Every HBCU track and field athlete competing in NCAA Championship

The road to Eugene officially begins this week as HBCU athletes from the SWAC, MEAC and other Division I Black college programs compete in the NCAA Division I East and West First Rounds.

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The NCAA preliminary rounds act as the national qualifying stage for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene, Oregon. Athletes are divided geographically into East and West regions, with the top competitors advancing to nationals.

For sprint and hurdle races, athletes must survive preliminary heats and quarterfinal rounds before national qualifiers are determined. Field events and relays use different qualifying structures, with most field events functioning as single-round finals where only the top 12 athletes advance.

Below is the complete event-by-event breakdown of HBCU athletes competing this week.

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WOMEN’S EVENTS

Women’s 100-meter dash

Women’s 200-meter dash

Women’s 800-meter run

Women’s 100-meter hurdles

Southern’s Tashina Alase enters with one of the top seed times among HBCU athletes in the regional field.

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Women’s 400-meter hurdles

Women’s 4×100-meter relay

Florida A&M relay pool

  • Janaree Kinchen
  • Diandrenique Gaines
  • Arayana Ladson
  • Kiersten Clark
  • Ty’yanah Adams

Howard relay pool

  • Nilijah Darden
  • Marcia Sey
  • Yahnari Lyons
  • Mackenzie Robinson
  • Ai’yana Gray-Williams

Women’s 4×400-meter relay

Howard relay pool

  • Zoe Turner
  • Aniya Woodruff
  • Cenaiya Billups
  • Lindsay Johnson
  • Carrie Vannoy
  • Yahnari Lyons
  • Mackenzie Robinson

Women’s High Jump

Women’s Long Jump

Women’s Triple Jump

Women’s Discus

Women’s Hammer Throw

MEN’S EVENTS

Men’s 100-meter dash

Men’s 200-meter dash

Men’s 400-meter dash

Men’s 110-meter hurdles

Men’s 400-meter hurdles

Men’s 4×100-meter relay

Men’s 4×400-meter relay

Men’s Long Jump

Men’s Triple Jump

Men’s Shot Put

Men’s Discus

Men’s High Jump

How athletes qualify for Eugene

Sprint and hurdle events

Most sprint and hurdle races use this format:

  • Preliminary heats
  • Quarterfinal rounds
  • National qualification rounds

The top finishers in each heat plus additional time qualifiers advance.

Relay events

Relay teams compete once at regionals:

  • Automatic qualifying spots go to top finishers
  • Additional teams advance on time

Field events

Field events are single-round finals:

  • Athletes receive three attempts
  • Top 12 overall advance to Eugene

Why this matters for HBCU track and field

The NCAA preliminary rounds represent one of the biggest stages in collegiate track and field before the national championships in Eugene, Oregon.

For HBCU athletes, advancing through regionals means:

  • All-American opportunities
  • NCAA finals appearances
  • National championship contention
  • Increased national visibility for HBCU track and field programs

Programs from the SWAC, MEAC and other HBCUs continue to show growing national depth in sprinting, hurdles, relays and field events.

The post Every HBCU track and field athlete competing in NCAA Championship appeared first on HBCU Gameday.

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This story was originally published May 26, 2026 at 9:29 AM.

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