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Kansas Relays

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kansas Relays
Tournament information
Location6100 Rock Chalk Drive
Lawrence, Kansas
DatesThird Thursday in April–Third Saturday in April
Established1923
AdministratorUniversity of Kansas
FormatTrack and field

TheKansas Relays are a three-day track meet every April, held at theUniversity of Kansas inLawrence, Kansas. Since 1923, the Kansas Relays have attracted runners, throwers, and jumpers from all over the United States of America, bringing in athletes ranging fromOlympians to high-schoolers. Olympians such asMarion Jones andMaurice Greene compete in the Gold Zone portion of the meet, which attracts thousands of spectators every year.[1] Competitors have also brokenworld records at the meet. The 2004 Olympic champion,Justin Gatlin, was a prominent athlete to fail adoping test at the Kansas Relays.

History

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The Kansas relays were founded byJohn H. Outland, theheadfootballcoach at the University of Kansas, in 1923. He got the idea for the Kansas Relays from thePenn Relays. The Penn Relays are held at theUniversity of Pennsylvania and is the oldest and largest track meet in the United States. Outland attended the University of Pennsylvania formedical school and where he first saw the Penn relays. John Outland thought that there should be an event like the Penn relays in Kansas so in 1920 he approached Kansasbasketball coach Forrest Clare Allen, also known asPhog Allen, who was also theathletic director, football and basketball coach at the University of Kansas. Three years later in 1923 the Kansas relays were founded.[2]

More than 600 athletes participated in the 1st annual Kansas relays on April 20, 1923.[3] During the relays early years the meet featured collegiate athletes in track and field such asTom Poor,Ed Weir, andTom Churchill were some of the athletes who later competed in the Olympics.[1][3] Tom Poor was the first to win the high jump event in Kansas Relays, with a jump of six feet and a quarter inch.[3] He later went on to place fourth in the 1924 Olympics. Ed Weir set a world record for the 120 meter high hurdles at the Kansas Relays in 1926. With world-class athletes competing in the relays, the first decade of the relays paved the way for the Kansas Relays to be a major event in the track and field event in the Mid-West.

1962 was the first year that female athletes were able to compete in the Kansas Relays and by 1976 women were competing in a number of different events.[3] In 1996 a new event was added for women, thepole vault.Stacy Dragila was the first women to win this event and set an American record at the Kansas Relays. In 1997 the Kansas Relays added the3000 m steeplechase to the women's events.

The Kansas Relays are held normally every year, but were cancelled in 1943, 1944, and 1945 because of World War II; in 1998 and 1999 because Memorial Stadium was being renovated;[3] and in 2020, 2021, and 2022 because of issues presented by theCOVID-19 pandemic. The last day of the relays was also cancelled in 2022 because of severe weather.[1]

The Gold Zone

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In 2005, the Kansas Relays added a new section: the Gold Zone. The Gold Zone was created because the relays started to lose the interest of spectators and athletes. Tim Weaver, then the meet director, created the Gold Zone to bring in more interest for the Relays[1] and create a three-hour meet-within-a-meet. The Gold Zone was a part of the meet that features some of the best athletes in track and field in the top events. 24,000 spectators came to see former American Olympians, world champions, and top NCAA athletes compete in various events in the first Gold Zone.[4] The events included in the Gold Zone include finals for all the dashes (100m, 400m, hurdles, etc.), 4 × 100 meter relay, 4 × 400 meter relay, the high jump, pole vault, the women's 3000 meter steeplechase and the men's one mile run.[5] Marion Jones, Maurice Greene,Jearl Miles Clark,Amy Acuff, andNick Hysong are some of the Olympians and world record holders that have competed in the Gold Zone. Gold Zone II drew over 26,000 fans in 2006 making the track meet one of the top ten largest in the world.

Justin Gatlin doping test

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Olympic gold medalist in the 100 meterJustin Gatlin tested positive fortestosterone at the Kansas Relays 2006. On April 22, 2006, Justin competed with his teammates, Sprint Capitol, in the 4 × 100 meter race at the Kansas Relays. Justin and his team took first place with a time of 38.16 seconds.[6]

On July 29, 2006, Justin Gatlin announced to the media that he had tested positive for high levels of testosterone at the Kansas Relays. Justin Gatlin was facing a lifetime ban from track and field, because he had already tested positive for anamphetamine 2001 at the Junior Olympics. It was determined that the amphetamine came from a prescription he had been taking for years.[7] Justin avoided the lifetime ban by cooperating with doping authorities. On December 31, 2007, it was announced that Gatlin would be banned from track for four years, which made him ineligible to compete in the2008 Beijing Summer Olympics.[8]

Meet records

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Men

[edit]
Men's meeting records of the Kansas Relays
EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRef.
100 m9.95(+0.8 m/s)Ivory Williams United States17 April 2010[9]
200 m20.15James Mallard United States19 April 1980
400 m45.12Devon Morris Jamaica19 April 1986
800 m1:48.22Viktors Lācis Latvia15 April 2000
Wes Santee1500 m3:38.62Rick Wohlhuter United States17 April 1976
Glenn CunninghamMile3:54.7Jim Ryun United States15 April 1967
5000 m13:40.35Kipsubai Koskei Kenya19 April 1980
10,000 m28:56.9Simon Kilili United States15 April 1978
110 m hurdles13.26Antwon Hicks United States19 April 2008
400 m hurdles48.20Bershawn Jackson United States21 April 2012
3000 m steeplechase8:33.7Randy Smith United States17 April 1976
High jump2.31 m (7 ft 6 in)Hollis Conway United States18 April 1987
Pole vault5.91 m (19 ft 4 in)Joe Dial United States16 April 1983
Long jump8.14 m (26 ft 8 in)Kenny Harrison United States18 April 1987
Triple jump17.04 m (55 ft 10 in)Kenny Harrison United States13 April 1986
Shot put22.67 m (74 ft 4 in)Kevin Toth United States19 April 2003
Discus throw67.13 m (220 ft 2 in)Mason Finley United States19 April 2019[10]
Hammer throw78.04 m (256 ft 0 in)Gleb Dudarev Belarus20 April 2018[11]
Javelin throw81.96 m (268 ft 10 in)Scott Russell Canada22 April 2011[12]
Decathlon8380 ptsSteve Fritz United States1997
100mLong jumpShot putHigh jump400m110m HDiscusPole vaultJavelin1500m
4 × 100 m relay38.16Sprint Capitol:
Dwight Thomas
Rodney Martin
Shawn Crawford
Justin Gatlin

 Jamaica
 United States
 United States
 United States
22 April 2006
4 × 200 m relay1:21.55Philadelphia Pioneers:
Steve Riddick
Fred Taylor
Herman Frazier
Tony Darden

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
18 April 1980
4 × 400 m relay3:03.67Philadelphia Pioneers:
Tim Dale
Fred Taylor
Herman Frazier
Tony Darden

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
19 April 1980
4 × 800 m relay7:21.2Oklahoma State:
Jim Metcalf
John Perry
Tom Von Ruden
Dave Perry

 United States
17 April 1965
Distance medley relay9:20.10University of Arkansas:
Reuben Reina
Charles Williams
Robert Bradley
Joe Falcon

 United States
 United States
 United States
 United States
15 April 1989
4 × 110m Shuttle hurdles relay57.69University of Nebraska–Lincoln:
David Davis
Nenad Lončar
Courtney Jones
Andy Nelson

 United States
 Serbia
 United States
 United States
19 April 2003

Women

[edit]
Women's meeting records of the Kansas Relays
EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRef.
100 m11.04Allyson Felix United States22 April 2006[13]
200 m22.32(+0.9 m/s)Veronica Campbell Brown Jamaica17 April 2010[14]
400 m51.19Mary Wineberg United States21 April 2007[13]
800 m2:01.30LeAnn Warren United States18 April 1981
1500 m4:08.94Nadezhda Ralldugina Soviet Union16 April 1983
5000 m15:42.76Sharon Lokedi United States20 April 2018
10,000 m34:41.33Amber Anderson United States15 April 1995
100 m hurdles12.72Nichole Denby United States21 April 2007[13]
400 m hurdles55.67Nawal El Moutawakel Morocco21 April 1984
3000 m steeplechase10:07.30Trina Cox United States21 April 2007
High jump1.89 m (6 ft2+14 in)Julieanne Broughton United States21 April 1990[13]
Pole vault4.51 m (14 ft9+12 in)Brynn King United States18 April 2024[15]
Long jump6.68 m (21 ft10+34 in)Elva Goulbourne Jamaica19 April 2008
Triple jump14.88 m (48 ft9+34 in)Trecia Smith Jamaica20 April 2002
Shot put17.39 m (57 ft12 in)Kearsten Peoples United States21 April 2012
Discus throw60.94 m (199 ft 11 in)Penny Neer United States20 April 1991
Hammer throw69.66 m (228 ft 6 in)Amber Campbell United States20 April 2013
Javelin throw58.73 m (192 ft 8 in)Dana Olson United States17 April 1982
Heptathlon5740 ptsLiz Roehrig United States2008
100m HHigh jumpShot put200mLong jumpJavelin800m
4 × 100 m relay43.94University of Nebraska–Lincoln:
Janet Burke
Rhonda Blanford
Angela Thacker
Merlene Ottey

 Jamaica
 United States
 United States
 Jamaica
16 April 1983
4 × 200 m relay1:33.63Barton County CC:
Sonia Williams
Natalee Sterling
Mikessia Triplette
Aleen Bailey

 Antigua and Barbuda
 Jamaica
 United States
 Jamaica
21 April 2000
4 × 400 m relay3:31.87University of Kansas:
Denesha Morris
Paris Daniels
Shayla Wilson
Diamond Dixon

 Jamaica
 United States
 United States
 United States
21 April 2012
4 × 800 m relay8:46.62Villanova University:
Mary Ellen McGowan
Debbie Grant
Joanne Kehs
Veronica McIntosh
 United States21 April 1984
Distance medley relay11:32.61University of Michigan:
Jessica Kluge
Richelle Webb
Karen Harvey
Molly McClimon

 United States
 United States
 Canada
 United States
17 April 1993
4 × 100m Shuttle hurdles relay54.02University of Nebraska–Lincoln:20 April 2001

References

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General

Specific

  1. ^abcd"Kansas Relays History". www.kuathletics.com. 2006. Archived fromthe original on May 25, 2013.
  2. ^"Unforgettable Hawks". www.kusports.com.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^abcde"Kansas Relays History". www2.kusports.com. Archived fromthe original on September 28, 2022.
  4. ^"U.S. stars to headline GOLDZONE II at Kansas Relays". www.coolruning.com.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^"2005 Gold Zone". www.kusports.com.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^"Kansas Relays Results". KUJH online. April 21, 2006. RetrievedApril 21, 2006.
  7. ^"Sprinter Gatlin fails doping test".www.rediff.com. July 30, 2006. RetrievedJuly 30, 2006.
  8. ^"With four-year doping ban, Justin Gatlin won't be eligible to defend Olympic 100-meter title". www.encyclopedia.com. January 1, 2008.
  9. ^"Jamaican sets 200 record at Kansas Relays". www2.kusports.com. April 18, 2010. RetrievedMay 4, 2010.
  10. ^"Lawrence -KS- (United States), 17–20.4.2019 -Kansas Relays-".trackinsun.blogspot.com. April 20, 2019. Archived fromthe original on April 20, 2019. RetrievedApril 20, 2019.
  11. ^Chris Duderstadt (April 20, 2018)."Dudarev delivers record-breaking performance for KU in men's hammer throw".kusports.com. RetrievedApril 22, 2018.
  12. ^"Javelin Throw Results".athletic.net. April 23, 2011. RetrievedMay 18, 2021.
  13. ^abcd"Kansas Relays all-time records / LJWorld.com". Archived fromthe original on April 10, 2017.
  14. ^"Jamaican sets 200 record at Kansas Relays". www2.kusports.com. April 18, 2010. RetrievedMay 20, 2004.
  15. ^"Pole Vault Results".World Athletics. RetrievedMay 6, 2025.

External links

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Track and field competitions in the United States
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