Regional Meet Day 1: All 3200m Results, Rain and All
Storms rolled through several regional sites on Friday, but the 3200m races were eventually completed across all four regions in both the 5A and 6A classifications. By the time the last heat cleared, a defending champion had been unseated, an athlete ran the fastest high school two-mile in recent Texas memory, and a runner who wasn’t supposed to win Region 4 walked away with a state bid anyway.
Here is a full accounting of what happened.
Girls 6A Regional Qualifiers: The Road to Austin
Editor’s Note: This is the third in a series covering the 5A and 6A Regional Meets. Region 1 — Lubbock, Region 2 — Arlington, Region 3 — Webster, Region 4 — San Antonio.
The Girls 6A regional fields are set. Sixty-four athletes per event — sixteen per region — have survived District and Area and now stand at the final checkpoint before the UIL 6A State Meet at Myers Stadium in Austin on May 15. This coming weekend, May 1–2, four regional meets will determine which nine girls in each event punch their ticket.
Girls 5A Regional Qualifiers: The Road to Austin
Editor’s Note: This is the fourth in a series covering the 5A and 6A Regional Meets. Region 1 — Lubbock, Region 2 — Arlington, Region 3 — Webster, Region 4 — San Antonio.
The Girls 5A regional fields are set. Sixty-four athletes per event have earned their way through District and Area, and now the field is at four regionals this coming weekend, May 1–2, racing for nine state berths in each event. Top two from each regional advance automatically. A ninth spot goes to the fastest third-place finisher from across all four regions — the wild card.
Boys 6A Regional Qualifiers: The Road to Austin
Editor’s Note: This is the second in a series covering the 5A and 6A Regional Meets. Region 1 — Arlington, Region 2 — Waco, Region 3 — Webster, Region 4 — San Antonio.
If you read the 5A version of this piece, you already know the shape of the journey: roughly 700 athletes per event began this championship cycle at District, District cut them to Area, and Area cut them again. Now 64 boys remain in the 6A distance events — sixteen per region — all of them racing for nine state berths on May 1–2.
Boys 5A Regional Qualifiers: The Road to Austin
Editor’s Note: This is the first in a series that will be released this week on the upcoming 5A and 6A Regionals Meets. Region 1 - Lubbock, Region 2 - Arlington, Region 3 - Webster, Region 4 - San Antonio.
Championship season is here. Roughly 700 athletes started this journey at District meets in mid-April. District cut the field to Area. Area cut it again. Now 64 boys remain across the 800m, 1600m, and 3200m — sixteen per region, all of them having earned their spot the hard way.
Distance Racing at the 98th Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays
The 98th Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays delivered exactly what you’d expect from one of the country’s most storied invitational meets: fast times, out-of-state visitors testing themselves against Texas talent, and a few performances that will carry weight well into the championship season as district meets begin this week. Here’s a look at the high school distance action across all six events.
Boys 1600m
Holliday’s Noah Strohman added another chapter to what is already a historically decorated prep career, crossing in 4:10.22 to claim the win in extremely windy conditions. A four-time UIL 3A cross country state champion and three-time state champion in both the 1600m and 3200m on the track, Strohman signed with Oklahoma State University in February and is hunting a fourth state track title this spring. The race at Texas Relays was tight at the top: Austin Anderson’s Colby Huntress ran 4:10.69 for second, and IMG Academy’s Matthew Dodds — one of several out-of-state entrants — took third in 4:10.91. The entire podium was separated by less than a second, and the field as a whole showed impressive depth, with seven athletes finishing under 4:15.
Race Preview: Boys Distance Events at the 2026 Texas A&M Bluebonnet Invitational
Race Preview: Boys Distance Events at the 2026 Texas A&M Bluebonnet Invitational
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The boys distance races at the 2026 Texas A&M Bluebonnet Invitational are loaded with talent, intrigue, and the kind of early-season uncertainty that makes these meets so fun to watch. Whether you’re here for tactical 800m racing, a loaded mile field, or the wide-open 3200, there’s something worth staying for in every event. Here’s what to watch.
Race Preview: Girls Distance Events at the 2026 Texas A&M Bluebonnet Invitational
Race Preview: Girls Distance Events at the 2026 Texas A&M Bluebonnet Invitational
Follow us on Instagram @texas_distance_project and X @tx_distance_pr
The Texas A&M Bluebonnet Invitational is shaping up to be one of the more compelling early-season distance meets on the Texas calendar. With some serious talent entered across the 800, 1600, and 3200 meters, there’s plenty to watch — and at this point in the season, even the seed times undersell what some of these athletes are capable of. Here’s a breakdown of what to expect in each event.