Athletics News

NCAA Women’s 400H — Sutherland Crushes McLaughlin Record

NCAA Women’s 400H — Sutherland Crushes McLaughlin Record

Savannah Sutherland ran into another zip code late in the race. (KIRBY LEE/IMAGE OF SPORT)

THE WHITEBOARD in Savannah Sutherland’s room tells the whole story — in big numbers: 52.70. A target time 0.05 faster than Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone’s Collegiate Record.

With that number in her head, running smoothly and seemingly effortlessly, the Michigan senior from Borden, Saskatchewan, Canada, circled the track once more and hurdled 10 times. At age 19 in 2023, Sutherland had won the NCAA title with a then-PR 54.45. She was runner-up last year to USC’s Jasmine Jones, again with a PR, 53.26.

What could she do this time, now 2 years on from her first win and a veteran of the Paris Olympic final (7th in 53.88)?

Sutherland not only broke her own Canadian record, but displaced McLaughlin-Levrone as Collegiate Record-holder with a blinder of a time, 52.46.

“I just had to put my fears aside and run fearlessly,” Sutherland said. “Before the race, I told my coach, ‘This will be the last time I will put on this Wolverine uniform. I want to do everyone proud!’ So I ran my best.”

That she did. She moved out quickly from the start in lane 6. By the middle of the backstretch, everyone else was chasing after silver. Georgia frosh Michelle Smith in lane 5 was closest but the Wolverine kept pushing the pace. By the final curve she was a stagger ahead of Smith as well.

As Sutherland sprinted toward the finish, a battle developed among Vanderbilt junior Alyria McBride (lane 4), Smith (5) and Texas soph Akala Garrett (7).

The duo were nearly even with two hurdles remaining. Then Garrett, the ’22 World Junior gold medalist, turned on the heat to secure a clear hold on 2nd after the final barrier and finish in 54.66. Smith held onto 3rd with 55.20.

Miami soph Sanaa Hebron was 7th on the curve but sprinted furiously after hurdle 10 to move up to 4th in 55.46 and edge Florida State senior Tyra Wilson’s 55.57.

“It felt easy in the moment,” said Sutherland of having knocked down an icon’s record. “I think the hardest part was probably getting over my fear and just having to go run it. I knew I had something in me, so just had to let it go.”

She added, “It means a lot, yeah. I mean, I grew up looking up to [McLaughlin-Levrone], so it’s definitely very special to me. I got to meet her this summer and run against her in the final in Paris, so it was almost a full circle moment for me.”

Of her whiteboard target, Sutherland said, “Every…

CLICK HERE to Read the Full Original Article at Track & Field News…