The BYU women’s team and freshman sensation Jane Hedengren each finished second at the NCAA cross country championships on Saturday in Columbia, Missouri.

Hedengren completed the 6,000-meter course in 18:38.9, 13 seconds behind Alabama’s Doris Lemngole, who won the individual title for the second straight year.

BYU’s Riley Chamberlain finished fourth.

The defending champion BYU men’s team placed 11th behind champion Oklahoma State.

Hedengren led the women’s race after the first 500 meters and much of the first two kilometers. She raced on Lemngole’s shoulder for most of the next three kilometers.

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Lemngole used a big kick to pull away over the final four hundred meters to win the race.

N.C. State won the women’s team championship for the fourth time in five years with 114 points.

BYU, the defending women’s champion, took second with 130 points. Oregon was third at 153.

Chamberlain took fourth for BYU in 18:47. BYU’s other scoring runners were:

  • Nelah Roberts (36th in the scoring) at 19:22.9
  • Taylor Rohatinsky (41st) in 19:29.8
  • Taylor Lovell (47th) in 19:35.4

Hedengren had been trying to become the first freshman woman to win the individual title in 40 years. N.C. State’s Suzie Tuffey is the only woman to accomplish the feat, in 1985.

Hedengren finished her freshman year just shy of an undefeated freshman season. She dominated her three other races this season.

In her college debut at the Pre-National Invitational exactly a month ago, Hedengren broke the course record by nearly 25 seconds.

Then at the Big 12 championship on Halloween, she broke the Big 12 record time.

At the NCAA Mountain Regionals last week, she won again by 42 seconds over Pamela Kosgei, the NCAA’s reigning 5,000- and 10,000-meter champion.

Habtom Samuel of New Mexico traversed the 10K course to win the men’s individual championship in 28:33.9.

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Comments

The BYU men were led by freshman Tayvon Kitchen, who was 28th in the scoring at 29:01.5.

Kitchen led the meet for much of the first five kilometers. He was at the head of a large pack of runners in a tactical race at the halfway point.

Oklahoma State won the men’s title with 57 points. BYU was 11th with 336 points.

BYU’s other men’s scorers were:

  • Noah Jenkins (35th in the scoring) 29:08.5
  • James Corrigan (78th) 29:33.2
  • Davin Thompson (82nd) 29:34.2
  • Max Davis (113th) 29:53.8
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