Seven ASU track athletes qualify for nationals
Before every meet, ASU women’s sprints coach Kenny McDaniel leaves his runners with an analogy to try and inspire them.
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Before every meet, ASU women’s sprints coach Kenny McDaniel leaves his runners with an analogy to try and inspire them.
“We’ll figure it out.”
As March rolls around, the madness of being “on the bubble” stretches off the court and all over the college sports landscape.
The Jasmine Chaney train is on a one-way track with no signs of changing course.
The focus is coming to a singular point, the lights are starting to burn brightest and the stakes are almost to their greatest height. But it’s just another day at the stadium as the ASU track and field team prepares for the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Indoor Championships in Seattle starting Friday.
The season-long goal of becoming more of a team in an ultimately individualistic sport finally manifested itself in a result this weekend at the Lumberjack Invitational in Flagstaff.
Lost in the conversations about dangerous hits, concussions, goalie fights and full line brawls is one of the most competitive NHL seasons ever.
They expected to start the season fast, but they didn’t expect to start out this fast.
After an impressive start to the indoor season, this weekend the ASU track and field team faces its first national measuring stick.
When you see a 6-foot-5-inch, 290 pound man with a grizzled chin hurling 15- to 20-pound metal balls at Sun Angel Stadium, you might be slightly intimidated.
It was déjà vu all over again for the ASU track and field team last weekend at the New Mexico Classic in Albuquerque and for the Sun Devil throwers at the Northern Arizona Team Challenge in Flagstaff.
After a record-breaking and list-climbing meet last weekend in New Mexico, the ASU track and field team looks forward to having an equally successful weekend with a return to Albuquerque for the UNM Classic and a trip to Flagstaff for the NAU Team Challenge.
Leave Aaron Rodgers alone.
If the opening meet of the 2011 indoor track and field season in Albuquerque, N.M., is any indication, all marks should be recorded in pencil from now on.
The ASU track and field team opens 2011 without a returning NCAA champion athlete for the first time since 2004.
Standing at 6-feet-4 inches tall with a body like a semitruck, redshirt sophomore thrower Jordan Clarke looks to have been built to withstand a cold winter or two.
When a team has close to 100 athletes who practice and compete at various times throughout a given day and participate in 21 different events, cohesion is something that the team would struggle to attain. That is the challenge that faces the ASU track and field team.
In the same way it expanded hockey to the nontraditional Sun Belt markets in the ‘90s, the NHL is now trying to reel in a nontraditional sports-watching demographic: nerds.
The 16th-ranked ASU wrestling team looks to take the Pac-10 after a fourth place finish in last season's tournament. Seniors Ben Ashmore, Anthony Robles, and Bubba Jenkins look to put impressive caps on their ASU careers. Robles and Jenkins are each situated in the top three in their respective weight classes and have sights on individual NCAA titles. Coach Shawn Charles looks for the hard work of the wrestling lifestyle to send them to the top.
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