Day Two PDF Results
Championship Central
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. – The 2025 Conference USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships resumed competition and had nine champions crowned on Saturday at Middle Tennessee’s Dean A. Hayes Track & Soccer Stadium.
Kennesaw State remains in front on the men’s side with 91.5 points. Liberty trails closely behind in second with 89 points. Middle Tennessee jumped from seventh to third place with a point total of 29.
Liberty moves up the women’s leaderboard, currently in first place after the second day of competition. The Lady Flames have 89.5 points. FIU moved one spot to second with 57 points and Kennesaw State sits in third place with 47.5 points.
Day two of the championship kicked off with the continuation of the men’s decathlon, featuring 110 hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin and 1500m. Liberty swept the top-three podium spots. After winning the 100m and 400m,
Daniel Van Duren won the men’s decathlon with 6,271 points. Teammates
Gabriel Willis and
Hunter Bleam followed behind Van Duren in second and third, respectively.
Liberty’s
Meredith Engle took the women’s heptathlon title with three first place finishes in shot put, long jump and high jump (5,164 points). Only 18 points separated first and second with fellow Flame,
Patasha Bryan taking the silver (5,146 points). Bryan captured first place wins in the heptathlon 200m and 800m.
Laysha Tunti from Kennesaw State took the bronze with 4,745 points.
Adding 18 points to Liberty’s total,
Bethany Tate claimed first place (15.02m), while
Tabby DeJong secured second with a throw of 14.46m in women’s shot put. New Mexico State’s
Alesha Lane landed in third place with a mark of 14.30m.
Liberty’s
Christian Hicks led the way in men’s shot put, winning the event with a mark of 17.17m. Kennesaw State followed with
Evan Martinez taking second (17.01m) and WKU’s
Kaison Barton finishing third (16.85m).
Simon Seid from KSU earned first in men’s pole vault with a mark of 5.18m. Sam Houston’s
Dylan Truss earned second and WKU’s
Sam Crenshaw earned third.
FIU picked up 17 points in the women’s high jump as two Panthers secured top-three finishes. FIU’s
Amaya Bien-Aime earned first place with a mark of 1.75m. UTEP’s
Peace Ewa and FIU’s
Luca Kesthelyi tied for second place with a mark of 1.72m.
In the men’s high jump, UTEP’s
Jakub Belik claimed the gold medal (2.14m). Freshman
Kenyatta Bennett from KSU made his mark in the high jump, among a field of upperclassmen, earning silver. Junior
Jeremiah Cams of Sam Houston took bronze.
After tonight’s prelims, Liberty captured the top two spots in the women’s 3000m steeplechase
. Marie Hostetler was crowned champion with a time of 10:14.75 and
Katrina Schlenker clinched the second place spot, recording a time of 10:20.68. KSU’s
Madison Seiler finished in third, marking a time of 10:21.40.
Three Blue Raiders swept the top-three podium spots in the men’s 3000m steeplechase.
Allan Kiplagat took first (8:45.64),
Carmelo Cannizzaro following in second at 8:46.80 and
Brian Kiptoo rounded out the sweep in third (8:57.18).
How to Keep Up
The events will be streamed live on ESPN+ for the designated times each day. Live results can be found
here.
Admission
Tickets are available
here: $10 per day.