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Chalmers targets World final after new personal best
Chalmers targets World final after new personal best

BBC News

time15 hours ago

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Chalmers targets World final after new personal best

Alastair Chalmers says he is targeting the 400m hurdles final at the World Championships in Tokyo after running a personal reigning British champion, 25, clocked 48.30 secs in Germany on Sunday, breaking his previous best by 0.24 seconds. Chalmers narrowly missed out on the finals at the European Championships last summer before falling in the semi-finals at the Olympic Games in Chalmers finish in the top two at the forthcoming British Championships, he will be guaranteed a place in Tokyo, having achieved the qualifying standard."So much can happen between now and then, I've just got to stay healthy," he told BBC Radio Guernsey. "I think on the day in Tokyo if I can execute a really good race and I'm healthy and in good shape then there is a good chance I could make that final."It's going to be hard, but that's the whole point of competition, you've got to turn up on the day and give if your all and not mess up."Chalmers has won the last five British titles and is in the form of his life, having improved his best time year on year."Running the fastest time of your life is always a lovely feeling," he added."When I crossed the line I was just very happy that I'd run that world qualifier, personal best, I think it was a meet record as well."I'm just in a great place physically and mentally and it just allows me to go out and run quick on the track against some really high quality athletes."The World Championships in Japan will take place from 13-21 September.

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone: Inside the mind of a serial winner
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone: Inside the mind of a serial winner

New York Times

time29-05-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone: Inside the mind of a serial winner

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone is discussing what the night before a race at the Olympic Games is like. 'It's very broken-up sleep,' she says, smiling. 'For very big races, it's almost like (my body) is a race car revving up. It's just ready. Ready to get to it.' And when McLaughlin-Levrone gets to it, that tends to be devastating news for her opponents. Still only 25, she has won four Olympic golds: two over 400m hurdles in Paris and Tokyo and two more in the 4x400m relay. Advertisement But track has not always been this straightforward for her. Over an absorbing half-hour on a video call with The Athletic, she provides a window into the mind of one of the planet's outstanding modern athletes. She explains how faith helped her overcome the anxiety that previously left her 'throwing up' before major races, as well as her fears that her value was wrapped up solely in winning and losing races. Three years out from a home Olympics in Los Angeles in 2028, she has emerged as the most dominant U.S. female track athlete. Among the men's and women's track medallists who won gold for the United States in Paris, only Sha'Carri Richardson has more than her 1.5m followers on Instagram. McLaughlin-Levrone has won 12 consecutive 400m hurdles finals in the past six years — she was last defeated at the World Championships in 2019. In that time, she has also broken the world record in the 400m hurdles six times. Between 1984 and 2019, the world record in the event was lowered by 1.42 seconds. But between the summers of 2021 and 2024, McLaughlin-Levrone trimmed 1.79 seconds off it — all by herself. By winning the 400m hurdles in Paris last summer, she became the first American to retain an Olympic gold in an individual track event since Michael Johnson's consecutive golds in the 400m in 1996 and 2000. There is competition, most notably from her compatriot Anna Cockrell and the Dutch racer Femke Bol. But in Paris, McLaughlin-Levrone obliterated the field. Bol took bronze, and she was two seconds behind. Is motivation a challenge? Does it ever feel like she is racing against herself? 'There's always something I can be doing better,' McLaughlin-Levrone says. 'There's always someone striving to be where you are. There's days where I'm more motivated than others. It's easy to get stuck in a rut or it can become monotonous, but I get to do what I love every day and I get to quite literally race a clock. Advertisement 'It's fun to figure out how I can become the best athlete I can be and keep lowering my times. There's always the reality of competition that's going to push me. But when I am at practice, it is figuring out how I can be better than Sydney was yesterday.' But how much 'better' can Sydney be? When she qualified to represent the United States in Rio de Janeiro in 2016 as a 16-year-old high-school student, she was the youngest to make the team in 36 years. Might she break Carl Lewis's U.S. record of nine American Olympic golds? Could she break the 50-second barrier for the 400m hurdles, having set a time of 50.37 seconds in Paris? Might she switch up events in 2028, having solely competed in the 400m hurdles and 4x400m relay in Paris? At the NYC Grand Prix in 2024, she won the 400m flat in 48.75 seconds, which would have secured a bronze medal in Paris. Over the 200m flat in Los Angeles last year — her first time competing over the distance since 2018 — she ran a time of 22.07, which would have earned her silver in Paris. All of which makes one wonder what might be possible if she committed to different events in 2028. This weekend, racing in Michael Johnson's Grand Slam Track in Philadelphia, McLaughlin-Levrone will run her first 100m flat in a professional setting, and will also contest the 100m hurdles. She was one of the first to sign up to Grand Slam Track. While attendance was underwhelming at the first meet in Kingston, Jamaica, and McLaughlin-Levrone says there are 'wrinkles' to iron out, she insists GST 'is something that can grow.' 'All the athletes I've talked to have really enjoyed it,' she adds. The event, in which racers compete in two disciplines at each meet, enables her to dabble in different events. And she says she is open to running on the flat in 2028. Advertisement 'I'm starting to kind of like this sprinting thing,' she says, with a glint in her eye. She likes the buzz of feeling uncomfortable. She says it is 'humbling', describing the short sprints as akin to 'entering a lion's den.' 'It's a completely different energy system. It's so ballistic; shooting out of the blocks, toe dragging. To create this force in a linear line down the track is so different than the grace that the 400m gives if you don't have the best block start. That doesn't exist in the 100m. 'It's definitely been a shift these past few weeks, but it's been great to work on sprint mechanics, block start and hurdle technique, because those are all things — even though they aren't as important in longer races — which can still be of benefit down the line.' She has been studying videos of short sprinters, tapping up Trayvon Bromell, the U.S. sprinter who has twice won world bronze, for advice. Bromell is a friend of her husband, the former NFL wide receiver Andre Levrone Jr. 'He was giving me a few pointers of how to set up in the blocks,' she says. 'I've watched a lot his starts, specifically, just trying to understand some of the shin angles. It is fascinating getting to learn something that I didn't know before.' McLaughlin-Levrone's track journey began in Dunellen, New Jersey. Both of her parents were strong runners and her dad Willie, her coach growing up, made it to the semi-finals of the 1984 U.S. Olympic trials in the 400m. 'My dad took me and my three siblings and we were our own little track team,' she says. 'There was no pressure. That is how we were introduced into the sport. 'I didn't do any club. We didn't really even train. My dad gave us some drills for our arm swing, our high knees, agility drills and then it was just, 'Go run'. He wanted us to be kids. He didn't want to train us like pros.' Advertisement In her early teens, she even paused from competitive running altogether, instead focusing on soccer (she was a right-winger), basketball and dance. Might she have made a career out of soccer? 'I think so,' she nods. 'If I had stuck with it. I loved it — not quite as much as track — but it was up there.' Track took over, as McLaughlin-Levrone won an under-18 World Championship at the age of 15 and then debuted in the Olympics at 16. When did she realize she might, to put it mildly, be onto something? 'In freshman year of high school, my first race was an indoors 300m. I broke the state record. I was like, 'OK, I think there's hope for you!' 'My parents used to say, 'You're special,' but I feel like parents are supposed to say that. But for me to see that come to fruition at 14, racing against some seniors, I was like, 'Wow, if I really train for this, I do think there's a future here.'' The exposure of the Olympics at just 16 brought rewards and pitfalls. She signed a six-year deal with New Balance. Agents and brands were quickly sniffing around. Her parents, she says, 'did a wonderful job of being that fence between me and all the other things.' Still, she acknowledges that returning to high school as an Olympian left her 'with a bit of a big head.' Expectations created pressure, and the path to the top had troughs as well as peaks, such as a stutter on the eighth hurdle at the 2019 World Championships in Doha, where she finished third. 'I lived a lot of my life in fear,' she says. 'Fear of not pleasing the Lord, fear of not being loved by people, and I think that's why I gravitated so strongly towards track and field. I felt, if I was winning, I was being validated and people would like me and love me. But, obviously, you're not going to win every single race, you're not always going to have your best days. And so to put my trust, my hope and my identity in something that was changing was obviously never going to give me a firm foundation. Advertisement 'I used to get so anxious and so nervous that I would just be throwing up. I would be a mess, honestly. 'For me, winning was the only option and it caused things inside that I didn't know how to handle or deal with.' How did she deal with losing? 'Not very well. A lot of it felt like I wasn't valuable anymore. I felt like people didn't view me the same way, or I wasn't as special or whatever. And so it took quite a hit to my confidence, my view of myself. 'I would definitely would say I drew back. I was very closed off and didn't really talk. It was all in my head.' She says that during the pandemic, she felt 'the Lord tugging' on her heart. She had grown up in the church, but says she previously had an incomplete view of her faith, and that the gospel now gives her greater security. She's writing a book about what she describes as her journey from fear to faith, and her husband Andre is also training to become a pastor. 'Whether that's reading before races, listening to worship music or even praying before workouts, it brings peace,' she says. She still experiences nerves, and the restless nights, but she takes comfort in believing that 'it is already written, whatever's going to take place.' Her family, too, remain a key support. 'My dad always says, 'Be the butterfly, just go and do what you do.' After the race in Paris, my eldest brother said, 'I almost threw up watching you, that was stressful.'' 'It was a huge moment for our family to go from being our own little track team at AAU (Amateur Athletic Union) events to the Paris Olympics.' In Los Angeles in 2028, that pride will only increase. 'For the Olympics and for track to have been so strong back in the '80s and the '90s, it kind of fell off a little bit in the States with all the amazing sports that we have and the leagues that have just grown. For U.S. track athletes, L.A. 28 is a huge moment. It is just so special to have it here on home soil and to bring it back.' (Illustration: Eamonn Dalton/The Athletic;)

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone To Test Herself In Philly Meet
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone To Test Herself In Philly Meet

Forbes

time22-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Forbes

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone To Test Herself In Philly Meet

Just over $6 million dollars in prize money has been handed out to professional track athletes over the first two installments of Grand Slam Track's inaugural season, and with the third series in the league's debut year approaching May 31 in Philadelphia, some changes have been made. The league announced on May 15 a drastic move, shortening the schedule from three days to two while eliminating the men's and women's 5,000 meter run entirely. While the decision condensed the schedule and added more events to the daily lineup, it ultimately won't change the broadcast time, with the meet still sticking to its less than two hour run time – though prize money for long distance runners will be cut in half. With 11 events on tap, Grand Slam Track will shorten its window between races – a space typically reserved for commentary – and focus more on the efforts on the track. Meanwhile, the move also will save Grand Slam Track $262,500 in prize money overall. Here are the top three storylines heading into Grand Slam Track: Philadelphia. The biggest news heading into Philadelphia is McLaughlin-Levrone's decision to drop down from a comfortable position in the long hurdles category to the much more competitive short hurdles. McLaughlin-Levrone, a four-time Olympic champion and the 400 meter hurdles world record-holder, is arguably the most accomplished track athlete on the globe, so there's no doubt she will be competitive in the bracket. In Miami, after blowing away the fields, she claimed a world lead in the 400 meter hurdles and the sixth-best time in the 400 meters worldwide. But after Masai Russell set a new American record in the 100 meter hurdles in Miami with a time of 12.17 – while Tia Jones ran an equally impressive clocking of 12.19 seconds – the story here is how the 25-year-old McLaughlin-Levrone will adapt. The last time the Olympic long hurdles champion ran down in distance was in May of 2024, with the New Jersey native clocking an impressive time of 12.71 in the women's 100 meter hurdles at the Occidental Invitational in California. But while it was a time that was competitive on the world stage, 41 women ran faster that year alone. And compared to McLaughlin-Levrone's personal best time of 12.65 from 2021, the fight for the line in Philadelphia will be a hunt between lionesses. That being said, McLaughlin-Levrone will also run the 100 meters for the first time in her professional career. The last time she ran the flat distance, in fact, was in 2018 at Kentucky when she laid down a wind-aided 11.07 (+3.5) at the Tennessee Relays. It's an event she will have great odds to win, with the top times over the first two events coming in 11.54 (Danielle Williams) and 11.09 (Ackera Nugent). Can McLaughlin-Levrone mitigate the world's best hurdlers in the 100 meter hurdles and come out with her third straight prize haul of $100,000? Just days before Grand Slam Track: Miami was set to unfold in early May, the American sprinter and Olympic medalist was the subject of his second arrest in less than a year. The 30-year-old Kerley was involved in an altercation at the team hotel allegedly involving an ex-girlfriend of his, with ESPN reporting she was a track and field athlete participating in the meet. Previously, Kerley was arrested in South Florida in January following a dispute with a police officer. Kerley did not compete in the league's second series – and the league did not comment on the matter, either -- but all indications might point to him being back for Philadelphia. The Texan released a statement on May 4, clarifying his arrest was 'not due to any criminal act. Rather it resulted from my decision to exercise reman (sic) silent until league counsel was present. I chose not to speak to law enforcement without my attorney, and for that reason alone. (sic) I was booked.' Kerley was back to the track at the Franson Last Chance meet in Azusa, California on May 9-10, securing two 100 meter performances of 9.87 (+2.9) and 9.98 (+1.8). And this weekend, he's scheduled to run at the Diamond League Rabat in Morocco, where he's entered in the men's 100 meters. Kerley finished fourth in the inaugural short sprints category in Kingston, Jamaica, clocking times of 10.30 and 20.39 for 100 meters and 200 meters. American Kenny Bednarek, meanwhile, has won the first two series outright and has taken home two straight $100,000 paydays. The short distance category got a lot more interesting with the inclusion of two red-hot stars. In the case of Josh Hoey, a 25-year-old hailing from just outside Philadelphia, he's on the run of a lifetime, with a recent World indoor title and an American record at 800 meters in 1:43.24. In February, he also netted a career best at 1,500 meters, clocking a time of 3:33.66 that gave him a top 20 worldwide effort. The Pennsylvania native opened his outdoor campaign in April on the road in Germany, posting a time of 3:59.57 for the mile. Which is notable, because the 22-year-old Kessler was in the same race and opened his season in 3:54.34, finishing second overall to Emmanuel Wanyonyi – who won Grand Slam Track's debut men's short distance category in Kingston, Jamaica. Six degrees of separation, am I right? Kessler's indoor season was full of successes, too, such as his historic mark of 3:46.90 from the mile in February at the Millrose Games – in a race where he went under the American record but was beat by Yared Nuguse – and a U.S. indoor championship at the 1,500 meters in 3:38.82. The Michigan native, however, might be just as good in the 800 meters, where he owns a best of 1:43.64 from the U.S. Olympic Trials in June – Kessler ultimately qualified for the U.S. team in both the 800 meters and the 1,500 meters. Both Hoey and Kessler will make the short distance category a super-card matchup against the likes of Olympic champion Cole Hocker and medalists Josh Kerr and Nuguse. Considering both are multi-talented racers with crossover ability between racers, they might just have what it takes to net big paydays, too. You can find Cory Mull on X at bycorymull and read more of his stories on Grand Slam Track in Forbes' SportsMoney site.

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