Drake Relays

The Drake Relays (officially the Drake Relays presented by Xtream powered by Mediacom) is an outdoor track and field event held in Des Moines, Iowa, in Drake Stadium on the campus of Drake University. Billed as America's Athletic Classic, it is regarded as one of the top track and field events in the United States.[1] In 2020, the Drake Relays was named a Silver Level event on the World Athletics Continental Tour, one of only two competitions in the United States to earn Silver Level status.[2]

Drake Relays
SportTrack and field
Founded(First held in April of 1910)
CountryDes Moines, Iowa, United States
QualificationWorld Athletics Silver Level
Sponsor(s)Xtream powered by Mediacom
Related
competitions
Penn Relays
Official websitedrakerelays.org

History

The inaugural Drake Relays were held in 1910. The first meet drew just 100 spectators and 82 athletes, all from Des Moines-area colleges and high schools. The second year attendance grew to 250 athletes and a crowd of some 500 spectators. In 1914, the Relays saw its first world record set. By 1922, the Relays had expanded to two days and drew 10,000 fans, becoming the first major track and field event broadcast on radio. For the 1926 Relays, Drake Stadium was built on the site of the prior host, Haskins Field.[3]

Women's events were added beginning in 1961 with Wilma Rudolph competing in the 100 meters.[4] The 1966 Relays began a streak of 48 consecutive Saturdays with a sellout.[5] In 1969, a $175,000 tartan track was installed. The events at the Relays would go all-metric in 1976 and the track was rebuilt as a 400-meter oval in 1978. It was resurfaced in 1983, and in 1988 was renamed the "Jim Duncan Track" to honor the long time relays public address announcer.

Hundreds of Olympic gold medalists have competed at Drake Stadium including Caitlyn Jenner, Michael Johnson, Carl Lewis, Jesse Owens, Wilma Rudolph, Frank Shorter, Gwen Torrence, and Jeremy Wariner.[6] Hundreds more Drake Relays competitors have gone onto compete in the Olympic Games, including 113 at the 2012 Olympic Games.[7]

In 2006, a Friday evening session was added.[8] In 2010, the Grand Blue Mile, a one-mile road race in downtown Des Moines, was added.[9] The week of festivities currently opens with a parade on Saturday, continues with a Beautiful Bulldog Contest (Drake's mascot) on Sunday, the Grand Blue Mile on Tuesday, and an indoor pole vault on Wednesday[10] with the decathlon and heptathlon beginning Wednesday and concluding alongside the distance carnival on Thursday.

Midwest grocer Hy-Vee became the presenting sponsor beginning in 2013, enabling the Relays to offer a $50,000 purse in running events and $25,000 purse in field events, making the Drake Relays the richest athletics event in the United States. ESPN2 aired 90 minutes of live-action coverage that year and ESPN3 aired an additional two hours.[11] The 2013 field saw 25 Olympic medalists compete.[12] Currently NBCSN airs 2–3 hours of coverage on Saturday with live online coverage via NBCSports.com throughout the event.

In January 2018 Drake Relays unveiled the Blue Standard, under which Iowa's top high school athletes automatically qualify based on their event performance. The Blue Standard is the top 25 percent of accepted entrant's results from past Drake Relays.[13]

In March 2020, Xtream powered by Mediacom was named the presenting sponsor of the Drake Relays. Xtream's sponsorship allows the Drake Relays to maintain its status as a premier track and field event, to be called the "Drake Relays presented by Xtream powered by Mediacom".[14]

In addition to the track meet, the Relays serves as a second homecoming for the university[15] and sees other community events such as student street painting and a downtown Des Moines block party.

Drake Stadium

Drake Stadium during the Saturday session of the 2014 Drake Relays presented by Hy-Vee

Opened in 1925, the 14,557-seat stadium and its famous blue oval have hosted the Relays since 1926. A $15 million renovation in 2006 reduced capacity from 18,000 seats in order to expand the lanes, allow fans to watch throwing and running at the same time, and allow for more hosting of events.[8] Another renovation following the 2016 relays saw a new track installed, constructed of the same material used for tracks in Beijing and London for the Summer Olympics.[16]

Directors

Eleven men have claimed the role of director of the Drake Relays since the very first officially organized track and field event took place more than 100 years ago back in the year 1910.

  • John L. Griffith 1910–1918
    Griffith was the founder of the Drake Relays. He remained director for nine years and moved to the University of Illinois after World War I. He later became commissioner of the Big Ten Conference. Drake's live bulldog mascot, Griff, is named for him.
  • M. B. Banks 1919–1921
    Banks also served as coach to the Drake football and basketball teams.
  • K. L. (Tug) Wilson 1922–1925
    Wilson was a former Illinois and Olympic athlete. After his tenure as director, he went on to become athletic director at Northwestern University. Wilson was also a former Big Ten Conference commissioner.
  • O. M. (Ossie) Solem 1926–1932
    Longtime Drake coach succeeded Wilson, later became head football coach at the University of Iowa and Syracuse University
  • F. P. (Pitch) Johnson 1933–1940
  • M. E. (Bill) Easton 1941–1947
  • Tom Deckard 1948–1955
  • Bob Karnes 1956–1969
  • Bob Ehrhart 1970–2000
  • Mark Kostek 2001–2005
  • Brian Brown 2006–2016
    Brown participated in the relays himself and held the Drake Relays record in the high jump until 2014. For his first eight years as director, Brown had attempted to have his record broken by recruiting some of the best high jumpers in the country.[17]
  • Blake Boldon 2017–present

Meet records

Men

EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRef
100 m10.01 (+1.9 m/s)Harvey Glance  United States24 April 1976[18]
200 m20.02 (+1.7 m/s)Wallace Spearmon  United States28 April 2012[19]
400 m44.08Kirani James  Grenada29 April 2016[20]
800 m1:45.86Randy Wilson  United States28 April 1978[21]
1500 m3:38.27Steve Scott  United States28 April 1984[22]
Mile3:51.71Alan Webb  United States28 April 2007[23]
5000 m13:21.39Morgan McDonald  Australia23 April 2021[24]
10000 m28:07.40Kipsubai Koskei  Kenya26 April 1980[25]
110 m hurdles13.04 (+1.8 m/s)Omar McLeod  Jamaica29 April 2017[26]
400 m hurdles48.15Alison dos Santos  Brazil24 April 2021[24]
3000 m steeplechase8:31.02Henry Marsh  United States30 April 1977[27]
High jump2.40 m (7 ft 10+14 in)Derek Drouin  Canada25 April 2014[28]
Pole vault5.90 m (19 ft 4+14 in)KC Lightfoot  United States22 April 2024[29]
Long jump8.26 m (27 ft 1 in)Anthuan Maybank  United States24 April 1993
Triple jump17.12 m (56 ft 2 in)Christian Taylor  United States27 April 2013
Shot put22.59 m (74 ft 1+14 in)Payton Otterdahl  United States24 April 2024[30]
Discus throw64.59 m (211 ft 10+34 in)Reggie Jagers  United States28 April 2018[31]
Hammer Throw72.77 m (238 ft 8+34 in)Libor Charfreitag  Slovakia27 April 2002[32]
Cory Martin  United States26 April 2008[32]
Decathlon8198 ptsKip Janvrin  United States25 April 1996[33]
10.96 (100 m), 7.20 m (long jump), 13.72 m (shot put), 1.98 m (high jump), 48.57 (400 m) /
14.70 (110 m hurdles), 43.16 m (discus), 4.95 m (pole vault), 58.02 m (javelin), 4:11.63 (1500 m)
4 × 100 m relay38.96University of Alabama
Emmit King
Lamar Smith
Calvin Smith
Walter Monroe

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
30 April 1983[34]
4 × 200 m relay1:20.53University of Texas-El Paso
Obadele Thompson
Milton Mallard
Hayden Stephen
Andrew Tynes

 Barbados
 United States
 United States
 Bahamas
30 April 1994[35]
4 × 400 m relay3:00.78Southern Illinois University
Parry Duncan
Tony Adams
Elvis Forde
Michael Franks

 United States
 United States
 Barbados
 United States
28 April 1984[22]
Sprint medley relay (2,2,4,8)3:12.19Alabama State University
Lamar Smith
Calvin Smith
Terry Menefee
William Wuyke

 United States
 United States
 United States
 Venezuela
30 April 1983
4 × 800 m relay7:12.57Iowa State University
Jason Gomez
Joven Nelson
Daniel Nixon
Festus Lagat

 United States
 United States
 United States
 Kenya
23 April 2021[24]
Distance medley relay9:30.45Southern Methodist University
Rob Topping
Russell Mitchell
Ben Bor
Paul Rugut

 United States
 United States

 Kenya
30 April 1983
4×110 m Shuttle hurdles relay52.94USA Blue
Jason Richardson
Aleec Harris
Aries Merritt
David Oliver

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
25 April 2015[36]

Women

EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRef
100 m11.06 (0.0 m/s)LaShauntea Moore  United States24 April 2010[37]
200 m22.40 (+0.7 m/s)Gwen Torrence  United States30 April 1994[38]
400 m50.13Francena McCorory  United States25 April 2015[36]
800 m2:00.03Ajee' Wilson  United States24 April 2015[39]
1500 m4:03.35Jennifer Simpson  United States26 April 2013[40]
Mile4:40.2Francie Larrieu-Smith  United States27 April 1975[41]
3000 m8:56.03Suzy Favor-Hamilton  United States27 April 2002[42]
Two miles9:16.78Jennifer Simpson  United States27 April 2018[43][44]
5000 m15:23.21Karissa Schweizer  United States26 April 2018[31]
10000 m32:57.38Patti Murray  United States28 April 1988[45]
100 m hurdles12.40 (+1.5 m/s)Jasmin Stowers  United States25 April 2015[36]
400 m hurdles53.88Dalilah Muhammad  United States30 April 2022[46]
3000 m steeplechase9:32.23Leah Falland  United States26 April 2018[24]
High jump1.98 m (6 ft 5+34 in)Chaunte Lowe  United States28 April 2012[47]
Pole vault4.88 m (16 ft 0 in)Sandi Morris  United States28 April 2018[31]
Long jump6.78 m (22 ft 2+34 in)Aisha James  United States26 April 2003[48]
Triple jump13.79 m (45 ft 2+34 in)Shani Marks  United States26 April 2003
Shot put19.37 m (63 ft 6+12 in)Tia Brooks  United States29 April 2016[49]
Discus throw64.38 m (211 ft 2+12 in)Becky Breisch  United States24 April 2010[50]
Hammer throw78.69 m (258 ft 2 in)Brooke Andersen  United States27 April 2023[51]
Heptathlon6040 ptsDiana Pickler  United States21–22 April 2009[52]
13.63 (0.0 m/s) (100 m hurdles), 1.78 m (high jump), 12.08 m (shot put), 24.48 (+1.7 m/s) (200 m) /
6.14 m (+1.0 m/s) (long jump), 41.39 m (javelin), 2:16.73 (800 m)
[53]
4 × 100 m relay43.58University Of Texas
Morgan Snow
Allison Peter
Christy Udoh
Chalonda Goodman

 United States
 United States Virgin Islands
 Nigeria
 United States
28 April 2012[54]
4 × 200 m relay1:31.96Texas Southern University
Linda Eseimokumoh
Beatrice Utondu
Dyan Webber
Mary Onyali

 Nigeria
 Nigeria
 United States
 Nigeria
28 April 1989[55]
4 × 400 m relay3:28.42Purdue University
Chole Abbot
Brionna Thomas
Symone Black
Jahneya Mitchell

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
28 April 2018[31]
Sprint medley relay (2-2-4-8)3:43.64Arkansas State University
Regine Williams
Daina Harper
Taylor Ellis-Watson
Chrishuna Williams

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
25 April 2015
4 × 800 m relay8:27.42University of Minnesota
Julie Schwengler
Jamie Cheever
Gabrielle Anderson
Heather Dorniden

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
27 April 2007[56]
Distance medley relay11:03.25Notre Dame University
Olivia Markezich
Kelly Hart
Erin Sullivan
Katie Wasserman

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
24 April 2021[24]
4 × 100 m Shuttle hurdles relay50.50USA Blue
Brianna Rollins
Dawn Harper-Nelson
Queen Harrison
Kristi Castlin

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
24 April 2015[39]

Mixed

EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRef
4 × 110 m Shuttle hurdles relay54.42Team Blue
Kristi Castlin
Spencer Adams
Nia Ali
Eddie Lovett
 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States Virgin Islands
30 April 2016[57]

Results

2020s2010s2000s1990s1980s1970s1960s1950s1940s1930s1920s1910s
202920192009199919891979196919591949193919291919
202820182008199819881978196819581948193819281918
202720172007199719871977196719571947193719271917
202620162006199619861976196619561946193619261916
202520152005199519851975196519551945193519251915
202420142004199419841974196419541944193419241914
202320132003199319831973196319531943193319231913
202220122002199219821972196219521942193219221912
202120112001199119811971196119511941193119211911
202020102000199019801970196019501940193019201910

Future dates

  • 113th Drake Relays: April 26-29, 2023
  • 114th Drake Relays: April 24-27, 2024[58]

Notes

References