
Home meet No. 2 of the 2025-26 indoor season is coming up on Friday when the Concordia Polar Dog Invite will take place. The meet will feature a full slate of field and running events.

Home meet No. 2 of the 2025-26 indoor season is coming up on Friday when the Concordia Polar Dog Invite will take place. The meet will feature a full slate of field and running events.

Adrianna Rodencal beat out five NCAA Division I athletes and won the 60-meter hurdle title at the Graduate Classic. A day later, four Bulldogs emerged as event champions at the Nisely Classic.

The long-awaited return to action will arrive this weekend as the Bulldogs send athletes to the Graduate Classic and Nisely Memorial Classic. Concordia opened the indoor season in December by hosting the Bulldog Early Bird.

Courtesy of their performances at the Concordia Bulldog Early Bird meet, junior Josiah Edwards and sophomore Adysen McCarter have earned GPAC athlete of the week awards.

Adysen McCarter and Adrianna Rodencal broke school records as the Bulldogs kicked off the indoor season by hosting the Bulldog Early Bird Meet. Concordia also achieved four NAIA auto standards and won six event titles.

The indoor track season is set to kick off on Friday and Saturday when Concordia will host the Bulldog Early Bird Meet. The December meet has taken place annually since 2020.
A roster of more than 160 athletes will be showcased during the 2025-26 Concordia Track & Field seasons. The Bulldogs return seven athletes with previous All-America awards to their credit.
Dr. Brandon Seifert will take his place amongst the elite student-athletes in NAIA history. On Sept. 15, Seifert was announced as one of nine inductees into the NAIA Hall of Fame Class of 2025.

The honors that came from the USTFCCCA included All-Academic Team recognition and a total of 25 All-Academic Athlete awards for Concordia Track & Field.

For the second-straight year, Mayson Ostermeyer has been named an Academic All-American by College Sports Communicators. Ostermeyer is a two-time NAIA pole vault All-American.
On the heels of a fine indoor season, Concordia Track & Field sets its focus upon the 2024 outdoor campaign. The Bulldogs will attempt to build upon the All-America awards won by 15 individuals at the indoor national meet.
The ‘aha moment’ for Zach Zohner occurred during the middle of the 2023 indoor season when he decided he would no longer let the fear of injury monopolize his thoughts. The right mentality set him on a path to a national title.
Energetic and intensely competitive, Rylee Haecker has been described by coaches as "a gamer." Beyond athletics, Haecker is caring and outgoing, is a positive encourager of her teammates and is devout in her faith.
If the Bulldog Early Bird Meet is any indication, Concordia Track & Field is in for a phenomenal 2023-24 indoor season. The Bulldogs enter 2024 expecting to compete with the best of the GPAC and the NAIA once again.
With only a cinder track and no dedicated indoor facilities, Coach John Knight went to work building up the Concordia Cross Country and Track & Field programs. He succeeded in landing some of the top athletes in school history.
In winding down a fifth year of a remarkable collegiate journey, the triple major Rachel Battershell has rediscovered the joy that made her a champion. Nearing the finish line, Battershell reflected on an experience she calls "really special."
Outdoor track season has nearly arrived for the Bulldogs, who are coming off indoor GPAC placements of first for the women and third for the men. The dynamics change with a different set of events on tap for outdoor track.
Twenty Bulldogs return who experienced the 2022 NAIA indoor national meet. The group includes past national champions Rachel Battershell and Josie Puelz. The program again has high hopes as the 2023 season has arrived.
In a different era of Bulldog Athletics, Bob Schulze left a legacy as a four-sport athlete. Schulze may not have known exactly what he was getting into, but 58 years after his graduation from Concordia, he knows that God led him to the perfect place.
You couldn't have been around Concordia and not have known Liz King. The native of Billings, Mont., became the first throws national champion under Ed McLaughlin and endeared people to her with her personality.