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ODAC Names Track and
Field Top Athletes
BC’s Queen, LC’s
Decker Share Men’s Award, RC’s Yerkes Top Woman
June 18, 2008
SALEM, Va. ---
For the third time in the last five years, three athletes received top
honors in a vote of the league’s track and field coaches. Bridgewater
College’s Melvin Queen and Scott Decker from Lynchburg College share the
2008 ODAC Male Track and Field Athlete of the Year award. Roanoke
College’s Robin Yerkes was tabbed as the 2008 ODAC Female Track and
Field Athlete of the Year.
Combined, the three standouts won 13 events between the 2008 ODAC Indoor
Track and Field Championships and 2008 ODAC Outdoor Track and Field
Championships. All three also competed in the 2008 NCAA Division III
Outdoor Track and Field Championships, helping represent the conference
in one of its strongest fields to date. Yerkes and Decker made the trip
to Ada, Ohio, to participate in the 2008 NCAA Division III Indoor Track
and Field Championships
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RC's Robin Yerkes |
Yerkes, a sophomore from Arnold, Maryland, won a combined six individual
events and ran a leg on the Maroons record-setting 4x100-meter relay
team. Indoors, she won the 55-meter (7.27 seconds), 200-meter (25.31)
and 400-meter (58.20) dashes to claim Athlete of the Meet honors. She
also anchored the Maroons winning 4x400-meter relay team (4:05.96).
Outdoors, Yerkes stopped the watches first in the 100-meter (12.38 secs),
200-meter (25.50) and 400-meter (57.25) dashes. Along with teammates
Jaleesa Osborne, Tiffany France and Kate Mason, Roanoke won the
4x100-meter relay with a time of 46.84 seconds, a new ODAC outdoor
championship and regular competition record. Yerkes and Mason, along
with Wava Doyle and Meredith Withers, finished second in the 4x400-meter
relay at a 4:15.88 mark.
At the outdoor national championships in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Yerkes
placed second in the 200-meter dash with a time of 24.87 seconds. Her
qualifying time of 24.70 seconds fell just 0.01 seconds short of the
ODAC record, a mark she already owns. Yerkes also reteamed with
Osborne, France and Mason in the 4x100-meter relay, crossing the line
with a second-place time of 46.54 seconds to reset the ODAC record the
four had established just a little over a month prior.
Indoors at Ohio Northern University, Yerkes placed fourth in the nation
in the 400-meter dash with a time of 56.74 seconds. She entered the
meet with the third-fastest time in the nation at 56.53 seconds.
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BC's Melvin Queen |
Queen, a senior from Chesapeake, Virginia, won twice outdoors at the
ODAC Championships including a fourth straight title in the 100-meter
dash (11.00 secs.). He also placed second in the 200-meter dash with a
time of 21.94 seconds. Queen then teamed with Brandon Copeland, Tyler
Beiler and Tony Konate in the 4x100-meter relay, claiming top marks with
a time of 41.73 seconds. That time set a new ODAC Championships record
by 0.01 seconds, replacing the 1998 Bridgewater team with a newer
edition of Eagles. At the ODAC indoor championships, Queen won the
55-meter dash with a time of 6.48 seconds.
In Wisconsin, Queen competed in a pair of events, placing sixth overall
in the 100-meter dash in 10.80 seconds. The Eagles’ 4x100-meter relay
team also made the trip up north, but the Eagles’ time of 41.32 seconds
fell one slot short of qualifying for the event’s final heat.
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LC's Scott Decker |
Decker, a senior from Clifton, Virginia, tasted victory in the pole
vault at both ODAC championship meets. Indoors, Decker cleared 4.76
meters, or 15-feet 7.25-inches, to win the event. Decker surpassed 4.50
meters (14-fee 9-inches) to win the outdoor pole vault. Although he did
not post a height at the NCAA indoor meet, Decker’s outdoor experienced
proved much more fulfilling as he finished third in the pole vault,
eclipsing 4.96 meters (16-feet, 3.25-inches) for his best mark of the
season.
Out of his spikes, Decker has received the ODAC/Farm Bureau
Scholar-Athlete Award four times, having earned the honor in a vote of
the ODAC’s sports information directors for indoor and outdoor track
each of the past two academic years. He was also recently named to the
CoSIDA (College Sports Information Directors of America) Academic
All-District First Team, making him eligible for Academic All-American
honors.
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