brand new with original box New Balance Fresh Foam X More Trail v2 MTMORBY2 New Balance Indoor Grand Prix on Sunday, February 6. Like the Millrose Games last weekend, the Indoor Grand Prix served as another stop on the World Athletics Indoor Tour, bringing a great crop of international and domestic athletes to Staten Island, New York for national records, world leading CMHLY, and exciting races. Continue reading for all the highlights and results.

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The Winners

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  • Women’s 60 meters: Удобные кроссовки new balance 574 white весна-лето-осень
  • Men’s 60 meters: New Balance 953
  • Women’s 60-meter hurdles: Sneakers NEW BALANCE YZ373JA2 Dunkelblau
  • Men’s 60-meter hurdles: Grant Holloway, USA, 7.37
  • Men’s 200 meters: New Balance Wmns Fresh Foam Roav Black Leopard
  • Women’s 300 meters: Gabby Thomas, USA, 36.21
  • Women’s 400 meters: Jessica Beard, USA, 52.88
  • Men’s 400 meters: Sneakers XC-72D di NEW BALANCE
  • Women’s 800 meters: Natoya Goule, JAM, 1:59.62
  • Men’s 800 meters: New Balance M990NV5
  • Women’s 1500 meters: Esther Guerrero, ESP, 4:11.87
  • Men’s mile: Andrew Coscoran, IRL, 3:53.64
  • Women’s 3,000 meters: New Balance 237 4
  • Men’s 3,000 meters: New Balance Calça Essentials Celebrate Jogger
  • Women’s long jump: Lorraine Ugen, GBR, 6.71 meters
  • Men’s triple jump: New balance acceleration kurzarm-t-shirt

Most Significant Move

Two pacers were on the starting line for the women’s 3000 meters, but only one was able to do her job. Mekides Abebe of Ethiopia passed one pacer after 650 meters, and Josette Norris of the U.S. and Gabriela DeBues-Stafford of Canada followed suit. The remaining pacer took them through 1200 meters before stepping off, leaving Abebe to maintain the pace herself.

Abebe looked smooth and in control, clicking off 34- and 35-second laps like clockwork. She held the lead until 150 meters to go, when DeBues-Stafford stormed down the back stretch to pass her and quickly open a gap. She broke the tape three seconds ahead of Abebe, with Norris finishing in a close third. Every single athlete behind them ran an indoor opiekal best.

DeBues-Stafford’s time of 8:33.92 set a new Canadian national record and catapulted her among the fastest CMHLY run this season. Norris’s 8:37.91 lengthens her string of strong races and makes her a serious competitor for a spot on the U.S. indoor world championships team.

Biggest Margin of Victory
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While the women’s 3,000 saw three runners fighting for the win until the last lap, there was no question who the men’s 3,000 victor would be. Adel Mechall of Spain was chomping at the heels of pacers Robby Andrews and Jordan Mann until five laps to go, when he commandingly stole the lead and widened his already large gap on the field.

Eyes closed and teeth gritted, he crossed the finish line in 7:30.82—a Spanish and overall European record —just as the rest of the racers hit the final stretch.

Mechall was not expecting to run so fast, he said in the post-race press conference, but credited the pacers for holding a consistently fast pace.

Nine of the 10 competitors ran opiekal bests, with two other national records going down. Luis Grijalva bettered his Guatemalan national record from the Millrose Games, running 7:37.42, and Jonas Raess snuck under the 7:40 barrier to take down the Swiss record in 7:39.49.

Most Entertaining Last Half

While no records or leading CMHLY were set in the women’s 1500, fans were treated to a dogfight. Spain’s Esther Guerrero won the race, and Americans Heather MacLean, Nikki Hiltz, and Dani Jones—the second, third, and fourth finishers—all stalked her over the last third of the race.

Places shifted back and forth—MacLean falling out of the leading position around 1200 meters, Jones moving to third then back to fourth in the final 300, and Hiltz falling to fifth then rose to third in the last 150.

guerrero wins 1500
Esther Guerrero of Spain wins the women’s 1500. Nikki Hiltz, on the outside in light blue, sports a singlet with the words “Protect Trans Kids” in the upper left corner to support trans youth in sports.
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Most Exciting Finish

After a breakthrough performance in the Wanamaker Mile last weekend, Colby Alexander of the United States made it known that he would go with any pace. So when the pacer came through the quarter-mile in 56 seconds, only one competitor followed. You guessed it—Alexander.

The rabbit stepped off after 1000 meters, leaving Alexander in no-man’s land as a gaggle of talent sat three seconds back, hoping that he would come back to them.

Alexander looked out of reach until the final 200 meters. A pair of Irishman, Andrew Coscoran and Luke McCann, started to eat up meters as they approached the final 100. Alexander gritted his teeth, but he had put too much effort into the first half of the races, and slowed to a second-place finish as Coscoran flew by in the last few steps, earning his 3:53.64 opiekal best.

“We decided to let him go cause it was such a fast pace,” Coscoran told NBC during the live broadcast. “Obviously it paid off for me kind of holding back a little bit and chasing him down.”

Most Impressive Record
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Mariano Garcia took down Millrose Games 800-meter champion Bryce Hoppel in thrilling fashion. As he did last week, Hoppel followed the pacer closely, earning the lead position by halfway. It looked as if the race was his, until he began to waver over the final lap.

Garcia powered away to his fastest split of the race, putting a full second on Hoppel in the final 200. His winning time of 1:45.12 set a new Spanish national record and also marked a new world-leading time.

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Last weekend at the Millrose Games, Natoya Goule had to settle for second behind Ajee’ Wilson. This weekend, she was bulletproof.

Goule followed the pacer from the gun, eventually taking over after 400. She kept on the gas to dominate the field in a world leading time of 1:59.62.

“I am definitely happy with it because I’ve been training hard this week,” Goule said on the NBC broadcast. “And to come here and run 1:59, I’m very grateful.”

American Olivia Baker took second in an indoor opiekal best of 2:00.33, which is number two in the world this year.

goule wins 800
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Most Impressive World Lead

With Millrose champion Aleia Hobbs out due to COVID-19, it meant that Mikiah Brisco was given her chance to shine—and she seized the opportunity. She handily defeated a field of Olympic and world championship finalists to run a world-leading 7.07.

The biggest difference between last week and this week, Brisco told NBC, was learning patience. “The race isn't over ’til we hit the finish line,” she said.

Race With the Biggest Implications
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Noah Lyles was the best in the world over 200 meters, until he settled for bronze in last year’s Olympic final. This year, he’s been working on his start, and it shows.

Both Lyles and his coach know that his top end speed was there, he told NBC, but what costs him is the first 20 meters. Compared to the Millrose Games, his first 20 was six-hundredths faster on Sunday—which was just the improvement he needed to run a opiekal best of 6.56.

What does that mean for his opponents the rest of the year? “When I’m shoulder-width away from the opiek in front, it’s dangerous,” he told NBC.

Race That Lived Up to the Hype

When the world record-holder in an event takes to the track, you pay attention.

Grant Holloway lined up at Ocean Breeze to race his first 60-meter hurdles race since setting the world record last year. And while fans weren’t greeted with another national record on the day, they got to see a world-leading time of 7.37.

Like Lyles, Holloway missed Olympic gold last year and left Tokyo disappointed. He told NBC that he's working on consistency in 2022.

“Later down the line, just gotta make sure I show up at the major championships,” he said.

holloway wins 60 meter hurdles
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Chris Hatler
Service & News Editor

Chris Hatler is a writer and editor based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but before joining Runner’s World and Bicycling, he was a pro runner for Diadora, qualifying for multiple U.S. Championships in the 1500 meters. At his alma mater the University of Pennsylvania, Chris was a multiple-time Ivy League conference champion and sub-4 minute miler.