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Track & Field Teams Ranked 2nd in Mideast Region This Week

USTFCCA Outdoor rankings

NEW ORLEANS, LA --- The Moravian College men's & women's track & field teams are both ranked in the Mideast Region in the third NCAA Division III Regional Team Index of the 2013 outdoor season released by the United States Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Wednesday. Both Greyhound teams are ranked second in the region in the top-ten regional rankings this week.

The Greyhound women, who were also second in the region last week, have a total of 241.64 points. Johns Hopkins University is currently first in the Mideast Region with 409.58 while Salisbury University is third at 206.22 points. Elizabethtown College is in fourth place with 184.1 points while Misericordia University is fifth with 175.98 points.

The Greyhound men, who were fourth in the region a week ago, have a total of 240.03 points. Salisbury leads the Mideast Region with 344.92 points while Johns Hopkins is third at 224.45 points. Messiah College holds down the fourth spot with 224.28 points while Carnegie Mellon University is fifth with 211.62 points.

To view the full rankings, visit http://www.ustfccca.org/assets/rankings/div3/2013-otf/NCAAD3_2013_outWk3_TF_RegionalIndexTop10.pdf.

Moravian will return to action on Friday and Saturday, April 19th and 20th when the Greyhounds host the Greyhound Invitational at Timothy Breidegam Tack & Rocco Calvo Field. The meet begins at 4:00 p.m. Friday with the hammer throw, the javelin and the 10,000-meter run for both men and women. The remaining events are scheduled for Saturday starting at 10:00 a.m.

 

About the Rankings
For more on the national team rankings and links to guideline and rationale information visit … http://www.ustfccca.org/rankings/division-iii-rankings

Rankings are determined by a mathematical formula, which is based on current national descending order lists. This is what's used to compile a team's ranking. The purpose and methodology of the rankings is to create an index that showcases the teams that have the best potential of achieving the top spots in the national-title race.

The Regional Index is determined using a similar method as national rankings, but on a smaller scale, comparing teams versus others within the same region. The result is a ranking that showcases squads with better all-around team potential — a group makeup critical for conference or similar team-scored events. A team may achieve a better regional ranking than a counterpart that has a better national ranking. Historically, some teams are better national-championship teams than conference-championship teams, having a few elite athletes that score very well in a diverse environment where teams do not have entries in more than a few events. Some teams are better at conference championships or similar team-scored events where they enter, and are competitive, in many of the events.

How a team fares in a national championship, conference championship, or scored meet with only a couple or few teams (like a dual or triangular) can be very different, given the number of events, competition, scoring, and makeup of entries — thus the rationale behind each of the ranking systems. Similar arguments about team makeup and rankings can also be found in swimming & diving and wrestling as their sports also have a similar trichotomy when it comes to team theory.