While defending champions Wisconsin and Stanford return
to Terre Haute, Ind. as the team favorites for Monday's NCAA
Division I Cross Country Championships, the races for
individual titles appear to be entirely up for grabs.Wisconsin, the men's defending champions, return as the
top-ranked squad, led by senior Chris Solinsky. Third a year
ago, Solinsky, the NCAA 5000m champion outdoors, is
aiming to succeed former teammate Simon Bairu, who won
his second straight title last year. Sixth at the Great Lakes
regional last weekend, Solinsky was seventh at the Big-10
championships after a fall seven kilometers into the race.
Five of Wisconsin's seven runners from last year's squad
will return.
Josh McDougal, a junior at Liberty College, is also among
the favorites for the individual title. 13th two years ago,
McDougal improved to fourth last year, and in 2006 has
claimed victories at the Griak Invitational and Pre-Nationals.
His sole lose this year came to Kenyan Jacob Korir of
Eastern Kentucky at last weekend's Southeast Regional
Championships.
Irishman Martin Fagan of Providence is another favorite.
16th last year, The 23-year-old prepped with big wins at the
Northeast Regional and Big East Conference
Championships, and earlier last month won the Blue
Division race at the Pre-Nationals.
Oregon sophomore Galen Rupp makes his first trip to the
NCAA Championships, on the heels of his victory at the
difficult PAC-10 Championships where he beat Arizona's
Robert Cheseret [KEN], and a fourth place showing at the
NCAA West Regional where he slipped late in the race.
After a low-key September, Mississippi freshman Barnabas
Kirui has emerged as a threat. The young Kenyan first
attracted attention with his victory at the Southeastern
Conference Championships, and followed up with a solid
win at the South Regional last weekend.
Colorado, the winners in 2001 and 2004, are ranked
second in the U.S. Track & Field Coaches Association poll
going into Monday's race, led by senior Billy Nelson and
junior Brent Vaughn, eight and ninth respectively in their
regional race last weekend. Arkansas, led by Australian
Shawn Forrest, and Iona, led by sophomore Mohamed
Khadraoui and junior Abraham Ng,etich of Kenya, are also
expected to be in the team chase.
WOMEN -
Defending champions Stanford return with their entire
seven-member squad from 2005, aiming for their third title
in the past four years. The Cardinals are led by PAC-10
Conference and West Regional champion Ari Lambi. Eighth
last year, the redshirt junior is looking to become the first
individual winner ever for the Stanford women.
Arkansas is expected to give the Cardinals a fierce battle for
overall honors. The Ladybacks dominated last weekend's
South Central Regional race, with their first five runners
taking spots 4,5,6,7 and 9, only nine seconds apart. While
Arkansas doesn't rely on a strong No. 1, they've displayed
solid pack running throughout the season.
Ranked No. 3, North Carolina State is led by Julia Lucas.
Sitting out last year, Lucas returned this season with
victories at the Pre-Nationals, the Atlantic Coast Conference
Championships, and at the Southeast Regional. The latter
two featured a head-to-head battle with Michelle Sikes of
Wake Forest, the other division winner at the Pre-Nationals:
Lucas won both.
There is plenty of international flavor in the battle for the
women's overall title, led by Texas Tech's Sally Kipyego.
Undefeated in five races this fall, the 20-year-old [DOB
19-Dec-1985] Kenyan, a triple junior college national
champion on the track last spring, has handled her
opposition with dominance and grace. Beginning her
season with a 30-scond victory at the Texas A&M Invite on
September 16, Kipyego followed up with a 40-second win at
the Murray Keating Invite and a 25-second win at the Chile
Pepper Invitational in early October, before beating the fields
at both the Big-12 and Mountain Regional races by nearly 45
seconds.
Iowa's Diane Nukuri, a junior from Pickerington, Ontario and
a 2000 Olympian for her native Burundi, won the Midwest
Regional title last weekend, while Florida State's
Dutchwoman Susan Kuijken took the Mid-Atlantic Regional
title.
The women's 6000m race begins at noon (EST) followed by
the men's 10,000 contest at 1:15 p.m.
(c) 2006 TRACK PROFILE Report, all rights reserved