
Tags: Athletics, Ackeem Blake, Anthonique Strachan, Bahamas, Barbados, Briana Williams, Carey Mcleod, Damion Thomas, Glasgow, Scotland, Jamaica, Julien Alfred, Ken Mullings, Laquan Nairn, Michelle Lee Ahye, Natoya Gouletoppin, Shashalee Forbes, St Lucia, Tajay Gayle, Trinidad And Tobago, Tyler Mason, World Athletics Indoor Championships
Jamaica’s Carey McLeod secured bronze in the men’s long jump final on day two of the World Athletics Indoor Championships, as Saturday’s morning session yielded mostly positive results for Caribbean athletes in Glasgow, Scotland.
McLeod, who just missed a medal at last year’s World Athletic Championships in Budapest, cut the sand at a new season’s best 8.21m. He placed behind Greece’s World Champion Miltiadis Tentoglou and Italy’s Mattia Furlani, who both leapt to a mark of 8.22m.
Another Jamaican, Tajay Gayle was sixth at 7.89m, while LaQuan Nairn of the Bahamas was 15th at 7.59m.
McLeod's medal is Jamaica's second at the Championship, adding to Ackeem Blake's bronze won in the men's 60m final on Friday.
On the track, St Lucia’s in-form sprinter Julien Alfred, Bahamian Anthonique Strachan, Barbadian Tristan Evelyn, as well as Jamaicans Briana Williams and Shashalee Forbes, all progressed to the women’s 60m semi-finals, after contrasting performances in their respective heats.
Alfred, 22, comfortably won her heat in 7.02s and headlines the qualifiers, as Strachan (7.24s), Williams (7.22s) and Forbes (7.17s), all placed second in their heats, while Evelyn (7.17s) was third in heat four.
Beyonce Defreitas (7.44s) of British Virgin Islands, and Trinidad and Tobago’s Michelle-Lee Ahye, despite a season’s best 7.26s, failed to progress, as both placed fifth in their heats.
The women’s 60m semi-final and final is scheduled for Saturday’s evening session.
Elsewhere on the track, Jamaica’s Damion Thomas and Tyler Mason, both failed to progress in the men’s 60m hurdles, after both placed sixth in their respective heats in 7.73s and 7.86s.
Jamaica’s Natoya Goule-Toppin also missed out on a spot in the women’s 800m final, following a sixth-place finish in her semi-final race. Goule-Toppin stopped the clock in 2:01.41.
Meanwhile, Ken Mullings of the Bahamas, started the men’s Heptathlon on a positive note, as he placed third in his heat of the 60m dash in a personal best 6.83s.
Mullings also registered a new lifetime best of 7.69m when he placed fifth in the long jump, and that was followed by a heave of 14.49m in the shot pot. By virtue of those performances, the 26-year-old currently occupies third position on 2684 points, behind Switzerland’s Simon Ehammer (2800 points) and Estonia’s Johannes Erm (2739 points).
They still have the high jump, 60m hurdles, pole vault and 1,000m to come.
LATEST STORIES
Devynne Charlton Taps Into Instinct and Mental Steel to Defend 60m Hurdles World Title in Nanjing
- 2025-03-26 15:06:40
- Hits 789
Wayne Pinnock Edges Closer to Gold After Silver at World Indoors: “It’s Within My Reach”
- 2025-03-26 16:32:07
- Hits 592
Ackera Nugent Grateful and Emotional After First Global Medal at World Indoors
- 2025-03-23 16:31:38
- Hits 395
Tyra Gittens-Spotsville left to rue missed opportunity at World Indoor Championships
- 2025-03-23 14:17:12
- Hits 213