By Rich Sands, @thatrichsands.bsky.social
(c) 2026 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved

STATEN ISLAND (01-Mar) — Nikki Hiltz won a fourth straight title in the 1500 and 17-year-old phenom Cooper Lutkenhaus took his first in the 800 at the USATF Indoor Championships on Sunday. That capped a weekend of close races at the Ocean Breeze Athletic Complex. The meet was used to select the U.S. team for the World Athletics Indoor Championships, March 20-22 in Kujawy Pomorze, Poland, with the top two finishers being named to the squad (provided they meet qualification criteria).

Hiltz’s kick was as reliable as ever, delivering a fourth national indoor title in the 1500 (and fifth overall including last year’s 3000). The race was particularly slow early, with Gracie Morris leading through 800 meters in 2:23.12. Lindsay Butler made things interesting with a surge to the front at 1200 meters (3:26.69) and looked positioned to steal the race.

But a 29.52-second last lap allowed Hiltz to come out on top in a spirited dash to the line, holding off Morris, 4:11.34 to 4:11.39. Butler, the 2022 NCAA indoor 800 champion for Virginia Tech, was close behind in 4:11.52, just ahead of Sinclaire Johnson (4:11.59).

“It’s cool to see someone I’ve never seen make a move like that do it and do it in a national final,” said Hiltz, who has also won the past three USATF Outdoor 1500 titles. “It makes it more exciting and it’s good to get more fire under me, nobody’s going to give it to me, I’ve gotta work for it.”

While Hiltz’s trophy cabinet is already at capacity, Lutkenhaus is just starting to fill his. After a shocking second-place finish at last summer’s outdoor nationals –where he set a World U18 record and made the U.S. team for the world championships at age 16– the Texas native turned pro. A high school junior, his first season has been near perfect as he racked up wins and age-group records this winter, including a 1:44.03 world U20 record.

On Sunday he eased into the lead at 400 meters (53.18) and won comfortably in 1:46.68. Behind him, Sean Dolan (1:47.17) held off Isaiah Harris (1:47.22) for second place.

“I came into this race not knowing exactly what was going to happen,” said Lutkenhaus. “I raced a lot of these guys before, but I wasn’t sure how it was going to play out. It was my first ever national championship indoor racing style, where it might go out a little slow. So I was trying to adapt to it pretty quickly, and it worked out.”

While Hiltz and Lutkenhaus were heavily favored coming in, Nathan Green pulled an upset to take the men’s 1500. After lurking towards the back of the pack he followed his former University of Washington teammate Luke Houser, who took the lead with two laps to go. Green covered the final 100 meters in 13.08 and dove at the tape to win in 3:37.65 over Houser (3:37.67), with Vincent Ciattei (3:37.73) a close third.

“I’ve raced Luke more times than I can count, he’s one of my best friends, so I used it to my advantage,” said Green, the NCAA outdoor champion in 2023 and 2025. “I knew he was gonna dive, I just had to dive first and hope I made it. It was a good race. Big last 80.”

Olympic gold and bronze medalists Cole Hocker (fifth in 3:38.08) and Yared Nuguse (fourth in 3:38.06) were caught in the pack and couldn’t make up ground on the frantic last lap. Both were doubling back from a thrilling 3000 on Saturday. Hocker had set the early pace in that race, passing the first kilometer in a leisurely 2:37.92, then allowed steeplechaser Matthew Wilkinson to take over at 1800 meters. Wilkinson passed 2000 in 5:17.11 as several challengers all bunched up behind him. Nico Young moved in front with 300 meters to go, with only Nuguse and Hocker still in contact.

Using his trademark finishing kick, Hocker slipped by Nuguse with 100 to go and swung wide down the homestretch to catch Young, taking the win in 7:39.25.  Nuguse leaned at the line to edge Young for the second spot on the Worlds team, 7:39.28 to 7:39.29.  Only 4/100ths of a second separated the top three finishers.

“They’re such good finishers so I was just staying connected to them,” said Hocker, who ran the last 200 in 26.36 and his final 400 in 54.28. “When we got down to that final stretch I just had to keep my knees driving and get to the finish line. It was a close one.”

In the women’s 3000, also on Saturday, Elise Cranny set the early pace, passing 1000 meters in 3:01.09, with Elle St. Pierre and Emily Mackay on her heels. St. Pierre moved to the front one lap later and dramatically increased the tempo. By 2000 (5:49.13) St. Pierre she had broken away from everyone except Mackay, her former training partner at New Balance Boston.

Mackay tenaciously hung with St. Pierre before making her move on the final backstretch and took the lead with 100 meters to go, breaking the tape in 8:30.19 off a 29.94 closing 200. The time broke a 36-year-old meet record (8:40.45 by Lynn Jennings on the old 160-yard oval at Madison Square Garden) and made the Binghamton grad the ninth-fastest American of all time indoors.

“Honestly, I had no idea what to expect today. I didn’t know if I was expecting it to be slower and more tactical like last year or really fast,” said Mackay, a U.S. Olympian in the 1500 in 2024. “I think it played to my strengths. I wanted it to be a faster race and more spread out. It’s not as much fun when it’s all jumbled, that’s how people fall. I really enjoyed it and it’s nice to be able to get in a line and wait. It’s so intense, the build-up, and I live for it. I really enjoyed the race.”

St. Pierre, who gave birth to her second child last May, finished in 8:31.07, also well under Jennings’s record. “I probably should have gone a little bit earlier. Championship races are just a little more strategic and I’d rather just run a burner,” she said with a laugh. “To wait around is not my favorite style.”

In Sunday’s women’s 800, Addy Wiley won her first U.S. title, moving to the lead at the bell and cruising home in a personal best 1:59.43. “I was just really happy to get out and get in a good position higher up in the field where I knew it was a safe position, but also I’d be able to strike whenever the body felt ready,” said Wiley, who has previously raced well on the Diamond League circuit but hadn’t been able to replicate that form at the national championships. “I was really glad to feel relaxed and confident and knowing that no matter where I was I could win, but if I could get to the front I was going to have a really good day.

Valery Tobias held off a late charge from Meghan Hunter for the runner-up spot, 1:59.77 to 2:00.03. In Saturday’s heats, Sage Hurta-Klecker, who finished fifth at last fall’s World Athletics Championships, could only manage second in her heat and did not advance to the final. Paige Sheppard of Union Catholic High School in New Jersey ran a savvy race but came up short of qualifying, but her time of 2:02.35 puts her sixth on the U.S. high school indoor all-time list.

PHOTO: Cole Hocker winning the 2026 USATF Indoor Championships 3000m title over Nico Young and Yared Nuguse (Photo by Gregorio Denny for Race Results Weekly)

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