Ohio State's Jesse Owens won championships in four individual events—the 100-yard sprint, the 220-yard sprint, the 220-yard low hurdles, and the broad jump (now called the long jump).
United States men's national soccer team | The Championships, Wimbledon | X-Men | field hockey | Field Marshal | NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship | 1935 | Canada men's national soccer team | World Figure Skating Championships | Mad Men | track | Field Museum of Natural History | Boyz II Men | Two and a Half Men | men's basketball | ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships | Wrigley Field | IAAF World Championships in Athletics | Men in Black | United States men's national basketball team | Men's National Team | 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships | Of Mice and Men | Men Behaving Badly | Ice Hockey World Championships | World Gliding Championships | 2007 World Championships in Athletics | Soldier Field | Sally Field | Men's major golf championships |
Hubbard had set the world record in the event in 1923, but Robert LeGendre had surpassed Hubbard's record at the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris.
For the second consecutive year, Ohio State's Jesse Owens won championships in four individual events—the 100-meter sprint, the 200-meter sprint, the 110-meter high hurdles and the broad jump (now called the long jump).
•
1. Jesse Owens, Ohio State - 10.2 seconds (new world record)
At the 1925 NCAA Men's Track and Field Championships, he helped Michigan take second place as the Wolverines narrowly lost the team title to Stanford.