1992 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships

The 1992 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships were contested June 3−6, 1992 at Mike A. Myers Stadium at the University of Texas at Austin in Austin, Texas in order to determine the individual and team national champions of men's and women's collegiate Division I outdoor track and field events in the United States.

1992 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships
DatesJune 3−6, 1992
Host cityTexas Austin, Texas
VenueTexas Memorial Stadium
University of Texas at Austin
1991
1993

These were the 70th annual men's championships and the 11th annual women's championships. This was the Longhorns' fifth time hosting the event and the first since 1985 (the last and only other time Arkansas had won the men's title before 1992).[1][2]

Arkansas and LSU topped the men's and women's team standings, respectively; it was the Razorbacks' second men's team title and the sixth for the Lady Tigers. This was Arkansas' first title since 1985 and was the first of eight consecutive titles for the Razorbacks. The Lady Tigers, meanwhile, captured their sixth consecutive title and, ultimately, the sixth of eleven straight titles they won between 1987 and 1997.

Team results

  • Note: Top 10 only
  • (H) = Hosts
  • Full results[3]


Women's standings

RankTeamPoints
LSU87
Florida81
Nebraska30
4Stanford28
5Alabama27
6UNLV25
7BYU23
8George Mason22
9Tennessee
Texas (H)
Wisconsin
21

Individual champions

Men's

100-meter

Olapade Adeniken, UTEP, 10.09[1]

200-meter

Olapade Adeniken, UTEP, 20.11[1]

400-meter

Quincy Watts, USC, 44.00[1]

800-meter

Jose Parrilla, Tennessee, 1:46.45[1]

1,500-meter

Steve Holman, Georgetown, 3:38.39[1]

3,000-meter Steeple Chase

Marc Davis, Arizona, 8:36.79[1]

5,000-meter

Jon Dennis, South Florida, 14:02.40[1]

10,000-meter

Sean Dollman, Western Kentucky, 29:49.50[1]

110-meter High Hurdles

Mark Crear, USC, 13.49[1]

400-meter Intermediate Hurdles

Dan Steele, Eastern Illinois, 49.79[1]

400-meter relay

LSU (Reggie Jones, Bryant Williams, Chris King, Jason Sanders), 38.70[1]

1,600-meter relay

Georgia Tech (Octavius Terry, Julian Amede, Derrick Adkins, Derek Mills), 2:59.95[1]

High Jump

Darrin Plab, Southern Illinois, 2.34 metres (7.7 ft)[1]

Pole Vault

Istvan Bagyula, George Mason, 5.80 metres (19.0 ft)[1]

Long Jump

Erick Walder, Arkansas, 8.47 metres (27.8 ft)[1]

Triple Jump

Brian Wellman, Arkansas, 17.30 metres (56.8 ft) (w)[1]

Shot Put

Brent Noon, Georgia, 19.98 metres (65.6 ft)[1]

Discus

Kamy Keshmiri, Nevada, 67.06 metres (220.0 ft)[1]

Hammer Throw

Mika Laaksonen, UTEP, 71.30 metres (233.9 ft)[1]

Javelin

Art Skipper, Oregon, 75.78 metres (248.6 ft)[1]

Decathlon

Brian Brophy, Tennessee, 8,276[1]

Women's

100-meter

Chryste Gaines, Stanford, 11.05 (w)[2]

200-meter

Dahlia Duhaney, LSU, 22.80[2]

400-meter

Anita Howard, Florida, 51.01[2]

800-meter

Nekita Beasley, Florida, 2:03.04[2]

1,500-meter

Sue Gentes, Wisconsin, 4:16.38[2]

3,000-meter

Nnenna Lynch, Villanova, 9:24.59[2]

5,000-meter

Monique Ecker, Oklahoma, 16:18.72[2]

10,000-meter

Kim Saddic, George Mason, 34:39.92[2]

110-meter High Hurdles

Michelle Freeman, Florida, 12.90[2]

400-meter Intermediate Hurdles

Tonja Buford, Illinois, 55.12[2]

400-meter relay

LSU (Dawn Bowles, Cheryl Taplin, Cinnamon Sheffield, Dahlia Duhaney), 43.03[2]

1,600-meter relay

Florida (Nekita Beasley, Michelle Freeman, Kim Mitchell, Anita Howard), 3:27.53[2]

High Jump

Tanya Hughes, Arizona, 1.87 metres (6.1 ft)[2]

Long Jump

Jackie Edwards, Stanford, 6.59 metres (21.6 ft)[2]

Triple Jump

Leah Kirklin, Florida, 13.43 metres (44.1 ft)[2]

Shot Put

Katrin Koch, Indiana, 17.53 metres (57.5 ft)[2]

Discus

Anna Mosdell, BYU, 54.78 metres (179.7 ft)[2]

Javelin

Valerie Tulloch, Rice, 58.26 metres (191.1 ft)[2]

Heptathlon

Anu Kaljurand, BYU, 6,142[2]

References