800 meters at the NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships
(Redirected from 880 yards at the NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships)
This is a list of the NCAA Division I indoor champions in the 800 meters or its imperial equivalent 880 yards. The imperial distance was run until 1983, while the metric distance was contested since 1984. The event was not held in 1986 and 1987. Hand timing was used until 1975, while starting in 1976 fully automatic timing was used. In 1986 and 1987, the 1⁄10-mile track that the races were run on was 25 inches (640 mm) per lap short, making the actual race distance less than 800 meters those years.[1][2]
Winners
editWomen
editMen
edit- Key
- y=yards
- A=Altitude assisted
880 Yards
editYear | Name, (Country) | Team | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1965 | Tom Von Ruden | Oklahoma St | 1:51.8y |
1966 | Richardo Urbina | Georgetown | 1:51.9y |
1967 | Dave Patrick | Villanova | 1:48.9y |
1968 | Dave Patrick | Villanova | 1:52.0y |
1969 | Frank Murphy Ireland | Villanova | 1:51.1y |
1970 | Mark Winzenried | Wisconsin | 1:51.7y |
1971 | Mark Winzenried | Wisconsin | 1:50.9y |
1972 | Dave Wottle | Bowling Green | 1:51.8y |
1973 | Ken Schappert | Villanova | 1:50.4y |
1974 | Reggie Clark | William & Mary | 1:52.2y |
1975 | Mark Enyeart | Utah St | 1:52.4y |
1976 | Bob Prince | Kansas St | 1:53.03y |
1977 | Mark Belger | Villanova | 1:49.17y |
1978 | Mark Belger | Villanova | 1:49.13y |
1979 | Evans White | Prairie View | 1:51.90y |
1980 | Evans White | Prairie View | 1:52.32y |
1981 | Sammy Koskei Kenya | Southern Meth | 1:52.29y |
1982 | Dave Patrick | Tennessee | 1:49.94y |
800 Meters
editYear | Name, (Country) | Team | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | John Marshall | Villanova | 1:51.23y |
1984 | Daniel Rojas[a] | Air Force | 1:49.52 |
1985 | Earl Jones | Eastern Mich | 1:47.26 |
1986 | not held | ||
1987 | not held | ||
1988 | Jim Maton | Eastern Ill | 1:49.27 |
1989 | Paul Ereng Kenya | Virginia | 1:47.69 |
1990 | Mark Everett | Florida | 1:47.45 |
1991 | George Kersh | Mississippi | 1:46.19 |
1992 | Rich Kenah | Georgetown | 1:47.40 |
1993 | Marko Koers Netherlands | Illinois | 1:48.39 |
1994 | Jose "Tony" Parrilla | Tennessee | 1:47.77 |
1995 | Michael Williams (JAM) | Manhattan | 1:48.12 |
1996 | Einârs Tupurîtis Latvia | Wichita St | 1:45.80 |
1997 | David Krummenacker | Georgia Tech | 1:47.49 |
1998 | David Krummenacker | Georgia Tech | 1:47.52 |
1999 | Derrick Peterson | Missouri | 1:45.88 |
2000 | Jess Strutzel | UCLA | 1:46.57 |
2001 | Jean-Patrick Nduwimana Burundi | Arizona | 1:45.33 |
2002 | Otukile Lekote Botswana | South Carolina | 1:46.88 |
2003 | Nate Brannen Canada | Michigan | 1:47.79 |
2004 | Nate Brannen Canada | Michigan | 1:47.61 |
2005 | Kevin Hicks | Florida A&M | 1:46.97 |
2006 | Jackson Langat Kenya | Texas Christian | 1:47.02 |
2007 | Ryan Brown | Washington | 1:48.40 |
2008 | Tyler Mulder | UNI | 1:49.20 |
2009 | Jacob Hernandez | Texas | 1:48.04 |
2010 | Robby Andrews | Virginia | 1:48.39 |
2011 | Fred Samoei | Alabama | 1:48.33 |
2012 | Mason McHenry | Arizona State | 1:47.96 |
2013 | Elijah Greer | Oregon | 1:47.13 |
2014 | Brandon McBride Canada | Mississippi State | 1:48.17 |
2015 | Edward Kemboi | Iowa State | 1:46.05 |
2016 | Clayton Murphy | Akron | 1:46.68 |
2017 | Emmanuel Korir | UTEP | 1:47.48 |
2018 | Michael Saruni | UTEP | 1:45.15 |
2019 | Bryce Hoppel | Kansas | 1:46.46 |
2021 | Charlie Hunter | Oregon | 1:45.90 |
2022 | Brandon Miller | Texas A&M Aggies | 1:47.19 |
2023 | Yusuf Bizimana | Texas Longhorns | 1:46.02 |
2024 | Rivaldo Marshall | Iowa Hawkeyes | 1:46.96 |
References
edit- ^ Johnson, Robert. "WTW: RIP Roddie Haley, A Man & Woman CRUSH IT At Age 40+, Legendary NCAA DMR Performances Past & Present". LetsRun.com. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ GBR Athletics
- ^ "USTFCCCA InfoZone: Women's Meet History by Event ::: USTFCCCA". Retrieved 2024-05-31.
- ^ "1983 Indoor NCAA Results" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-02-02.
- ^ "USTFCCCA InfoZone: Men's Meet History by Event ::: USTFCCCA". Retrieved 2024-05-31.
Notes
edit- ^ Originally won by Iowa State's Gareth Brown in a time of 1:49.47, but he was later disqualified.