2016 Olympian and three-time World Championship qualifier Colleen Quigley joined the Portland State cross country and track & field coaching staff as a volunteer assistant starting at the beginning of 2017. Quigley will enter her sixth year with the Portland State cross country programs and her seventh year with the Portland State track & field programs during the 2022-23 academic year.
It’s become a yearly tradition for the Vikings to set a program-best cross country season since Quigley joined the coaching staff, but even still, the Vikings took a large leap forward in 2021. For the first time in program history, the Vikings had representation at the NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships. Katie Camarena inserted some Viking green into the national meet after placing fifth at the NCAA West Regional, and finished 70th overall out of 250 of the best runners in the country.
Camarena’s appearance at nationals tied the bow around a season that included the:
- Best men’s team finish at NCAA West Regional (8th)
- Best women’s team finish at NCAA West Regional (11th, tied)
- Best women’s team finish at Big Sky Championships (3rd)
- Best individual finishes for a Viking woman at the Big Sky (3rd), NCAA West Regional (5th) and NCAA D1 National meets (70th, Katie Camarena every time)
- Best individual finish for a Viking man at the Big Sky Championships (14th, tied, by Jordan MacIntosh)
- First Top 10 regional ranking in USTFCCCA West Region (men ranked ninth on Oct. 18)
The Viking men’s eighth-place finish at the NCAA West Regional halved their previous best finish of 16th. Additionally, the Viking women’s third-place finish at conference beat their previous best finish by two spots.
The Viking women’s entire top five finished among the first 30 runners at the Big Sky meet, as depth was a theme throughout the season. The Vikings had never placed more than three runners in the top 30 before the 2021 meet, let alone five. The Vikings accomplished a similar feat at the NCAA West Regional where both teams placed their entire top five among the first 100 finishers. The men nearly placed their entire top five among the first 75 finishers, missing out by only two spots, while the women were one spot away from putting six runners in the top 100 of their race.
The highlight of the 2021 cross country season remained Camarena’s accomplishments, however. A transfer from UC Santa Barbara, Camarena made a quick impact in her time on the Park Blocks, as she would either set or become the Vikings’:
- First national cross country qualifier in Division I program history
- First USTFCCCA All-Region honoree in cross country
- Best individual finish at Big Sky Championships (4th)
- Best individual finish at NCAA West Regional (5th)
- 4k school record (at Viking Rust Buster, Sept. 3)
- 5k school record (at Big Sky Championships, Oct. 29)
- 6k school record (at Santa Clara Bronco Invitational, Oct. 16)
Camarena's success continued into the 2022 track & field indoor season in which she swept the Portland State school records in the 800 meters, mile, 3,000 meters and 5,000 meters. Camarena's records in the mile and 3k also set new standards within the Big Sky Conference, and came on back-to-back days at the Husky Classic. Camarena became the first woman ever in the Big Sky Conference ever to crack nine minutes in the 3k while finishing in 8:57.08. Camarena then followed with an even-more-impressive mile race the following day as she beat out a deep field that included BYU's Courtney Wayment and Elizabeth Bird, a 2020 Olympic Finalist in the steeplechase for Great Britain. Camarena's winning time of 4:32.27 broke a 19-year-old conference record that Northern Arizona's Johanna Nilsson set in 2003.
Camarena went on to become the Vikings' first-ever double qualifier for the NCAA Indoor Championships, as she finished the regular season ranked third and 11th nationally in the mile and 3k, respectively. Camarena finished ninth and 13th in the finals of both events, making her the Vikings' first-ever two-time NCAA Second-Team All-American.
The NCAA Indoor Championships wrapped up Camarena's Viking career, which was admittedly short but incredibly impactful. In just one cross country and one indoor track & field season, Camarena:
- Set 7 school records (Cross Country: 4k, 5k, 6k; Indoor: 800m, mile, 3k, 5k)
- Set 2 Big Sky Conference Records (indoor mile, 3k)
- Became the first woman in Big Sky Conference history to crack nine minutes in the indoor 3k (8:57.08 at the Husky Classic on Feb. 11)
- Became the first Viking to qualify for the NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships
- Became the Vikings' first qualifier for the NCAA Indoor Championships since Geronne Black in 2013, and the only Viking ever to qualify in two different events in the same year
- Became the Vikings' first two-time NCAA second-team All-American during the Division I era
Camarena has since joined Quigley as a training partner under assistant coach Josh Seitz. In that capacity, Quigley was a key person who helped Camarena qualify for her first USATF Outdoors meet, where Camarena nearly made the finals of the women's 1,500 meters.
Outside of Camarena, the Viking men set three school records during the 2022 indoor track & field season between two for Jordan MacIntosh and another for Keynan Abdi. MacIntosh and Abdi both went under the old record in the indoor 3k at the UW Indoor Preview, with MacIntosh finishing in 8:07.94 and Abdi in 8:14.04. MacIntosh then set the indoor mile record at 4:04.28 at the UW Invitational, while Abdi followed with the indoor 5k record (14:17.70) at the Husky Classic.
The 2022 outdoor season saw Chase Lovercheck return to the Big Sky podium in the 800 meters. Lovercheck made a surprise podium appearance as a freshman in 2019, but then battled the pandemic and a foot injury over the next two years before returning to the podium as a senior. Lovercheck placed second in the conference in a new personal best of 1:50.24. His time, which got altitude-adjusted down to sub-1:50, qualified him for the NCAA West Prelims, making him the first Viking to qualify in the 800 meters since Tony Crisofulli in 2011.
MacIntosh added another school record late in the outdoor season at the Bell Canadian Track & Field Championships. MacIntosh finished fourth at the Canadian national meet in a time of 8:35.44, which bettered the record Josh Snyder set a year before. MacIntosh's time would have ranked him 13th in the NCAA had he competed during the collegiate season.
Quigley helped lead the Vikings to a successful 2021 season despite restrictions around the COVID-19 pandemic. Forced to train in pods of anywhere from four to 15 athletes, the Vikings still came through with five marks that were the program's fastest or second-fastest times in their respective events in at least 20 years. The crown jewel of that set was the school record in the men's steeplechase, which Josh Snyder set twice during the season. Snyder topped out at 8:56.64 at the Oregon Relays, breaking a 39-year-old school record in the process. Besides that mark, Kaila Gibson ran the fastest women's 10k since 1987 (33:55.99), Tom Richardson ran the fastest men's 1,500m since 2001 (3:48.39), Keynan Abdi ran the fastest men's 5k since 2001 (14:14.00), and Cayla Seligman ran the second-fastest women's 5k since 1987 (16:38.83).
Snyder and Gibson also both made the NCAA West Prelims in 2021, marking a historic debut and long-awaited return for both runners, respectively. Snyder became the Vikings' first-ever qualifier in the men's steeplechase, while Gibson returned to the NCAA postseason after missing out on a chance to qualify in 2020 due to the pandemic. Gibson joined Camelia Mayfield as the Vikings' only two-time NCAA West Prelims qualifiers in the women's 10k.
The Vikings only competed at one meet during the unique 2021 winter cross country season, but that meet -- the Big Sky Cross Country Winter Championships -- brought more history as the Vikings posted a program-best finish. The Viking men set a program record by placing fifth, while the women's sixth-place finish meant the Vikings saw their best combined finish ever between their men's and women's teams. The finish at the Big Sky meet earned the Viking men their first-ever USTFCCCA West Region ranking (12th), while the women finished the season ranked 14th. The end-of-season rankings for both teams marked the first time both had been ranked simultaneously in program history.
In only their second year since shifting to a distance-events focus, Quigley helped led the Vikings to one of the program's best cross country seasons in the fall of 2019. The Viking men set a program-best finish at the Big Sky Championships, finishing seventh out of 11 teams. The Viking men also placed three runners in the top 100 of the NCAA West Regional for only the second time in program history.
Richardson led the Viking men with a 54th-place finish at the NCAA West Regional, the third-best individual finish ever by a Viking at the meet. Richardson's time of 31:00.2 also marked the second-best ever by a Viking in the cross country 10k. Josh Snyder and Max Norman joined Richardson in the top 100 at 95th and 96th, respectively. Norman became only the second Viking men's runner to place in the top 100 in back-to-back years, joining one of the program's all-time greats in Michael Devenport.
All that amounted to a 20th-place team finish for the Viking men, the first time they've placed in the top 20 of the NCAA West Regional since 2003. The Vikings were a bit unlucky to not finish even higher, as only 46 points separated the Vikings from the 13th-place team at the meet.
The Viking women, meanwhile, placed two runners in the top 75 at the NCAA West Regional for the second straight season. Hunter Storm and Delaney White led the Viking women at 70th and 72nd overall, respectively. Storm led the Vikings at every meet during the season, and moved into the all-time top five in the cross country 4k and 6k. Storm came within 3.3 seconds of the school record in the 6k while finishing in 20:51.4 at the Bronco Invitational.
On the track, four Viking distance runners have qualified for the NCAA West Preliminary Rounds during Quigley's tenure at the school.
Sarah Medved became the Vikings' first-ever qualifier in the steeplechase in 2018, and then repeated the feat as a fifth-year senior in 2019. Medved also repeated as the Big Sky champion in the steeplechase in 2019, a year after becoming the Vikings' first-ever conference champion in the event.
Gibson joined Medved at the 2019 NCAA West Prelims after she qualified in the women's 10,000 meters. Gibson qualified after running the 10k in 34:12.51 at the Stanford Invitational, a time that marked a 70-second personal best for Gibson and moved her up third all time in the outdoor 10k at Portland State.
Alex Cisneros joined Medved at the NCAA West Prelims in 2018, becoming the Vikings' first-ever qualifier in the men's 10,000 meters that season.
Chase Lovercheck also made a surprise podium finish in the outdoor men's 800 meters at the 2019 Big Sky meet. Lovercheck, ranked 18th in the men's 800 going into the meet, placed third in a time of 1:50.92 -- four seconds faster than his personal best in the 800 coming into the Big Sky meet. Lovercheck's time was the best by a Viking freshman in the past 16 years by more than a second.
Luke Ramirez set the best time by a Viking freshman in the men's 1,500 meters while running the prelims of the 1,500 meters in 3:56.26 at the Big Sky Outdoor Championships.
Quigley helped lead the Vikings to their best cross country season in program history in 2018. The Viking women tied their highest team finish ever at the Big Sky meet with a fifth-place finish, after being picked to finish in a tie for ninth. Additionally, the Vikings' fifth-place finish came in the 11-team Big Sky Conference, making it the Vikings' best finish ever within the conference relative to the size of the field. The Viking women followed it up with a 15th-place finish at the NCAA West Regional, their highest finish at the meet since they placed 11th in 2002.
Medved and Gibson led the Viking women to their historic performances throughout the year, as they traded off going first and second all season. Medved and Gibson became the first Viking teammates – male or female – to place in the top 40 together at the NCAA West Regional, just under two weeks after they became the first Viking teammates to place in the top 10 together at the Big Sky Conference meet. The Vikings had never had two runners place in the top 50 of the NCAA West Regional before Medved and Gibson, let alone the top 40.
Medved led the Vikings with a 39th-place finish at the NCAA West Regional, the second highest finish ever by a Viking women's runner, behind only Melissa Telford's 28th-place finish in 1999. Medved broke the school record in the 6k with her finish at the NCAA West Regional meet, while Gibson also broke the previous record while finishing only three-tenths of a second behind her. Gibson broke the school record in the 4k earlier in the season.
Medved became only the second two-time All-Big Sky honoree in program history while finishing 10th at the Big Sky meet behind Gibson at ninth. Medved and Gibson finished with seven top-10 finishes between them during the season, including at the Cougar Classic where they each placed in the top five to lead the Vikings to their first-ever team win at a meet hosted by a Pac-12 school (Washington State). The Vikings upset regionally-ranked Washington State and Idaho at that meet, moving them into the USTFCCCA West Region rankings at 15th. The Vikings remained ranked 15th for three straight weeks, the longest period of time that the Vikings have ever been ranked in the poll.
The Viking men, meanwhile, recorded their second-best finish ever at the Big Sky meet relative to the size of the conference, as they placed eighth out of 11 teams after being picked to finish dead last before the season. The men also recorded their best finish at the NCAA West Regional meet since 2003 with a 21st-place finish.
Norman and Drew Seidel led the Viking men to their strong finishes at both meets. Norman and Seidel placed 31st and 32nd, respectively, at the Big Sky meet, making them the Vikings' first pair of freshmen men's runners to place in the top 35 of the Big Sky meet since 2002.
Norman and Seidel also led the Vikings with 98th- and 99th-place finishes at the NCAA West Regional, making them the first freshmen teammates to place in the top 100 together at the regional meet in program history. The Viking men hadn't had two runners of any classification finish in the top 100 of the NCAA West Regional since 2003, when Devenport and Blake Flanders placed 56th and 93rd overall, respectively. Norman's 98th-place finish also marked the highest finish by a first-year Viking men's runner at the regional since Devenport placed 64th overall in 2002.
Quigley helped oversee one of the best indoor and outdoor track seasons ever by the Viking distance crew in 2018. Medved won the Vikings' first-ever Big Sky title in the women's 3,000-meter steeplechase in 2018, and also became the Vikings' first-ever qualifier for the NCAA West Preliminary Rounds in the men's or women's steeplechase. Cisneros joined Medved as the Vikings' first-ever West Prelims qualifier in the men's 10,000 meters, as well as the first Viking men's runner to qualify in any event longer than 800 meters.
Cisneros and Medved qualified for the West Prelims on the back of school record-breaking performances in the men's 10,000 meters and women's steeplechase, respectively. Medved broke the school record in the steeplechase twice during the season, the second of which put her more than 50 seconds clear of the old record -- 10:21.56 to 11:11.60. Cisneros, meanwhile, broke a 34-year-old school record in the men's 10,000 meters with his finish in 29:25.74 at the Mt. SAC Relays.
Cisneros also set the school records in the men's indoor 3,000 and 5,000 meters, while Gibson and Alana Chaplin added school records in the women's indoor 5,000 meters and outdoor 2,000-meter steeplechase. Overall, six of the 10 school records set during the 2018 indoor and outdoor track seasons came from the Vikings' distance runners.
In her first year with the track programs, Quigley helped then-senior Ben Richardson overcome an injury at the end of the indoor season to earn All-Big Sky honors with a third-place finish in the men's 800 meters. Quigley also led Alex Cisneros to a school record in the indoor 5,000 meters, as Cisneros broke a six-year-old school record in the event by more than seven seconds with his finish in 14:43.07.
Quigley brings experience at the highest level of the sport to her role for the Vikings. Quigley finished eighth in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro after finishing third in the steeplechase at the 2016 USA Olympic Trials. Quigley also finished third in the steeplechase at the 2015 USA Outdoor Track & Field Championships, qualifying her for the 2015 IAAF World Outdoor Championships in Beijing, where she finished 12th.
Quigley won the national title in the 3,000-meter steeplechase during her senior year at Florida State in 2015, and totaled nine NCAA All-American honors between cross country and track & field. Quigley also took second place in the steeplechase at the 2013 NCAA Outdoor Championships, when she also helped the Seminoles finish fourth as a team.
Additionally, Quigley broke the Atlantic Coast Conference and Florida State records in the steeplechase and indoor mile, and won five individual ACC titles in her career between the steeplechase (2 titles), indoor mile (2 titles) and outdoor 1,500 meters (1 title). Quigley also anchored the Florida State DMR team to two ACC titles in 2013 and 2015, including another conference record in 2013.
Quigley was a two-time NCAA South Region champion in cross country, as well, and swept ACC Performer and Scholar-Athlete of the Year honors in 2013 after she finished sixth at the NCAA Championships that fall. Quigley also earned Scholar-Athlete honors in indoor and outdoor track & field, making her one of only three athletes in ACC history to earn the honor in cross country, indoor and outdoor track & field. Quigley also earned ACC Outdoor Track Performer of the Year honors in 2015.
Nationally, Quigley was named the 2015 USTFCCCA Division I Women’s Outdoor Track Scholar Athlete of the Year, and was a two-time Capital One CoSIDA Academic All-American.
Quigley finished her degree at Florida State in May 2015, completing her Bachelor of Science in Dietetics with a 3.94 GPA within the honors program.
Outside of Track & Field, Quigley worked as a helpline volunteer for the National Eating Disorders Association during the summer of 2014, and worked for Glamour Magazine as an intern for the booking editor during the summer of 2012. Quigley was also a model for Wilhelmina Models from 2007-11, and worked in New York, London, the Bahamas, Amsterdam and the Turks and Caicos Islands for such clients as Tommy Hilfiger, Ralph Lauren, Prescriptives, Escada, Fornarina, Simons and Glamour Magazine.
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS:
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2016 Olympian (Finished 8th in the 3k steeplechase)
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3x World Championship qualifier (2015, 2017, 2019)
- 9-time NCAA All-American between cross country and track & field
- 2015 NCAA national champion in the 3k steeplechase
- Silver Medalist at the 2013 NCAA Outdoor Championships in the 3k steeplechase
- School (FSU) and conference (ACC) record holder in the 3k steeplechase and indoor mile
- Five-time ACC individual champion (steeplechase x2, indoor mile x2, 1,500m) and two-time ACC champion in the Distance Medley Relay
- Two-time NCAA South Region champion in cross country