 Deon Lendore surrendered his National Collegiate Athletic Association  (NCAA) Division 1 Indoor Track and Field Championship men’s 400 metres  title, in Arkansas, USA, late on Saturday.
Deon Lendore surrendered his National Collegiate Athletic Association  (NCAA) Division 1 Indoor Track and Field Championship men’s 400 metres  title, in Arkansas, USA, late on Saturday.
Lendore, a senior at Texas  A&M University, clocked 45.81 seconds to finish second in section  two and fourth overall in the finals. The title went to American Vernon  Norwood, the Louisiana State University (LSU) student getting home in  45.31. Lendore’s Texas A&M teammate, Grenadian Bralon Taplin picked  up silver in 45.55, and United State/University of Florida athlete Najee  Glass got bronze in 45.77.
While Lendore missed out on a top-three  finish in the individual event, the Trinidad and Tobago quartermiler had  the satisfaction of anchoring Texas A&M to men’s 4x400m gold in  three minutes, 02.86 seconds. Lendore produced a 45.34 seconds split.
Sparkle  McKnight ran the second leg for University of Arkansas in the women’s  4x400m relay, the T&T athlete splitting 51.79 to help her team earn  silver in 3:28.70, just behind University of Texas, the winners in  3:28.48. On Friday, McKnight was part of the triumphant women’s distance  medley relay team.
McKnight featured in a huge Arkansas celebration  on Saturday night, the school emerging as women’s team champions with a  total of 63 points.
University of Oregon (46.5) and University of  Georgia (37) finished second and third, respectively, while Deandra  Daniel’s Coppin State University finished joint-32nd with six points.  The T&T athlete earned all six points with her third-place finish in  Friday’s high jump.
Lendore’s Texas A&M accumulated 33 points  for fourth spot in the men’s team competition, behind champions Oregon  (74), Florida (50) and Arkansas (39).
At the NCAA Division 2 Indoor  Championships, in Alabama, Kevin Roberts’ Tiffin University finished  sixth in the men’s team competition with 28 points. Adams State  University earned 45 points to capture the men’s title, while the  women’s title went to University of Central Missouri (47).
Roberts, a freshman at Tiffin, finished ninth in the men’s long jump (7.08m) and 12th in the triple jump (14.51m).
At  the Division 1 Championships, Daniel continued her fine run of form,  earning women’s high jump bronze with an impressive 1.87m clearance.
“It  means a lot to me to come in third,” said Daniel, in an interview on  the Coppin State website www.coppinstatesports.com. “I put in the work  and got the results I deserved. I am very pleased with my efforts today  and I had great attempts at each height. I knew in my heart that I could  do it. Jumping today I felt relaxed and great. That helped me  throughout the competition.”
Daniel said she was grateful to her high  jump coach at Coppin State, former T&T athlete Natoya Baird, as  well as the school’s women’s track and field head coach, Alecia  Shields-Gadson.
“I just want to thank God because without him I  wouldn’t have been able to reach this far and accomplish any of this.  Also, I want to thank my main coach Natoya for believing in me. She is  the best coach and we have built a great relationship, not only as coach  but as good friends. I want to thank coach Shields for her great  support, and everyone else for their prayers and support. It meant a lot  and it mattered.
“Finishing third feels great, but I didn’t  accomplish all of my goals for indoors. I will be even better for  outdoors,” Daniel warned.
