By David Monti, @d9monti
(c) 2026 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved
EUGENE, ORE. (04-Jul) — On a sunny, breezy and warm afternoon at Hayward Field at the University of Oregon, Nikki Hiltz of Flagstaff, Ariz., and Cameron Myers of Australia won their respective miles at the 51st Prefontaine Classic, the ninth stop of the 2026 Wanda Diamond League. Hiltz, a ten-time USATF champion, ran an outdoor all-comers record of 4:17.49, and Myers set an new Australian and Oceania record of 3:46.06. Both marks were world leaders.
Hiltz, 31, had hoped to break Sinclaire Johnson’s American record of 4:16.32. But when the race turned tactical after three-time Olympic 1500m champion Faith Kipyegon decided not to push the pace after the pacemaker Taryn Parks stepped off, Hiltz saw a different opportunity emerging.
“I was excited when it was slow,” the former Arkansas Razorback told reporters. “I knew after the press conference, honestly, that I knew that it could be tactical. It’s so funny because I put it out there that I want this record. My coach asked me, ‘OK, do you want the record or the win?’ The win every time.”
Kipyegon, the world record holder with a 4:07.64 personal best, is also an excellent tactical runner. After Parks dropped out, Kipyegon led at the three-quarter mark with Australia’s Jessica Hull, Kenya’s Dorcus Ewoi, and Hiltz close behind her. Going down the backstretch for the final time there were still athletes in contention, but coming out of the bend it quickly became a three-up sprint between Hiltz, Kipyegon and Ewoi. Hiltz just had the better close.
“Every lap I just felt better and better, and it’s rare when those things happen,” said Hiltz.
Ewoi, the 1500m silver medalist from last September’s World Championships, just edged Kipyegon for second, 4:17.62 to 4:17.80. Klaudia Kazimierska of Poland, who competed for the University of Oregon during her NCAA career, took fourth in a national record 4:17.90. Eight women broke Mary Slaney’s 1988 facility record of 4:21.25, one of the oldest records in American athletics.
Myers’s win in the Bowerman Mile was more commanding. Just 20 years old, Myers already had the world-leading time in the 1500m for this season (3:28.00) and he did an excellent job of managing his position in the field of 12.
Pacemaker Abe Alvarado took the field through the first quarter in 56.1 and the halfway point in about 1:52. When Alvarado dropped out at the top of the backstretch in the third quarter Myers took the lead. He split three quarters in 2:50.6 with Americans Hobbs Kessler and Yared Nuguse close behind. He simply held that lead to the finish, capped by a powerful surge in the final 200 meters.
“I just tried to make sure that the third lap stayed semi-honest,” Myers told Race Results Weekly. “Even when the pacer dropped out and started peeling off with about 900 to go, I wasn’t feeling great. But I’m like, I know that there are great finishers behind me.”
Nuguse was able to beat everyone but Myers, taking second in 3:46.61. Another American, Ethan Strand, took third in a personal best 3:46.97. Kessler, who was near the front in the early going, took fourth in 3:47.38. In all, ten men broke 3:50. The last was Gary Martin who just finished his career at the University of Virginia and was running his first pro race (for the Brooks Beasts). He clocked a small personal best of 3:48.76.
“Not bad, I think,” said Martin. He added: “All things considered, I don’t think it was my best day and I got a baby PB.”
Reigning world champion Lilian Odira of Kenya got the better of 2024 Olympic Champion Keely Hodgkinson of Great Britain in the women’s 800m. The top athletes let the pacemaker go (the halfway split of 53.58 was too hot), and the race came down to a sprint down the Hayward homestretch between Odira and Hodgkinson. Odira clearly looked stronger, while Hodgkinson was laboring (the Briton had both knees taped after a fall she took last week). Odira ran 1:56.19 to Hodgkinson’s 1:56.73. American Addy Wiley, the bronze medalist from this year’s World Indoor Championships, took third in 1:57.70.
“Shocking, to be honest,” said a distraught Hodgkinson when asked by reporters about how she felt about her race. “I don’t know. It’s been a bit of a week. My knees taped up; I took a bad fall last week. So four days I couldn’t even walk, so I guess I should take the positive to be able to line up.”
Odira was very pleased with her race, an important step in her preparations for the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow later this month.
“I’m so grateful, coming to the USA and doing my first Pre Classic and becoming a winner,” she said. Wow, so amazing, and I’m so happy.”
The women’s two-mile, which started today’s distance program, was a tactical affair. The contenders let the pacemaker, Mia Barnett of Sweden, get a lead of nearly 15 seconds through the halfway point where she dropped out. The contenders split halfway in about 4:46, and saved everything for the final lap where two Ethiopians, Aleshign Baweke and Hirut Meshesha, burned the final quarter mile in 60.7 seconds. Baweke led out of the final bend and Meshesha could not catch her. They were timed in 9:20.02 and 9:20.20, respectively. Baweke’s time was a world-leader for the rarely-run distance.
“It was a very good race,” Baweke told the event’s flash quotes team. “The race was not fast, but because I won, I’m very happy. When I saw it was slow, I thought I will need to finish fast. So, all the way I was thinking, I need to finish fast.”
American Shelby Houlihan took third on the back of a strong final sprint.
“It was a good step to getting back to racing,” said Houlihan, who plans to compete in the USATF Championships later this month in New York in either the 1500m or the 5000m.
The other distance event on today’s program, the women’s steeplechase, went fast. Behind the pacemaking of Taylor Lovell, the first kilometer was covered in 2:54.68, and unlike in the women’s 800m and mile the top contenders were close behind: Faith Cherotich and Doris Lemngole of Kenya, Peruth Chemutai of Uganda, Winfred Yavi of Bahrain, and Marwa Bouzayani of Tunisia. The leaders were on pace to attack Yavi’s meeting record of 8:45.25 from last year.
Things slowed a bit in the middle kilometer (3:03), and with the record chances diminished the contenders turned to racing each other, instead. Yavi led at the bell with Cherotich and Bouzayani close behind. Yavi continued to lead on the backstretch, but Cherotich went past the former Kenyan and led at the final water jump (she hurdled it without missing a step). Cherotich, the reigning world champion, got home first in 8:51.74 with Yavi close behind in 8:52.94. Bouzayani set a national record in third: 8:54.32.
“I was expecting to go fast today and I’m happy for what I got,” Cherotich told Race Results Weekly. “I believe in myself so I was very, very ready.”
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The Wanda Diamond League resumes in Monaco on July 10 with the Herculis Meeting, then goes to London on July 18 before taking a pause for the Commonwealth Games and the European Athletics Championships.
PHOTO: Nikki Hiltz winning the women’s mile at the 2026 Prefontaine Classic (Photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)
PHOTO: Cam Myers of Australia winning the Bowerman Mile at the 2026 Prefontaine Classic (Photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)
PHOTO: Lilian Odira winning the women’s 800m at the 2026 Prefontaine Classic (Photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)
PHOTO: Faith Cherotich (center) chasing Winfred Yavi in the women’s steeplechase at the 2026 Prefontaine Classic (Photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)
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