Does anyone know how to call the Hogs in French?
There are bound to be some of the University of Arkansas' signature cheers heard at the Paris Olympics after what happened Monday night at the U.S. Track and Field Trials in Eugene, Ore.
Four Razorbacks -- Rachel Glenn, Taliyah Brooks, Chris Bailey and Jarrion Lawson -- made the U.S. Olympic track and field team within less than an hour of each other's performances at the University of Oregon's Hayward Field.
Glenn, an Arkansas redshirt junior and two-time NCAA champion, cleared 6 feet, 4 1/2 inches to finish second in the women's high jump.
Former Razorbacks Brooks, Bailey and Lawson -- who all still train in Fayetteville -- finished third in the heptathlon, 400 meters and long jump, respectively.
The top three finishers in each event qualify for the U.S. team that will compete at the Paris Olympics, which begin in late July.
It will be the second Olympics for Lawson, 30; and the first for Brooks, 29; Bailey, 24; and Glenn, 22.
Brooks scored a career-high 6,408 points in the heptathlon, Bailey ran 44.42 seconds in the 400 to match his personal-best time and Lawson went a season-best 26-10 in the long jump.
Brooks, an NCAA pentathlon champion at Arkansas who has battled injuries throughout her career and undergone seven surgeries on her left knee, ran a personal-best 2:13.39 in the 800 to cap the heptathlon and finish third by 29 points over fourth-place Michelle Atherley, who ran 2:06.68.
Former Florida standout Anna Hall won the heptathlon with 6,614 points and Chari Hawkins was second with 6,456.
Brooks started Monday's events by going 20-7 3/4 in the long jump, then threw the javelin a personal-best 135-4.
Lawson, a five-time NCAA champion who finished fourth in the long jump at the 2016 Olympics, went from seventh place to third Monday night on his final of six attempts when he took off right at the board -- avoiding a foul by less than an inch -- and went 26-10.
Lawson edged Southern California junior Johnny Brackins by a quarter-inch for the final spot on the U.S. team. Brackins was fourth with a best leap of 26-9 3/4.
Prior to Lawson's last attempt, his best mark had been 26-3 1/4.
Florida State junior Jeremiah Davis went 26-11 on his third attempt to win the long jump. Florida junior Malcom Clemons was second at 26-10, though his mark was listed ahead of Lawson's.
Glenn high-jumped on the same Hayward Field surface where on June 8 she finished 13th at the NCAA Championships, clearing 5-11 1/2 and missing three attempts at 6-1 1/2.
On Monday night, Glenn made 6-4 1/2 on her third attempt, then missed three attempts at 6-5 1/2.
If Glenn had missed her third attempt at 6-4 1/2, she wouldn't have finished in the top three because two other jumpers had cleared 6-3 1/4 on their first attempt while Glenn made that height on her second attempt.
Kentucky senior Charity Hufnagel's top clearance also was 6-4 1/2, but she won the event because she cleared that on her first attempt.
Glenn will have a chance to make the Olympic team in a second event. She runs in the first round of the 400 hurdles on Thursday night.
Bailey, running in lane 9, was eighth through the first 200 of the 400 when he ran 21.83. He closed strong, running the final 100 in 11.73 and moved from fifth to third to finish behind Quincy Hall (44.17) and Michael Norman (44.41).
Ryan Crouser, an Arkansas volunteer assistant coach who trains in Fayetteville and is a two-time Olympic gold medalist, made the U.S. team for third time after winning the men's shot put Saturday night.
Former Razorback Krissy Gear, who won the 3,000 steeplechase at last year's U.S. Championships, advanced to the final by running 9:30.92.
Two other former Razorbacks -- Logan Jolly and Gracie Hyde -- were separated by one-hundredth of a second for the final of 14 spots in the final.
Jolly ran 9:33.91 in the first heat. Hyde, a senior at NCAA Division II Adams State in Alamosa, Colo., this year, ran 9:33.92 in the second heat for the No. 15 time.
Hyde is from Benton and also previously. competed for the University of Central Arkansas.
Former Razorback Lauren Gregory finished 13th in the 5,000 final, running 15:44.09.
Jamal Britt, a former All-American at Iowa who trains in Fayetteville, ran 13.07 in the first round of the men's 110 hurdles to advance to the semifinals.
Britt had the second-fastest time behind Grant Holloway, the former Florida NCAA champion, Olympic silver medalist and three-time world champion who ran 12.92.
Arkansas senior Elijah Morris (13.57) and former Razorback Matthew Lewis-Banks (14.31) both failed to advance.
Former Razorback Alex Gochenour-Brondyke, an assistant coach at Iowa State, dropped out of the heptathlon after the long jump and finished 17th with 4,207 points.