Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The NCAA Division I men's cross country championships (formerly the NCAA University Division cross country championships) are contested at an annual meet hosted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to determine the individual and team national champions of men's collegiate cross country running among its Division I members in the United States.
They were hosted by Indiana State University at the LaVern Gibson Cross Country Course in Terre Haute, Indiana on November 19, 2016. [1] Four different championships will be contested: men's and women's individual and team championships.
Western Oregon competes in 12 intercollegiate varsity sports: Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, soccer and track & field; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, soccer, softball, track & field and volleyball.
Oregon State’s Kaylee Mitchell and Oregon’s Izzy Thornton-Bott both had all-American performances, finishing 12th and 40th overall. How Oregon, Oregon State runners did at the NCAA Cross ...
Prior to 1991, only a single national championship was held between all members of the NJCAA; Division II existed from 1991 to 2003 and 2020-present and Division III started in 1991. [ 2 ] NCAA Men's Division I Cross Country Championship
Four different championships were contested: men's and women's individual and team championships. Syracuse won the men's team championship, their first since 1951. [2] [3] Oregon's Edward Cheserek won the men's individual event, his third consecutive championship. Cheserek joined Gerry Lindgren, Steve Prefontaine, and Henry Rono as the event's ...
The 1973 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships were the 35th annual cross country meet to determine the team and individual national champions of NCAA Division I men's collegiate cross country running in the United States. Held on November 19, it was hosted by Washington State University at Hangman Valley Golf Course, near Spokane ...
The individual championship was won by Steve Prefontaine, from Oregon, with a time of 28:00.2. [2] Prefontaine's time broke the event distance record, set the previous year by Gerry Lindgren. With the distance for the NCAA championships changing to 10,000 meters in 1976, his distance record would remain unbroken.