Monday, December 15

Field athletes lead Bruins in strong second-day showing


Tolson gets first in shot put; Jones takes champion's run

  MARY CIECEK/Daily Bruin Senior Staff Senior
Christina Tolson competes in the shot put at the
NCAA Championships. She won the event with a throw of 57-feet-3/4
inches.

By Christina Teller
Daily Bruin Senior Staff

EUGENE, Ore. “”mdash; In the unpredictable sport that is track
and field, it is the field events that continue to be the sure
thing for the UCLA women’s team as the Bruins scored in both
field events so far at the 2001 NCAA Championships.

In day two of competition Thursday, senior Christina Tolson
stepped up and took first in the shot put with her throw of
57-feet-3/4 inches. USC’s Cynthia Ademiluiy took third in the
event at 55-1/4. Tolson advanced to the finals by placing first in
the preliminary heats and earned her first outdoor title with her
first throw in the finals.

“I knew that this was my year,” said Tolson, who
finished fifth at last year’s meet. “I had to take a
break from track after last year’s NCAAs, and I came back
knowing I could do it this year.”

After the event ended, Tolson received a congratulatory hug from
Bruin alumna Seilala Sua (’00), the two-time shot put
(1999-00) and the four-time discus (1997-00) champion at the NCAA
outdoors.

Tolson is the seventh woman in NCAA history to win both the
indoor and outdoor shot put titles in the same year, and she brings
home the third straight shot put title for the Bruins.

“I’m so happy for her,” UCLA Coach Jeanette
Bolden said. “She’s led the team all year. She’s
grace under pressure.

“Art (Venegas) has done a great job continuing to keep
them focused and letting them know that they are the anchor of the
team,” Bolden said of the UCLA throwing coach’s
champions.

The day of senior success continued as senior Shakedia Jones
advanced to the 100-meter semifinal with the fastest time of the
day at 11.11 seconds.

Jones won her heat and finished one-tenth of a second faster
than two-time defending champion Angela Williams of USC. Jones, the
anchor of the UCLA 4 x 100m relay team, has been suffering from
shin splints since the indoor season. She sees the disqualification
during the 4 x 100m preliminary run Wednesday for dropping the
baton as a blessing in disguise, as she can now concentrate only on
the open 100m.

Also running their fastest this season was the 4 x 400m relay
team of freshman Adia McKinnon, freshman Sheena Johnson, junior
Ysanne Williams and senior Michelle Perry. The foursome finished in
3 minutes, 30.54 seconds and will advance to the finals on Saturday
along with the other women’s title favorites, USC and South
Carolina.

McKinnon led off with an explosive leg of 52.9, reaching the
hand-off point before any of her competitors. Johnson and Williams
maintained a substantial lead, but on the final lap LSU’s
Ronetta Smith and South Carolina’s Demetria Washington gained
on Perry, and the Bruins finished third in the heat. UCLA’s
time was three-tenths of a second faster than USC’s.

“It’s a confidence booster because we were able to
bounce back today after not doing well yesterday,” Johnson
said.

Individual competition ended Thursday for freshman Sani Roseby,
who did not advance to the finals of the 100m hurdles, and
McKinnon, who did not advance to the 400m finals. They finished
with times of 13.77 and 53.67, respectively.

The Bruins continue competition today with Perry opening the
heptathlon with the 100m hurdles, high jump, shot put and 200m
events. Jones will run in the semis of the 100m, while Williams and
freshman Lena Nilsson will compete in the 800m finals. Senior Erika
Hoernig and juniors Heather Sickler and Tracy O’Hara, the
defending champion, will compete in the pole vault.


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