A College Freshman Just Ran One of the Best NCAA 5000m Races Ever

Jane Hedengren broke a 22-year-old facility record in her first NCAA track final — and she's just getting started.

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Jessy Carveth
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Jessy is our Senior News Editor, pro cyclist and former track and field athlete with a Bachelors degree in Kinesiology.

Senior News Editor

Jane Hedengren was a high school senior a year ago.

On Friday night at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships in Fayetteville, Arkansas, she ran like she’d been doing this for a decade.

The BYU freshman won the women’s 5000 meters in 15:00.12, shattering the Randal Tyson Track Center’s 22-year-old facility record and defeating Alabama’s Doris Lemngole — the two-time defending NCAA cross country champion — by more than three seconds. Lemngole finished second in 15:03.42.

It was Hedengren’s first NCAA track final. She won it wire to wire.

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How the Race Unfolded

The early pace was conservative. The first 1600 meters went through in 5:04.43 — slow enough to leave the field bunched together. Then Hedengren hit the accelerator.

She covered the next 1600 in 4:46.36, reaching 3200 meters in 9:50.79. That surge put the pressure on Lemngole and Pamela Kosgei of New Mexico. Neither could answer.

It’s the kind of race strategy you rarely see in collegiate distance running — sit patiently, drop the hammer mid-race, and never let up. Hedengren’s final 1600 came in 4:33.72. Over the last 1000 meters, she progressively turned the screw: 34.58, 34.12, 33.14, 31.81 — a finishing sequence that equates to 13:51 per 5000m pace. Her final 400 clocked 64.43 seconds.

That kind of closing speed requires an exceptional lactate threshold — the ability to sustain fast running without your muscles flooding with fatigue. Elite runners train for years to build it. Hedengren is 19.

By the homestretch, she was smiling.

“I just realized I’m going to control what I can control, and that’s my effort and being grateful to be out here with really strong women and seeing what we can push each other to do,” Hedengren said after the race.

She teared up as she embraced BYU head coach Diljeet Taylor.

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Historic on Multiple Levels

No freshman has ever won the women’s 5000m at the NCAA Indoor Championships. Hedengren is the first.

The win also ended a streak of defeats against Lemngole. The two clashed at the 2025 NCAA Cross Country Championship, where Lemngole — a decorated collegiate distance runner in her own right — came out on top. Friday’s race settled the score.

“It was discouraging not closing the way I wanted to,” Hedengren said, referencing past races. “So today we were really focused on running relaxed.”

For BYU, the victory marks the program’s first indoor individual national title since Courtney Wayment won this same event in 2022 with a time of 15:30.17 — a benchmark Hedengren beat by 30 full seconds.

Hedengren came into the meet already holding the NCAA record in the 5000m. Before that, she spent her 2024–25 senior year at Timpview High School in Utah rewriting the US prep record books. She’s been on the Bowerman Award watchlist all season — the honor given to the top collegiate women’s track and field athlete in the country — and was named the Big 12 Women’s Outstanding Freshman of the Year.

“It feels really special to be here with my team,” Hedengren said. “I’m continuing to learn, there’s so much to learn … having some great people around me.”

Performances like this fit into a broader moment for women’s elite distance running, which is producing remarkable talent at every level right now. What separates runners at this tier comes down to smart interval training, threshold work, and the mental ability to execute under pressure.

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What Comes Next

BYU sits fourth in the team standings heading into Saturday’s final session, with 13 points. Illinois leads with 30, followed by Oregon with 20 and Florida with 14.

Hedengren isn’t done. She returns Saturday for the 3000 meters at 5:10 p.m. MST, joining teammate Riley Chamberlain and Jenna Hutchins. Chamberlain, currently the top-ranked collegiate miler in the country, races the mile final at 3:10 p.m. MST. Both events stream live on ESPN+.

Given what Hedengren has done this season, it would be unwise to bet against her.

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Jessy Carveth

Senior News Editor

Jessy is our Senior News Editor and a former track and field athlete with a Bachelors degree in Kinesiology. Jessy is often on-the-road acting as Marathon Handbook's roving correspondent at races, and is responsible for surfacing all the latest news stories from the running world across our website, newsletter, socials, and podcast.. She is currently based in Europe where she trains and competes as a professional cyclist (and trail runs for fun!).

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