Four more titles highlight final day of SEC Indoor Championships

COLLEGE STATION – With a flourish of points on the second day of the SEC Indoor Championships held in front of 2,575 fans at Gilliam Indoor Stadium the Texas A&M men placed fourth while the Aggie women finished fifth in team scoring.

Alabama men won the men’s team title with 91 points, to defeat two-time defending champion Arkansas by three points. The Razorbacks scored 88 and were followed by Florida (83.5), Texas A&M (75.5), Georgia (71), Kentucky (45), Tennessee (44), Auburn (37), South Carolina (34), and Mississippi (34).

Arkansas women totaled 108 points for their fourth consecutive title, followed by Georgia (84.5), Kentucky (74), LSU (63), Texas A&M (62), Florida (61), Mississippi (42), Alabama (37), Missouri (35.5) and Mississippi State (31).

“We left some points out there, but so did other folks,” stated Texas A&M head coach Pat Henry. “The men’s side was closer than the women’s side. I’m happy for Dan Waters at Alabama. We’re going to get a little better as we go. We just have to wait and see what happens with our nationals people.”

SEC titles were claimed by Jacob Wooten in the pole vault, Devin Dixon in the 800m, Sammy Watson in the 800m as well as the men’s 4×400 relay. Earning a SEC runner-up were Alex Riba in the mile, Audie Wyatt in the pole vault, Alison Ondrusek in the weight throw and Jazmine Fray in the 800m.

The Aggie foursome of Ilolo Izu (46.56), Robert Grant (44.61), Devin Dixon (45.66) and Mylik Kerley (45.52) broke the SEC Indoor meet record, Texas A&M school record and Gilliam facility record, that were all set last season, with a 3:02.35 victory.

Ranked third on the all-time collegiate list, the Aggie 4×400 crew now holds the American collegiate record. Finishing behind Texas A&M in the 4×400 were Florida (3:02.65), Arkansas (3:04.53), Auburn (3:06.09), Tennessee (3:06.49) and Mississippi State (3:07.99).

“My thought was, they’re going to put me into position and I just have to finish this for them,” said Kerley, who anchored Texas A&M to victory at the NCAA Indoor in 2017. “We already know this isn’t the end of it, the national meet is coming up. The goal for me and these guys is to get qualifying marks for the national meet.

“It’s probably the fastest 4×4 ever, there’s like 15 guys under 46, so the goal was just to get qualifying marks, and we did that. This race was similar because it was us and Florida, I got the baton in the front, and used the momentum from our home crowd at A&M—it was similar to NCAA’s last year and we’re going to prepare to do that again in two weeks.”

Sammy Watson defeated defending champing Jazmine Fray in the women’s 800 and Jean Jenkins added a seventh place for Texas A&M as the Aggies accumulated 20 points in the event. Watson clocked 2:04.25 for the victory with Fray runner-up in 2:05.42 as Jenkins ran 2:09.84.

Fray led the first half of the race, splitting 28.64 and 31.26 on the first two laps, crossing 400m at 59.90. Watson ran 31.90 on the next lap and took over the lead at 600m at 1:32.00, then closed with a 32.25 on the final circuit.

“I’m a frontrunner type of person,” stated Watson. “That’s what I like to do. I love just looking at the big screen and seeing Jazmine with me when we are racing. We just want to be better than ever, just be our best.
“Our workouts are always meticulous and headed toward the NCAA meet. We all want to win, and there are never any hard feelings between us. I’m amazed that I’m here and competing at the highest level.”
In the men’s 800m Devin Dixon added an indoor title to his 2017 conference outdoor win as he ran 1:49.32. Efrain Hernandez finished seventh in the race with a 1:52.22.

The Texas A&M sweep of the 800m was the first to occur since LSU won the men’s and women’s in 2007 and 2008.

“I’m really proud of the half-milers,” noted Henry. “We didn’t run fast, but we won the races. That’s all that matters. It just didn’t happen that we ran fast.”

The Aggie men went 1-2 for 18 points in the pole vault with Jacob Wooten claiming his first conference title over Audie Wyatt, the two-time defending champion. Both cleared 17-3 ¾ (5.28) as Wooten was awarded the victory based on fewer misses at that height. Wooten made it on his first attempt while Wyatt needed a second attempt. Both raised the bar to 18-3, but neither was able to clear it.

Alex Riba became the first Aggie to medal in the SEC Indoor mile with a 4:08.18 performance that left him trailing a 4:07.14 by Mississippi’s Sean Tobin, the defending champion. Aggie Taylor Clayton ran 4:12.53 to place eighth.

Alison Ondrusek used a sixth round heave of 69-8 ¾ (21.25) to move from third to second place in the weight throw. Carissa van Beek finished seventh with a mark of 61-11 ½ (18.88) to pick up a pair of points.

Nathan Hite wrapped up a solid effort in the heptathlon, earning a bronze medal with a career best score of 5,592. That score makes Hite the No. 2 performer with the No. 6 performance on the Aggie all-time list, trailing only Lindon Victor.

The men’s 400m produced a fourth and seventh place finish for Robert Grant (46.14) and Mylik Kerley (46.38).  Diamond Spaulding (23.28) and Brenessa Thompson (23.63) finished sixth and eighth in the women’s 200m.

In the women’s distance medley relay, the Aggies ran a time of 11:21.86 in placing fourth with a squad of Hannah Campbell (3:30.01), Jarra Owens (54.07), Brittany Parker (2:08.67) and Watson (4:49.11). Texas A&M women also placed fourth in the 4×400 with a time of 3:32.30 as they ran a foursome of Danyel White (52.60), Glorilisha Carter (53.28), Julia Madubuike (54.28) and Fray (52.14).

Lajarvia Brown produced a leap of 43-3 ¾ for fifth place in the triple jump as Tyra Gittens matched her indoor best of 5-10 ¾ for seventh place in the high jump. Karis Jochen ran 16:42.64 for seventh place in the 5,000m.

Story courtesy of Texas A&M Athletics

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