Underclassmen leave mark at Big Ten Championships
The Hoosiers didn’t win a conference championship last weekend at the Big Ten Indoor Championships, but they did find the fountain of youth.
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The Hoosiers didn’t win a conference championship last weekend at the Big Ten Indoor Championships, but they did find the fountain of youth.
When the Big Ten Indoor Championships concluded Saturday at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio, the Hoosiers found themselves where they expected to be all season: the middle of the pack. The men finished seventh and the women finished 11th.
With the Big Ten Championships this weekend in Geneva, Ohio, IU can expect to head one direction from its ninth-place finish last year.
Notre Dame’s Alex Wilson Invitational, famous for its aggressive Distance Medley Relay heats, finished in disappointment for IU as it placed 12th out of 14 teams.
With the Big Ten Indoor Championships looming a week away, the Hoosiers will send seven athletes to Notre Dame for the Alex Wilson Invitational on Friday and Saturday, including the highly-touted men’s Distance ?Medley Relay.
For the seniors, it was a farewell to a familiar venue, but for many athletes, it represented a last chance to board the IU bus to Geneva, Ohio, and the Big Ten Championships in two weeks.
The countdown to the Big Ten Championships has begun as IU approaches the two-week mark this weekend with the Hoosier Hills Invitational at Gladstein Fieldhouse.
IU junior Dylan Anderson lines up for the 60-meter hurdles, the fifth event of the men’s indoor heptathlon, on the second day of the 2015 Gladstein Invitational.
No track and field record was safe Saturday at the Notre Dame Meyo Invitational, as more than 20 events between the men and women have felt infiltration in their top-10 lists this season.
The Hoosiers will hit the road for the first time this season as they travel to Notre Dame to compete in the Meyo Invitational Friday and Saturday.
The 2015 Indiana Relays were all about improvement for the Hoosiers as 22 athletes raised their marks and times into the top 10 in the Big Ten, 12 athletes broke into the top 50 in the nation and two athletes improved to qualifying times in NCAA Division I.
In just three meets this season, 19 Hoosiers have broken into the top 10 lists of their respective events.
IU junior Dylan Anderson looked up to the ceiling and smiled, like he was trying to understand the history he had just written his name into.
Brittany Neeley took the baton with a strategy in mind, a strategy that she had used previously in the meet.
Coming off its first meet of the calendar year, IU track and field will take to the track Saturday for the Gladstein ?Invitational.
IU Track and Field Coach Ron Helmer knew that the key to the men’s victory, 80-55, and the women’s loss, 72-64, against No. 14 Purdue was winning the evenly matched events.
The Hoosiers will be running for redemption when the No. 14 Boilermakers ride into Gladstein Fieldhouse at 4 p.m. Saturday for the IU-Purdue dual meet.
By Taylor Lehman