riley crossed in 10.272, two-thousandths of a second ahead of Adams and five-thousandths faster than Mitchell in a mild upset Friday night at Drake Stadium.

"I knew it was going to come down to a lean," Riley said. "I remember my coach telling me to just punch my arms as hard as you can and open your stride. I did that and the lean and I got it. I knew I had it."

Malloy: Family Affair for 800 Champ

The big-time college track programs came calling after Nachelle Mackie set four Utah high school records. But she and her twin decided to join their older sister at their parents' alma mater, writes Mike Malloy. Story

The meet concludes on Saturday with the LSU and Oregon women tied for first with 40 points apiece. The Florida men lead by eight points over Virginia Tech as they try for their first outdoor title after capturing the last three indoor crowns.

Oregon's English Gardner didn't need to lean to take the women's 100, powering to the lead out of the blocks and holding off a charging Kimberlyn Duncan to win in 11.10

Gardner took pride in being able to finish the last 40 meters strong. That had been a problem in the past for the sophomore, who faded late and finished seventh in the NCAA meet in 2011.

"I worked so hard last year and fell so short. I wanted to just come back and redeem myself," Gardner said. "I definitely came out here with a lot of fire and a lot of intensity and wanted to win."

Though Gardner held off Duncan and her LSU teammate Semoy Hackett, those two Tigers still picked up 14 crucial points in the team title race.

In the men's 800, favorite Charles Jock of UC-Irvine used the memory of losing by four-hundredths of a second in 2011 as fuel to push him to a convincing win.

Jock took charge early in the race and dared the field to try to chase him down. They didn't, as Jock won in 1:45.59 with Iowa's Erik Sowinski second in 1:45.90.

"This feels like redemption. I've played that video so many times. I must have played it 20 times this week. It was the worst feeling in the world having worked for 798 meters," Jock said of losing to Virginia's Robby Andrews last year.

Florida's Tony McQuay (44.58) and Illinois's Ashley Spencer (50.95) both set collegiate marks for 2012 in winning their respective 400s.

Arizona junior Brigetta Barrett cleared 6 feet, 4 inches to win the women's high jump for the second straight year, while Oklahoma's Tia Brooks won the women's shot put at 60-6.

Southern Utah's Cameron Levins swept the 5,000 and 10,000 races, winning the 5,000 on Friday night in 13:40.05 -- including a 54.4 in his final 400 meters.

Levins has scored as many points, 20, as the Texas A&M men and women have combined for. That statistic is proof enough that the Aggies will likely see their streak of sweeping the men's and women's team titles end at three years in a row.

Oregon's Brianne Theisen came into Friday with a 207-point lead in the heptathlon, and she left it with the second-highest score in NCAA meet history.

Theisen cruised to 6,440 points, the best since Diane Guthrue-Gresham of George Mason scored 6,527 back in 1995. She now has seven total NCAA championships, a mark topped by just three women.

It was the third straight NCAA title for Theisen, who said the key to her success was to not put too much pressure on herself.

"The harder you try -- I mean, the shot put, the javelin -- the worse they are. So it's kind of like I just went through the motions and didn't try and it was phenomenal," Theisen said.

The Ducks didn't get the points they were hoping for out of the 800 though. Anne Kesselring, the defending champion, finished fifth as BYU's Nachelle Mackie won in 2:01.06.

Still, Oregon is in position to win its first outdoor title since 1985 on Saturday, while LSU could win a record 15th team championship.

For the Gators men, Saturday could provide a breakthrough that's been years in the making. Florida has finished as the runners-up four times since 2004.

  • Recommend
  • Tweet
  • Comments
  • Email
  • Print

Comments

Use a Facebook account to add a comment, subject to Facebook's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your Facebook name, photo & other personal information you make public on Facebook will appear with your comment, and may be used on ESPN's media platforms. Learn more.

W SportsNation

What summer event are you most looking forward to?

  •  
    26%
  •  
    33%
  •  
    3%
  •  
    28%
  •  
    10%

(Total votes: 1,416)

More From espnW

  • Hays: With walk-off, Michigan in fast lane

    May 25 12:14 AM ET | By Graham Hays

  • Car forces Patrick to back of Charlotte field

    May 25 5:13 PM ET | By David Newton

  • WNBA

    May 25 10:08 PM ET

  • College Sports

    McManus: UNC uses toughness to advance, will face Maryland

    May 25 1:04 PM ET | By Jane McManus

  • More Sports

    Isaacson: Serena may be one to beat at French Open

    May 25 5:07 PM ET | By Melissa Isaacson

Related Content

  • K-State's Kynard repeats as high jump champ

    Kansas State's Erik Kynard successfully defended his high jump title Thursday in the NCAA outdoor track and field championships, clearing 7 feet, 8 inches.

    Jun 7 11:47 PM ET

  • Levins gives So. Utah 1st NCAA track champion

    Canadian distance star Cameron Levins owned the recent Summitt League meet, winning the 800, 1,500, 5,000, and 10,000 meters to give Southern Utah a staggering 40 points.

    Jun 6 11:25 PM ET

  • About espnW
  • Press
  • Advertise on espnW.com
  • Sales Media Kit
  • Interest-Based Ads
  • Corrections
  • Contact Us
  • Shop
  • Jobs at ESPN
  • Supplier Information

2013 ESPN Internet Ventures. Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and Safety Information/Your California Privacy Rights are applicable to you. All rights reserved.