Meet Recap: 2025 NCAA DIII Indoor T&F Championships

Champions were crowned at the 2025 NCAA Division III Indoor Track & Field Championships!

The meet was held at the Nazareth University Golisano Training Center in Rochester, New York.

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2025 NCAA DIII Indoor Track & Field Championships – Final Results

Men’s Team
Score
Women’s Team
Score
UW-La Crosse
84
MIT
49
UW-Oshkosh
39
Washington (Mo.)
45.5
Rowan
32
UW-La Crosse
37
Lynchburg
29
Loras
32
SUNY Cortland
26
SUNY Geneseo
29

Men’s Recap

UW-La Crosse knows what it feels like to win a national title.

The Eagles have done it before. In fact, they’ve done it TWENTY times.

Well, actually that should be 21 after this year. And that’s just indoors.

UW-La Crosse dominated from the start of the meet and spread its wings wide. The Eagles featured All-Americans in 12 out of 17 events, including double national champion Sam Blaskowski in the 60 meters and 200 meters, national champion Grant Matthai in the 5000 meters, and Cael Schoemann in the 800 meters. UW-La Crosse also managed to best its own national championships point record, posting 84 points (six more than it did in its 2006 championship performance).

UW-Oshkosh and Rowan finished second and third, respectively. The Titans were led by national champion Josh Rivers in the long jump, who shattered a longstanding meet record, as well as runner-up efforts by other athletes in the 60 meters, 200 meters, and weight throw. The Profs were buoyed by an otherworldly 1-2-4-5 performance in the 60-meter hurdles with national champion Jason Agyemang up top and Jamir Brown right behind.

Women’s Recap

MIT defeated a crowded field of competitors, putting up 49 points en route to its first-ever national indoor title. The Engineers were led by dominating efforts by Alexis Boykin, who won both the shot put and weight throw – the latter with the second farthest throw in NCAA DIII history at 20.91m (68-7¼). MIT also got a runner-up finish out of its distance medley relay.

The Engineers ultimately edged out Washington (Mo.) and UW-La Crosse. The Bears featured pole vault champion Yasmin Ruff, while the Eagles saw sprint double champion Lauren Jarrett at the front of their attack. Jarrett, already the divisional record holder in the 60 meters, equaled her record of 7.29 seconds in the preliminary round en route to her first national title of the meet.

Emory’s Nikki Boon made history of her own, winning the pentathlon and becoming the first woman in NCAA DIII history to exceed 4000 points. Boon, the runner-up in both the pentathlon and heptathlon last year, amassed 4061 points to win the combined event by more than 300 points.