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Watch more from the meet: www.runnerspace.com VERONA, Wis. – Two weeks after facing each other at Notre Dame's Joe Piane Invitational, the nation’s top two teams met again at the Wisconsin Pre-Nationals, with the No. 2 BYU Cougars prevailing the second time around against top-ranked Northern Arizona. Led by Joe Piane champion Lexy Halladay-Lowry finishing ninth individually, BYU finished with 105 points for the team title, defeating No. 1 NAU by 61 points on Saturday at the Thomas Zimmer Championship Cross Country Course. Halladay-Lowry covered the 6-kilometer course in 19 minutes, 33.4 seconds, but it was BYU’s depth that proved to be the difference maker. The Cougars had seven women in the top 35, including Carmen Alder (19:48.6, 14th), Jenna Hutchins (19:54.7, 20th), Riley Chamberlain (20:00.1, 27th) and Nelah Roberts (20:06, 35th). “I think that was a really good showing,” Halladay-Lowry said. “There are some other teams who I feel like didn’t have some of their key players, and we’re aware of that. We had a good showing today, but we just want to keep our heads down and realize there’s a still a lot of work to be done.” BYU flipped the script on NAU in a short turnaround after the Lumberjacks prevailed by 13 points on Oct. 4, with six NAU runners cracking the top 20. “I feel like at Joe Piane we learned a lot of things about the team as a whole, but then also diving deeper into each individual,” Halladay-Lowry said. “Coach (Diljeet Taylor) gave each of us our new plans going into this race just to fine-tune some things as we continue to progress throughout the season. Our people did those things, and I think that’s why our result was a little better today.” NAU jumped out to an early lead at two kilometers, leading BYU 108-143 with seven Lumberjacks running in the top 40. Scoring shifted at four-kilometers, with BYU finding themselves ahead of NAU by 36 points, but trailing No. 28 West Virginia for the top spot. Less than a kilometer to go, BYU runners began picking off people left and right, including Alder, Chamberlain and Roberts, who combined to catch 36 people in the latter half of the race. “Our team is doing a really good job of continuing to pack up, which I think is important in the team scoring” Taylor said. “Really proud of how we’re coming together at this point of the season. Again, the team culture is probably the thing I’m most proud of and we’re going to continue to work and build.” NAU, who didn’t race Elise Stearns and Karrie Beloga, remained in third place the final two-kilometers, with No. 3 Washington overtaking them for second with 157 points. Chloe Foerster guided the Huskies, finishing 16th in 19:50.6, with India Weir (20:00.6, 28th) and Maeve Stiles (20:02.5, 30th) joining the top 30. Julia David-Smith finished in 20:09.8 for 41st and Sophie O’Sullivan, in her season debut, ran 20:10.4 to finish 42nd. West Virgina, finishing with only five women, collected 207 points to beat No. 3 Notre Dame, who rounded out the top five with 216 points. No. 17 New Mexico finished sixth with 236 points, with freshman Pamela Kosgei shattering Parker Valby’s course record by 18 seconds to win the individual crown in 18:59.1, becoming the first woman to break 19 minutes on the course. Kosgei overtook Florida’s Hilda Olemomoi and Tulane’s Carolina Jeptanui and outran them to the finish line, beating Olemomoi by three seconds in second in 19:02.9 and Jeptanui by six seconds in third in 19:05.4. Kosgei, Olemomoi and Jeptanui and three other women ran under Valby’s previous best of 19:17 from last year’s Nuttycombe Invitational, with West Virginia’s Ceili McCabe running 19:10.8 for fourth, Connecticut’s Chloe Thomas running 19:11.8 for fifth and N.C. State’s Grace Hartman running 19:15.2 for sixth. Arkansas’ Paityn Noe led the Razorbacks with a seventh-place effort in 19:19.5 and West Virginia’s Joy Naukot was 10th in 19:37.4. No. 5 N.C. State scored 293 points for seventh with a pair of top-10 finishes from Hartman’s and Hannah Gapes (19:31, eighth). No. 13 Wisconsin finished eighth with 348 points, Florida State took ninth with 364 points and No. 11 Florida earned 10th with 368 points. Click subscribe to get alerts and never miss a new track video! Follow RunnerSpace.com on social media at @runnerspace. Copyright RunnerSpace.com.