BYU's Shaq Walker finishes 3rd behind record-setting 800M finish


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EUGENE, Ore. — Some would say it was going to take some a record-breaking performance to keep BYU standout Shaquille Walker from winning a national championship Friday.

Boy, did it.

Walker finished third in the 800-meter final with a time of 1 minute, 45.17 seconds at the NCAA Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon.

His time, which was a personal meet-record for the BYU junior, trailed Texas A&M freshman Donavan Brazier’s 1:43.55 — a mark that broke an NCAA record set by Jim Ryun 50 years previous to the date.

> True frosh [@DonavanBrazier](https://twitter.com/DonavanBrazier) just ran 1:43.55!! Move over Jim Ryun, America's got a new phenom [pic.twitter.com/bTMldKA6Z2](https://t.co/bTMldKA6Z2) > > — LetsRun.com (@letsrundotcom) [June 11, 2016](https://twitter.com/letsrundotcom/status/741449927696486400)

Mississippi State senior Brandon McBride finished second in 1:44.50.

Aaron Fletcher finished 13th in the 3,000-meter steeple chase. Fletcher stayed with the pack for most of the race behind Michigan’s Mason Ferric before the Wolverine senior pulled away with a title-winning time of 8:27.16.

By qualifying for the finals and earning a time of 9:14.56, the BYU senior earned second-team All-American honors.

Rory Linkletter ran the 5,000-meter final in 14:06.62 to finish in 19th place. The freshman from Calgary, Alberta, was one of a field of 13:25.59 to finish behind Oregon junior Edward Cheserek, a 14-time NCAA champion across cross country, indoor and outdoor track.

Zach Blackham cleared his first high-jump attempt at 6 feet, 10 1/4 inches, but missed on the adjusted height of 7 feet 1/4 inch to miss out on a top-eight finish in Saturday’s finals.

Florida won the NCAA men’s track and field team title, thanks in part to a second-place finish in the 1,600-meter relay in the final event. Arkansas finished second, followed by Texas A&M, Oregon and Louisiana State.

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