Riley Chamberlain (runner)
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | 21 July 2004 |
| Sport | |
| Sport | Athletics |
Event(s) | Middle-distance running, Long-distance running, Cross country running |
| Achievements and titles | |
| Personal best(s) | 800m: 1:59.75 (Portland, 2025) 1500m: 4:02.03 (Los Angeles, 2025) Mile: 4:26.19 (Boston, 2025) 3000m: 8:40.89 (Seattle, 2025) 5000m: 14:58.97 (Boston, 2025) |
Riley Chamberlain (born 21 July 2004) is an American middle- and long-distance, and cross country runner.[1]
Biography
From a family of runners, Chamberlain's father competed at the USA Olympic Trials in the steeplechase, as she ran in track and field at high school alongside her sister, Karissa.[2] Chamberlain attended Del Oro High School prior to competing at the collegiate level for Brigham Young University. She set a BYU record and became the fourth fastest NCAA all-time in the women’s indoor mile run with a time of 4:33.14 at the 2023 Razorback Invitational.[3]
Chamberlain was a member of winning BYU distance medley relay teams at the 2024 and 2025 NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships.[4] In February 2025, Chamberlain had run alongside Carmen Alder, Meghan Hunter, and Tessa Buswell to set a new collegiate best time of 10:37.58 for the event at the Husky Classic, breaking the previous best mark by over six seconds.[5]
In July 2025, Chamberlain ran a new personal best of 4:02.23 in the 1500 metres whilst competing at the Sunset Tour in Los Angeles. The following week at the Stumptown Twilight in Portland, Oregon, she won the 800 metres in a personal best time of 1:59.75.[6] She qualified for the final of the 1500 metres at 2025 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, before falling in a racing incident involving Helen Schlachtenhaufen, and finished behind the pack.[7][8]
Chamberlain placed fourth in the individual race at the 2025 NCAA Cross Country Championships in Missouri, helping BYU to a second place finish in the team event.[9] On 6 December, she ran 14:58.97 for the 5000 metres in Boston, Massachusetts at the Colyear-Danville Season Opener, finishing runner-up as BYU teammate Jane Hedengren broke the NCAA indoor record.[10]
References
- ^ "Riley Chamberlain". World Athletics. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
- ^ Jackson, Aaron (May 5, 2022). "Athlete of the Week: Riley Chamberlain grabs personal records in the last two invitationals". Gold Country Media. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
- ^ Repetti, Hayley (Mar 30, 2023). "Riley Chamberlain now setting records in college". Gold Country Media. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
- ^ Gault, Jonathan; Johnson, Robert (March 15, 2025). "NCAA Women's Track: BYU Repeats in DMR Thriller as Doris Lemngole Keeps Winning – Day 1 Recap". Lets Run. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
- ^ "BYU Women, Washington Men Run Fastest Indoor DMRs In Collegiate History". Runnerspace. 15 Feb 2025. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
- ^ "RILEY CHAMBERLAIN, THOMAS RATCLIFFE MAKE GOOD USE OF STUMPTOWN TWILIGHT WITH WINS AND PRS". Runnerspace. 20 July 2025. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
- ^ Kahler, Theo (2 August 2025). "Helen Schlachtenhaufen Was a Contender for the World Championship Team. A Bloody Fall Dashed Her Hopes". Runners World. Retrieved 7 Dec 2025.
- ^ "USA Championships". World Athletics. 2 August 2025. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
- ^ Edler, Krysyan; Walch, Tad (22 November 2025). "BYU women, Jane Hedengren finish second at NCAA cross country championships". Deseret.com. Retrieved 7 December 2025.
- ^ Woods, David (7 December 2025). "JOSH HOEY BREAKS INDOOR 600 WORLD RECORD, JANE HEDENGREN CRUSHES COLLEGIATE 5,000 RECORD AT BU". Runnerspace. Retrieved 7 Dec 2025.