Bucknell University Athletics

Men's Track & Field Through the Decades, Presented by Geisinger
3/29/2021 4:43:00 PM | Men's Track and Field
LEWISBURG, Pa. -- Track and field at Bucknell University has roots dating back into the 1800s. It started with informal athletics tournaments, and by the early 1890s local merchants had begun donating trophies to the Bucknell Athletic Association for a more formal Field Day event held at the Union County Fairgrounds, as Bucknell had no on-campus track at that time. Eight events were contested for the main prize cup: the 100-yard dash, half-mile run, running long jump, running high jump, running hop, step and jump, throwing the hammer, putting shot, and throwing a baseball. Some of the winning marks at the first Field Day weren't bad! The winning time in the 100-yard dash was 10.5 seconds, and the half-mile was run in 2:30.Â
Bromley Smith, Class of 1895, became the first trainer of track and field athletes, and the sport began to pick up steam. Bucknell sent a relay team to the Penn Relays Carnival in 1986, which was the second year for that historic meet. The Bucknell unit finished in last place in its first trip to the brand new Franklin Field, but in each of the next two years Bucknell finished first. In 1899, Bucknell added a dual meet against Penn State, and the program was off and running, so to speak. Bucknell won four Central Pennsylvania Track Conference championships in the 1920s and captured the MAC title in 1936.Â
Bucknell did not participate in any track meets in 1943-46 during the World War II era, but when the program resumed in 1947 it began competing at the Middle Atlantic Championships, in addition to Penn Relays and a handful of duals. The Bison achieved modest success over the next several decades until an explosion in the 1970s. The legendary Art Gulden came on board in the summer of 1970, and in just his third season Bucknell went undefeated (8-0) in dual meets. By 1975 the Bison were winning their first conference championship in the brand new East Coast Conference, and the program was producing some of the best track and field athletes in the nation.Â
Of course none were better than the great Thomas McLean, who won the NCAA championship in the 800 meters in 1976, which remains Bucknell's only individual national title. McLean also finished third in the 800 in 1975 and fourth in 1977. By the late 1970s, Gulden had ramped up the Bucknell cross country team into a national power, and many of those stars also became All-Americans in track, such as George Buckheit, Rick Sayre and Bill Reifsnyder.Â
The Bison dominated the East Coast Conference, winning 11 indoor and 10 outdoor team championships over a 15-year span, and they have captured another nine team crowns since the inception of the Patriot League in 1990. All told, Bucknell's men's track and field teams have won 35 league titles across four different conferences, and the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame is littered with stars from many of those championship teams.Â
Over the course of this week, head coach Kevin Donner will be joined by many of the great athletes of the distant and recent past who helped shape the history of the Bison men's track and field program. Special thanks to Geisinger for sponsoring the series.
1970s
The 1970s were a transformative era for the Bison men's track & field program, as Art Gulden's squad began to regularly win championships and produce All-Americans, and even a national champion in Thomas McLean. Four alumni join us on today's chat: Doug Nauman '73, Bill Gravely '77, Robert Scott '77 and Ted Williamson '77. Nauman was a terrific two-way athlete in football and track and field, and he was inducted into the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame in 1984. Nauman won the Middle Atlantic Conference title in the javelin throw in 1973, and his top mark of 231-7 was the school record under the old javelin specs. On the gridiron, Nauman was an All-Pennsylvania, All-East and Academic All-America defensive tackle, and he won the Christy Mathewson Award as the top athlete in his class. Gravely is another two-sport Hall-of-Famer. He played two seasons of basketball under coach Jim Valvano, and he was also one of the top horizontal jumpers in school history. In fact, his school record in the triple jump still holds up 45 years later. Gravely won a couple of East Coast Conference titles and All-East citations in the triple jump. Scott was the ECC gold medalist in both the 100m and 220m in 1976. Williamson was an All-American as part of the 4x880m relay in 1976. He won two ECC gold medals in the mile relay in 1976 and 1977, and he helped set school records in the 4x800m and sprint medley relays. Those marks still rank second today.
1980s
Bucknell men's track and field completely ruled the East Coast Conference under Art Gulden in the decade of the 1980s. The Bison won nine of the 10 ECC Indoor Championships and six of the 10 outdoor titles, with the other four second-place efforts. Throw in a perfect 10 of 10 ECC titles in cross country, and this has to be considered one of the most dominant eras in any sport in Bison Athletics history. Today four alumni from the 1980s join us for a look back at this successful period: Mike Geraghty '84, Chip Gercken '85 P'17 P'22, Charles Spadafore '85 and Ray Wood '88. Geraghty, a 2002 inductee into the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame, is one of the top middle distance runners in program history. He ranked second only to former NCAA champion Thomas McLean in both the outdoor 400 meters (47.50) and 800 meters (1:49.84). Indoors, Geraghty graduated as the school record-holder in the 400 meters (49.01) and 500 meters (1:02.34). He was also second to McLean in the indoor 800m (1:51.77). Geraghty also graduated with school records in the outdoor 4x800m relay (7:31.84) and the outdoor distance medley relay (9:54.04). Geraghty was an extremely versatile runner who also helped set a then-school record in the outdoor 4x100 relay and also ran what was then the second-fastest time in school history in the 200-meter dash. Geraghty won seven total ECC championships, and he competed in the NCAA Indoor Championships in 1982 and 1984. Gercken won an ECC gold medal in 1984 with the 4x100m relay. Spadafore won three ECC gold medals in the long jump -- one indoors and two outdoors -- and he also won league titles with the 4x100m relay and the DMR. He is the former school record-holder in the long jump and was the 1985 ECC Scholar-Athlete of the Year for outdoor track and field. Wood was a two-time ECC champion in the 440m, and he also captured an All-East citation with the DMR as a senior.  Â
1990s
The decade of the '90s started with a transition to a new conference. Bucknell East Coast Conference championships both indoors and outdoors in 1990, and then won the inaugural Patriot League crowns both indoors and outdoors in 1991. The first PL outdoor meet was held here at Christy Mathewson-Memorial Stadium, and then the Bison followed with two more indoor titles in 1992 and 1993. We have six outstanding alumni back with us for this episode: Paul Austin '91, James Heizman '96, Brian Torres '98, Ron Hess '00, Dave Pomfret '00 and Brian Schiding '00. Heizman, Hess and Pomfret are all members of the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame. Austin was a two-sport star who also played on the offensive line for the Bison football team. He won indoor conference titles in both the ECC and Patriot League in the 35-pound weight throw, and he added a gold medal in the shot put in the very first PL Indoor Championships in 1991. Later that spring, he swept the hammer, shot and discus at the PL outdoor meet, and he graduated with the school records in the weight throw and hammer throw. Heizman in 1996 became Bucknell's first All-American in 14 years when he placed 13th in the hammer throw at the NCAA Championships, and in 2004 he placed fifth in the hammer at the U.S. Olympic Trials. Heizman won a Patriot League title in the discus throw and set school records in the hammer and 35-point weight. Torres was an outstanding middle distance runner at Bucknell. He was a five-time Patriot League champion, including three gold medals with the 4x800m relay and two in the open 800m. Hess was an outstanding distance runner who won Patriot League Performer of the Meet honors three times during his career and graduated with 10 career conference gold medals. He was also a two-time All-Patriot League performer in cross country, helping the Bison to team titles in 1997, 1998 and 1999. Hess captured four Patriot League indoor titles, including three in the mile (1998-2000) and one in the 1000m run in 1999. He added two more Patriot League outdoor titles, winning the 800m in 1999 and 2000. Hess was also a two-time Academic All-American (1999 and 2000) and five-time Patriot League Scholar-Athlete selection during his career (three times for indoor track and twice for outdoor track). Hess received the league's highest academic honor when he was tabbed Patriot League Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year for all sports in 1999-2000. He was a member of Patriot League 25th Anniversary Team and the Patriot League All-Decade Team for track & field. Pomfret pulled off the rare double of claiming conference championships in the pole vault and javelin throw. He claimed indoor gold medals in the pole vault in 1998, 1999 and 2000, and then came back in the spring to pick up outdoor titles in the javelin in each of those years. Pomfret was the 2000 Patriot League Indoor Field Athlete of the Meet after crushing the school record in the pole vault by clearing 17 feet, 3 inches. Pomfret also graduated with the outdoor pole vault record (16-3), and his top javelin throw of 209-4 ranked third at graduation. Schiding captured Patriot League gold medals in the long jump in both 1999 and 2000, and in the triple jump in 2000. He graduated with the school record in the indoor long jump.Â
2000s
In 2001, the Bison family mourned the loss of head coach Art Gulden, and we welcomed Kevin Donner as the program's new mentor. Fortunately the program did not skip a beat, and more championships and record-setting performances followed. Four stars of the 2000s join Coach Kevin Donner on today's panel. We are very pleased to welcome David Gabriel '02, Noel Powell '04, Kerry Boyle '09 and Kyle Anthony '10. Gabriel was an outstanding sprinter in the early part of the decade. He won Patriot League titles in the indoor 200m in 2001, as well as the outdoor 200m (1999), 100m (2001) and 4x100m relay (2002). He formerly held school records in the outdoor 200m and 4x100m relay. Powell, a 2018 Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame inductee, piled up championship points for the Bison as a record-setting jumper and sprinter. Powell won six Patriot League gold medals, four outdoors and two indoors, and was a four-time All-East honoree and a three-time NCAA Regionals qualifier. Powell dominated the 2002 Patriot League Outdoor Championships, winning the 100-meter dash, the 200-meter dash, the long jump, and the 4x100-meter relay en route to Track Athlete of the Meet honors. He won the long jump and 100-meter dash again in 2003, and he also won back-to-back Patriot League indoor long jump titles. Powell set long-standing Bucknell records in the 100-meter dash (10.52) and indoor (25-0) and outdoor (24-10 ½) long jumps, and he also graduated with the school record in the 200-meter dash and 4x100 relay. Powell earned the Christy Mathewson Award as the top athlete in the Class of 2004. Boyle won four individual gold medals at Patriot League Championships. He captured three indoors -- two in the 400m and one in the 200m -- and another in the outdoor 400m. He graduated with school records in the 200m, 300m, 400m, 500m, 4x400m relay and sprint medley relay. Anthony was a standout horizontal jumper and was one of the stars of Bucknell's 2010 Patriot League championship team. Indoors, he won three league titles in the triple jump and was named the 2007 PL Rookie of the Meet. Outdoors, he earned two league titles in the triple jump and one in the long jump. He was once again the 2007 PL Rookie of the Meet at the outdoor championships, and as a senior he was named PL Field Athlete of the Meet.Â
2010s
We start our look back with the most recent era of the 2010s, when the Bison captured four straight Patriot League team titles from 2010-13. Today we catch up with five incredible athletes from that decade: Drew Fitzgerald '11, Rob Arent '12, Justin Hicks '13, Christian Lupica '15 and Billy Melchionni '19. Fitzgerald was a tremendous jumper for the Bison. He won the high jump, was runner-up in the pole vault and seventh in the long jump at the 2009 Patriot League Indoor Championships, and was later named Field Athlete of the Meet. He was an NCAA Regional qualifier in both the high jump and pole vault, and he graduated with the school record in the high jump at 6-10 3/4. Arent captured nine Patriot League individual gold medals, three indoors and six outdoors, en route to the Christy Mathewson Award as the top athlete in his class. Arent was a three-time league champion in the 400-meter hurdles and won the open 400 twice indoors and twice outdoors. He remains Bucknell's school-record holder in the outdoor 400m hurdles and indoor 400m dash, and he also graduated with the school mark in the 100m hurdles (now third). Hicks was an outstanding sprinter for the Bison, winning a total of eight Patriot League gold medals indoors and outdoors, including two each in the 60 and 100-meter dashes. He graduated with school records in the outdoor 200m and 4x100m relay as well as the indoor 60m, and he now ranks second in each of those events. He is also second to Hall-of-Famer Noel Powell in the 100m. Lupica was a two-time Patriot League champion in the 60m hurdles indoors, and he captured four more outdoor golds, including two in the 110m hurdles. He still holds the school records in both the 60m and 110m high hurdles, and he was selected as the 2014 outdoor PL Track Athlete of the Meet. Also a Christy Mathewson Award winner, Lupica also helped set a number of school records in relays. Melchionni was another blazer on the track, and another Christy Mathewson Award winner. He won four PL gold medals outdoors, including two in the 400m, and was named the PL Track Athlete of the Meet in both 2017 and 2018. Melchionni broke Bucknell indoor records in the 200m and 300m indoors and in the 200m outdoors.Â
Bromley Smith, Class of 1895, became the first trainer of track and field athletes, and the sport began to pick up steam. Bucknell sent a relay team to the Penn Relays Carnival in 1986, which was the second year for that historic meet. The Bucknell unit finished in last place in its first trip to the brand new Franklin Field, but in each of the next two years Bucknell finished first. In 1899, Bucknell added a dual meet against Penn State, and the program was off and running, so to speak. Bucknell won four Central Pennsylvania Track Conference championships in the 1920s and captured the MAC title in 1936.Â
Bucknell did not participate in any track meets in 1943-46 during the World War II era, but when the program resumed in 1947 it began competing at the Middle Atlantic Championships, in addition to Penn Relays and a handful of duals. The Bison achieved modest success over the next several decades until an explosion in the 1970s. The legendary Art Gulden came on board in the summer of 1970, and in just his third season Bucknell went undefeated (8-0) in dual meets. By 1975 the Bison were winning their first conference championship in the brand new East Coast Conference, and the program was producing some of the best track and field athletes in the nation.Â
Of course none were better than the great Thomas McLean, who won the NCAA championship in the 800 meters in 1976, which remains Bucknell's only individual national title. McLean also finished third in the 800 in 1975 and fourth in 1977. By the late 1970s, Gulden had ramped up the Bucknell cross country team into a national power, and many of those stars also became All-Americans in track, such as George Buckheit, Rick Sayre and Bill Reifsnyder.Â
The Bison dominated the East Coast Conference, winning 11 indoor and 10 outdoor team championships over a 15-year span, and they have captured another nine team crowns since the inception of the Patriot League in 1990. All told, Bucknell's men's track and field teams have won 35 league titles across four different conferences, and the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame is littered with stars from many of those championship teams.Â
Over the course of this week, head coach Kevin Donner will be joined by many of the great athletes of the distant and recent past who helped shape the history of the Bison men's track and field program. Special thanks to Geisinger for sponsoring the series.
1970s
The 1970s were a transformative era for the Bison men's track & field program, as Art Gulden's squad began to regularly win championships and produce All-Americans, and even a national champion in Thomas McLean. Four alumni join us on today's chat: Doug Nauman '73, Bill Gravely '77, Robert Scott '77 and Ted Williamson '77. Nauman was a terrific two-way athlete in football and track and field, and he was inducted into the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame in 1984. Nauman won the Middle Atlantic Conference title in the javelin throw in 1973, and his top mark of 231-7 was the school record under the old javelin specs. On the gridiron, Nauman was an All-Pennsylvania, All-East and Academic All-America defensive tackle, and he won the Christy Mathewson Award as the top athlete in his class. Gravely is another two-sport Hall-of-Famer. He played two seasons of basketball under coach Jim Valvano, and he was also one of the top horizontal jumpers in school history. In fact, his school record in the triple jump still holds up 45 years later. Gravely won a couple of East Coast Conference titles and All-East citations in the triple jump. Scott was the ECC gold medalist in both the 100m and 220m in 1976. Williamson was an All-American as part of the 4x880m relay in 1976. He won two ECC gold medals in the mile relay in 1976 and 1977, and he helped set school records in the 4x800m and sprint medley relays. Those marks still rank second today.
1980s
Bucknell men's track and field completely ruled the East Coast Conference under Art Gulden in the decade of the 1980s. The Bison won nine of the 10 ECC Indoor Championships and six of the 10 outdoor titles, with the other four second-place efforts. Throw in a perfect 10 of 10 ECC titles in cross country, and this has to be considered one of the most dominant eras in any sport in Bison Athletics history. Today four alumni from the 1980s join us for a look back at this successful period: Mike Geraghty '84, Chip Gercken '85 P'17 P'22, Charles Spadafore '85 and Ray Wood '88. Geraghty, a 2002 inductee into the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame, is one of the top middle distance runners in program history. He ranked second only to former NCAA champion Thomas McLean in both the outdoor 400 meters (47.50) and 800 meters (1:49.84). Indoors, Geraghty graduated as the school record-holder in the 400 meters (49.01) and 500 meters (1:02.34). He was also second to McLean in the indoor 800m (1:51.77). Geraghty also graduated with school records in the outdoor 4x800m relay (7:31.84) and the outdoor distance medley relay (9:54.04). Geraghty was an extremely versatile runner who also helped set a then-school record in the outdoor 4x100 relay and also ran what was then the second-fastest time in school history in the 200-meter dash. Geraghty won seven total ECC championships, and he competed in the NCAA Indoor Championships in 1982 and 1984. Gercken won an ECC gold medal in 1984 with the 4x100m relay. Spadafore won three ECC gold medals in the long jump -- one indoors and two outdoors -- and he also won league titles with the 4x100m relay and the DMR. He is the former school record-holder in the long jump and was the 1985 ECC Scholar-Athlete of the Year for outdoor track and field. Wood was a two-time ECC champion in the 440m, and he also captured an All-East citation with the DMR as a senior.  Â
1990s
The decade of the '90s started with a transition to a new conference. Bucknell East Coast Conference championships both indoors and outdoors in 1990, and then won the inaugural Patriot League crowns both indoors and outdoors in 1991. The first PL outdoor meet was held here at Christy Mathewson-Memorial Stadium, and then the Bison followed with two more indoor titles in 1992 and 1993. We have six outstanding alumni back with us for this episode: Paul Austin '91, James Heizman '96, Brian Torres '98, Ron Hess '00, Dave Pomfret '00 and Brian Schiding '00. Heizman, Hess and Pomfret are all members of the Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame. Austin was a two-sport star who also played on the offensive line for the Bison football team. He won indoor conference titles in both the ECC and Patriot League in the 35-pound weight throw, and he added a gold medal in the shot put in the very first PL Indoor Championships in 1991. Later that spring, he swept the hammer, shot and discus at the PL outdoor meet, and he graduated with the school records in the weight throw and hammer throw. Heizman in 1996 became Bucknell's first All-American in 14 years when he placed 13th in the hammer throw at the NCAA Championships, and in 2004 he placed fifth in the hammer at the U.S. Olympic Trials. Heizman won a Patriot League title in the discus throw and set school records in the hammer and 35-point weight. Torres was an outstanding middle distance runner at Bucknell. He was a five-time Patriot League champion, including three gold medals with the 4x800m relay and two in the open 800m. Hess was an outstanding distance runner who won Patriot League Performer of the Meet honors three times during his career and graduated with 10 career conference gold medals. He was also a two-time All-Patriot League performer in cross country, helping the Bison to team titles in 1997, 1998 and 1999. Hess captured four Patriot League indoor titles, including three in the mile (1998-2000) and one in the 1000m run in 1999. He added two more Patriot League outdoor titles, winning the 800m in 1999 and 2000. Hess was also a two-time Academic All-American (1999 and 2000) and five-time Patriot League Scholar-Athlete selection during his career (three times for indoor track and twice for outdoor track). Hess received the league's highest academic honor when he was tabbed Patriot League Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year for all sports in 1999-2000. He was a member of Patriot League 25th Anniversary Team and the Patriot League All-Decade Team for track & field. Pomfret pulled off the rare double of claiming conference championships in the pole vault and javelin throw. He claimed indoor gold medals in the pole vault in 1998, 1999 and 2000, and then came back in the spring to pick up outdoor titles in the javelin in each of those years. Pomfret was the 2000 Patriot League Indoor Field Athlete of the Meet after crushing the school record in the pole vault by clearing 17 feet, 3 inches. Pomfret also graduated with the outdoor pole vault record (16-3), and his top javelin throw of 209-4 ranked third at graduation. Schiding captured Patriot League gold medals in the long jump in both 1999 and 2000, and in the triple jump in 2000. He graduated with the school record in the indoor long jump.Â
2000s
In 2001, the Bison family mourned the loss of head coach Art Gulden, and we welcomed Kevin Donner as the program's new mentor. Fortunately the program did not skip a beat, and more championships and record-setting performances followed. Four stars of the 2000s join Coach Kevin Donner on today's panel. We are very pleased to welcome David Gabriel '02, Noel Powell '04, Kerry Boyle '09 and Kyle Anthony '10. Gabriel was an outstanding sprinter in the early part of the decade. He won Patriot League titles in the indoor 200m in 2001, as well as the outdoor 200m (1999), 100m (2001) and 4x100m relay (2002). He formerly held school records in the outdoor 200m and 4x100m relay. Powell, a 2018 Bucknell Athletics Hall of Fame inductee, piled up championship points for the Bison as a record-setting jumper and sprinter. Powell won six Patriot League gold medals, four outdoors and two indoors, and was a four-time All-East honoree and a three-time NCAA Regionals qualifier. Powell dominated the 2002 Patriot League Outdoor Championships, winning the 100-meter dash, the 200-meter dash, the long jump, and the 4x100-meter relay en route to Track Athlete of the Meet honors. He won the long jump and 100-meter dash again in 2003, and he also won back-to-back Patriot League indoor long jump titles. Powell set long-standing Bucknell records in the 100-meter dash (10.52) and indoor (25-0) and outdoor (24-10 ½) long jumps, and he also graduated with the school record in the 200-meter dash and 4x100 relay. Powell earned the Christy Mathewson Award as the top athlete in the Class of 2004. Boyle won four individual gold medals at Patriot League Championships. He captured three indoors -- two in the 400m and one in the 200m -- and another in the outdoor 400m. He graduated with school records in the 200m, 300m, 400m, 500m, 4x400m relay and sprint medley relay. Anthony was a standout horizontal jumper and was one of the stars of Bucknell's 2010 Patriot League championship team. Indoors, he won three league titles in the triple jump and was named the 2007 PL Rookie of the Meet. Outdoors, he earned two league titles in the triple jump and one in the long jump. He was once again the 2007 PL Rookie of the Meet at the outdoor championships, and as a senior he was named PL Field Athlete of the Meet.Â
2010s
We start our look back with the most recent era of the 2010s, when the Bison captured four straight Patriot League team titles from 2010-13. Today we catch up with five incredible athletes from that decade: Drew Fitzgerald '11, Rob Arent '12, Justin Hicks '13, Christian Lupica '15 and Billy Melchionni '19. Fitzgerald was a tremendous jumper for the Bison. He won the high jump, was runner-up in the pole vault and seventh in the long jump at the 2009 Patriot League Indoor Championships, and was later named Field Athlete of the Meet. He was an NCAA Regional qualifier in both the high jump and pole vault, and he graduated with the school record in the high jump at 6-10 3/4. Arent captured nine Patriot League individual gold medals, three indoors and six outdoors, en route to the Christy Mathewson Award as the top athlete in his class. Arent was a three-time league champion in the 400-meter hurdles and won the open 400 twice indoors and twice outdoors. He remains Bucknell's school-record holder in the outdoor 400m hurdles and indoor 400m dash, and he also graduated with the school mark in the 100m hurdles (now third). Hicks was an outstanding sprinter for the Bison, winning a total of eight Patriot League gold medals indoors and outdoors, including two each in the 60 and 100-meter dashes. He graduated with school records in the outdoor 200m and 4x100m relay as well as the indoor 60m, and he now ranks second in each of those events. He is also second to Hall-of-Famer Noel Powell in the 100m. Lupica was a two-time Patriot League champion in the 60m hurdles indoors, and he captured four more outdoor golds, including two in the 110m hurdles. He still holds the school records in both the 60m and 110m high hurdles, and he was selected as the 2014 outdoor PL Track Athlete of the Meet. Also a Christy Mathewson Award winner, Lupica also helped set a number of school records in relays. Melchionni was another blazer on the track, and another Christy Mathewson Award winner. He won four PL gold medals outdoors, including two in the 400m, and was named the PL Track Athlete of the Meet in both 2017 and 2018. Melchionni broke Bucknell indoor records in the 200m and 300m indoors and in the 200m outdoors.Â
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Players Mentioned
Bucknell Men's Basketball Post Game: Patriot League Tournament 1st Round vs Navy
Wednesday, March 04
In The Herd: Patriot League Opening Round Game Preview And Achile Spadone Feature
Monday, March 02
In The Herd: EIWA Championships Preview And Dillon Bechtold Feature
Monday, March 02
ECAC OPEN SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS (3/01/26 - Sunday Finals Session)
Monday, March 02




