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May 23, 2024

BRYNN KING WINS NCAA DIVISION II OUTDOOR POLE VAULT CHAMPIONSHIP

Brynn King's second Division II national pole vault championship did not come easily.
After missing on her first two attempts at 4.35 meters (14-feet, 3 ¼ inches), King passed on her third try in order to buy time and focus on her next jump at 4.40 meters (14-5 ¼).

As she has done all season, the Roberts Wesleyan University junior delivered.
King switched to a longer pole and that change catapulted her to the NCAA DII Outdoor Championship at Emporia State University's Francis G. Welch Stadium.

"I scared myself a little bit on that first bar," said King, who set meet and facility records of 4.60 meters (15-1) while outdueling runner-up Kyla Davis of Pittsburg State for the title. "I knew that if I just turned that pole over that I could make that bar, so I was just focusing on moving that pole into the pit. I was nervous, but at the same time I knew that I could make that bar."

"It was a dogfight and Brynn had to come through and get to that mental state that she hasn't been in in other meets and that was huge," Roberts pole vault coordinator and 2012 Olympic Gold Medalist Jenn Suhr.

The championship capped a perfect season for King as she finished unbeaten against college competition. Those victories include a record-setting performance of 4.65 meters (15-3) while winning the DII Indoor Championship in Pittsburg, Kans., on March 8. The Woodlands, Texas native is the only student-athlete from Roberts to win an NCAA championship and is the first in East Coast Conference history to capture multiple individual events.

"Standing on the podium in a Roberts uniform is exciting," King said. "There are a lot of people supporting me at Roberts and I feel like that is kind of my time to recognize all of that support and let people know that I am representing for y'all."

King, who set NCAA Division II outdoor record of 4.68 meters (15-4 ¼) while winning the 96th annual Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays at the University of Texas on March 30, took control of the meet after she and Davis both cleared 4.40 meters  (14-5 ¼).

"Standing on the podium in a Roberts uniform is exciting," King said. "There are a lot of people supporting me at Roberts and I feel like that is kind of my time to recognize all of that support and let people know that I am representing for y'all."
King, who set NCAA Division II outdoor record of 4.68 meters (15-4 ¼) while winning the 96th annual Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays at the University of Texas on March 30, took control of the meet after she and Davis both cleared 4.40 meters  (14-5 ¼).
King climbed into the lead with makes at both 4.45 (14-7 ¼) and 4.50 (14-9). King secured the title when Davis failed on her only attempt at 4.55 meters (14-11). King eclipsed the 10-year-old meet mark of 14-9 set by Kristen Hixson of Grand Valley with a make at 4.60 (15-1).
King then raised the bar to 4.74 meters (15-6 ½) in an attempt to set the all-time NCAA women's pole vault record of 4.73 meters (15-6 ¼) set by the University of Washington's Olivia Gruver on March 29, 2019, but was unsuccessful.
"It was a fun meet, but it was stressful," said King, who was named the 2024 ECC Outdoor Track and Field Athlete of the Year last week. "It was a good learning experience, me having to battle it out for the win."
Suhr agreed.

"Looking at it, you always want it to be 'easy make, easy make,' but I think that in the end this sets her up to do big things because you have to be in that situation that you cannot replicate in practice," Suhr said. "Being on your third attempt at the opening bar, having to make a bar to win and having to make another bar. You don't get that at normal meets, you don't get that locally and you don't get that in practice."
King has qualified for the U.S. Olympic Trials in Eugene, Ore., on June 28-30. She will return to Rochester, where she will accept the Jerry Flynn Award as the Rochester Press-Radio Club's College Athlete of the Year on June 11, to train.
"DIIs were important and Olympic Trials are important, but she's training through this," Suhr said. "She's not peaking at this meet, she is going to peak for Olympic Trials. She is still working on new sprint techniques, she's she's lifting and now she has five weeks to get ready for the Olympic Trials is big. Now everything is going to funnel just a little bit tighter as she gets ready for Trials."
King is looking forward to the intense training time, but had something else on her mind on Thursday night – a well-deserved celebratory meal.
"It's already ordered," she said. "Cheeseburger, loaded, with a side of fries."