COLLEGE STATION – Texas A&M claimed another pair of team titles as host of the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational in front of 1,990 fans at Gilliam Indoor on Saturday. Meet records were established by a pair of Aggies with Audie Wyatt in the pole vault and Fred Kerley in the 200 meters.
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Texas A&M women generated a point total of 184 points to better the seven-team field that included No. 3 Georgia (121), Texas Tech (95.5), and Arizona State (63.5). The Aggie men, ranked No. 12, produced 150 points to defeat the field that included No. Â 11 Texas Tech (106), No. 8 Georgia (104), TCU (53), Arizona State (46), UTSA (34) and UT Arlington (29).
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"The first places in all the events were good today, no matter who won," said Texas A&M head coach Pat Henry. "It was a good meet, and it was the kind of meet we needed. To win a meet like this you need to be really good."
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Combined the Aggies recorded a dozen wins, including both 4x400 relays. A total of nine meet records were broken, five of which were set by athletes from Georgia – Kendell Williams (8.07 – 60m hurdles, 21-4 ¾ - long jump), Madeline Fagan (6-2 ¾ - high jump), Keturah Orji (45-9 ¼ - triple jump), and Alex Poursanidis (72-6 ½ - weight throw).
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In the men's 200m Kerley sped to a winning time of 20.74, which moves him to No. 10 on the Texas A&M all-time list. It bettered the meet record of 20.79 set in 2013 by LSU's Aaron Ernest. Runner-up to Kerley was a 21.43 by TCU's Raymond Bozmans.
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"Improving and believing in the coaches, that was the key," noted Kerley. "Running 20.7 is good, but I did some terrible stuff in the race. I tripped on the curve on the backstretch. I know what I have to do to get better. It helps gear up for SECs."
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Wyatt set the pole vault meet record of 17-9 (5.41) a year ago. Today he cleared 17-10 ½ (5.45) and then attempted 18-1 ¼ (5.52) in an attempt to better his indoor school record of 18-1.
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"It felt really good, I have been trying to get on the poles I need to be on," said Wyatt. "I'm getting there. Last year I was going for the meet record, and in December I knew I had a lot of work to do. My confidence has improved and it was a good day."
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Following Wyatt to complete a 1-2-3 sweep for the Aggies were Carl Johansson and Jacob Wooten, who both cleared 17-0 (5.19).
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"As a group we are getting better every weekend," added Wyatt. "I think all three of us are going to get to nationals this year."
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In the women's pole vault, Emily Gunderson cleared a pair of career best heights on first attempts in securing the win. Entering the meet with an indoor best of 13-3 ¾, Gunderson surpassed that height by clearing 13-4 ¼ (4.07) and then won the competition with a 13-8 ¼ (4.17).
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Gunderson and Helen Falda of UT Arlington both missed at 13-10 (4.22) with Gunderson claiming the victory off fewer misses. Aggie teammate Sara Kathryn Stevens finished third with a clearance of 13-0 ¼ (3.97).
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"I knew I needed to clear the bars after 12-8 on my first attempt to finish first," said Gunderson. "It's a nice feeling to PR twice and win."
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Mylik Kerley, the younger brother of Fred, ran his first open 400m as an Aggie. His time of 46.31 won the event and moved him to No. 7 on the Texas A&M all-time list.
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"It meant a lot to just run and be healthy," stated M. Kerley. "It's fun running in an A&M uniform. It was hard getting here, but I'm grateful to be here with all the good guys who were here before.
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Mylik Kerley later anchored the Aggies to a 3:06.91 victory in the 4x400 over Texas Tech (3:07.70) with a split of 45.51. The first three legs included Richard Rose (47.62), Robert Grant (47.12) and Devin Dixon (46.66).
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"Usually with Fred running on the relay I know I have a safe leg," said M. Kerley. "With a competitive race in the relay it was better for us to learn how to run a smarter race."
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The freshman sprinters for the Aggie women produced a pair of wins. Amber Ivy claimed the 60m in 7.31 seconds, which is No. 9 on the Texas A&M all-time list, ahead of teammate Brenessa Thompson (7.45) and Georgia's Kate Hall (7.47).
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In the women's 200m it was Danyel White improving her world junior leading time with a 23.22 victory as the Aggies swept the top four places. White's time is No. 11 on the Aggie all-time list. Following White were Ivy (23.45), Jaevin Reed (23.91) and Briyahna Desrosiers (23.98).
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Jazmine Fray ran her third different distance of the indoor season and clocked 53.91 for the victory over teammate Kadecia Baird (54.13). Fray's mark is No. 12 on the Texas A&M all-time list. Fray broke the Aggie school record in the 1,000m (2:43.15) in December and ran the second fastest mile (4:44.87) in school history last weekend.
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Fray later ran the third leg of the 4x400, supplying a 53.06 split on the third leg. The Aggies ran 3:36.81 for the win over Texas Tech (3:40.21). The Texas A&M line-up also included Desrosiers (53.75) and White (54.94) on the first two legs while Jarra Owens (55.06) anchored.
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Aggie victories included Katie Willard controlling the 800m with a 2:06.99, the third best performance on the Texas A&M all-time list, with Brittany Parker runner-up in 2:11.73 and Miah Nelson fifth at 2:12.35. Arin Rice won the mile in 4:54.18 and Jeffrey Prothro claimed the triple jump with an effort of 49-7 ¾.
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Runner-up performances for the Aggies also included Cameron Villarreal (4:08.27) in the mile while Taylor Clayton (4:10.46) finished third after winning the first section. Celine Markert was second in the shot put (49-3 ¾) behind a meet record of 55-11 ¼ (17.05) for Arizona State's Maggie Ewen.
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A career best of 63-2 (19.25) for Alison Ondrusek placed her fourth in the weight throw. Jeff Bartlett reached 57-0 (17.37) for fifth place in the shot put.
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Christian Farris led a solid effort by the Aggies in the 3,000m as he clocked 8:20.33 for third place with Austin Wells (8:25.65) and Jacob Perry (8:34.48) in sixth and seventh. In the women's race Kelsie Warren placed fifth in 9:53.06 with Kelsey Persyn (10:00.17) and Devin Norton (10:01.80) in sixth and seventh.
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Texas A&M women generated a point total of 184 points to better the seven-team field that included No. 3 Georgia (121), Texas Tech (95.5), and Arizona State (63.5). The Aggie men, ranked No. 12, produced 150 points to defeat the field that included No. Â 11 Texas Tech (106), No. 8 Georgia (104), TCU (53), Arizona State (46), UTSA (34) and UT Arlington (29).
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"The first places in all the events were good today, no matter who won," said Texas A&M head coach Pat Henry. "It was a good meet, and it was the kind of meet we needed. To win a meet like this you need to be really good."
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Combined the Aggies recorded a dozen wins, including both 4x400 relays. A total of nine meet records were broken, five of which were set by athletes from Georgia – Kendell Williams (8.07 – 60m hurdles, 21-4 ¾ - long jump), Madeline Fagan (6-2 ¾ - high jump), Keturah Orji (45-9 ¼ - triple jump), and Alex Poursanidis (72-6 ½ - weight throw).
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In the men's 200m Kerley sped to a winning time of 20.74, which moves him to No. 10 on the Texas A&M all-time list. It bettered the meet record of 20.79 set in 2013 by LSU's Aaron Ernest. Runner-up to Kerley was a 21.43 by TCU's Raymond Bozmans.
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"Improving and believing in the coaches, that was the key," noted Kerley. "Running 20.7 is good, but I did some terrible stuff in the race. I tripped on the curve on the backstretch. I know what I have to do to get better. It helps gear up for SECs."
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Wyatt set the pole vault meet record of 17-9 (5.41) a year ago. Today he cleared 17-10 ½ (5.45) and then attempted 18-1 ¼ (5.52) in an attempt to better his indoor school record of 18-1.
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"It felt really good, I have been trying to get on the poles I need to be on," said Wyatt. "I'm getting there. Last year I was going for the meet record, and in December I knew I had a lot of work to do. My confidence has improved and it was a good day."
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Following Wyatt to complete a 1-2-3 sweep for the Aggies were Carl Johansson and Jacob Wooten, who both cleared 17-0 (5.19).
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"As a group we are getting better every weekend," added Wyatt. "I think all three of us are going to get to nationals this year."
Â
In the women's pole vault, Emily Gunderson cleared a pair of career best heights on first attempts in securing the win. Entering the meet with an indoor best of 13-3 ¾, Gunderson surpassed that height by clearing 13-4 ¼ (4.07) and then won the competition with a 13-8 ¼ (4.17).
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Gunderson and Helen Falda of UT Arlington both missed at 13-10 (4.22) with Gunderson claiming the victory off fewer misses. Aggie teammate Sara Kathryn Stevens finished third with a clearance of 13-0 ¼ (3.97).
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"I knew I needed to clear the bars after 12-8 on my first attempt to finish first," said Gunderson. "It's a nice feeling to PR twice and win."
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Mylik Kerley, the younger brother of Fred, ran his first open 400m as an Aggie. His time of 46.31 won the event and moved him to No. 7 on the Texas A&M all-time list.
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"It meant a lot to just run and be healthy," stated M. Kerley. "It's fun running in an A&M uniform. It was hard getting here, but I'm grateful to be here with all the good guys who were here before.
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Mylik Kerley later anchored the Aggies to a 3:06.91 victory in the 4x400 over Texas Tech (3:07.70) with a split of 45.51. The first three legs included Richard Rose (47.62), Robert Grant (47.12) and Devin Dixon (46.66).
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"Usually with Fred running on the relay I know I have a safe leg," said M. Kerley. "With a competitive race in the relay it was better for us to learn how to run a smarter race."
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The freshman sprinters for the Aggie women produced a pair of wins. Amber Ivy claimed the 60m in 7.31 seconds, which is No. 9 on the Texas A&M all-time list, ahead of teammate Brenessa Thompson (7.45) and Georgia's Kate Hall (7.47).
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In the women's 200m it was Danyel White improving her world junior leading time with a 23.22 victory as the Aggies swept the top four places. White's time is No. 11 on the Aggie all-time list. Following White were Ivy (23.45), Jaevin Reed (23.91) and Briyahna Desrosiers (23.98).
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Jazmine Fray ran her third different distance of the indoor season and clocked 53.91 for the victory over teammate Kadecia Baird (54.13). Fray's mark is No. 12 on the Texas A&M all-time list. Fray broke the Aggie school record in the 1,000m (2:43.15) in December and ran the second fastest mile (4:44.87) in school history last weekend.
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Fray later ran the third leg of the 4x400, supplying a 53.06 split on the third leg. The Aggies ran 3:36.81 for the win over Texas Tech (3:40.21). The Texas A&M line-up also included Desrosiers (53.75) and White (54.94) on the first two legs while Jarra Owens (55.06) anchored.
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Aggie victories included Katie Willard controlling the 800m with a 2:06.99, the third best performance on the Texas A&M all-time list, with Brittany Parker runner-up in 2:11.73 and Miah Nelson fifth at 2:12.35. Arin Rice won the mile in 4:54.18 and Jeffrey Prothro claimed the triple jump with an effort of 49-7 ¾.
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Runner-up performances for the Aggies also included Cameron Villarreal (4:08.27) in the mile while Taylor Clayton (4:10.46) finished third after winning the first section. Celine Markert was second in the shot put (49-3 ¾) behind a meet record of 55-11 ¼ (17.05) for Arizona State's Maggie Ewen.
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A career best of 63-2 (19.25) for Alison Ondrusek placed her fourth in the weight throw. Jeff Bartlett reached 57-0 (17.37) for fifth place in the shot put.
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Christian Farris led a solid effort by the Aggies in the 3,000m as he clocked 8:20.33 for third place with Austin Wells (8:25.65) and Jacob Perry (8:34.48) in sixth and seventh. In the women's race Kelsie Warren placed fifth in 9:53.06 with Kelsey Persyn (10:00.17) and Devin Norton (10:01.80) in sixth and seventh.
