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Everything You Need To Know About Belgrade 2022
Your in-depth guide to all of the events, athletes and storylines to watch for every event at the World Indoor Championships.
This is the CITIUS MAG Newsletter by Chris Chavez. If you’ve been forwarded this email or stumbled upon a link online, you can sign up and subscribe here:
It’s been four years since we’ve had the chance to watch a World Indoor Championship. The last time medals were handed out was in 2018 in Birmingham (UK) but that will all change this weekend in Belgrade, Serbia. Multiple Olympic champions from Tokyo will be in action, and there will also be a slew of athletes looking to make their mark as stars to watch ahead of this summer’s World Championships in Eugene, Oregon.
Here is a preview of all the events, athletes and storylines to watch for every event:
THE SPRINTS
Men’s 60m: Marcell Jacobs vs. Christian Coleman
Final on Saturday at 4:20 p.m. ET
As I’ve previously written about throughout the indoor season, Christian Coleman’s return to the track after serving a suspension for whereabouts failures has been building toward a head-to-head battle with Olympic 100m champion Marcell Jacobs.
Last summer, Jacobs stunned the track world with his win in Tokyo but after the question of “Who is this guy?” got asked, it was soon after followed up with: “What if Christian Coleman was in that race?” This Saturday, we’ll get a semblance of an answer. Coleman is the reigning World Indoor and Outdoor champion and enters with the world-leading time of 6.45. Jacobs has not lost a race this indoor season but was disqualified from a 60m race on March 7 for a false start.
Marvin Bracy, who joined the CITIUS MAG Podcast after his runner-up finish at the U.S. Indoor Championships, tied his personal best with a 6.48 for the No. 3 world time. He’s looking to make it a U.S. 1-2 for the first time since 2001 and add to a medal collection that already contains a World Indoor silver from 2014.
Women’s 60m: Can Ewa Swoboda Do It On The Big Stage?
Final on Friday at 3:55 p.m. ET
Poland’s Ewa Swoboda has been one of the biggest stars of the 2022 indoor season after running 6.99 to win the Polish national championships in Torun. The European indoor champion is the only woman to break 7 seconds in the event this year. She first staked her claim to the short-sprint throne when she beat double Olympic champion Elaine Thompson-Herah in Torun on Feb 22. She hasn’t competed at a global championship since 2019, where she missed the final in the 100m at the Doha world championships. She’s looking to put a string of bad luck in the rearview mirror after missing the 2021 European Indoor Championships due to a positive COVID test and sitting out the Tokyo Olympics with an injury.
Team USA is sending a strong duo in U.S. champion Mikiah Brisco (7.07 SB) and Marybeth Sant-Price (7.04 SB). Their seasons’ bests sit at #2 and #4 on the entry list, so they’ll be in the medal hunt.
Switzerland’s Mujinga Kambundji is the only returning medalist from 2018. She earned a bronze medal in 2018. Her 7.05 season’s best puts her at No. 5 in the world for the year.
Men’s 400 Meters: A D2 Star Favored For Gold?
Final on Saturday at 3:10 p.m. ET
The star power of this event took a hit this year with a number of Olympians opting to skip the World Indoor Championships and other world-class sprinters still in the NCAA. We just saw North Carolina’s A&T’s Randolph Ross (also a 2021 U.S. Olympian) win the NCAA championships in 44.62. There’s a good chance the winning time at Worlds is slower. U.S. indoor champion Trevor Bassitt has a season’s best of 45.75 for No. 8 in the world and he’s one of the favorites. This weekend, he’s upgrading his Ashland University kit to a Team USA jersey. If you read his recent interview in The Lap Count, you’ll find an extra reason or two to root for him.
“I've always kind of gone by the philosophy that it's not about running a personal best; it’s about who crosses the line first,” Bassitt said. “The goal is to leave there with two gold medals and if I run fast times with it, awesome. If not, I won two World Championships.”
Liemarvin Bonevacia of the Netherlands could be the person to upset Bassitt. He ran 45.48 to win the Dutch national championships and enters as the #1 seed. He was a member of The Netherlands’ 4x400m relay team that took silver at the Tokyo Olympics. At 32, he’s looking to finally add an individual world championship medal.
Big props to Pavel Maslak who heads to the world championships as a longshot for a fourth-consecutive World Indoor title. His season’s best of 46.70 was good for second at the Czech national championships.
Women’s 400 Meters: Shaunae Miller-Uibo vs. Femke Bol
Final on Saturday at 2:50 p.m. ET
One of the best parts of professional indoor track is the chance to see stars from other events thrive in new disciplines. Dutch star Femke Bol has proven that she’s not just a great 400m hurdler (2021 Olympic bronze medalist). She’s been undefeated in the indoor 400m for the past two years, including winning gold for the 2021 European indoor title. Her 50.30 is the world-leading time heading into the world championships.
Yet few people would call her the favorite. That’s because Shaunae Miller-Uibo heads to Belgrade to defend her ground as the world’s best 400 meter runner. The two-time Olympic champion has not raced this indoor season so her fitness is a bit of an unknown. But you can never doubt that she will show up to a championship ready.
Major credit to both women just for showing up - as decorated Olympians who will surely be in the hunt for outdoor titles, they would typically be good candidates to skip World Indoors. The tighter turns also don’t favor taller athletes, and Bol (6’0”) and Miller-Uibo (6’1”) are both among the tallest long sprinters currently active. Kudos for representing your nation and toeing the line.
The United States has not missed a podium in the women’s 400m since 2006. Lynna Irby is the best shot for a medal after winning the U.S. Indoor Championships. She has a season’s best of 51.88 and a personal best of 49.80 outdoors.
Men’s 60m Hurdles: Grant Holloway World Record Watch
Final on Sunday at 2:30 p.m. ET
Grant Holloway has never lost a 60m hurdles race in his career. He’s the world record holder and enters as the world leader with a season’s best of 7.35 from the World Indoor Tour Meeting in Lievin. He’s been ramping it up each meet with the hopes of throwing down a big mark at the World Indoor Championships. The world record is 7.29, held by… Grant Holloway.
France’s Pascal Martinot-Lagarde would be the best bet for a possible upset. He has two World Indoor championship silver medals and one bronze in his career. His season’s best of 7.46 is No. 3 in the world behind Holloway and NCAA champion Trey Cunningham of Florida State.
Women’s 60m Hurdles: Danielle Williams Looks To End Jamaican Drought
Final on Saturday at 4:05 p.m. ET
It’s been more than two decades since Jamaica has had a medalist in the women’s 60m hurdles at the World Indoor Championships, but the odds look good this year. Danielle Williams looks to become the first Jamaican 60m hurdles medalist since Michelle Freeman in 2001. Freeman was also the last Jamaican to win gold in 1997. Williams, the 2015 world champion in the 100m hurdles, is heading into Belgrade undefeated with the world-leading time of 7.75, and the #2 entrant is her countrywoman, Britany Anderson.
Florida’s Grace Stark tied the collegiate record of 7.78 to win the NCAA title in this event but did not contest the U.S. Championships. Team USA will be represented by Gabbi Cunningham, who was 7th in the 100m hurdles at the Tokyo Olympics, and Alaysha Johnson. Cunningham enters with the same PB as Anderson, so if she delivers a par performance, she’ll be in the medal hunt as well.
THE DISTANCE EVENTS
Men’s 800 Meters: Watch For Bryce Hoppel’s Revenge
Final on Saturday at 2:10 p.m. ET
There was something about the disappointment expressed on Bryce Hoppel’s face when he was upset by Mariano Garcia at the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix on Feb. 6. Garcia ran 1:45.12 for a world-leading time and Spanish national record. He hasn’t been untouchable, however - he finished second at the Spanish national championships - which suggests this will be a fairly even rematch.
Hoppel rebounded by winning the U.S. Indoor Championships in a season’s best of 1:45.30 – No. 3 in the world. Hoppel was injured heading into the Tokyo Olympics so we didn’t get to see him advance beyond the semifinals. He was fourth at the 2019 World Championships so he’s still looking for his first career global championship medal.
British record holder Elliot Giles beat Garcia at the World Indoor Tour meet in Madrid and is just a year removed from his 1:43.63 personal best so we know what he’s capable of indoors. He was beaten by Kenya’s Collins Kipruto at the Müller Grand Prix.
All four men are entered with seasons’ bests within 0.3 seconds of one another. No one is heading into this one as a favorite.
Women’s 800 Meters: Keely Hodgkinson’s Time To Shine
Final on Sunday at 1:05 p.m. ET
2021 was a year to remember for Keely Hodgkinson. She won the European indoor title, broke the British outdoor 800m record, earned an Olympic silver medal and won the Diamond League title. 2022 has been off to just as strong of a start for the 20-year-old. At the Müller Indoor Grand Prix on Feb. 19, she ran 1:57.20 for the fastest indoor 800m performance in 20 years and the sixth-fastest all-time. She tuned up for Worlds with a runner-up finish in the 400m at the British indoor championships in a personal best of 52.42.
U.S. indoor champion Ajee’ Wilson is still seeking her gold. She has two silver medals from the last two World Indoor Championships. She has not lost this season against mostly U.S.-based competition. Her season’s best time is only 2:01.38 from mostly-tactical races where she’s been in control from the front.
Wilson’s biggest competitor so far this year has been Jamaica’s Natoya Goule at the Millrose Games. Goule went on to run 1:58.46 at the World Indoor Tour stop in Lievin for the No. 2 time in the world. In that race, she beat 2019 world champion Halimah Nakaayi of Uganda. Goule wants to be the first Jamaican woman to win a medal in the indoor 800 since Kenia Sinclair in 2006.
Tactics are going to be fascinating in this race. Goule likes to break her competition with a blistering opening 400m. Wilson likes to get to the front early and wind the pace down slowly. Hodgkinson… is going to be tough to beat with either strategy. Wilson’s usual strategy can run the wheels off most competitors, but Hodgkinson closed in 28.87 in her 1:57 performance, suggesting that she’ll be more than fine kicking off any pace. However it plays out, it’ll be a race to watch for sure.
Men’s 1500 Meters: Jakob Ingebrigtsen Takes Centerstage
Final on Sunday at 1:35 p.m. ET
Jakob Ingebrigtsen is the Olympic champion, European indoor champion, world record holder and now looks to add “World Indoor champion” to his extensive list of accolades at just 21 years old. He ran 3:30.60 to break the World Indoor 1500m world record in Lievin. Former world record holder Samuel Tefera of Ethiopia was in that race but was a non-factor by the time Ingebrigtsen made his crushing blow in the final lap. World Indoors will be a rematch and Tefera’s season’s best is a more-than-respectable 3:33.70. However, he just happens to be up against one of the best middle distance runners in the world at the moment.
The U.S. medal hopes will be U.S. championship runner-up Josh Thompson and fourth-place finisher Sam Prakel after U.S. Olympic Trials champion Cole Hocker withdrew and third-placer Henry Wynne didn’t have the standard. Thompson in particular will be hoping for a tactical race.
Kenya’s Abel Kipsang took fourth at the Tokyo Olympics and holds a season’s best/personal best of 3:34.57 from his win in Birmingham. And look for Olli Hoare of Australia to keep the second half of the race honest, as he’s more of a strength-based miler than a kicker. They’ll both be medal contenders, but it’s hard to imagine anyone taking down Ingebrigtsen without something crazy happening.
Women’s 1500 Meters: Gudaf Tsegay Wants Golden Hardware
Final on Saturday at 3:35 p.m. ET
Ethiopia’s Gudaf Tsegay is just 24 years old and has three career global championship bronze medals. She took bronze in the 1500m at the 2016 World Indoor Championships and then bronze in the 1,500 meters at the 2019 world outdoor championships. Last year, she elected to race the 5000m in Tokyo and came away with a bronze medal. The indoor 1500m is the event she owns. She ran the world record of 3:53.09 in Feb. 2021 and won both her races to start the 2022 campaign. She was planning to go after the indoor mile world record in Lievin on Feb. 17 but fell in the early stages of the race. She’s the heavy favorite for this one since she’s been undefeated in the event since 2019.
Her compatriot Axumawit Embaye is No. 2 on the world list with a 4:02.12 in Karlsruhe. She was the 2014 World Indoor Championship silver medalist. On paper, the next best duo in the race is Jessica Hull and Linden Hall of Australia, both finalists in the 1500m in Tokyo. Both women have run under 4 minutes outdoors but don’t have a lot of hardware yet, so they’ll be hungry for the podium.
If this becomes a kicker’s race, the U.S. duo of Heather MacLean and Josette Norris could become the first American women to medal since Regina Jacobs’s gold in 2003.
Men’s 3000 Meters: An Ethiopian Sweep?
Final on Sunday at 7:05 a.m. ET
There’s a good likelihood that Ethiopia can sweep the medals here because they own four of the top five times of 2022, with Berihu Aregawi leading the charge with a 7:26.20 for the fifth-fastest time in history on Jan. 28. That was his only race of the season, good enough to make the Ethiopian team while still keeping his cards close before the world championships.
Lemecha Girma and Selemon Barega are the other two Ethiopian studs who have battled twice this indoor season, and both men have seasons’ bests of 7:30. Girma came away victorious both times in Lievin and Torun.
Spain’s Adel Mechaal, who ran a European record of 7:30.82 to win the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix, would be the best bet to try and break up any podium sweep but he’s also entered in the 1500m, so he’ll be on his third race of the weekend by the time the 3000m final comes around.
If the race is tactical, keep an eye on two U.S.-based internationals: Geordie Beamish, who won the 3000m at Millrose, and Marc Scott, the U.K. indoor champion.
Women’s 3000 Meters: Dawit Seyaum Wants To Make It Nine Golds For Ethiopia In The Last 20 Years
Final on Friday at 3:30 p.m. ET
Ethiopia’s rich history in the 3000 meters is even better on the women’s side with eight of the last nine gold medals being won by Berhane Adere (2003), Meseret Defar (2004, 2006, 2008, 2010) and Genzebe Dibaba (2014, 2016 and 2018). Dawit Seyaum wants to start her own streak and enters with the fastest time in the world with a 8:23.24 from Lievin. Her compatriot, Ejgayehu Taye, was just three seconds behind her and could be her biggest challenger.
One runner to watch will certainly be Canadian sensation Gabriela DeBues-Stafford, who ran a national record of 8:33.92 to win the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix but then closed the final 3000m of her 14:31.38 indoor 5000m in around 8:30. After her 5th place finish in the 1500m at the Olympics, she is fully capable of hanging with Seyaum and Taye in a fast race or a kick.
Team USA’s Alicia Monson and Elle Purrier St. Pierre enter with the World No. 3 and 12 times. Monson’s 8:31.62 came in a commanding Millrose Games victory from the front where she just pressed on from the last 2000m of the race. Purrier St. Pierre’s season’s best is “only” 8:41.53 from U.S. Indoors, but she closed her final lap of that race in 28.88.
Even if the duo fail to medal, if the Ethiopians want a fast race in the final, it wouldn’t be a total shock to see Karissa Schweitzer’s American record of 8:25.70 threatened.
THE THROWS
Men’s Shot Put: Ryan Crouser Goes For His First World Title
Final on Saturday at 1:40 p.m. ET
Given how dominant Ryan Crouser has been at the global level for the past two years, it’s easy to forget that he’s never won a gold medal at a world championship. The world record holder and two-time Olympic champion is heavily favored to change that when he steps into the ring in Belgrade. He has competed just twice indoors this season. His Millrose Games world record* was voided after a technical error by officials. He won the U.S. Indoor Championships with a 22.51m throw, which is the world-leading mark.
Poland’s Konrad Bukowiecki sits at No. 2 in the world with his 21.91m throw from the World Indoor Tour meet in Madrid on March 2. However, Bukowiecki lost to Croatia’s Filip Mihaljević at the Orlen Cup in Torun earlier in the season. As the #2 and #3 seeds, both will be in medal contention.
Do not forget about New Zealand’s Tom Walsh, the reigning World Indoor champion since 2016. This will be his indoor season opener, since he’s been competing outdoors at home and notched a 21.55m season’s best to win his 12th national title on March 5. If Walsh ends up on the podium, it will be his eighth global championship medal.
Women’s Shot Put: Get To Know Auriol Dongmo
Final on Friday at 1:55 p.m. ET
Portugal’s Auriol Dongmo is looking to add ‘world champion’ to her resume after winning the 2021 European indoor championship and taking fourth at the Tokyo Olympics. She is undefeated on the season and improved upon her world-leading time each meet. She threw a national record and personal best of 19.90m at the Portuguese national indoor championships last month. On March 12, her 19.68m throw at the European Throwing Cup set the bar as the early outdoor world-leading mark.
The U.S. medal hopes rest on the shoulders of Maggie Ewen, who sits at No. 2 in the world with her 19.79m throw to win the U.S. Indoor Championships. Ewen is looking for her first world championship medal. She looks to be just the second American woman to win the World Indoor Championships since Michelle Carter’s gold in 2016.
Don’t count out veteran Christina Schwanitz, the four-time global medalist and 2015 world champion in the event. Funnily enough, her Wikipedia page refers to her as a “retired German shot putter” despite the fact that she’s competed three times this year, most recently finishing third at the German national championships in a season’s best of 18.49m. She’ll be a long shot to medal, but championship experience goes a long way at these events.
THE JUMPS
Men’s High Jump: The Return of Gianmarco Tamberi
Final on Sunday at 5:45 a.m. ET
The last time most people saw Italy’s Gianmarco Tamberi was when he dunked in the NBA Celebrity All-Star Game last month. Before that, many fans cheered his and Mutaz Barshim’s decision to share the gold medal in Tokyo, a true highlight of the 2021 Olympics. He has not competed this indoor season but is entered in the meet and plans to compete, according to his Wednesday afternoon Instagram post. This will be his first meet since winning the Diamond League title in Zurich last September.
If he’s rusty, the gold medal hopes turn to South Korea’s Woo Sang-Hyeok to possibly win the nation’s first-ever world indoor championship medal. He was fourth in the Tokyo Olympics and is poised to break into the medals with the best jump on the entry list, the world-leading mark of 2.36m. He was the World Youth champion in 2013 and then a World Junior bronze medalist in 2014.
New Zealand’s Hamish Kerr, who has an incredible Instagram name as TheRealFlyingKiwi, enters with his 2022 outdoor best of 2.30m. He’s got a good shot at a medal as 5 of the 6 men over 2.30m indoors this year are not competing.
Women’s High Jump: Root For Ukraine’s Yaroslava Mahuchikh
Final on Saturday at 6 a.m. ET
Australia’s Eleanor Patterson enters this one with the 1.99m world lead from a Feb. 15 meet in Banská Bystrica, Slovakia. She also picked up wins at the World Indoor Tour stops in Birmingham and Madrid. On paper, she’s the favorite – especially since Olympic champion and three-time world champion Mariya Lasitskene is barred from competing due World Athletics’ ban of authorized neutral athletes from Russia following the nation’s invasion of Ukraine.
Yaroslava Mahuchikh was last year’s European indoor champion and claimed a bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics. She is one of six Ukrainian athletes competing in Belgrade. Her season’s best is 1.96m, a four-way tie for #2 seed, but the world will surely be cheering her on to medal as she represents her home nation. On Instagram, she was vocal about stopping the IOC from allowing Russian and Belarussian athletes from competing at the Paralympics. A medal of any sorts for Mahuchikh would be a nice moment to briefly celebrate during an extremely difficult period of her life.
U.S. champion Vashti Cunningham, who earned a silver medal in 2018, is not competing at Worlds.
Men’s Pole Vault: The Mondo Duplantis Show
Final on Sunday at 12:17 p.m. ET
Olympic champion Mondo Duplantis of Sweden just broke his own world record by clearing 6.19m to solidify himself as the gold medal favorite. U.S. champion and Olympic silver medalist Chris Nilsen will try and pull off an upset to cap a stellar indoor season that has seen him breaking the U.S. indoor record twice, resulting in a new lifetime best of 6.05m. K.C. Lightfoot, the U.S. Championship runner-up, has the No. 3 mark in the world with a 5.95 win in Dortmund on Feb. 12.
Duplantis is not unbeatable - pole vault is a famously finicky event and off days do happen. However, his last loss indoors was three years and 21 competitions ago, so for another vaulter to emerge victorious, he would have to have a pretty bad outing.
Women’s Pole Vault: Sandi Morris vs. Katie Nageotte Again
Final on Saturday at 1:05 p.m. ET
U.S. champion Sandi Morris is the favorite for gold as Russia’s Anzhelika Sidorova and Polina Knoroz are banned from competing. Morris is looking to defend her gold medal from 2018. Her strong results in 2022 have made it clear she’s put her 2021 disappointment and injury past her. She won the Millrose Games and then the U.S. title to show she’s back in that 2018-2019 top form.
Her training partner, Olympic champion Katie Nageotte, is coming back around at the right time. She cleared 4.80m in Lievin and then took second at the U.S. championships. It wouldn’t be shocking to see a U.S. 1-2 if both vaulters remain healthy.
Slovenia’s Tina Sutej was fifth in Tokyo and has been competing well this indoor season with a national record of 4.80m in Rouen on March 5. Watch for her as well. The fifth seed in this competition is 34-year-old veteran Yarisley Silva of Cuba, a five-time global medalist going back to her silver at the 2012 Olympics. The shallower-than-normal field could help her add to her medal count.
Men’s Long Jump: Miltiadis Tentoglou Wants Gold Again
Final on Friday at 2:05 p.m. ET
Last summer’s Olympic long jump competition was thrilling. We saw Greece’s Miltiadis Tentoglou equal Cuban star Juan Miguel Echevarria’s 8.41m jump on their final try, so the title came down to the second-best jumps by each athlete and Tentoglou had a 8.11m mark that gave him the win. Tentoglou is also the man to watch this weekend since he has a 8.25m season’s best, the top seed and #2 in the world this year. Switzerland’s Simon Ehammer has the world-leading mark of 8.26m but is not competing.
Sweden’s Thobias Montler isn’t too far off with a 8.23m SB. The U.S. duo of Jarrion Lawson and 2016 world indoor champion and 2018 bronze medalist Marquise Dendy are also medal contenders if they can jump close to their personal bests.
Women’s Long Jump: A Win For The Home Crowd?
Final on Sunday at 12:30 p.m. ET
Each time out at the World Indoor Championships, Ivana Vuleta (nee Španović) of Serbia has improved upon her previous finish. She earned bronze in 2014, silver in 2016 and then gold in 2018. But it can’t get better than gold, so she’s got to defend her title. She has the #1 mark in the world with a 6.88m win from the World Indoor Tour stop at this very same venue on March 7. The stadium will be electric if she can win in front of a home crowd.
Nigerian star Ese Brume is entered in the meet as well. She was the Olympic bronze medalist in the event but has yet to compete since running in the heats of the 4x100m relay in Tokyo.
The American hopes will be with U.S. champion and Olympian Quanesha Burks, who just signed a partnership deal with McDonald’s.
Men’s Triple Jump: Donald Scott vs. Will Claye?
Final on Friday at 7:10 a.m.
The U.S. Championships saw quite the battle between Donald Scott, Chris Carter and Will Claye. In Spokane, Scott claimed his third U.S. indoor title and is looking for his first global championship medal. He was sixth at the 2019 World Championships and seventh at the Tokyo Olympics last summer.
Claye, who heads to Serbia as the reigning champion, is still looking to regain his pop. His season’s best is 16.63m from his third place finish at the U.S. championships, more than a meter off his personal best. Carter opted not to go to Worlds, so Claye’s shot at a title defense and a third indoor gold is alive.
Lázaro Martínez of Cuba is a young star to watch. At 24 years old, he was eighth at the Tokyo Olympics and sits at No. 2 in the world with his 17.21m personal best from Lievin.
Women’s Triple Jump: Make It Three, Yulimar!
Final on Sunday at 6 a.m. ET
Olympic champion and world record holder Yulimar Rojas is one of the most entertaining athletes on the circuit. She’s done it all. She has won the last two world indoor titles and owns the indoor world record. She won the 2021 Olympic title and broke the outdoor world record at the Games. She hasn’t been defeated indoors since Feb. 2019.
Normally “triple jump final at 6 a.m. on a Sunday” doesn’t scream must-see TV. But Rojas competing is always a sight to see and one of the underrated gems of our sport right now. She’s energetic and engaging when she jumps, not afraid to show joy or frustration after an effort and always ready to hype up the crowd. Her season’s best of 15.41m is only 2 centimeters shy of her world indoor record from 2020. At 26 years old, she is smack in the middle of her prime. If you can set an alarm and chug a cup of coffee, you might just be rewarded with a historic performance.
HOW TO WATCH LIVE (ALL TIMES ET)
If you’ve made it this far, you deserve to be rewarded with the secret keys to how you can watch off this. Well, lo and behold the streaming and TV schedule for this weekend’s track and field action:
Friday
4:30-8:35 a.m. | Streaming on Peacock
12:30-4:30 p.m. | Streaming on Peacock
Saturday
4:30-7:30 a.m. | Streaming on Peacock
7-10 a.m. | Televised on CNBC | Streaming on NBC Sports Live
12-1 p.m. | Televised on NBC | Streaming on NBC Sports Live
Sunday
5-8:15 a.m. | Streaming on Peacock
11:45 a.m.-4 p.m. | Streaming on Peacock
12-3 P.M. | CNBC | Streaming on NBC Sports Live
That’s it from me today. As always, thank you for reading! If you enjoyed this, learned something new, or have any questions or commentary on anything featured in this issue, feel free to hit my inbox by replying or writing to [email protected]
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