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7 Must-Watch Storylines at the 2026 Melbourne Continental Tour Gold Meet

2024 Maurie Plant Meet. Photo by Ben Levy for Inside Athletics.

Melbourne is set for a blockbuster night at Lakeside Stadium under cool conditions on Saturday night.

From historic depth to genuine world-class matchups, here’s what to watch.

1. The Deepest Australian 400m Field Ever?

Five Australians — Reece Holder, Aidan Murphy, Cooper Sherman, Luke Van Ratingen and Thomas Reynolds — have all broken 45.20 in the past 6 months. Yet only Sherman and Reynolds have gone head-to-head during that period.

That’s unprecedented depth in Australian sprinting. And they’re not just racing each other.

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Enter Jacory Patterson, the Diamond League champion, bringing genuine global pedigree into the mix.

This isn’t just a domestic race, it’s a statement opportunity ahead of the Australian Championships.

2. No Hull, No Problem: Australia’s Sub-4 Army Takes Centre Stage

With Jessica Hull bypassing the meet after winning two medals at last weekend’s World Indoors, the spotlight shifts — but the quality is still there.

Georgia Hunter-Bell brushes off the cobwebs at Lakeside Stadium after winning the 1500m at last weekend’s World Indoor Championships in Poland. Photo courtesy of Australian Athletics.

World Indoor champion Georgia Hunter-Bell leads an elite field featuring all of Australia’s other sub-4 contingent:

  • Linden Hall
  • Claudia Hollingsworth
  • Sarah Billings
  • Abbey Caldwell

Expect this one to be honest from the gun — and fast. Hollingsworth’s Australian Allcomers record of 3:58.09 set earlier in the month at Box Hill is likely to be improved upon.

3. Kennedy Chasing the Double Again

Lachlan Kennedy lit up Melbourne last year with a sprint double.

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Last year’s Peter Norman 200m. Lachlan Kennedy led into the home straight and couldn’t be run down by Gout Gout.

He’s back following injury with a classy 200m season opener in Hobart a month ago.

In the 100m, he faces national champion Rohan Browning in a field that is missing all of the other top 8 Australian performers in the Commonwealth Games qualifying period.


In the 200m, Gout Gout enters the frame. He’s run 20.23 in the Commonwealth Games qualifying period to Kennedy’s 20.43s, but only one-hundredth-of-a-second quick so far in Australia this domestic season. Add to the mix Ireland’s Benjamin Richardson, the fastest man in the field with a PB of 19.99, who enters the race with recent 10.26/10.44 clockings in South Africa.

Backing up the double won’t just be difficult. But it could be defining.

4. Denny vs the World in a Loaded Discus

Australia’s own Matthew Denny won’t have it easy.

He’s up against a stacked international field:

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  • Lawrence Okoye from Great Britain
  • Roje Stona from Jamaica
  • Claudio Romero from Chile

All have personal bests beyond the Lakeside track record.

This could turn into one of the highest-quality discus contests ever held on Australian soil.

5. Pole Vault Fireworks Incoming?

Olympic champion Nina Kennedy headlines, but she won’t have it her own way on her comeback from injury.

Nina Kennedy is ready for Melbourne. Photo courtesy of Australian Athletics.

American twins Hana Moll and Amanda Moll arrive as challengers, having cleared 4.88m (PB) and 4.43m (somewhat short of her 4.91m PB) respectively indoors in January.

With a track record of 4.71m under threat, this shapes as one of the events of the night on the back straight.

6. The 800m: Depth, Speed, and Early Season Statements

Four Commonwealth Games qualifiers line up:

  • Peter Bol
  • Bob Abdelrahim
  • Daniel Williams
  • Luke Boyes

They’re joined by Olympic semi-finalist Peyton Craig opening his season over two laps after an easy 1500m win in a slow Hobart race.

This has the feel of a race that could go faster than expected and rewrite the Australian all-time lists.

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7. Myers Leads the Next Generation in the John Landy 1500m

Teen sensation Cameron Myers starts favourite, but this won’t be a procession.

Germany’s Robert Farken and World Indoor bronze medallist Adam Spencer loom as serious threats.

The John Landy 1500m is rarely tactical — expect pace, and expect moves.

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Australian Top Lists

At 12 March

MEN

Event Mark Name
100m10.00Gout Gout
200m20.26Gout Gout
400m44.54Reece Holder
800m1:43.89Peter Bol
1500m3:31.87Jude Thomas
5000m12:59.61Ky Robinson
10000m27:59.65Seth O'Donnell
110m H13.88Mitchell Lightfoot
400m H49.95Matthew Hunt
3000m St8:46.51Ed Trippas
High Jump2.25mYual Reath
Pole Vault6.00mKurtis Marschall
Long Jump8.23mLiam Adcock
Triple Jump16.58mConnor Murphy
Shot18.56mAiden Harvey
Discus68.74mMatt Denny
Hammer68.20mTimothy Heyes
Javelin83.03mCameron McEntyre
Decathlon6771Robbie Cullen
10000m Walk38:02.68Isaac Beacroft

WOMEN

Event Mark Name
100m11.08Torrie Lewis
200m22.56Torrie Lewis
400m51.73Jemma Pollard
800m1:57.15Jess Hull
1500m3:55.15Jess Hull
5000m14:56.83Rose Davies
10000m31:27.18Lauren Ryan
100m H12.96Michelle Jenneke
400m H55.02Sarah Carli
3000m St9:42.62Cara Feain-Ryan
High Jump2.00mNicola Olyslagers
Pole Vault4.47mNina Kennedy
Long Jump6.62mDelta Amidzovski
Triple Jump13.58mDesleigh Owusu
Shot16.12mEmma Berg
Discus56.54mTaryn Gollshewsky
Hammer68.55mLara Roberts
Javelin65.54mMackenzie Little
Heptathlon5925Camryn Newton-Smith
10000m Walk42:16.58Elizabeth McMillen

Read Full Top Lists