Swift sprinting opens new year as Fred Kerley announced for Maurie Plant meet

Fast times in Brisbane, Perth and Sydney set up a scorching summer of sprinting, set to be headlined by world 100m champion Fred Kerley lining up at next month’s Maurie Plant Meet in Melbourne.

Kerley will line up in the Peter Norman Memorial 200m at the 23 February meet at Lakeside Stadium.

“I am excited to start my season in Australia and I will also use this as a training base for the upcoming season. I have competed in all the other continents, and I am excited to get the opportunity to compete in Australia,” Kerley said.

“Also, it is nice to open my season with the 200m because I got injured in the 200m semi-finals at the World Championships. All in all, I am excited to come and show my talent to the Australian people.”

Australia’s fastest 100m sprinter, Rohan Browning, will step in in distance for the Maurie Plant Meet, while World junior bronze medallist Calab Law is also set to feature. Law lowered his season leading 200m time with a 20.61 second (+1.0) run at the Norma Croker Shield meet at the Queensland Sport & Athletics Centre on Saturday.


Calab Law in action at last year’s Australian Championships. Photo by Michael Thomas.

The 19-year-old Queenslander also leads the nation over 100m in his first season in the senior ranks, following a 10.26 second personal best back in November. That mark was equalled in Brisbane on the weekend by Anas Abu-Ganaba in a race in which Law finished third. Abu-Ganaba lowered his personal best of 10.28 seconds set back in 2018 in a dominant performance.

On the other side of the country, 31-year-old Brianna Beahan out dipped 16-year-old Olivia Dodds, with both recording the same time of 11.48 seconds into a 1.3 m/s headwind at the Strive Athletics meet at the freshly resurfaced WA Athletics Stadium. Beahan’s performance matched her 2021 personal best while Dodds slashed three-tenths-of-a-second off her PB set in January last year.

Michelle Jenneke also showed strong early season form with a 100m personal best of 11.63 seconds in Brisbane.

In Sydney at The Ridge, tailwinds affected all of the sprints, with quality competition taking place nonetheless. Australian Under 18 record holder Sebastian Sultana sped to a 10.20 second win (+2.7), edging out Commonwealth Games relay representative Jacob Despard (10.21). Jake Penny and Jackson Rowe (dead heat for third in 10.31), Joshua Azzopardi (10.33) and Christopher Ius (10.38) also recorded promising early season times.

Ius returned to the track to take victory in the 200m in 20.66 seconds (+3.2), ahead of Despard (20.72) and Rowe (20.76).

In the women’s sprints Monique Quirk took out a double in 11.35 (+3.1) and 23.70 (+2.4), with 2016 4x400m Olympian Jessica Thornton also recording a swift 100m of 11.59 seconds behind Quirk.

In the field Connor Murphy recorded a windy jump of 16.28m (+3.1).

Racewalking Supernova

At the AIS the Supernova 10000m walks were held over the weekend, with World Continental Tour Silver status. Jemima Montag (43:35.74) and Declan Tingay (39:23.98) took out the races.

Non-sanctioned meets

World Athletics has implemented a new sanctioning process for meets from 1 January, with not all Australian deomsstic meets having the World Rankings Competition classification required for performances to count towards World Athletics Top Lists and World Rankings (those that do are listed on the World Athletics calendar). All of the performances noted above were performed in World Rankings Competitions. Some otherwise noteworthy performances were recorded in non-World Rankings Competitions over the weekend (and thus won’t feature on top lists etc):

  • Jack Hale running 10.30 seconds (+1.5) in Hobart
  • Jessica Stenson (15:46.11) and Ellie Pashley (15:54.77) tuning up for the World Cross Country Trials with performance in a mixed 5000m race in Geelong.

[wcepe_products ids=’399,313,668′ columns=’3′]

Latest Posts:

  • Hansen and Janetzki win Victorian cross country titles at Bundoora
    Georgia Hansen turned the tables on Natalie Rule, while Logan Janetzki continued his emergence in the senior ranks with victory at the Victorian Cross Country Championships at Bundoora Park. Cold and windy conditions greeted athletes throughout the program, although the rain largely held off until after the racing had finished. The course was soft underfoot,
  • 5, 5 and 5: Kennedy joins the all-time greats and declares “Project 5m is here”
    Equal fifth on the all-time list. The world’s best jump in five years. And now, a very public tilt at five metres. Nina Kennedy’s comeback season reached new heights in Monaco, the Olympic and former world champion clearing 4.95m to win the Diamond League. It was all of an Oceania Area Record, Australian Record and
  • National Cross Country Champion Zach Facioni Retires at 27
    Australian distance runner Zach Facioni has called time on his career, less than a year after claiming his first senior national title. Reigning Australian cross country champion Zach Facioni has announced his retirement from competitive athletics at the age of 27, bringing an end to a career that included World Cross Country representation, NCAA success
  • Two Phone Calls, Two Feelings: Mia Gross on the Highs and Uncertainty of Selection
    For every athlete who opens a “congratulations, you’re on the team” email during a Commonwealth Games selection cycle, there can still be another chapter to come. Mia Gross’s two most recent vlogs show both sides of that experience — first the excitement of making the Australian team, then the stress of having that selection challenged.
  • Gout withdraws from World Juniors with hamstring injury
    Gout Gout’s 2026 season has come to an abrupt and painful end, with the teenage sprint sensation forced to withdraw from next month’s World Under-20 Championships in Eugene after scans confirmed a significant tear in his left hamstring. Gout suffered the injury during a training session in Brisbane, with an MRI the following morning delivering
Gearing up for the season?

Replacement spikes, shipped fast from Melbourne.

Pyramid Spikes 6mm Carbonlite Gold Spikes 6mm Neo 6mm Pyramid Spikes 7mm Christmas Tree Spikes 9mm Spikes 12mm Spikes 15mm Spikes 18mm Spikes

Recent Photos

aXCR-Calder-4194 TIM_6841 TIM_9116
Previous Story

Melbourne Track Classic granted Continental Tour Gold status and renamed after Maurie Plant

Next Story

World Cross Country Championships hit Bathurst in 2023 – Event Guide

Latest from Blog

Go toTop