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Dominance on the Track
At the 2005 NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships, the men’s 4x400-meter relay team of Reggie Dardar, Kelly Willie, Bennie Brazell and Xavier Carter set a new collegiate record of 2 minutes, 59.59 seconds to win its third outdoor national title in the event. USC broke the record with a 2:59.00 in 2018
Dominance
ON THE TRACK
With 32 national championships in the record books, LSU has created the most balanced track and field program in the nation. The Lady Tigers have set a standard in women’s sports that may never be matched. Between 1987 and 1997, the Lady Tigers won an unprecedented 11 consecutive outdoor national championships, a streak that stands as the benchmark of excellence in women’s collegiate athletics to this day. NCAA Champions
Their streak is impressive even when considering men’s sports. The lone streak that betters the LSU women is the 12-straight indoor championships won by the Arkansas men’s track and field team from 1984-95.
However, when considering the dominance of the Lady Tiger track program in just the parameters of women’s track and field, there is no other team in the history of the sport that can compare. Since the inception of the women’s NCAA Track & Field Championships in 1982, the Lady Tigers have won 14 (1987-97, 2000, 2003, 2008) of the 40 outdoor championships contested, and have finished second at three additional contests (1985, 2004, 2007). The Lady Tigers scored an average of 74.7 points a year during their run of 11-straight titles and dominated the field in 1993 and 1994, doubling the team points scored by the respective second-place finishers in both seasons.
Not to be overshadowed by the accomplishments of the Lady Tigers, LSU’s total track and field program has made NCAA history several times as well. In 1989, both the men’s and women’s programs won NCAA Outdoor titles, marking the first time in history that one school claimed both the men’s and women’s outdoor national championships during the same season. It went on to repeat the feat in 1990, again rewriting NCAA track and field history. In 2004, LSU once again became the first school to ever sweep both the men’s and women’s national crowns at the NCAA Indoor Championships.
In addition to the program’s team success, former LSU great Xavier Carter made history at the 2006 NCAA Outdoor Championships by becoming the first collegiate athlete since Ohio State’s Jesse Owens in 1936 to win four individual titles at a single NCAA meet. Carter won titles in the 100 meters, 400 meters, 4x100-meter relay and 4x400-meter relay.
The Tigers got back to the top in 2021 on the men’s side by winning the fifth men’s outdoor national title in program history. LSU won six event titles at the meet, the second most ever, in one of the most dominant showings in meet history.
With the 2022 season now underway, the Tigers and Lady Tigers are poised to challenge for SEC and NCAA titles once again during both the indoor and outdoor seasons. Head coach Dennis Shaver will lead two of the nation’s more talented squads as they look to carry the torch for this storied LSU program.
RELAY LEGACY
(Above) Fitzroy Dunkley, Quincy Downing, Vernon Norwood and Cyril Grayson ended the 2015 season as NCAA Outdoor Champions in the men’s 4x400-meter relay after running 3 minutes, 1.96 seconds in the national final. Norwood also swept NCAA Indoor and NCAA Outdoor titles in the 400 meters. (Above, Right) The Lady Tigers wrapped up the 2007 NCAA Outdoor Championships with a bang by successfully defending their national title in the 4x400 relay. Nickiesha Wilson, Cynetheia Rooks, LaTavia Thomas and Deonna Lawrence ran 3:28.07 to win it. LSU has won a total of 42 NCAA relay titles in the 4x100 and 4x400 relays between the men’s and women’s teams.