
USTFCCCA News & Notes

Meet Recap: 2025 NJCAA DIII Outdoor T&F Championships
Champions were crowned at the 2025 NJCAA DIII Outdoor Track & Field Championships in Utica, New York!
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College of DuPage (Ill.) swept the team titles, repeating the same feat they compiled in 2022 and 2021.
2025 NJCAA DIII Outdoor T&F Championships – Final Standings |
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Men’s Teams
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Points
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Women’s Teams
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Points
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No. 1 College of DuPage (Ill.)
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196
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No. 1 College of DuPage (Ill.)
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174
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No. 2 Harper (Ill.)
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130
|
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No. 3 Harper (Ill.)
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95
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No. 3 Joliet (Ill.) JC
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120
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No. 2 Mineral Area (Mo.)
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84.5
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No. 5 Hudson Valley (N.Y.) CC
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77
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No. 7 Suffolk County (N.Y.) CC
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65
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No. 4 Suffolk County (N.Y.) CC
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59
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No. 5 Joliet (Ill.) JC
|
63
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Men’s Recap
DuPage won for the fifth-straight year, scoring 195 points to outdistance in-state rival Harper (Ill.) by 66 points.
The Chaps won five events, and three involved Weston White, who swept the 100 (10.59w) and 200 (21.31w) in addition to running a leg on the victorious 4×100 relay team (42.71). The other winners for DuPage were William Kallas in the pole vault at 4.50m (14-9) and Sterling Sawicki in the hammer at 46.26m (151-9).
Winning four events was Joliet (Ill.) JC, with Nathan Ciarlette prominent each time. Ciarlette was part of the Wolves’ winning 4×800 relay team on Thursday (8:00.34) and then had three individual winning performances on Saturday – 800 (1:58.62), 1500 (4:05.86) and 5000 (16:13.30).
Women’s Recap
DuPage rose to the top for the first time since 2022, thanks hugely to triple individual winner Ellie Logsdon, who claimed victories in the 100 (12.47w), 400 (57.85) and 400-meter hurdles (1:05.60). She also ran legs on two of the Chaps’ winning relay teams – the 4×100 (50.07) and 4×400 (4:10.31) – competing in all five finals on the final day.
The Chaps had another multiple victor in Carmen Solis, who claimed the unusual combination of 800 (2:29.18) and 5000 (20:08.31) while also being a member of the title-winning 4×800 team (10:49.71). She was also runner-up in the 1500.
Other standout performances were turned in by Kimiko Quayle of FIT (N.Y.), who threatened the meet record of 4:49.57 in the 1500 while winning by 14+ seconds in 4:50.16, and Tierra Hooker of Camden County (N.J.), who swept the high jump (1.55m/5-1) and long jump (5.50m/18-0½).