TUCSON, Ariz. – Another record breaking performance highlighted Harvard track & field's final day at the Jim Click Shootout in Arizona.
After sophomore
Marta Amani set a new program record in the women's long jump on the opening day of the Jim Click Shootout, first-years
Harlow Tong, LeRoy Horton, Jordan Coleman and junior
Jonas Clarke joined forces to break the school record in the men's 4x100m relay. The quartet posted a time of 39.40 to take second place, surpassing the former record of 39.82 from last season.
HARVARD HIGHLIGHTS:
- The day started on the track with hurdles on the straightaway, as sophomore Simon Weiser ran a 14.28 for a fifth place finish in the men's 110m hurdles, a new personal-best. That mark ranks fourth all-time in school history.
- The Ivy League champion in the women's 60m hurdles during the indoor season, junior Fabiola Belibi finished in sixth with a time of 13.78.
- The Crimson produced a historic result in the men's 4x100m relay, as Tong, Horton, Coleman and Clarke combined to finish in second with a time of 39.40, a new school record.
- Junior Mfoniso Andrew, senior Chloe Fair, first-year Saige Forbes and first-year Ella Cooper ran the women's 4x100m relay for the Crimson, as the group posted a time of 45.34 to take sixth place. That mark ranks sixth all-time in school history.
- Two Crimson took spots in the top-10 in the men's 400m. First-Year Hudson Allain finished in eighth with a time of 47.94, as junior Justin Levy took 10th after running a 48.36.
- The women's 400m saw sophomore Sophia Gorriaran finish in sixth place with a collegiate career-best of 53.82. A native of Providence, Rhode Island, Gorriaran now ranks third all-time in the women's 400m in school history.
- Clarke's sixth place finish highlighted Harvard's involvement in the men's 100m dash, as the South Hadley, Massachusetts native ran the sprint in 10.44.
- In the women's 100m, Andrew finished in eighth place with a wind-aided time of 11.70. Forbes took 10th place with a time of 11.98.
- The NCAA runner-up in the indoor 800m at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships, senior Victoria Bossong won the women's 800m at the Jim Click Shootout with a time of 2:01.96.
- Senior Peter Fischer posted a personal-best time of 51.35 to place fourth in the men's 400m hurdle. That result is Fischer's personal-best, as he now ranks sixth all-time in program history.
- An NCAA qualifier in the women's 400m hurdles last year, Fair finished in second in the event at the Jim Click Shootout after running a 56.24.
- Four Crimson finished in the top-10 of the men's 200m dash. Clarke finished in fifth with a wind-aided time of 20.99, as first-year Liam Acevedo took sixth with a wind-aided 21.08. Tong finish ninth with a time of 21.24, as Coleman rounded out the top-10 in tenth after posting a wind-aided 21.27.
- Andrew finished in 10th in the women's 200m with a time of 23.85, a new personal-best and a mark that ranks fifth in school history.
- The action on the track ended with the 4x400m relays. On the men's side, Acevedo, Levy, first-year Hudson Allain and Fischer finished in third with a time of 3:14.32.
- Harvard fielded two squads in the women's 4x400m relay. Fair, Andrew, Gorriaran and Bossong took third with a time of 3:31.36, a mark that ranks third in school history. Amani, Cooper, Forbes and junior Jacklynn Okereke finished in seventh with a time of 3:45.95.
- Over on the field, senior Kenneth Ikeji made his outdoor season debut in the men's hammer throw, posting a mark of 72.96m (239'4") to take second.
- Two Crimson featured in the women's high jump, as sophomore Klara Barbic (1.64m/5'4.5") finished in third, while sophomore Lilly Hodge placed in a tie for fourth (1.64m/5'4.5").
- Sophomore Emilia Kolokotroni won the women's hammer throw, setting a new personal-best of 65.08m (213'6"), a mark that sits in second in school history. Junior Michaela Denson finished in fourth after throwing a personal-best 54.31m (178'2"), moving up to 10th all-time in school history.
- In the men's high jump, sophomore Tito Alofe won the event after clearing 2.15m (7'0.5").
- The men's pole vault saw first-year Philip Andreas Kubon clear 5.05m (16'6.75"), as he now ranks sixth all-time in school history.
UP NEXT:
Harvard travels to New Haven, Connecticut next weekend, joining forces with Yale to face Oxford and Cambridge in the famous HYOC dual meet.
For complete coverage of Harvard Track & Field, follow us on Twitter (@HarvardTFXC) and Instagram (@harvardtfxc).