INDIANAPOLIS – Scoring the second highest point total in U.S. history, Anna Hall won her second career USATF Indoor Combined Events crown, taking the women's pentathlon with a score of 4,831 Sunday at Fall Creek Pavilion. Hall holds the American record at 5,004, set in 2023 at Albuquerque to win her first pentathlon title.
The World Athletics Championships heptathlon gold medalist last summer, Hall zipped to an 8.19 in the 60-meter hurdles to open the day, and then won the high jump with a clearance at 1.85/6-0.75. She had a best of 13.89/45-7 in the shot put and added a 6.20/20-4.25 in the long jump before closing out the competition with a 2:07.30 win in the 800.
Timara Chapman, last year's NCAA indoor pentathlon winner for Texas A&M, notched a lifetime best of 4,603 to earn silver, with Erin Marsh tied her lifetime best of 4,432 to take bronze.
Wins in the final two events carried Hakim McMorris to his first national title Sunday as he scored 6,255 points to take the USATF Indoor Combined Events men's heptathlon gold by 10 points over 2025 USATF decathlon winner Heath Baldwin. His score elevated him to No. 8 on the all-time U.S. performer list, with Baldwin's 6,245 putting him at No. 9.
Baldwin had established a 99-point lead after the first day, scoring highly in the long jump and high jump to tally 3,532, and the duo tied in the first event on day two, both clocking 7.91 in the 60-meter hurdles. McMorris cleared 4.95/16-2.75 in the pole vault to cut Baldwin's lead to 38 as Baldwin could manage only 4.75/15-7.
In the final event, McMorris quickly went to the lead in the 1000 and led through 400 in 60.28 and 800 in 2:04.03 before closing in 31.70 to cross the line first in 2:35.72 ahead of Baldwin's 2:39.94. Justin Abrams, who was eighth in the NCAA indoor heptathlon for Cincinnati last year, earned bronze with a lifetime best score of 5,937.
Full results can be found here.