NEW ORLEANS, La. – With the 2024-25 indoor season in the books, five Crimson won northeast regional awards from the United States Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association.
Harvard swept the honors on the women's side, as senior
Victoria Bossong is the Northeast Women's Track Athlete of the Year and senior
Izzy Goudros is the Northeast Women's Field Athlete of the Year. For a third straight season, senior
Kenneth Ikeji is the Northeast Men's Field Athlete of the Year. Two Crimson coaches also earned regional recognition from the USTFCCCA.
Jason Saretsky, The William W. "Bill" McCurdy Director of Track and Field/Cross Country, is the Northeast Women's Head Coach of the Year, as assistant coach
Kebba Tolbert is the Northeast Women's Assistant Coach of the Year.
One of the nation's top middle-distance athletes, Bossong proved herself throughout the 2024-25 indoor season. With a second place finish in the women's 800m at the 2025 NCAA Indoor, Bossong earned All-America First Team honors for the first time in her Crimson career. A native of Cumberland Foreside, Maine, Bossong also picked up All-America First Team status in the women's 4x400m relay, anchoring a Harvard relay team that finished in sixth place at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships.
Goudros was sensational in the pentathlon throughout the 2024-25 season. A two-time All-America Second Team honoree in the pentathlon in her collegiate career,Goudros capped her Harvard career with a first team All-America performance in the event at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships, finishing in sixth with 4305 points. Earlier in the season, Goudros broke the Ivy League record in the pentathlon with 4313 points at the Crimson Elite.
A two-time NCAA national champion, Ikeji took All-America First Team status in the men's weight throw for a second consecutive campaign, finishing in sixth with a season-best throw of 24.02m (78' 9.75"). At the 2025 Ivy League Heptagonal Indoor Championships, Ikeji won his third-straight Ivy League title in the men's weight throw, becoming only the fourth student-athlete in meet history to win three consecutive men's weight throw titles.
Saretsky oversaw one of the most successful seasons in the history of the Crimson's women's track & field program. 11 Crimson garnered All-America First Team honors, a mark that led the nation this season. Saretsky led Harvard to an 11
th place finish with 18 points at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships, both new all-time program highs at the meet.
One of the top assistant coaches in the conference, Tolbert led his student-athletes to new heights this indoor season. Bossong, Goudros and senior
Chloe Fair all earned multiple All-America honors with Tolbert's guidance, as his event group accounted for 89 out of the Crimson's 160 points at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships.
Harvard begins the outdoor season this weekend, taking part in the Ron & Sharlene Allice Trojan Invitational in Los Angeles, California.
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