Section 8: Safety Considerations
Throwing Event Safety
- Throwing cages required for discus and hammer (cage netting designed to contain mis-throws)
- Sector marshals positioned to keep the sector clear of personnel during throws
- Implement inspection prevents injury from damaged implements
- Javelin events use a strict landing-area protocol with marshals positioned to prevent personnel from entering the sector
Pole Vault and High Jump Safety
- Pole-vault landing mats must meet NCAA-approved dimensions and minimum 65 cm thickness for the championship
- High jump landing mats must meet NCAA-approved dimensions and thickness
- Standards and crossbars must be approved equipment; safety pads on the standards prevent ankle-strike injuries
- Pole-vault pole inspection prior to use; broken poles must be removed from service
Heat and Weather
- NCAA outdoor track and field championship policy uses WBGT-based heat thresholds for event modifications
- Heat-related modifications can include start-time changes, additional water stations, mandatory cooling breaks for distance events, and event postponement in extreme cases
- Lightning detection halts outdoor competition within the standard radius of detected strikes; competition resumes only after the all-clear interval has elapsed
- High wind affecting event safety (especially pole vault, javelin) may cause event delay or postponement at the discretion of the meet referee
Distance Event Safety
Distance events (5,000 m, 10,000 m, steeplechase) require medical monitoring during competition. Athletic trainers stationed at strategic points around the track; ambulance access to the track entrance maintained throughout the event. Heat illness in the 10,000 m and steeplechase requires immediate evaluation and removal from competition.
Medical Coverage
- Each NCAA-sanctioned meet requires certified athletic trainers on site
- Championship-level meets require a physician on site plus EMT/ambulance coverage
- Emergency action plan covering on-field cardiac, head/neck, orthopedic, and heat-related emergencies must be in effect at every venue
- Defibrillators (AEDs) positioned strategically around the track and at field-event sites
Concussion Protocol
Pole-vault head/neck-impact incidents and field-event implement-strike incidents are the primary head-injury risks in track and field. Concussion protocol: athlete with actual or suspected concussion is removed from competition immediately and is subject to a graduated return-to-play assessment before being cleared for subsequent training and competition.