| 1956 NCAA Track and Field Championships | |
|---|---|
| Dates | June 1956 | 
| Host city | Berkeley, California | 
| Venue | Edwards Stadium | 
| ← 1955  1957 →  | |
The 1956 NCAA Track and Field Championships were held in Berkeley, California in June 1956. UCLA won the team title, ending a seven-year streak by the University of Southern California. Nine NCAA meet records and one American record were broken at the event.[1]
Bobby Morrow of Abilene Christian led all athletes with 20 points in the meet. Morrow won both the 100-meter and 200-meter dashes.[1] Morrow went on to win three gold medals in the 1956 Summer Olympics.
Rafer Johnson led the scoring for team champion UCLA. Johnson scored 16 of UCLA's 55-7/10 points with second-place finishes in the broad jump and high hurdles.[1] Johnson went on to win the gold medal in the decathlon at the 1960 Summer Olympics.
The one American record that was broken at the meet was in the 800-meter run. Arnie Sowell of the University of Pittsburgh set the new American mark with a time of 1:46.7.[1]
Team scoring
1. UCLA – 55-7/10
 
2. Kansas - 50
 
3. University of Southern California – 34½
 
4. Michigan State – 29
 
5. Abilene Christian – 25
 
6. Villanova – 24
 
7. Oregon – 20
 
8. Michigan – 19-7/10
 
9. Oklahoma A&M – 19
 
10. Manhattan - 17
Track events
100-meter dash[2]
 
1. Bobby Morrow, Abilene Christian – 10.4
 
2. Dave Sime, Duke – 10.6
 
3. Agostini, Fresno State – 10.6
110-meter high hurdles[2]
 
1. Lee Calhoun, North Carolina College – 13.7
 
2. Rafer Johnson, UCLA – 13.8
 
3. Looween, Mankato State – 14.0
200-meter dash[2]
 
1. Bobby Morrow, Abilene Christian – 20.6
 
2. Blair, Kansas – 21.0
 
3. Bobby Whilden, Texas – 21.2
400-meter dash[2]
 
1. Jesse Mashburn, Oklahoma A&M  – 46.4 
 
2. Haines, Penn – 46.6
 
2. Jenkins, Villanova – 46.6
2. Ellis, Russ UCLA – 46.6
400-meter hurdles[2]
 
1. Lewis, Notre Dame – 51.0
 
2. Glenn Davis, Ohio State – 51.4
 
3. Thompson, Rice – 51.8
800-meter run[2]
 
1. Arnie Sowell, Pittsburgh – 1:46.7
 
2. Stanley, San Jose State – 1:49.2
 
3. Brew, Dartmouth – 1:50.5
 
3. Johnson, Abilene Christian – 1:50.5
1,500-meter run[2]
 
1. Ron Delany, Villnova – 3:47.3
 
2. Bailey, Oregon – 3:47.4
 
3. Sid Wing, Univ. South. Calif. – 3:49.7
3,000-meter steeplechase[2]
 
1. Kennedy, Michigan State – 9:16.5
 
2. Matza, BYU – 9:17.2
 
3. Kielstrup, Michigan – 9:34.4
5,000-meter run[2]
1. Bill Dellinger, Oregon – 14:48.5
 
2. Jim Beatty, North Carolina  – 14:51.1
 
3. Jones, Michigan State – 14:52.2
Field events
Broad jump[2]
 
1. Bell, Indiana – 25 feet, 4 inches
 
2. Rafer Johnson, UCLA - 25 feet, 4 inches
3. Floerke, Kansas – 24 feet, 5 inches
High jump[2]
 
1. Reavis, Villanova – 6 feet, 8¼ inches
 
1. Lang, Missouri – 6 feet, 8¼ inches
  
1. Dyer, UCLA – 6 feet, 8¼ inches
Pole vault[2]
 
1. Bob Gutowski, Occidental – 14 feet, 8 inches
 
1. Graham, Oklahoma A&M – 14 feet, 8 inches
 
3. Levack, Univ. South. Calif. – 14 feet, 4 inches
 
3. Landstrom, Michigan – 14 feet, 4 inches
Discus throw[2]
 
1. Drummond, UCLA – 173 feet, 1/2 inch
 
2. Vick, UCLA – 171 feet, 5 inches
 
3. Rink Babka, Univ. South. Calif. – 170 feet, 9½ inches
Javelin[2]
 
1. Conley, Cal Tech – 239 feet, 11 inches
 
2. Maijala, Univ. South. Calif. – 229 feet, 10 inches
 
3. Bitner, Kansas – 223 feet, 11½ inches
Shot put[2]
 
1. Bantum, Manhattan – 60 feet, 1/2 inch
 
2. Bill Nieder, Kansas – 57 feet, 3⅛ inches
 
3. Owen, Michigan – 57 feet, 2/3 inch
Hammer throw[2]
 
1. McWilliams, Bowdoin – 195 feet, 3 inches (new NCAA meet record)
 
2. Hall, Cornell – 193 feet, 8½ inches
 
3. Morefield, MIT – 193 feet, 2 inches
Hop, step and jump[2]
 
1. Sharp, West Chester St. – 50 feet, 4¾ inches
 
2. Floerke, Kansas – 49 feet, 6¼ inches
 
3. Davis, LaSalle – 49 feet, 3¼ inches