
Huskies Qualify Seven As Pole Vaulters Dominate
May 29, 2026 | Track & Field
NCAA West Preliminary Championships
May 27-30 | Fayetteville, Ark. | John McDonnell Field
Schedule PDF | Live Results
ESPN+ Live Stream Links
Friday (3pm) | Saturday (3pm)
UW Athletes at West Prelims
Friday
12:00 pm – Men's High Jump – Leland Lieberg
3:15 pm – Men's 1,500m, Quarterfinals – Martin Barco, Tyler Bilyard, Reuben Reina
3:40 pm – Men's 3,000m Steeplechase, Quarterfinals – Isaac Briggs
4:00 pm – Men's Triple Jump – Roman Hutchinson (Flight 1), Trevontay Smith (Flight 2)
4:50 pm – Men's 400m, Quarterfinals – Alex Rhodes
5:25 pm – Men's 400m Hurdles, Quarterfinals – Jonathan Frazier
6:10 pm – Men's 5,000m, Semifinals – Evan Jenkins
Saturday
3:15 pm – Women's 1,500m, Quarterfinals – Mia Cochran, Chloe Foerster
3:40 pm – Women's 3,000m Steeplechase, Quarterfinals – Josephine Welin
4:15 pm – Women's 100m Hurdles, Quarterfinals – Sofia Cosculluela
5:05 pm – Women's 800m, Quarterfinals – Jenica Swartz, Chloe Symon
6:10 pm – Women's 5,000m, Quarterfinals – Mia Cochran, Julia David-Smith, Chloe Thomas
FAETTEVILLE, Ark. – One Husky in the 10k, one in the javelin … and FIVE in the pole vault advanced through West Prelims and onto the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships at Arkansas today. It was a great showing for the UW women's team, which took six NCAA tickets and advanced five more women to Saturday's quarterfinal round of Prelims.
Pole Vault U. put on a master class today, as first came a clutch jump-off win from Jimmy Rhoads to grab the last qualifying spot in the men's vault, which was postponed from Wednesday due to weather.
Then when the women's vault took to the runway, Washington secured four of the 12 spots, including a second jump-off win of the day, this time from senior Sara Borton. Borton, making her first NCAAs since 2023, joined up with twins Hana and Amanda Moll, and freshman Veronica Vacca, to give UW one-third of the advancing field.
Also powering through to the NCAA final site today were Saydi Orange in the javelin, and Chloe Thomas in the 10,000-meters. Orange threw a lifetime-best to make her first NCAA Championships, and Thomas gritted out another impressive 10k two weeks after she won the Big Ten title to earn another in the NCAA finals at Hayward Field.
Two days still remain as UW looks to add to its ten qualifiers thus far, which counts Sofia Cosculluela and Teko Cates, who advanced in the multis without competing at Prelims. The men's competition wrapping up on Friday, and the women coming back to settle the final NCAA fields on Saturday.
Pole Vault U On Point
It was a nerve-racking but ultimately phenomenal day for the Husky vault squad, putting five of coaches Toby Stevenson and Tim Reilly's proteges into the NCAA finals.
The men's vault came first, rescheduled from Wednesday. But weather remained a problem for the men, as it continued to rain, and the typical heights of the men in the field proved harder to come by today.
Rhoads, the Big Ten runner-up and the NCAA Indoor bronze medalist, entered at the third height of the competition, and had two misses before staying alive with a third attempt over 17-7 1/4. But he continued to have a tough time with the conditions at the next bar of 17-11 1/4, missing all three attempts. Only five of the 48 men cleared that bar, so based on previous makes and misses, Rhoads was in a tie for 12th-place with Samuel Abati of Texas. They went to a jump-off, both missing another attempt at 17-11 1/4. The bar then went back to 17-7 1/4, and Rhoads came through with a make, and a miss from Abati brought it to an end and Rhoads made it through.
In the women's vault, the Huskies had five of the 24 women jumping on pit two, with another 24 on the first pit.
Senior Avril Wilson had a make at the first height of 12-10 3/4, but she went out at the second bar to cap her Husky career with a second-straight Prelims appearance.
Sara Borton and Veronica Vacca entered at 13-4 1/2 and had first attempt makes. They each then cleared the next height, 13-10 1/2, on second attempts. Amanda Moll also came in at that bar and cleared on her first try to move into first-place.
At the fourth height, 14-2 1/2, Hana Moll entered the competition and missed on her first try, but got safely over on her second, and Amanda cleared again on one attempt. Vacca and Borton both stayed in the mix with second-attempt clearances, but there were still 17 women in the mix after that height.
Going up again to 14-6 1/4, both Moll sisters cleared on first attempts to steer clear of any drama. Vacca then stepped up with a big first-attempt make at that bar. Borton came up short, but as with Rhoads earlier in the day, there were fewer than 12 women that cleared the height, and based on earlier makes and misses, Borton was in a two-way tie for 12th. She had to jump against Texas Tech's Kashlee Dickinson. The two had another attempt at 14-6 1/4, and with her collegiate career on the line, Borton cleared it, for a new lifetime-best. Dickson missed, and Borton was the fourth Husky on to Eugene.
It was especially gratifying for Borton, who was a First Team All-American indoors and outdoors in 2023 and the Pac-12 co-Champion before missing all of the 2025 season rehabbing from an injury.
The Moll twins both will make their third consecutive NCAA Outdoor appearance, where Hana will attempt to defend her title. Amanda was third outdoors a year ago and has returned to excellent form after missing the majority of the indoor season. Vacca has now made both the indoor and outdoor national championships as a true freshman. She was 10th indoors in March, as Hana took that title as well.
Orange Ends 17-Year Drought
Washington's women's javelin trio of Ashley Schroeder, Saydi Orange, and Leonie Troeger have been excellent all year, with Schroeder and Orange going to first and third in UW history, respectively, and Troeger climbing to seventh. Schroeder was coming off an epic Big Ten title two weeks ago, where Orange was fourth and Troeger fifth.
Their competition today showed the agony and ecstasy that NCAA Prelims can produce. For Orange, it was an ecstatic career-best on her last attempt and a first career trip to NCAAs. She reached back and connected on a throw of 175-feet, 6-inches, moving her up to No. 2 in school history behind only Schroeder, and that finished in sixth-place overall.
Troeger also had a strong series of throws, with a best today of 164-1, but she wound up in the dreaded 13th spot overall, just one spot, and one foot, out of making it to Eugene.
Schroeder had been incredibly consistent all season, throwing over 170-feet each time out, but unfortunately today it just didn't quite line up for the junior. She threw 156-7 today, finishing 21st overall, heartbreakingly ending her season one meet short of what she was hoping for. Still it was a tremendous breakthrough year for Schroeder, winning the first conference title in any women's throwing event by a Husky since 2000, and breaking a 15-year-old School Record.
Orange will go on to be the first Husky in the NCAA women's javelin field since Brooke Pighin in 2009.
Thomas Marches On In 10k
Big Ten Champion Chloe Thomas backed up her conference title with another long, late night run in hot and humid conditions. Thomas ran with the main lead pack throughout and made sure she was always within the top-12, doing whatever it took to just move through. Thomas finished the 25 laps with a pack of seven women that finished within three seconds of each other, taking 11th-place overall in a time of 32:32.72.
It will be her first NCAA Outdoor 10k final after she previously ran in the outdoor 5,000-meters final in 2024 when at UConn.
Abby DeVeau closed out her incredible first season of collegiate track, following three years of club rugby, of course, by just missing an NCAA bid by one spot. DeVeau managed to run a major PR in just her second career 10k, despite the challenging conditions, with a time of 32:44.64 to finish 13th overall. That moves her all the way up to No. 4 in school history.
Maeve Stiles also ran well in her final collegiate race for the Dawgs. She finished 22nd in a time of 33:50.06 to give UW three women in the top-25 of the 10k.
See You Saturday
The Huskies went five-for-five in advancing from the first round to the quarterfinals today on the track, with those five women earning a shot to race for NCAAs this Saturday.
First up was Sofia Cosculluela in the 100m hurdles. Already qualified for NCAAs in the heptathlon, Cosculluela is playing with house money trying to qualify in another event, and keep her hurdling in quality form for the heptathlon in two weeks. She ran a time of 13.46 seconds today which was fifth in her heat and it just snagged the last time qualifier for the next round, as the field was cut from 48 down to 24.
In the 1,500-meter first round, Chloe Foerster and Mia Cochran both were ready to go, taking the lead at different points of their races to keep the pace honest. They both earned top-five finishes to auto-advance, and they wound up with nearly identical times.
In heat two, Foerster took a turn at the front with two laps to go and was not threatened for a top-five spot as she finished fourth in 4:13.78. In the final heat, Cochran took the lead immediately and kept the pace honest for the first two laps, and then she tucked in to follow the lead in for her own fourth-place finish in 4:13.68.
Punching their quarterfinal tickets in the 800-meters were Jenica Swartz and Chloe Symon. Swartz took fourth in her heat in 2:04.73, and had to wait to see if her time would hold up, as only the top-three auto advanced, but Swartz's time was among the fastest of the six time qualifiers and she will go again on Saturday.
Symon will join her, as the freshman used a strong kick around the final turn and down the homestretch to pull up into second and nearly win her heat in a time of 2:03.60.
Washburn Caps Great Season
Junior Ava Washburn made her first NCAA Prelims appearance in the long jump. She didn't have her very best today but still had a solid jump of 19-9 1/4 to finish 35th overall. Washburn went to No. 6 in school history this year in the long jump at 20-8, improving her career-best this season by more than a foot.
NCAA West Preliminary Championships
Day 2 of 4
Fayetteville, Ark. | John McDonnell Field
UW Results
Women's 800m, First Round, Heat 1 of 6: 4. Jenica Swartz, 2:04.73q (Advances to Quarterfinal); Heat 6 of 6: 2. Chloe Symon, 2:03.60Q (Advances to Quarterfinal)
Women's 1500m, First Round, Heat 2 of 4: 4. Chloe Foerster, 4:13.78Q (Advances to Quarterfinal); Heat 4 of 4: 4. Mia Cochran, 4:13.68Q (Advances to Quarterfinal)
Women's 10000m, Semifinals: 11. Chloe Thomas, 32:32.72 (Advances to NCAAs); 13. Abby DeVeau, 32:44.64; 22. Maeve Stiles, 33:50.06
Women's 100m Hurdles, Heat 4 of 6: 5. Sofia Cosculluela, 13.46q (Advances to Quarterfinal)
Women's Pole Vault: 1 (tie). Amanda Moll, 14-6 1/4 (Advances to NCAAs); 3 (tie). Hana Moll, 14-6 1/4 (Advances to NCAAs); 5 (tie). Veronica Vacca, 14-6 1/4 (Advances to NCAAs); 12. Sara Borton, 14-2 1/2 (Advances to NCAAs by winning jump-off at 14-6 1/4); 41 (tie). Avril Wilson, 12-10 3/4.
Women's Long Jump: 35. Ava Washburn, 19-9 1/2
Women's Javelin: 6. Saydi Orange, 175-6 (Advances to NCAAs); 13. Leonie Troeger, 164-1; 21. Ashley Schroeder, 156-7.
Men's Pole Vault (Originally scheduled for Wednesday): 12. Jimmy Rhoads, 17-7 1/4 (Advances to NCAAs by winning jump-off at 17-7 1/4)
Advancing to NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene thus far
Evan Jenkins – Men's 10,000-meters
Jimmy Rhoads – Men's Pole Vault
Teko Cates – Men's Decathlon (advance straight to Eugene via season-best)
Chloe Thomas – Women's 10,000-meters
Sara Borton – Women's Pole Vault
Amanda Moll – Women's Pole Vault
Hana Moll – Women's Pole Vault
Veronica Vacca – Women's Pole Vault
Saydi Orange – Women's Javelin
Sofia Cosculluela – Women's Heptathlon (advance straight to Eugene via season-best)
For news, scores, highlights and more, download the Go Huskies app on your mobile device. Follow @UWTrack on Instagram, X, and Facebook and subscribe to UW Athletics on YouTube for the latest on the Dawgs.
May 27-30 | Fayetteville, Ark. | John McDonnell Field
Schedule PDF | Live Results
ESPN+ Live Stream Links
Friday (3pm) | Saturday (3pm)
UW Athletes at West Prelims
Friday
12:00 pm – Men's High Jump – Leland Lieberg
3:15 pm – Men's 1,500m, Quarterfinals – Martin Barco, Tyler Bilyard, Reuben Reina
3:40 pm – Men's 3,000m Steeplechase, Quarterfinals – Isaac Briggs
4:00 pm – Men's Triple Jump – Roman Hutchinson (Flight 1), Trevontay Smith (Flight 2)
4:50 pm – Men's 400m, Quarterfinals – Alex Rhodes
5:25 pm – Men's 400m Hurdles, Quarterfinals – Jonathan Frazier
6:10 pm – Men's 5,000m, Semifinals – Evan Jenkins
Saturday
3:15 pm – Women's 1,500m, Quarterfinals – Mia Cochran, Chloe Foerster
3:40 pm – Women's 3,000m Steeplechase, Quarterfinals – Josephine Welin
4:15 pm – Women's 100m Hurdles, Quarterfinals – Sofia Cosculluela
5:05 pm – Women's 800m, Quarterfinals – Jenica Swartz, Chloe Symon
6:10 pm – Women's 5,000m, Quarterfinals – Mia Cochran, Julia David-Smith, Chloe Thomas
FAETTEVILLE, Ark. – One Husky in the 10k, one in the javelin … and FIVE in the pole vault advanced through West Prelims and onto the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships at Arkansas today. It was a great showing for the UW women's team, which took six NCAA tickets and advanced five more women to Saturday's quarterfinal round of Prelims.
Pole Vault U. put on a master class today, as first came a clutch jump-off win from Jimmy Rhoads to grab the last qualifying spot in the men's vault, which was postponed from Wednesday due to weather.
Then when the women's vault took to the runway, Washington secured four of the 12 spots, including a second jump-off win of the day, this time from senior Sara Borton. Borton, making her first NCAAs since 2023, joined up with twins Hana and Amanda Moll, and freshman Veronica Vacca, to give UW one-third of the advancing field.
Also powering through to the NCAA final site today were Saydi Orange in the javelin, and Chloe Thomas in the 10,000-meters. Orange threw a lifetime-best to make her first NCAA Championships, and Thomas gritted out another impressive 10k two weeks after she won the Big Ten title to earn another in the NCAA finals at Hayward Field.
Two days still remain as UW looks to add to its ten qualifiers thus far, which counts Sofia Cosculluela and Teko Cates, who advanced in the multis without competing at Prelims. The men's competition wrapping up on Friday, and the women coming back to settle the final NCAA fields on Saturday.
Pole Vault U On Point
It was a nerve-racking but ultimately phenomenal day for the Husky vault squad, putting five of coaches Toby Stevenson and Tim Reilly's proteges into the NCAA finals.
Pole Vault U with a Master Class!!
— Washington Track & Field and Cross Country (@UWTrack) May 29, 2026
???????????? for Eugene as Sara wins the jump-off and joins Amanda, Hana, and Veronica!!
4 of the 24 women in the NCAA final will be Dawgs and Coach Powell is ?? pic.twitter.com/oe43vtVMx9
The men's vault came first, rescheduled from Wednesday. But weather remained a problem for the men, as it continued to rain, and the typical heights of the men in the field proved harder to come by today.
Rhoads, the Big Ten runner-up and the NCAA Indoor bronze medalist, entered at the third height of the competition, and had two misses before staying alive with a third attempt over 17-7 1/4. But he continued to have a tough time with the conditions at the next bar of 17-11 1/4, missing all three attempts. Only five of the 48 men cleared that bar, so based on previous makes and misses, Rhoads was in a tie for 12th-place with Samuel Abati of Texas. They went to a jump-off, both missing another attempt at 17-11 1/4. The bar then went back to 17-7 1/4, and Rhoads came through with a make, and a miss from Abati brought it to an end and Rhoads made it through.
In the women's vault, the Huskies had five of the 24 women jumping on pit two, with another 24 on the first pit.
Senior Avril Wilson had a make at the first height of 12-10 3/4, but she went out at the second bar to cap her Husky career with a second-straight Prelims appearance.
Sara Borton and Veronica Vacca entered at 13-4 1/2 and had first attempt makes. They each then cleared the next height, 13-10 1/2, on second attempts. Amanda Moll also came in at that bar and cleared on her first try to move into first-place.
At the fourth height, 14-2 1/2, Hana Moll entered the competition and missed on her first try, but got safely over on her second, and Amanda cleared again on one attempt. Vacca and Borton both stayed in the mix with second-attempt clearances, but there were still 17 women in the mix after that height.
Going up again to 14-6 1/4, both Moll sisters cleared on first attempts to steer clear of any drama. Vacca then stepped up with a big first-attempt make at that bar. Borton came up short, but as with Rhoads earlier in the day, there were fewer than 12 women that cleared the height, and based on earlier makes and misses, Borton was in a two-way tie for 12th. She had to jump against Texas Tech's Kashlee Dickinson. The two had another attempt at 14-6 1/4, and with her collegiate career on the line, Borton cleared it, for a new lifetime-best. Dickson missed, and Borton was the fourth Husky on to Eugene.
It was especially gratifying for Borton, who was a First Team All-American indoors and outdoors in 2023 and the Pac-12 co-Champion before missing all of the 2025 season rehabbing from an injury.
The Moll twins both will make their third consecutive NCAA Outdoor appearance, where Hana will attempt to defend her title. Amanda was third outdoors a year ago and has returned to excellent form after missing the majority of the indoor season. Vacca has now made both the indoor and outdoor national championships as a true freshman. She was 10th indoors in March, as Hana took that title as well.
Orange Ends 17-Year Drought
Washington's women's javelin trio of Ashley Schroeder, Saydi Orange, and Leonie Troeger have been excellent all year, with Schroeder and Orange going to first and third in UW history, respectively, and Troeger climbing to seventh. Schroeder was coming off an epic Big Ten title two weeks ago, where Orange was fourth and Troeger fifth.
Their competition today showed the agony and ecstasy that NCAA Prelims can produce. For Orange, it was an ecstatic career-best on her last attempt and a first career trip to NCAAs. She reached back and connected on a throw of 175-feet, 6-inches, moving her up to No. 2 in school history behind only Schroeder, and that finished in sixth-place overall.
On the ?? to Eugene pic.twitter.com/yW3NEEnoys
— Washington Track & Field and Cross Country (@UWTrack) May 29, 2026
Troeger also had a strong series of throws, with a best today of 164-1, but she wound up in the dreaded 13th spot overall, just one spot, and one foot, out of making it to Eugene.
Schroeder had been incredibly consistent all season, throwing over 170-feet each time out, but unfortunately today it just didn't quite line up for the junior. She threw 156-7 today, finishing 21st overall, heartbreakingly ending her season one meet short of what she was hoping for. Still it was a tremendous breakthrough year for Schroeder, winning the first conference title in any women's throwing event by a Husky since 2000, and breaking a 15-year-old School Record.
Orange will go on to be the first Husky in the NCAA women's javelin field since Brooke Pighin in 2009.
Thomas Marches On In 10k
Big Ten Champion Chloe Thomas backed up her conference title with another long, late night run in hot and humid conditions. Thomas ran with the main lead pack throughout and made sure she was always within the top-12, doing whatever it took to just move through. Thomas finished the 25 laps with a pack of seven women that finished within three seconds of each other, taking 11th-place overall in a time of 32:32.72.
It will be her first NCAA Outdoor 10k final after she previously ran in the outdoor 5,000-meters final in 2024 when at UConn.
Abby DeVeau closed out her incredible first season of collegiate track, following three years of club rugby, of course, by just missing an NCAA bid by one spot. DeVeau managed to run a major PR in just her second career 10k, despite the challenging conditions, with a time of 32:44.64 to finish 13th overall. That moves her all the way up to No. 4 in school history.
Maeve Stiles also ran well in her final collegiate race for the Dawgs. She finished 22nd in a time of 33:50.06 to give UW three women in the top-25 of the 10k.
See You Saturday
The Huskies went five-for-five in advancing from the first round to the quarterfinals today on the track, with those five women earning a shot to race for NCAAs this Saturday.
First up was Sofia Cosculluela in the 100m hurdles. Already qualified for NCAAs in the heptathlon, Cosculluela is playing with house money trying to qualify in another event, and keep her hurdling in quality form for the heptathlon in two weeks. She ran a time of 13.46 seconds today which was fifth in her heat and it just snagged the last time qualifier for the next round, as the field was cut from 48 down to 24.
In the 1,500-meter first round, Chloe Foerster and Mia Cochran both were ready to go, taking the lead at different points of their races to keep the pace honest. They both earned top-five finishes to auto-advance, and they wound up with nearly identical times.
In heat two, Foerster took a turn at the front with two laps to go and was not threatened for a top-five spot as she finished fourth in 4:13.78. In the final heat, Cochran took the lead immediately and kept the pace honest for the first two laps, and then she tucked in to follow the lead in for her own fourth-place finish in 4:13.68.
Strong, composed close from the freshman Chloe Symon ??
— Washington Track & Field and Cross Country (@UWTrack) May 29, 2026
She takes care of first round business with a 2:03.60 to move on!#GoHuskies pic.twitter.com/fmGIyb5tSA
Punching their quarterfinal tickets in the 800-meters were Jenica Swartz and Chloe Symon. Swartz took fourth in her heat in 2:04.73, and had to wait to see if her time would hold up, as only the top-three auto advanced, but Swartz's time was among the fastest of the six time qualifiers and she will go again on Saturday.
Symon will join her, as the freshman used a strong kick around the final turn and down the homestretch to pull up into second and nearly win her heat in a time of 2:03.60.
Washburn Caps Great Season
Junior Ava Washburn made her first NCAA Prelims appearance in the long jump. She didn't have her very best today but still had a solid jump of 19-9 1/4 to finish 35th overall. Washburn went to No. 6 in school history this year in the long jump at 20-8, improving her career-best this season by more than a foot.
NCAA West Preliminary Championships
Day 2 of 4
Fayetteville, Ark. | John McDonnell Field
UW Results
Women's 800m, First Round, Heat 1 of 6: 4. Jenica Swartz, 2:04.73q (Advances to Quarterfinal); Heat 6 of 6: 2. Chloe Symon, 2:03.60Q (Advances to Quarterfinal)
Women's 1500m, First Round, Heat 2 of 4: 4. Chloe Foerster, 4:13.78Q (Advances to Quarterfinal); Heat 4 of 4: 4. Mia Cochran, 4:13.68Q (Advances to Quarterfinal)
Women's 10000m, Semifinals: 11. Chloe Thomas, 32:32.72 (Advances to NCAAs); 13. Abby DeVeau, 32:44.64; 22. Maeve Stiles, 33:50.06
Women's 100m Hurdles, Heat 4 of 6: 5. Sofia Cosculluela, 13.46q (Advances to Quarterfinal)
Women's Pole Vault: 1 (tie). Amanda Moll, 14-6 1/4 (Advances to NCAAs); 3 (tie). Hana Moll, 14-6 1/4 (Advances to NCAAs); 5 (tie). Veronica Vacca, 14-6 1/4 (Advances to NCAAs); 12. Sara Borton, 14-2 1/2 (Advances to NCAAs by winning jump-off at 14-6 1/4); 41 (tie). Avril Wilson, 12-10 3/4.
Women's Long Jump: 35. Ava Washburn, 19-9 1/2
Women's Javelin: 6. Saydi Orange, 175-6 (Advances to NCAAs); 13. Leonie Troeger, 164-1; 21. Ashley Schroeder, 156-7.
Men's Pole Vault (Originally scheduled for Wednesday): 12. Jimmy Rhoads, 17-7 1/4 (Advances to NCAAs by winning jump-off at 17-7 1/4)
Advancing to NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene thus far
Evan Jenkins – Men's 10,000-meters
Jimmy Rhoads – Men's Pole Vault
Teko Cates – Men's Decathlon (advance straight to Eugene via season-best)
Chloe Thomas – Women's 10,000-meters
Sara Borton – Women's Pole Vault
Amanda Moll – Women's Pole Vault
Hana Moll – Women's Pole Vault
Veronica Vacca – Women's Pole Vault
Saydi Orange – Women's Javelin
Sofia Cosculluela – Women's Heptathlon (advance straight to Eugene via season-best)
For news, scores, highlights and more, download the Go Huskies app on your mobile device. Follow @UWTrack on Instagram, X, and Facebook and subscribe to UW Athletics on YouTube for the latest on the Dawgs.
Players Mentioned
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Wednesday, April 08
Anna Gibson | Former UW Track Student-Athlete Debuts Ski Mountaineering at the Winter Olympics
Saturday, February 21
Raising the Bar | Hana & Amanda Moll
Monday, August 04
Women's 1500m final - 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championship
Sunday, June 15



































