Galen Loyd in the 400 meter dash
Chris Reich, NSU Photographic Services

As career winds down, Loyd leans on importance of family

4/11/2025 9:00:00 AM

NATCHITOCHES—To most people, family is a major part of their lives.

For Northwestern State sprinter Galen Loyd, it is even more important.

Loyd has seen a lot during his young life, starting with an accident with his father that left him in a wheelchair.

A year and a half ago, he became a father, which has helped Loyd grow up and mature even more than he was before.

With his family by his side, Loyd has been healthy and proceeded to have the best season of his career, one that is winding down for the senior.

Loyd is preparing for his final collegiate meet at home, the Leon Johnson NSU Invitational on Saturday at the Walter P. Ledet Track & Field Complex. He is one of the three Demons being honored on Senior Day.

"My emotions are high," he said. "I've been doing this since I came here and every year, I PR on this track. This being my last year here, it kind of makes you want to cry a little bit, but I am also happy I made it to the end."

A native of Colifax, Loyd wanted to stay close to home for his collegiate career, and he found that at Northwestern State.

His family was close by and could watch him compete, which was an important factor.

"My family is very important to me," Loyd said. "My dad was in a wreck in 2012 and ever since then he has been in a wheelchair. He still has movement and everything, but he just can't walk. Being so close to home just allows me to take care of my parents and stay close to my sisters. Having a young daughter who also lives up here in Natchitoches is a big thing for me as well."

That family is now more important than ever, but it played a role in him coming to Natchitoches and saw the advantages right away of coming to a school close to home.

"It was really important to me to come to Northwestern State," he said. "Being so close to family, being around them and being able to see them now and then gives me a boost of confidence knowing that I still have them around and I am not too far away from them if I ever need them."

Another item in Northwestern State's favor when recruiting Loyd was associate head coach Adam Pennington.

During the early stages of Pennington's coaching career, he coached an athlete named Kartavius Hamilton at McNeese. Hamilton just happened to be the track and field coach at Grant High School, which is where Loyd attended.

With Loyd receiving guidance on where to go to school, the choice was easy for him to make, especially with his family close by.

"His coach reached out to me at the time," Pennington said. "He was running decent enough to end up here and now he is running decent enough to make it to the first round of the national championships and hopefully keep advancing. He's turned that corner from a high school athlete to a collegiate athlete and it has definitely helped the process having a former athlete as his high school coach."

 Not heavily recruited, Pennington saw potential in Loyd and offered him a scholarship. His first few years were riddled with injuries, but now a senior, Loyd is back healthy and showing the Southland Conference what he can do.

"It's been a process for him," Pennington said. "When he first came here as a freshman, he wasn't heavily recruited. He came from a small school and right away he had success in the 400 but got injured shortly after his first outdoor meet his freshman year. Ever since then, he has had injuries year in and year out and was never really healthy enough to display what he was capable of.

"This year, he has finally had a healthy season and it has all kind of played out. Right before indoor conference, he had a small setback with a small injury, but then he came right back to begin the outdoor season with personal best."

Loyd has posted four top five finishes so far this season, already the most out of any year of his career, including a personal-best 46.94 in the 400-meter dash at the Lurline Hamilton Invitational to win the event and currently ranks second in the conference in both the 400 and as part of the 4x400 relay.

Throughout his career, Loyd has claimed three medals, including earning his first career gold medal as a member of the 4x400 relay team at the indoor meet last month.

Loyd, one of the most improved Demons throughout his career, has a chance to etch his name into the record books at Northwestern State with a strong end to the season, leading the Demons down the stretch with only three more meets prior to the SLC outdoor meet, as he aims to earn his first SLC team title after watching the women claim four.

The best news of it all for him, though, is his family is able to see him go for it.

"He's been a pleasure to work with," Pennington said. "He is a great athlete and a great kid and has become a great leader, great man and a great father. It's been awesome to watch him grow throughout his four years."
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