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Pride Month 2026

11 Bruins earn NCAA track and field championship bids at West Regionals

Feature image

Sophomore sprinter Kayla McBride runs with the baton in the women’s 4×400-meter relay at the UCLA-USC dual meet May 3. McBride competed in the 400-meter dashes at the Big Ten championships and the NCAA West Regionals. She placed 37th at the latter and therefore did not earn an individual spot in the one-lap event at the NCAA championships. (Andrew Ramiro Diaz/Photo editor)

Sofia Celis

By Sofia Celis

June 1, 2026 10:04 p.m.

Wonka’s Golden Ticket.

A lucky scratcher.

And an NCAA championship punch ticket.

Each secures a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

The only difference is, the Bruins had to earn it.

Eleven UCLA track and field athletes secured NCAA championship qualifications at the West regional, which spanned from Wednesday through Saturday in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

Not only did these Bruins make it to the next round, but many earned personal and program achievements.

Sophomore sprinter/hurdler Celeste Polzonetti – who not only placed second in her preliminary heat and third overall in the women’s 100-meter hurdles, but also notched a personal-best, 12.79-second outing – headlined the Bruin performances while tying for fourth place in the program’s top-10 outdoor women’s performance list.

(Andrew Ramiro Diaz/Photo editor)
Sophomore sprinter/hurdler Celeste Polzonetti jumps over a hurdle at the UCLA-USC dual meet. In addition to competing in the women's 100-meter hurdles, the Desio, Italy, local has contributed to the women's 100-meter relay throughout the 2026 outdoor campaign. (Andrew Ramiro Diaz/Photo editor)

Junior sprinter and NCAA championships qualifier Gabriel Clement II notched a 45.22-second mark, placing fifth in the men’s 400-meter dash, besting his last personal record of 45.24 seconds from the week prior, which he set at the Louisiana State Battle on the Bayou.

Mirroring Clement, junior sprinter Taylor Snaer punched her national championship ticket after placing seventh with a 22.64-second performance in the women’s 200-meter dash, despite failing to qualify in the women’s 100-meter dash.

Senior sprinter/hurdler Tamaal Myers II also earned his spot in next week’s championships with a personal best of 49.67 seconds in the men’s 400-meter hurdles, ultimately breaking his last personal record of 50.01 seconds that he scored at last year’s NCAA West Regionals.

The only Bruin jumper who advanced was sophomore Valentina Fakrogha, whose 1.87-meter tally earned her seventh place and a golden ticket. Along with Fakrogha, senior thrower Xavier Hastenrath notched a 19.31-meter throw to secure sixth place in the men’s shot put, securing a bid in next weekend’s national meet.

Making their way to Eugene as well, women’s 4×100-meter relay sprinters senior Naomi Johnson, redshirt senior Madison Fleming, sophomore Kayla McBride and Snaer finished 10th at 43.71 seconds, 0.05 seconds slower than their collective personal best.

McBride and Johnson doubled their success in the 4×400-meter relay, as they will join sprinters junior Ava Simms and freshman Gabriella Taylor next weekend after a clocking season-best 3:30.82 performance, earning one spot above the final qualifying ranking with an 11th-place finish.

(Andrew Ramiro Diaz/Photo editor)
Junior sprinter Ava Simms sprints away from the start line while holding a baton in the mile relay at the UCLA-USC dual meet. Simms spent her first two collegiate seasons at Arizona before transferring to UCLA ahead of the 2026 campaign. (Andrew Ramiro Diaz/Photo editor)

But other Bruins fell short of earning a top-12 placement to extend their outdoor campaigns.

And many of these outings were only a couple of places short of clearance.

Despite his semifinals-worthy performance at 18th place in the men’s 400-meter hurdles preliminaries, senior sprinter/hurdler Zaire Waring’s 23rd-place finish in the semifinals impeded him from advancing to Eugene.

Only three places from a qualifying ranking, graduate student jumper Hamdi Ali failed to earn a championship ticket with a 2.12-meter performance in the men’s high jump. And despite Johnson qualifying for both the women’s 4×100- and 4×400-meter relays, the senior fell four places short in the women’s 400-meter dash semifinals.

After the program’s 51st and 43rd overall rankings at last year’s NCAAs for the men’s and women’s teams, respectively, this year’s 11 Bruins will likely strive to earn a better collective performance.

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Sofia Celis
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