Two National Titles for Streamline Athletes Partner Programs at the 2026 NCAA D2 and D3 Outdoor Championships

Streamline Athletes partner programs delivered a standout weekend at the 2026 NCAA D2 and D3 outdoor track and field championships, headlined by two individual national titles. Caleb McLeod of CSU-Pueblo and Patreece Clarke of New Mexico Highlands each won a national championship, and both compete in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.

Both meets ran May 21 to 23, 2026. The D2 championships were held at Welch Stadium in Emporia, Kansas, where Grand Valley State won the men's team title and West Texas A&M won the women's. The D3 championships took place at Veterans Memorial Field in La Crosse, Wisconsin, where host Wisconsin-La Crosse swept both the men's and women's team titles.

Here is how the Streamline Athletes partner programs scored, starting with the program that produced the weekend's biggest result.

CSU Pueblo (D2, RMAC)

Colorado State University Pueblo produced a headline of the weekend. Sophomore Caleb McLeod won the men's 1500 meters national title in 3:49.25, closing hard in the final after qualifying eighth out of his prelim. McLeod, an international athlete from Dalgety Bay, Scotland, gave the ThunderWolves their signature moment of the championships.

The distance group did not stop there. Helen Braybrook finished runner-up in the women's 1500 in 4:20.11, and Jadyn Herron took fifth in the same event. In the throws, Xavier Freeman placed second in the men's shot put at 18.69m (61'4") and Febe Wessels matched him with a runner-up finish in the women's shot put at 15.94m (52'3.75"). CSU Pueblo's men scored 18 points to finish 15th, and the women scored 20 to finish 13th.

View CSU Pueblo on Streamline Athletes →

Read more on CSU Pueblo's championship weekend

New Mexico Highlands (D2, RMAC)

Another headline in the form of a national title also came from the RMAC. New Mexico Highlands senior Patreece Clarke won the women's 100 meter hurdles in 13.03, dropping her time from the prelims to the final and closing out her college career as a national champion. Running faster when the medal was on the line is exactly what you want from your best athlete on the biggest day of the season.

Teammate Ashley Barrett scored in both sprints, placing seventh in the 100 meters (11.60) and eighth in the 200 meters (24.42). New Mexico Highlands finished with 13 points and a share of 20th place.

Two RMAC programs and two national champions in the same weekend made for a strong showing from the conference.

View New Mexico Highlands on Streamline Athletes →

Wayne State College, Nebraska (D2, NSIC)

Wayne State College, Nebraska scored in the discus, where sophomore McKinley Grover placed fifth at 49.47m (162'4") for four team points.

View Wayne State on Streamline Athletes →

Read more on Grover and WSC at the D2 championships →

Wittenberg (D3, NCAC)

At the D3 championships, Wittenberg University's nine points all came from one athlete. Sophomore Jack Kittle finished third in the 400 meters (46.15) and seventh in the 200 meters (21.26), and ran a leg on the eighth-place 4x400 relay. The performance placed Wittenberg 23rd in the team standings.

View Wittenberg on Streamline Athletes →

Read more on Kittle and the Tigers at the D3 national meet →

Springfield College (D3, NEWMAC)

Springfield College scored on both sides of the meet through its hurdlers. Katherine DeFosse placed fourth in the women's 100 meter hurdles (13.78, school record) for five points, and Mike Anderson took seventh in the men's 110 meter hurdles (14.29) for two more.

View Springfield College on Streamline Athletes →

Read more on Springfield's men → | Read more on Springfield's women →

Southern Maine (D3, LEC)

The University of Southern Maine earned three points from senior Riley Reitchel, who placed sixth in the women's javelin at 43.35m (142'3"). Reitchel closes out a decorated career, leaving Southern Maine as a two-time First Team All-American, three-time national qualifier, and three-time Little East Conference champion in the javelin.

View Southern Maine on Streamline Athletes →

Read more on Reitchel's All-American weekend →

Across the weekend

Six Streamline Athletes partner programs put athletes on the scoreboard at the two championships, including two individual national champions. Congratulations to the coaches, athletes, and staff at each program.

Full results are available on TFRRS for the D2 championships and the D3 championships. Athletes can explore each program on Streamline Athletes through the links above.

Notes for recruits

Streamline Athletes partner programs also delivered at the 2026 U SPORTS Track and Field Championships in March.

2026 U SPORTS Track & Field Championships | Partner Program Results
Several Streamline Athletes partner programs delivered strong results at the 2026 U SPORTS Track & Field Championships, including Western, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Montréal, Manitoba, and UNB.

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