Also included in the line-up for the meet borne out of a partnership between USA Track and Field, the Bermuda National Athletics Association and main local sponsor Athene, is Olympic silver medalist and world-record holder Grant Holloway and Noah Lyles as well as Bermuda’s Athlete of the Year triple jumper Jah-Nhai Perinchief.
Additional stars are expected to be confirmed in the near future.
“Hundreds of athletes and fans are expected to travel to Bermuda from around the world to participate in this world-class competition, in addition to millions of viewers from around the world who will tune in for the live two-hour international broadcast on NBC showcasing Bermuda as the world-class sports destination it is,” said BTA Chief Executive Charles Jeffers II.
The USATF Bermuda Games will the latest addition to the World Athletics Continental Tour Gold Series.
Against a stacked field, Moraa ran a tactically brilliant race staying on the shoulder of the USA’s Athing Mu, the 2022 world champion, before powering past her down the home stretch to take victory in 1:56.02.
Great Britain’s Keely Hodgkinson, who stayed off the pace for most of the race, stormed through to overtake Mu late and take silver in 1:56.34.
Mu, who has raced sparingly this season, finishing third in 1:56.61.
Jamaica’s Adelle Tracey, who clocked a lifetime best 1:58.99 in her semi-final, produced another lifetime best of 1:58.41 for seventh place.
Young, an 800m runner turned quarter-miler, ran 51.13 for fifth place in the 400m last week Saturday and then split 49.75 on the second leg as Texas A&M shattered the four-year-old collegiate record that was held by Oregon.
It put a cap on a successful season for Young, who was also a member of the team that ran a collegiate indoor record in March. She doesn’t believe the exertions of last weekend will have an impact on her come next week.
“I most definitely think I can come into trials refreshed after a heavy workload during the championships,” she said.
“It’s just like another track meet and I don’t think it’s right to mentally tell yourself that you’re drained from another championship because stuff like that can affect your performance when you’re competing, it all starts with your mental aspects, so if you have any doubt, that can definitely mess with your performance so I definitely feel I can come into trials refreshed.”
Without saying as much, Young was not satisfied with her performance in the finals of 400m where she didn’t at least match her season-best 50.85 set the week before in the qualifiers and which would have been good enough for third place in the finals.
She did, acknowledge, however, that inexperience played its part.
“I didn’t think I had the best execution in the open 400. I think that over time you perfect your execution and I don’t think I am 100 percent there where I am perfect with my execution but I am working on it with each race. I am trying to make adjustments and try and get it right and I think I am heading in the right direction with that,” she said.
She takes satisfaction from the fact that her sub-50-second split in the relay helped her team to victory in 3:22.34 that broke the championship, meet and facility record of 3:23.13 set by Oregon in June 2017. Young’s 49.75 was only bettered Athing Mu, the 400m champion, who split 48.85 on the anchor leg.
“It definitely did make up for not being in the top three (of the 400m) because I got a very outstanding split and performed well in the 4x400, running faster than I ran in the open 400m,” she said, explaining that while running the second leg, all she was thinking about was putting her team in a position to win.
“I just wanted to give my team everything I got because I knew that all the other girls on the team were going to give it everything they got so I wanted to go out there and give my very best,” she said.
“After I handed off the stick in first position I heard my split time and I was like ‘wow, that’s crazy’, and it made me very happy and that’s something I’ve never done so I knew doing that would put us on track the break the record.”
Texas A&M now holds both indoor and outdoor records for the 4x400m relay, which has cemented Young in the annals of her school’s and NCAA history.
“Indoors, it was pretty exciting to break the collegiate record but we knew that the (outdoor) collegiate record was pretty hard, it was a pretty tough target but I knew if we all did our best it was very possible to break and when we got the record we were really excited and happy because it was a really special performance.”
Goule-Toppin took the Jamaican national record into new territory eclipsing her previous record of 1:56.15 when she clocked 1:55.96 to claim third behind Great Britain’s Keely Hodgkinson and the USA’s Athing Mu, who battled down the stretch in a desperate bid for the Diamond League trophy.
The American just edged ahead late to win in 1:54.97, a USA national record and world lead. It was also a new meet record and a personal best for Mu.
Hodgkinson finished second in a national record and personal best 1:55.19.
Goule-Toppin, who entered the championships ranked second in the world, contested the last of the seven heats, where she bided her time in the early stages, before challenging and pushing America’s reigning World Champion Athing Mu in the homestretch.
In the end, Goule-Toppin finished second in 1:59.64, behind Mu, who stopped the clock in 1:59.59. Switzerland’s Lore Hoffman clocked a season’s best 2:00.14 to secure the third automatic qualifying spot.
Though she ran a national record of 3:58.77 in the 1,500m semi-finals, where she shaved 3.07 seconds off the previous mark set by Yvonne Graham in Monaco in 1995, Tracey was more at home in the two-lap event, and she performed accordingly to book her spot in the next round.
The 30-year-old occupied the inside lane for most of the way before finding space in between competitors in the home stretch to close fast for second in heat four.
She stopped the clock in a season’s best 1:59.92, behind Uganda’s Halimah Nakaayi (1:59.68), with French athlete, Renelle Lamote (2:00.22, taking the third automatic qualifying spot from the heat.
Meanwhile, Cuba’s Rose Mary Almanza, who contested heat six, placed sixth in 2:01.33 and failed to progress.
The semi-finals are scheduled for Friday.
You can catch live action of the 2023 World Athletic Championships by downloading the Sportsmax App.
Parchment sped to a season’s best mark 13.15 for victory in the Men’s 110m hurdles ahead of the USA's current world leader Devon Allen (13.20) and Jamal Britt (13.30).
The Women’s 100m hurdles was won by the USA’s Alaysha Johnson in 12.50 ahead of Puerto Rican Olympic champion Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (12.52) and Jamaican 2015 World champion Danielle Williams (12.67).
Double Olympic sprint champion Thompson-Herah cruised to victory in the Women’s 100m in 10.93 ahead of Trinidad & Tobago’s Michelle Lee-Ahye (11.06) and the USA’s Shania Collins (11.08).
Bahamian reigning Olympic and World 400m champion Steven Gardiner won the Men’s 300m in 31.52 ahead of the USA’s Vernon Norwood (31.81) and Jamaica’s Nathon Allen (32.04).
2011 World and 2012 Olympic 400m champion Kirani James of Grenada was victorious in the Men’s one-lap event in a season’s best 44.70 ahead of Jamaica’s Sean Bailey (45.42) and the USA’s Trevor Stewart (45.50).
Jamaica’s Junelle Bromfield was third in the Women’s equivalent in 51.82 behind Americans Gabby Scott (51.42) and Olympic 800m champion Athing Mu (50.42).
Moving to the 400m hurdles, Jamaica’s Janieve Russell ran a season’s best 54.09 to win ahead of teammates Shiann Salmon (54.43) and Rushell Clayton (54.90).
In the field, Jamal Wilson of the Bahamas was victorious in the Men’s high jump with 2.22m ahead of the USA’s Jeron Robinson (2.17m) and Puerto Rico’s Luis Castro Rivera (2.17m).