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American Track League

"The return is here guys!" 'Cubby' Taylor glad to have been able to prove himself once more

In his first-ever indoor meet, Taylor, who spent much of the last two years recovering from injury and training at the Tumbleweed camp in Florida, produced a fast 45.73s to finish second behind Fred Kerley at the opening meeting of the American Track League in Fayetteville.

Kerley won in an even more impressive 45.03 pulling away from Taylor in the final few metres after the Jamaican tried to challenge him late in the race. They were the only two runners under 46 seconds in the race in which Travean Caldwell was third in 46.25.

‘Cubby’ as Taylor was known during a stellar high school career, said he was pleased to show that his senior career was not over before it even began.

 “So I did my first indoor race of my career and it turned out to be history but let’s leave that for later. It has been two years since I’ve gotten a serious injury and I hadn’t gotten the chance to prove myself back to the world,” Taylor said in a post on his Instagram page.

“Big thanks to my management team, my teammates and coach @ranareider for not giving up on me. The return is here guys, it’s here.”

The post was made under a video of the race that has been viewed more than 6500 times and generated many positive responses from his adoring fans.

100m hurdler Williams to make debut at American Track League

The upcoming appearance will be the first for the 28-year-old sprinter since she pulled the plug on her 2020 season, in May, when the coronavirus pandemic wreaked havoc on the international track and field schedule.

The American Track League, which is part of the World Athletics Silver Tour, gives professional athletes an opportunity to return to competition as preparations begin for an Olympic year. 

The meet, which is staged in four-parts, ran off in Fayetteville, Arkansas on Sunday.  2016 Olympic gold medalist in the 110m hurdles, Omar McLeod, who raced in the 60 metres, was one of several Jamaicans who took part on the opening weekend.  The list also included the likes of Tyquendo Tracey, Senoj-Jay Givans, and Christopher Taylor.  The meet will continue with the next three installments on January 31st, February 7th, and February 14th.

Williams, the 2019 Diamond League champion, is based in South Carolina in the USA where she trains with coach Lennox Graham at Clemson University.

Bahamians Gardiner and Gaither win 100m races at American Track League meet

Danniel Thomas-Dodd won her second shot put competition on the trot following her victory from the previous weekend.

Gardiner, the 2019 World 400m champion, won his 100m heat in a smart 10.35. He edged Antigua’s Cejhae Green who clocked 10.38 and Devin Quinn 10.41. All three ran in the final heat of four where the times were far superior to those from the previous three heats.

Meanwhile, Gaither won the Women 100m in 11.61 over Madison Flemming 12.51.

Gaither booked her spot in the final by winning her in 11.57 ahead of Jamaican triple jumper Kimberly Williams (12.06) and sprint hurdler Rushelle Burton 12.35.

In the 400m, Chris-Ann Gordon-Powell was fourth in 52.75s. US athletes took the top three spots as Courtney Okolo won in 51.86 ahead of Jessica Beard 52.40 and Shamier Little 52.68.

Following up her 19.18m throw a week ago, Thomas-Dodd, the 2019 World Championship silver medallist set a mark of 18.65m in the shot put.

Chris Taylor, Omar McLeod open indoor seasons in Arkansas on Sunday

Taylor is among a number of Jamaicans including Omar McLeod, Tyquendo Tracey and Senoj-Jay Givans, set to compete at the meet as they begin preparations for the Olympic Games in Tokyo from July 23 to August 8.

Taylor, 20, a Jamaican high-school phenomenon at Calabar High School, is the lone Jamaican in the field that includes World Championship 400m bronze medalist finalist Fred Kerley and Olympic and World Championship relay gold medalist Kyle Clemons.

According to Doyle, McLeod, Taylor’s training partner at Tumbleweed Track Club in Florida, Givans and Tracey will race over 60m.

Doyle said the start sheets for the meet are still being finalized.

Danielle Williams runs personal best 7.86 to win 60m hurdles at final American Track League meet

Williams, the 2019 World Championship 100m hurdles bronze medalist, was one of two Caribbean athletes who won at the meeting held in Fayetteville, Arkansas as Asa Guevara won the 300m in 33.11 over the USA’s Jemiel Trimble (33.38).

The 2015 World Champion easily won her preliminary heat in 7.90 giving an indication of what was to come. In the final, she unleashed but had to fight hard to hold off the challenge of Tonea Marshall to win in 7.86.

Marshall was a close second in 7.89 while Great Britain’s Cindy Sember was third in 8.01.

The winning time was the third-fastest in the world this year, joint with Marshall’s 7.86 set at the same venue on January 24.

The men’s event was won by the USA’s Michael Dickson in 7.53. He finished clear of Trinidad and Tobago’s Ruebin Walters who stopped the clock at 7.68. Wellington Zaza of Liberia was third in 7.71.

In the women’s 400m, Jamaica’s Chrisann Gordon finished in second place in 52.06, more than a second behind the USA’s Shamier Little who won the event in a personal best 50.57, the third-fastest time in the world this year.

Sparkle McKnight from Trinidad and Tobago was fifth in a season-best 54.14.

Rajay Hamilton was fourth in the men’s 800m in a personal best 1:47.57. The race was won by Kenya’s Michael Saruni in 1:45.34.

Bahamas’ Laquan Nairn jumped 5.89m, which surprising good enough for third in the long jump won by the USA’s Marquis Mendy with 8.19m.

Greg Vann finished second with 7.47m.

The USA’s Allison Felix was second in the women’s 60m in 7.28 and then returned to win the 200m in a personal best of 22.59, the fourth-fastest time in the world this year.

Puerto Rico’s Jasmine Camacho-Quinn also ran a personal best of 22.91 while Shawnti Jackson was third in 23.45.  

God works shining through' Britany Anderson as she runs lifetime best 60m hurdles in Louisville

The latest came on Saturday at the American Track League meeting in Louisville, Kentucky where she clocked 7.82 to win the 60m hurdles. The time follows in the wake of her 7.88 run for second place behind Danielle Williams at the New Balance Grand Prix in New York on February 6, and the 7.91 she ran at the Millrose Games on January 29.

Anderson’s time on Saturday makes her the second-fastest Jamaican in the world this year and fourth-fastest in the world. Only world leader Williams (7.75), Kendra Harrison (7.81) and Alia Armstrong (7.81) have run faster.

Encouraged by another top-class performance, Anderson let her feelings known on Instagram where under a video of her race, she posted “Three weekends in a row!! Another PB 7.82. Y’all go see God works shine through me.”

It was a fantastic weekend for Jamaica’s female sprint hurdlers as along with Anderson’s lifetime best and Danielle Williams running a world-leading 7.75 at the Tiger Paw Invitational on Friday night, Baylor sophomore Ackera Nugent ran a new personal best and school record 7.89 at the Texas Tech Shoot Out on Friday.

Imperious Miller-Uibo, Richards win 200m races at second American Track League meeting

Miller-Uibo, who is likely to run the 200m at the Olympics in Tokyo this summer, won in a world-leading and personal best 22.40 blowing away 400m hurdler Shamier Little who clocked a solid 23.40 for second place.

Miller-Uibo’s time, a Bahamian national record, tied the facility record set by Bianca Knight in 2008 and was just 0.07s off the American record set by Gwen Torrence in 1996.

The Bahamian said afterwards she was pleased with the run having wanted to get a chance to see what kind of shape she was in and was thankful to have finished the race healthy.

In the men’s equivalent, Richards, the 2018 Commonwealth Games 200m champion clocked 20.74 to win the 200m in a Trinidad and Tobago 1-2 finish. Deon Lendore clocked 20.89 relegating American Rodney Rowe (20.95) to third.

Meanwhile, in the Women’s 600m T&T’s Sparkle McKnight clocked 1:29.32 for third behind the USA’s Sammy Watson who won in 1:28.29 just ahead of Puerto Rico’s Gabby Scott (1:28.30).

Mario Burke ran 6.68 for third in the Men’s 60m that was won by the USA’s Maurice Eaddy in 6.63. Marvin Bracy was second in 6.66.

In the field, Jamaica’s Chanice Porter jumped a season-best 6.52m to finish second in the long jump event won by the USA’s Kendell Williams with her best jump of 6.60m. Yanis David of France was some distance back in third with 6.32m.

Jamaican hurdler rebounds from long-term injury with 300m hurdles win in Georgia

Nugent clocked 39.81 to establish what is believed to be a Jamaican national record for the event. Her coach Lennox Graham was just grateful that she was well enough to run.

“She has been progressing well. Her foot issues, which prevented her attending practices for much of last year, have greatly improved,” he said.

“With the forced shutdown in late March she got some more time to focus even more on rehab - she was away from any training for about 7-8 weeks.  So, I feel good about her current performance considering less than ideal preparations.”

Nugent at finalist at the 2017 World Championships in London was happy for the victory.

“Thankful for the big and little victories,” she posted on Instagram.

“Our plan was to just shake off the rust after being out with injuries last year. I didn’t know I broke the Jamaican national 300m hurdles record too! I’m so grateful for a little glimmer of hope in the world right now.”

Nugent was not the only Jamaican winner on Saturday as national 800m champion Natoya Goule was also victorious in the two-lap event.

With just one other competitor in the race, Goule cruised to victory in 2:00.43 and said afterwards that under the circumstances, she was satisfied with the performance.

“At first I wasn’t satisfied because I know I can run faster, but when I look on the face of it that I’m not in race shape and it is my first outdoor race I am satisfied,” she said.

“I’ve always opened up with two minutes outdoors and during the season I would get faster so I am satisfied considering that I took time off then started back up again during the lockdown. I know if I was able to compete like the norm, I would have run a good time even though I was running by myself.”

Laurie Barton was a distant second in 2:05.72.

Danielle Williams, the 2019 World Championship bronze medallist won the 100 hurdles in 13.23.

Jazeel Murphy rediscovering his speed at TITANS International

The performance prompted TITANS International Coach Michael Frater to express his pride in the achievement. “Proudest moment as a coach, so far. @JazeelMurphy finally lowering his PB after almost 10 years,” Frater posted on Instagram.

It was some achievement indeed and a long road back for one of the more promising talents from just over a decade ago.

Murphy was once a standout high school sprinter at Bridgeport High School. Blessed with raw speed and electric acceleration, he was among a talented group of young sprinters like Odean Skeen and Kemar Bailey-Cole from the era of the early 2000s, who seemed destined for greater things.

“Jazeel, as a youngster was on several junior teams and ran sub 21 at Carifta,” recalled David Riley, one of the top coaches in the country. “He was one of more the more promising athletes from that era but he had some lingering issues due to differences in his leg length (but) definitely the ability was always there.”

Murphy won the U17 sprint double at the Carifta Games in St Lucia in 2009 in 10.41 and 20.97, respectively, the latter a championship record. He won the U20 100m title in Jamaica in 2011 in 10.27.

Building on his momentum and rising status as perhaps the next great sprinter from Jamaica, the former Bridgeport High School athlete, won another Carifta U20 title in Bermuda in 2012 in a very windy 10.31 (5.7m/s). He later ran 10.29s for fifth place at the World U20 Championships in Barcelona, Spain, that same year.

The future loomed bright for Murphy, who would later join the Racer’s Track Club where it was hoped he would follow in the footsteps of Usain Bolt, who by then had won his sixth Olympic gold medal. However, in the years that followed, through injury and other related issues, Murphy failed to live up to expectations and began a steady decline.

After 2012, when he ran his personal best 10.25 into a headwind of -1.2m/s in Barcelona, Murphy seemed to get slower over time. Between 2013 and 2020, Murphy ran season-best time of 10.25 in 2013, 10.65 in 2014, 10.39 in 2015, 10.50 in 2016, 10.61 in 2017, 10.51 in 2018 and 10.85 in 2020. After almost a decade, no one remembered Murphy or even cared. He had become a statistic. Another of Jamaica's talented athletes who had fallen through the cracks.

Last summer, all that began to change.

Murphy, now 27, joined TITANS International in June 2020, weighing in at a whopping 260 pounds, Coach Gregory Little revealed to Sportsmax. TV. The first order of business, Little said, was to get his weight down under a two-year plan that will see him running even faster in 2022.

“This year was about conditioning and we want to get him up and running next year, getting him back to the feeling of running fast,” said Little, who believes Murphy, now down to about 185 pounds, should be running 9.9s by 2022.

“Hopefully, he can. He is just starting to learn everything about track and field.”

The first signs of Murphy’s revival came at the Olympic Destiny meet on May 22 when he ran 10.35. The following week he ran 10.28 just off his personal best at the time. Another 10.28 followed on June 5.

At the national championships, he ran 10.34 in the preliminary round but only after coming to an almost complete stop after emerging from the blocks thinking there was a false start. Realizing his mistake, he sped down the track but ran out of room and placed fifth.

His next stop was Mission Viejo in California on Sunday where he made the breakthrough, clocking a lifetime best of 10.17.

Little is hopeful that this is just the beginning of a revival for the ages, one that could see Jazeel Murphy take a major step forward in fulfilling his true potential.

McLeod wins, podium places for Caribbean athletes at American Track League III in Arkansas

The 2016 Olympic champion ran 7.53 while holding off the challenge of American Michael Dickson who crossed in 7.58. Trinidad and Tobago’s Ruebin Walters was third in 7.68.

In the women’s equivalent, Great Britain’s Tiffany Porter won in 7.95 just managing to hold off a fast-finishing Brittany Anderson, who was 0.02 behind in 7.97. Gabbi Cunningham was third in 8.08. Rushelle Burton returning to competition from injury was fourth in 8.20.

For the second week running Nigeria’s Blessing Okagbare managed to hold off Christania Williams in the 60m dash. This time, however, the Nigerian ran a personal best of 7.10 after separating from the Jamaican who equalled her personal best of 7.14.

Teahna Daniels of the USA was third in a season-best 7.17.

The winner of the Women’s 400m was determined over two heats by time trial and Shamier Little was easily the fastest winning Heat One in a personal best 51.33. Shakima Wimbley also of the US took second after winning Heat Two in 52.12.

Jamaica’s Shian Salmon ran a personal best of 52.85 for second in Heat One but was third overall.

In the men's event, Michael Cherry of the USA won heat one in a personal best 45.24 for the win. Second and third were determined by a battle between Deon Lendore of Trinidad and Tobago and Christopher Taylor of Jamaica. Lendore emerged as the second-place finisher after winning Heat 2 in 46.08 to Taylor' 46.09, which was good enough for third overall.

Laquan Nairn jumped a personal best and national record 8.16m in the Men’s Long Jump but had to settle for second as the USA’s Marquis Dendy won the event with a world-leading 8.21m on his final jump of the competition.

Charles Brown of the USA was third with a jump of 7.81m.

Michelle-Lee Ahye runs season best 10.94 to win 100m dash at Orange County Classic

The 30-year-old Trinidadian bested the field that included Americans Morolake Akinosun, who ran 10.98 for second place in the race aided by a legal wind of 2.0 m/s. Twanisha Terry, who ran 10.94 for victory at the Pure Athletics Global Invitational on May 1, finished third in 11.01.

This was the second time this season that Ahye has gone below 11 seconds in the 100m. She ran 10.96 for a third-place finish in her heat at the USATF Golden Games on April 16. She did not finish the final.

Tristan James of Dominica was also among the winners at the meet, jumping 7.86m to win the long jump competition. In what was a close battle, James emerged the victor over Kemonie Briggs, whose best of 7.81 secured second place while Dhanushka Piyarathne of Sri Lanka’s 7.76m leap earned him third place.

The oft-injured Javon Francis made a rare appearance in the 400m where he finished third in 46.09 behind the winner Tyler Terry 45.51 and Paul Dedewo (45.72).

Quarter-miler Roneisha McGregor was also third in the women’s 200m in a wind-assisted 23.18 (3.2m/s). Akinosun won the race in 22.67 with Lauren Rain Williams-James second in 22.83.

Odean Skeen, fit again, opens season in Arkansas Sunday

The talented 26-year-old sprinter, whose progress over the years has been stymied by injury, says he is fit and ready to go as he takes his first steps towards booking a spot on Jamaica’s team to Tokyo.

“Everything is fully fit. I am ready to go,” Skeen told Sportsmax.TV earlier today from his base in the United States where he trains under the watch of Michael Ford.

Skeen, who has a personal best of 9.98s, was a high school track star in Jamaica and was seen as the next great sprinter to emerge from the island famous for producing the likes of Usain Bolt, Donald Quarrie, Yohan Blake, Michael Frater and Nesta Carter.

However, hamstring injuries prevented him from fulfilling his potential. At Auburn University, it was an ankle problem that held him back and which eventually forced him to undergo surgery in 2018. The pandemic then disrupted his training and competition schedules but he now believes he is ready to take his first steps back into competition.

“Training is going great. I am getting stronger but I am going to be focusing on execution not so much on time,” said Skeen about his plans for this weekend.

He will be competing in his first race since he ran a windy 10.35s in Prairie View Texas on July 30 last year in the midst of the pandemic.

Omar McLeod runs second-fastest time in the world in first race in almost two years

Rhonda Whyte, a former Jamaican champion in the 400m hurdles also chalked up a victory as she continued to prepare for the Jamaican championships next month.

The 27-year-old McLeod, the defending Olympic champion, gave an early glimpse of what can be expected this season when he raced to victory in 13.11, the second-fastest time in the world this year. Only Grant Holloway, who dethroned the Jamaican at the 2019 Doha World Championships, has run faster this season.

The American ran a world-leading 13.07 in Gainesville, Florida on April 17.

The victory represents a welcome return to form for the Jamaican, who has struggled over the past few years during which he changed coaches twice. Now under the guidance of coach Rana Rieder at the Tumbleweed Track Club in Jacksonville, Florida, he seems to have rediscovered the form that led him to the Olympic title at Rio 2016 and the World title in London in 2017.

“Ran 13.11s today for a season opener! Fastest opener in over 4 years and first 110 race in almost 2 years!” he declared proudly on his Facebook page afterwards. That’s patience, hard work, faith, resilience, commitment, staying true to you, blocking out the noise and trust!”

The former Razorback defeated a quality field of athletes including former USA champion Devon Allen, who ran 13.26 while finishing second. The talented and dangerous Daniel Roberts finished third, stopping the clock at 13.30.

Also in the race was world-record holder Aries Merritt, who is making a comeback after a serious illness. He was sixth in 13.90.

Britany Anderson, the 2018 World U20 silver medalist ran a fast 12.69 to win the 100m hurdles. The time would have been a personal best had the trailing wind not been just above the allowable limit, registering at 2.1m/s.

Second place went to Devynne Charlton of the Bahamas, who clocked 12.74.

Tia Jones, who edged Anderson at the World U20 Championships in Tampere, was third in 12.95, just ahead of Pedrya Seymour of the Bahamas who finished fourth in 12.96.

Former Jamaica national champion, Rhonda Whyte, won the 400m hurdles in 55.11 in an all-Caribbean 1-2-3. Whyte’s compatriot, Leah Nugent finished in second place in 56.12 while Sparkle McKnight from Trinidad and Tobago finished third in 56.54.

Runner-up spots for Taylor, Williams while Ewers claims third-place in Fayetteville

Andre Ewers, meanwhile, finished third in the men’s 60 dash that ended in a dominant win for American Trayvon Brommell.

Taylor, who was making his debut indoors, ran 45.73 in the 400m that was won impressively by American Fred Kerley in 45.03. Kerley said afterwards that he would have gone faster had he been pressed.

The 45.73, however, would have been an encouraging start for Taylor, who spent much of the past two seasons recovering from injury after he made the move to Florida to train with Rana Reider at Tumbleweed Track Club.

Travean Caldwell was third in 46.25.

Williams, the 2018 Commonwealth Games 100m silver medalist, ended up second in a blanket-finish with Nigeria’s Blessing Okagbare who won in 7.17s. Williams’ 7.18 mirrored the time she ran in the preliminaries earlier. Kayla White was third in 7.20.

Ewers ran 6.74 in the preliminaries to advance along with Omar McLeod whose 6.73 made him the fastest Jamaican going into the finals. Neither of them was as impressive as Bromell, who ran 6.58 easing down as he made his way into the final.

In the final, he let it all hang out winning handsomely in 6.48. The rest of the field finished under a blanket with Nigeria’s Divine Oduduru given second in 6.65 with Ewers third in 6.67. McLeod was a further 0.03 seconds back in sixth.

Brittany Anderson, who set the U20 world record in the 100m hurdles in Finland in July 2019,  found the going at the senior level a little tougher today finishing fourth in the 60m hurdles.

Her time of 8.06s was the fastest for a Jamaican this year but Tiffany Porter (7.89), Christina Clemons (7.88), and, winner, Tonea Marshall (7.86) were that much faster.

Thomas-Dodd puts a season's best for first win since April, Taylor runs SB 400m behind Gardiner

It was her first win and first mark over 19m since she threw 19.17m on April 10 in Miramar, Florida. In her three, previous outings she had marks of 18.46m, 18.91m and 18.46, respectively. In Tennessee, she got the better of a quality field of athletes like Jessica Ramsay of the USA, who threw 18.78m.

Raven Saunders put 18.50m for third.

Fourth-place was taken by young Jamaican thrower Lloydricia Cameron, who managed a best effort of 17.57m.

Meanwhile, Christopher Taylor, also produced a season-best in the 400m, clocking 45.67 to finish behind Steven Gardiner of the Bahamas who cruised to victory in 45.06.  Quintaveon Poole was third in 45.92.

Leah Nugent also produced a season-best 55.34 while chasing World Championship silver medalist Sydney McLaughlin. The second-fastest woman of all time over the distance clocked a world-leading 52.83 in her first race in the event this season.

Sage Watson of Canada was third in 56.04. Sparkle McKnight of Trinidad and Tobago also ran a season-best 56.06 for fourth.

The USA’s Andre Hudson ran 10.27 to win the 100m dash in which Jevaughn Minzie finished fourth in 10.41.

Saudi Arabia’s Abdullah Mohammed (10.32) and Canada’s Bismark Boateng (10.35) took the other podium spots.

Wins for Dwyer, Knight and Porter at American Track League meeting in Georgia

Knight, 25, the fastest Jamaican woman over 400m hurdles this year, rebounded from her nasty fall at Jamaica’s national championship a week ago to win the event in 53.85. Tia’Adana Belle was the runner-up in 55.75 while Noelle Montcalm finished third in 56.67.

Dwyer, who will be travelling to the World Championships in Eugene, Oregon in less than two weeks, cruised to an easy victory in the 200m. He clocked 20.45 to finish ahead of Akeem Sirleaf, who ran a season-best 20.57 for second place. The final podium spot went to Mario Heslop, who ran 20.66.

Meanwhile, in the long jump, Chanice Porter, who will also represent Jamaica at the World Championships, jumped a season-best 6.55m to win the long jump. Tifanny Flynn soared out to 6.48m for second place as Sha’ Keda Saunders (6.43m) finished third.

O’Dayne Richards threw a season-best 20.47m to finish third in the men’s shot put competition that was won by New Zealand’s Tom Walsh with a mark of 21.69m. Roger Steen throw 21.47m for second place.

Back on the track, Shockoria Wallace, ran 11.25 to win the 100m over compatriots Olympians Natasha Morrison (11.33) and Remona Burchell (11.34).

Jamaica’s 400m record holder was second in the 400m clocking 45.43 to finish ahead of compatriot Demish Gaye (45.47) in the race won by South Africa’s Wayde van Niekerk in a season-best 44.58.

Tiffany James was the runner-up in the women’s race clocking 51.70. The one-lapper was won by Na ‘Asha Robinson in 51.54. Shakima Wimbley finished third in 52.22.

In the 800m, Ghana’s Alex Amankwa ran 1:45.14 to claim victory over Mexico’s Jesus Lopez (1:45.30) and Jamaica’s Rajay Hamilton (1:46.19).

With weekend sprint-double in the bag, Natalliah Whyte's eyes remain firmly fixed on the Olympics

The 22-year-old Whyte, who ran a blistering leadoff leg to set up Jamaica’s impressive win in the sprint relay team in Doha last October, secured a sprint double at the meet held in Marietta, Georgia.

In what was her first race in months Whyte clocked a solid 11.57s to win the 100m while running into a stiff headwind of -1.8m/s. She completed the double when she also won the 200m in 23.59.   She told Sportsmax.TV that she was happy to be competing again after months of quarantine lockdown.

“It felt great being able to compete for the first time. I was eager to see where I am at competition-wise since I haven’t been able to train as I would want to but I am pretty pleased,” she said. “Hopefully there will be more meets and I can take it one race at a time and finish the season on a positive note.”

Under circumstances where she was unable to train for some time because of the Covid19 pandemic, Whyte said she was satisfied with the times.

“The times were not bad being that I was unable to use any training facility for about three months. I had to improvise and get smart with what I had available. So things were challenging but the time was okay for the first race under the circumstances of the lockdown,” she said.

The pandemic might have crippled the world for the past few months but it has not shifted Whyte’s focus on achieving her goals, especially after her inspiring performance in Doha that has whetted her appetite for more high-quality global competition.

“Training started out great after Doha. I was working on my weak points and I was really looking forward to the 2020 Olympics but we can’t change the things we can’t control. However, I am still excited about the upcoming Olympics. My goals haven’t changed,” she said.

“I am just eager to get competing and to see where I am and to improve and take what I have learnt into the next season to come.”

Yohan Blake wins 200m in 20.22, Megan Tapper storms to windy 12.48 in California

It was a meet that several Caribbean athletes used as a tune-up before their expected departures to Tokyo, Japan for the Olympic Games that begin later this week.

Blake, who is contesting both 100m and 200m at the Olympics ran 20.22 in a blanket finish with Rasheed Dwyer, who defeated him at the national championships in Kingston last month. Dwyer was given the same time.

Jevaughn Minzie was third in 20.29 while the ever-improving Jazeel Murphy ran 20.49 for fourth.

Minzie had earlier won the 100m in 10.09 in slightly windy conditions. The wind registered at 2.3m/s just above the allowable limit.

It was a race where the top four places were separated by 0.02 seconds. Chris Royster of the United States was given the same time as Minzie while Travis Collins finished third in 10.10. Tyquendo Tracey was fourth in 10.11.

Murphy was sixth in 10.15. The former Bridgeport High School star ran a lifetime best of 10.17 during the preliminary round.

Candice Hill won the women’s 200m in 22.30, a time aided by a trailing wind of 3.3m/s. Anastasia Le-Roy, who missed out on the chance to make Jamaica’s team to Tokyo, was second in 22.79. Cassondra Hall of the USA was third in 22.97.

Hill won the 100m in 10.99 (2.5m/s) ahead of Tristan Evelyn of Barbados (11.23) and Jamaica’s Remona Burchell (11.24).

Tapper, the newly minted national 100m hurdles champion, clocked 12.48 to win her event in commanding fashion ahead of Evonne Britton, who ran 12.72 and Yanique Thompson (12.75). The time would have been a massive lifetime best for Tapper had it not been for a heavy tailwind of 3.6m/s.

Ronda Whyte ran 55.57 to win the 400m hurdles defeating Puerto Rico’s Grace Claxton, who ran 56.26. Canada’s Noelle Montcalm ran 56.37 for third place.

The flat 400m was won by Tovea Jenkins in 51.53 after holding off the challenge of Jaide Stepter of the USA who ran 51.87. Le-Roy was third in 51.98.

Khallifah Rosser won the men’s event in 45.74 ahead of Nathon Allen, who clocked 45.89. South Africa’s Derrick Mokaleng was third in 46.04, the same time that was given to Demish Gaye, who was fourth.