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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Texas A&M sweeps track titles

Oregon men fall just short of ‘Triple Crown’

Texas A&M’s 4x400 relay team celebrates finishing second in the event and clinching the team championship for the Aggies.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Noah Trister Associated Press

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – So much for the Oregon coronation. Instead, Texas A&M was the school that made track and field history.

Justin Oliver held on for second place as the anchor in the 1,600-meter relay, giving the Aggies the men’s team title at the NCAA track and field championships Saturday. Texas A&M also won the women’s title, becoming the first school since 1990 to win both outdoor championships.

The Oregon men were seeking a rare “Triple Crown” after winning titles in cross country and indoor track and field earlier this season. Nobody’s done that since Arkansas in 1998-99.

The relay – the last event of this week’s meet – knocked the Ducks out of first place.

“When it got to the 300 mark and I saw I was still second place, I see the finish line, I see the trophy at the finish line waiting on me,” Oliver said. “We’re the national champions. Texas A&M. No one else.”

The Aggies finished with 48 points. If Texas A&M had finished one spot lower in the relay, it would have ended up in a four-way tie for the title with Florida, Florida State and Oregon.

The women’s finish was less tense. Texas A&M ended up with 50 points, seven ahead of Oregon.

Texas A&M had never won any team title before this week. Coach Pat Henry is in his fifth year there after coming over from LSU. He won 27 NCAA team championships while coaching the LSU men and women, including 15 outdoor titles.

“This one is something we’ve been working very hard to do,” Henry said. “This one is very, very special to me because it’s a new one. It’s a new championship.”

Henry was the last coach to sweep the men’s and women’s outdoor titles, at LSU in 1990.

Oregon led both team competitions going into Saturday, and the Ducks earned 10 more big points when Andrew Wheating won the 800. Wheating passed Tevan Everett of Texas inches before the finish to win in 1 minute, 46.21 seconds.

That was it for the Oregon men, and Texas A&M made up ground in the triple jump when four Aggies combined to earn 18 points.

Florida took fourth. The Gators, Ducks and Seminoles all finished with 46 points.