Tokyo, Japan – Jamaica’s women’s 4x400m team produced an authoritative performance en route to winning their heat in what was at the time a world-leading 3:22.77. Fourteen minutes later, Team USA ...
Jamaica roared back to sprint dominance at the Tokyo 2025 World Athletics Championships with a stunning one-two finish in the men’s 100m final. Seville’s quick reaction time of 0.157 seconds set the ...
Jamaica’s sprint hopes remained firmly on track at the Tokyo 2025 World Athletics Championships as Kishane Thompson, Tina Clayton and the legendary Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, in her farewell appearance, ...
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados — Jahleel Croal of the British Virgin Islands has been called up to replace Omari Lewis, who was ruled out of the upcoming Barbados Grand Prix after suffering a hamstring injury.
Despite some critics using the Kingston leg of the series to point fingers at marketing and logistics, the underwhelming turnout there says more about audience apathy than any alleged failure on the ...
MEN’S 100M: 1. Elvis Afrifa (NED), 10.25; 2. Benjamin Richardson (RSA), 10.28; 3. Henrik Larsson (SWE), 10.29; 4. Ronnie Baker (USA), 10.30; 5. Owen Ansah (GER), 10 ...
What if the most electrifying event in global athletics — the 100m sprint — isn’t as equal as we think? Not because of doping. Not false starts. In race after race, frame after frame, some athletes ...
Men’s 100m: 1. Lachlan Kennedy (AUS), 9.98; 2. Bayanda Walaza (RSA), 10.03; 3. Ferdinand Omanyala (KEN), 10.07; 4. Shaun Maswanganyi (RSA), 10.24; 5. Simon ...
Williams, competing for Nike, won the women’s 100m in 11.08 seconds with a slight +0.3 m/s wind. She crossed the line ahead of Marie-Josée Ta Lou-Smith (CIV), also of Nike, who ran 11.20. Germany’s ...
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