By Rich Sands, @sands
(c) 2024 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved
The women’s 1500 and men’s 800 finals at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Trials at Hayward Field are set for Sunday, following the semi-final rounds on Friday.
Nikki Hiltz and Elle St. Pierre were fast
The 1500 was particularly fast. Nikki Hiltz pulled away from Elle St. Pierre with 200 to go to take the first section in 4:01.40. Knowing her qualifying position was secure, St. Pierre (4:02.14) cruised home in fifth, behind Sinclaire Johnson (4:01.68), Heather MacLean (4:02.09) and Cory McGee (4:02.09).
St. Pierre and sixth-place finisher Sage Hurta-Klecker (4:08.07) were both given yellow card warnings for shoving. Hurta-Klecker, who had been fifth in Monday’s chaotic 800 final, did not advance.
“It would have been amazing to have a fairy tale ending in the 1500,” Hurta-Klecker wrote in an Instagram post, “but I found myself mentally and emotionally zapped going into the semifinal.”
Read more: Cole Hocker & Elle St. Pierre secure 2024 U.S. Olympic Trials Titles
The second heat was nearly as fast, with the top five tightly bunched down the homestretch. Emily Mackay (4:02.46) finished just ahead of Elise Cranny (4:02.56), Helen Schlachtenhaufen (4:02.68), Maggi Congdon (4:02.79) and Addi Wiley (4:02.92).
“This is my first time doing three rounds and how I felt today makes me feel really confident going into the final,” said Mackay, the bronze medalist at the world indoor championships in March. “It definitely helps having a day off between now and the finals. I think people were less timid and more likely to run harder today.”
The 800 featured a cutthroat format in which the top two in each of three semifinals advanced, along with three additional time qualifiers, and it produced a trio of sensational races. Josh Hoey (1:45.73) held off Clayton Murphy (1:45.76) in the first section. Isaiah Harris (1:46.21) and 2021 Olympian Isaiah Jewett (1:46.33) did not advance.
“My first year as a pro I wrote down a bunch of goals, the last one was to make the outdoor final and I’m here five years later,” said Hoey, a high school star who skipped the NCAA system and turned pro in 2018, but has struggled to find consistency prior to this season. “I made a lot of mistakes coming up to now, but I never gave up.”
Hobbs Kessler powers to 1:43.71 PB
In the second heat, Hobbs Kessler, who made the team in the 1500 on Monday, edged past Brandon Miller in the final strides to win in 1:43.71, a personal best by more than a second. Miller (1:43.73) also recorded the fastest time of his career. Abraham Alvarado (1:44.44) finished third and was rewarded with a time qualifier and the Paris Olympic standard (1:44.70 or better).
“I just wanted to run Brandon down, because we’ve really been working on going through the gears that last 150,” said Kessler. “That was a great opportunity to do it. I didn’t want to leave anything on the table.”
Two-time defending national champion Bryce Hoppel exuded confidence as he controlled the final section, winning in 1:44.01, with Jonah Koech (1:44.47) taking the second automatic spot. Shane Cohen, using the same late-race charge that got him an NCAA title on this track earlier in the month, stormed from sixth to third in the final stretch, trimming his personal best to 1:44.92, which was good enough to advance.
Crowd favorite Eric Holt clocked 1:45.05 and would have made it through on time, but he was disqualified for a lane infringement violation after taking three steps on the line.