Bella Nelson is building her own path as America’s next Young Steeplechase Talent
Bella Nelson is moving quickly from high school distance star to one of the next young American steeplechasers to watch, and her runner-up finish at the USATF U20 Championships at Hayward Field added something special to her journey.
The Oklahoma State freshman finished second in the women’s 3000m steeplechase in 10:23.37, earning her first USA National Team selection and taking another major step in an event that already feels connected to her family, her athletic background, and the fearless way she has always carried herself. For a runner who came through Owasso High School as one of Oklahoma’s best distance talents, the performance showed how quickly she is learning the rhythm of the barriers, the water jump, and the pressure that comes with racing for a place on an international team.

For her father, Billy Nelson, the moment goes beyond Bella’s result, because Hayward Field was the same track where he placed second at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Trials to make his first senior national team in the steeplechase. Watching his daughter earn her first USA team spot on that same stage made the day unforgettable.
“Watching her place 2nd in the steeplechase and make her first USA National Team on the same track I placed 2nd to make my first USA National Track Team was surreal,” Billy said. “She executed her race plan and ran a near-perfect race. Watching her navigate the water jump and hurdle the dry barriers with ease, confidence, and determination was inspiring.”
That technical ease has become one of the clearest signs of Bella’s upside, because the steeplechase demands more than just fitness, pace judgment, and toughness. It asks an athlete to think, react, jump, recover, and commit again, lap after lap, and Bella’s background has prepared her for that kind of challenge in a way that feels almost natural.

Billy said the signs were there long before she ever became a steeplechaser, with Bella growing up active, competitive, and comfortable moving through different sports and environments. She played soccer, ran around the ranch where the family lived, climbed anything in sight, and showed an efficient stride whenever she ran during games or school activities.
“We always knew she was athletic, even at a young age,” Billy said. “When she would run in soccer or just run during school activities, she had an efficient stride. I knew then if she found running and it found her, she could do something special.”
That athletic foundation followed her into high school, where everything began to come together through cross country and track. At Owasso, Bella became a two-time individual state champion in cross country, helped her team win four state titles, earned Gatorade Oklahoma Girls Cross Country Player of the Year honors, and built the strength that now supports her steeplechase progression at Oklahoma State.

Her freshman year has already shown the range that makes her exciting, with speed over the middle distances and a steeplechase personal best of 10:15.34 earlier in the season at Hayward Field. That combination gives her a strong base for the event, and her U20 performance showed that she can bring those tools into a championship setting when the stakes are high.
Billy sees the steeplechase as fitting into the full picture of who Bella has always been, because her competitiveness has never been limited to running. She played soccer and basketball, joined pickup football games, rode horses, and even rode mini bulls when she was younger, which gave her the kind of courage and body awareness that can be valuable when the race turns physical and uncomfortable.
“She isn’t afraid to ‘dig deep into the well’ during races and sticks to her race plan no matter who lines up next to her,” Billy said. “Fear isn’t in her vocabulary. She embraces challenges both mentally and physically and sees it as a way to keep advancing.”
That mentality will matter as Bella moves toward the World U20 stage, because the steeplechase rewards athletes who can stay calm when the race becomes messy, crowded, and painful. Her father has seen that world from the inside as a U.S. Olympian, a national champion, and a coach, and his biggest lesson for Bella has been less about chasing perfection and more about learning how to grow from every race.
“Each race is a lesson, both good and bad, that can help you excel in this sport,” Billy said. “It’s ok to be upset, but after 5-10 mins, it’s time to replay it, learn from it, and keep moving forward. Also, always remember why you do this. You do this because you love it. Never forget that.”
That message feels important for a young athlete whose name is now attached to a Team USA breakthrough and a growing sense of expectation. Bella has already created her own path through high school success, a strong start at Oklahoma State, and a steeplechase performance that placed her among the top young American athletes in the event, and the next stage of her journey will be about building on that without losing the joy and character that have shaped her rise.
For Billy, the hope years from now is that people remember more than the places, times, and selections, because the numbers will always remain in the results archive. What he wants people to remember is the way Bella carried herself, the way she treated competitors, teammates, coaches, and fans, and the kind of person she was becoming amid all the attention.
“She has a heart of gold and builds those up around her,” Billy said. “Accomplishments in track and field live on forever in some form of results. You can always go back and see places finished and times run. You cannot look up how an athlete composed themselves. That’s something people remember in their own hearts and minds.” That is the story Bella Nelson is beginning to write now, with a steeplechase rhythm that carries family history, a racing spirit shaped by fearlessness, and a first USA team moment that confirms she belongs among the country’s most exciting young contenders.














