By David Monti, @d9monti
(c) 2026 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved
TORUŃ (20-Mar) — The first day of the 21st World Athletics Indoor Championships kicked off with brutal qualifying races in the men’s and women’s 800m and 1500m. In the longer races the competition was particularly intense. With no time qualifiers, only the top three athletes from each of the three heats made it to their respective finals. That meant that 30 men and 24 women were reduced to just nine for each final.
“Kind of brutal,” quipped reigning USA 1500m champion Nikki Hiltz, who competed in the first heat. “I wasn’t thinking about the final today at all. I was just thinking about today, and treat it like a final.”
In Hiltz’s heat Frenchwoman Agathe Guillemot did most of the leading, and that was just fine with Hiltz. With 200m to go Guillemot, Hiltz, Italy’s Ludovica Cavalli, Sweden’s Wilma Nielsen, and Lithuania’s Gabija Galvydyte were all still in contention. Hiltz, known for a blazing kick, wasn’t worried.
“I know I have another gear in the last 50 always, so I just tried to save one more bullet,” said the former Arkansas Razorback. “I think in the last 50 I surprised myself and was a little more explosive than I thought I would be.”
Guillemot, who led for the last two laps, held on to win in 4:16.25. Hiltz got second in 4:16.32 and Cavalli third in 4:16.45.
The second heat was dominated by Ethiopia’s Birke Haylom, fifth in last year’s World Indoor Championships in the 3000m, clocking 4:10.66. Much to the delight of the Polish crowd, former Oregon Duck, Klaudia Kazimierska moved up from fourth position with a lap to go, and moved into second coming around the final bend. She ran 4:11.33, just holding off Kenya’s Susan Ejore-Sanders (4:11.41). Sanders, sixth in the Paris 2024 1500m final, just edged Jemma Reekie of Great Britain out of the final qualifying spot.
“When I’m in a race like that I just think about getting the top three and qualify for the finals,” said Ejore-Sanders. “So, I just kept telling myself to stay in the race.”
Three women –Georgia Hunter Bell of Great Britain, Jessica Hull of Australia, and Gracie Morris of the USA– dominated the third heat (both Hunter Bell and Hull were Paris 2024 medalists). Morris, recently second at the USA Indoor Championships, led most of the early laps, but not by design.
“We kind of had like several race plans,” Morris told reporters. “I just kind of found myself there and felt comfortable in that spot, trying to run my own race.”
With two laps to go Hull took off and Hunter Bell and Morris chased hard. Hull still had the lead with 100m to go, but Hunter Bell eventually prevailed in 4:12.09 to Hull’s 4:12.45, reversing their order from the Paris 2024 Olympic final where Hull won silver and Hunter Bell bronze. Morris got third in 4:12.57 and advanced to her first global final.
For Hull, another former Oregon Duck, her status as an Olympic medalist meant nothing tonight, she said.
“It doesn’t matter who you are or what you’ve done, that progression (to the final) is unsettling,” Hull told Race Results Weekly. “You’re just kind of on edge out there more than you would be outdoors where you have more room. It was just get the job done. Wait for 300 to go at the latest.”
The men’s 1500m heats started off with a rare breakaway attempt. Rok Markelj of Slovenia split the first 400m in 58.13 seconds and put a five-second gap on the field. That margin grew to 8 seconds by 800m, and was still seven seconds at 1000m. One of the chasers, Adam Spencer of Australia, wasn’t quite sure what to make of it.
“I’ve been in (this kind of race) a few times, but not at this level,” Spencer told Race Results Weekly. “I was a bit scared a few laps in but with about two laps to go I felt pretty good that we were going to get him.”
Markelj’s lead dwindled to less than two seconds at the bell, and behind him Italy’s Federico Riva, USA’s Nathan Green, and Spencer were gunning for him. The Slovenian was soon passed (he would finish second to last), and Riva, Spencer and Green became a three-man breakaway, and that’s how they finished in 3:40.52, 3:40.79, and 3:40.97, respectively.
“We got top three, so at the end of the day that’s all I needed to do,” Spencer added.
Green, who is competing in his first global championships, did not speak with the media telling reporters, “maybe next time” as he walked past them in the mixed zone.
Sweden’s Samuel Philström (3:43.38) and Portugal’s Isaac Nader (3:43.58) went one-two in the second heat. Nader, last September’s world 1500m champion, told reporters that he was feeling confident and is now self-coached. He parted with coach Enrique Pascual Oliva late last year.
“Now we coach ourselves,” said Nader, whose romantic partner, Salomé Alfonso, also competed tonight in the 1500m but did not advance. He continued: “I’m in good shape. Today I just pass to the final. I am the same athlete (despite being world champion). The difference is that I have more confidence in myself.”
The third and final heat featured last-lap dominance by Spain’s Mariano García who won in 3:38.19. But the best performance in that race was by Frenchman Titouan Le Grix, the former NCAA Division II star with Wingate University in Wingate, North Carolina. In the homestretch, Le Grix went from fifth to second to make the final.
“It was amazing,” an ecstatic Le Grix told reporters. “I knew I had quite some energy in the legs. The tactic went perfect as we said with my coach. If it wasn’t going to be a fast race I was just going to attack in the last 200.”
Sadly, Norwegian teenager Håkon Moe Berg did not advance. He made a powerful move in the middle of the race to break it open, but he faded to finish fifth.
HODGKINSON ADVANCES EASILY
Qualifying in the 800m for both men and women went mostly to form where the top two from each of six heats, plus the next six fastest athletes, advanced to Saturday’s semi-finals. The women competed first and reigning Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson easily won the first heat from the front in 2:00.32 over Switzerland’s Valentina Rosamilia (2:01.15). She is a heavy favorite to win gold here.
“I’m not the biggest fan of rounds; you never know what can happen, you are exposed to anything,” Hodgkinson told the U.K. Athletics flash quotes team. “So, I just have to make sure I take each round as it comes and conserve energy. The last 100m I didn’t know who was behind me, so I pushed forward to make sure I was in a good place. Overall, the race felt good.”
Reigning USA indoor champion Addy Wiley won the third heat in 2:00.85. She followed Australia’s Hayley Kitching in the first lap, and they split 400 meters in a fast-enough 59.50. They pulled away in the final lap and had a comfortable gap on France’s Charlotte Dumas at the finish. Kitching was timed in 2:00.99.
“I wasn’t going to start this race any further back than third,” Wiley told reporters. “I honestly was unsure anyone would take it, so I was ready to be up there. No fooling around, no getting tripped up, just getting to the semis.”
Kitching, who was tripped and fell in her preliminary race at the NCAA Championships one week ago, was clearly pleased to have advanced. Like Wiley, her plan was to run at, or near, the front and stay out of trouble.
“Honestly, it sucked because I was really hoping to get that national title,” she said of the NCAA Championships. “But, you know, stuff happens, especially with indoors. I’ve just got to keep my head up.”
Wiley’s American teammate Valery Tobias appeared to advance out of heat four where she finished second, but officials disqualified her for running out of her lane in the first lap of the race (World Athletics track rule 17.2.3). Ahead of her, Ethiopia’s Nigist Getachew got the win in 2:02.89, and Ireland’s Maeve O’Neill (who competes for Providence College in the NCAA) advanced as well after crossing the line third.
The other two heat winners, Italy’s Eloisa Coiro and Switzerland’s Audrey Werro, ran the fastest times of the day, 1:59.87 and 1:59.91, respectively. The two Kenyans competing here, Gladys Chepngetich and Rosemary Longisa, both finished last in their heats. Both women competed in the NCAA Championships where Chepngetich won the national 800m title for Clemson, and Longisa finished second in the mile for Washington State.
In men’s 800m qualifying, gold medal favorite Eliott Crestan of Belgium won heat three and posted the fastest time of the day: 1:45.51. Crestan, who was the silver medalist at the 2025 edition of the World Athletics Indoor Championships, tailored his strategy today given the strong competitors in his heat, including Spain’s Mohamed Attaoui and Algeria’s Slimane Moula.
“I’m very happy for the race because when yesterday I saw the start list I saw the name Attaoui and Moula,” Crestan told Race Results Weekly. “A very, very hard start list. So the tactic was to run pretty fast, but not too fast. The race was good for me with a good pace.”
Attaoui, who is known for his explosive kick, ran most of the race in the back and used his closing speed to move up to second on the final lap, clocking 1:45.75 to advance. Moula, who would have been a solid bet to make the final, did not advance after finishing third.
Seventeen year-old American Cooper Lutkenhaus ran well in heat two, battling with Croatia’s Marino Bloudek. Lutkenhaus eased to the front at the 200m point, but Bloudek immediately passed him and led until about the 700m mark. At that point Lutkenhaus moved to the outside to challenge Bloudek, and actually passed him in the center of the track coming down the homestretch. But Bloudek won by a lean, 1:46.20 to 1:46.24, and both men advanced to the semi-finals.
“It felt really good,” Lutkenhaus told reporters. “Going into the race we just wanted to qualify. But we wanted to run tactically and see how we could do. Kind of just sit in that second spot and move up whenever we needed to. I felt pretty comfortable with where I was at.”
Other medal contenders who advanced include Australia’s Peter Bol, who won the first heat; Ireland’s Mark English, who won the fourth heat; and Great Britain’s Ben Pattison, who won the fifth heat. Pattison was pleased with how he approached his race.
“It was good,” said Pattison, who raced frequently this indoor season. “I was expecting it to be a bit harder. I got myself to the front. My coaches said get into a good position and try to make it easier for yourself. What I do a lot of the time is get into a bad position and work very hard to get out of it.”
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Action at the World Athletics Indoor Championships continues here tomorrow. In the middle and long distance events, both the men’s and women’s 800m semi-finals will be contested along with the 3000m finals for both men and women.
PHOTO: Keely Hodgkinson winning her heat at the 2026 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Toruń, Poland (photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)
PHOTO: Eliott Crestan of Belgium winning his 800m heat at the 2026 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Toruń, Poland (photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)
PHOTO: Samuel Philström of Sweden and Isaac Nader of Portugal battling for the win in their heat of the 1500m at the 2026 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Toruń, Poland (photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)
PHOTO: Georgia Hunter Bell of Great Britain, Jessica Hull of Australia, and Gracie Morris of the USA finishing one, two, three in their heat of the 1500m at the 2026 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Toruń, Poland (photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)
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