Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Coach Mac would have been proud

- NATE ALLEN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — For the first/ last time since the track inside the Randal Tyson Indoor Track Center last Thursday was named in his honor, retiring Arkansas Women’s Coach Lance Harter piloted his Razorbacks to their ninth consecutiv­e victorious SEC Indoor Track and Field Championsh­ips.

On the same Friday and Saturday, Arkansas Coach Chris Bucknam piloted his Razorbacks men to their fourth consecutiv­e SEC Indoor crown.

From somewhere above, both coaches imagined John McDonnell’s Irish eyes were smiling.

The NCAA’s greatest head coach with 42 Arkansas men’s national championsh­ips and 84 conference championsh­ips starting in 1974 cross country into his 2008 finale before retirement, “Coach Mac” until his 2021 death staunchly supported his successor’s regime Bucknam said often.

When then Lady Razorbacks Athletic Director Bev Lewis was enticing Harter in 1990 to replace her as women’s head cross country/track coach off Lance’s Division II national championsh­ip success at Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo, McDonnell stressed the women’s potential could run with Arkansas’ men. That sold him, Harter said.

Ellen McDonnell, John’s wife, daughter Heather and son Sean, were among the 400 attending Thursday’s magnificen­t retirement ceremony organized on Harter’s behalf.

After his 2023 Indoor Razorbacks outpointed 2022 NCAA Indoor national champion Florida, 130.5 to 84 while Bucknam’s men exceeded runnerup Florida, 100.25 to 73, Harter recalled the first time his team joined McDonnell’s in a SEC sweep.

“Coach Mac was so emotional about it,” Harter said.

“For him it was just common place, but for the women to topple that it made him feel really, really good.”

Both Harter and Bucknam said how gratified they felt for each other and their staffs following Saturday’s sweep.

SEC titles have been common place for Harter with 44 and Bucknam with 28.

The page turns now to the NCAA Indoor Championsh­ips March 1011 in Albuquerqu­e, N.M. Bucknam’s Razorbacks stand their best chance of winning a national championsh­ip since their 2013 Indoor title.

Harter may well gain national championsh­ip No. 7 and another in the June Outdoor before handing reins to associate head coach Chris Johnson.

Still, the SEC sweep deserves dwelling. McDonnell never took his conference titles lightly. Neither do Harter and Bucknam. Especially with the SEC by far the toughest track league.

“We’re happy to hoist another SEC championsh­ip,” Bucknam said. “It’s an important glue to our history This is a hard league to win and it never gets old winning.”

And it “stuck in our craw” galling to lose, Harter said, recalling Florida winning the 2022 SEC Outdoor over Arkansas by four points.

“Obviously this (2023 SEC Indoor) for these kids was really special,” Harter said.

Especially on the Lance Harter Track, said senior Lauren Gregory, a Saturday women’s double SEC winner in the mile and 3,000 after Friday inheriting a lastplace Arkansas distance medley relay and mile anchoring it to third.

“The new Lance Harter emblem on the track I couldn’t stop looking at it,” Gregory said. “It just adds something else to the experience.”

An experience of SEC success that never gets old.

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