Chesondin breaks course record in leading Arkansas to team win

FAYETTEVILLE – Razorback Timothy Chesondin led Arkansas to a team title at the 37th Chile Pepper Festival as he produced a meet and Agri Park course record of 22 minutes, 53.6 seconds for the individual victory.

Arkansas scored 40 points to defeat Texas (56), Northwest Missouri (103), Stephen F. Austin (118) and Oral Roberts (241) among the 31 teams competing in the McDonnell Memorial 8k.

“First and foremost it’s about winning,” stated Arkansas men’s coach Chris Bucknam. “We want to win the race, that’s what we line up to do. That’s our No. 1 priority.

“I’m very happy with our performance, placing four in the top five. Very pleased with how we ran, for the most part as a team. But as you can see we have a big gap between our fourth and fifth guy. We have a lot of work to do to close that gap.”

Behind the record run by Chesondin, who bettered the previous record of 22:57.0 set by Razorback Kirami Yego in 2024, were teammates Brian Masai, runner-up in 23:10.2, James Sankei, fourth in 23:31.3, and Ben Shearer, fifth at 23:38.4. Oral Robert’s Abraham Chelangam placed third in 23:29.3.

The 1-2-4-5 tally from the first four Arkansas finishers totaled 12 points. Jack Williams was the fifth Razorback, placing 28th with a time of 24:43.4 to bring the team score to 40 points. Texas, led by Nathanael Berhane (23:53.1) reached 56 points off a 7-9-10-11-19 tally.

Also racing for Arkansas were Eli Seavy and Donovan Bitticks. Seavy covered the course in 25:02.7 to place 46th, while Bitticks ran 26:36.3 in placing 167th among a field of 285 runners who finished the race.

“We held out one athlete out for this race, so that person may be able to go in there and help us in that fifth slot,” noted Bucknam.

“I’m very pleased with the top four guys for sure. Timothy set a course record on a warm day. The course is in great shape and so he basically ran by himself pretty much the whole way. This is an accurate 8k course, so it’s an accurate assessment of where he’s at.”