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A Decade Since Jenny Meadows Closed the Curtain on an Inspirational 800m Career

Ten years ago today, British middle-distance star Jenny Meadows stepped onto the track for the final time in an official 800-metre race, bringing an outstanding international career to a memorable close at the 2016 European Athletics Championships in Amsterdam.

Competing in the women's 800m semi-finals, Meadows crossed the line in 2:03.13, marking the final chapter of a career defined by resilience, consistency and success at the highest level of the sport. While the result itself did not earn her a place in the final, it symbolized the conclusion of a journey that inspired countless athletes across Britain and beyond.

By the time she retired, Meadows had firmly established herself among Europe's finest middle-distance runners. Her greatest achievements included winning bronze at the World Championships, claiming European Championship silver, and securing European Indoor Championship gold, achievements that reflected years of dedication against some of the strongest competition of her generation.

Her personal best of 1:57.93 remains a testament to her exceptional talent and competitive spirit. Throughout her career, Meadows became known not only for her tactical intelligence and finishing strength but also for the determination she showed in overcoming injuries and setbacks that might have ended many other careers much earlier.

A decade after her final race, Meadows' legacy continues to resonate within athletics. Her accomplishments helped raise the profile of British women's middle-distance running, while her professionalism and perseverance remain an example for aspiring athletes pursuing success on the international stage.

Ten years may have passed since her final competitive 800m, but Jenny Meadows' impact on the sport endures—proof that true champions are remembered not only for the medals they win, but also for the inspiration they leave behind.

(07/07/2026) Views: 61 ⚡AMP
by Erick Cheruiyot for My Best Runs.
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Why Keely Hodgkinson Chooses Precision Over Tradition in South Africa

In the world of middle-distance running, where marginal gains define greatness, Keely Hodgkinson and her M11 Track Club have taken a path less travelled—deliberately bypassing Kenya’s iconic high-altitude havens in favour of a more calculated base in Potchefstroom.

For decades, Iten has stood as the spiritual home of distance running, perched at a staggering 2,400 metres above sea level. It has forged champions and shaped legends. Yet for an athlete like Hodgkinson—an Olympic 800m champion whose success hinges on a delicate balance between endurance and raw speed—such extreme altitude presents a unique challenge.

Instead, her team, led by renowned coaches Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows, has identified Potchefstroom as the ideal training ground. Sitting at a more moderate 1,350 metres, it offers what many would call the “perfect compromise”—high enough to stimulate red blood cell production, yet low enough to preserve the explosive speed essential for elite 800m racing.

This distinction is crucial. The 800m is neither purely aerobic nor entirely anaerobic; it demands a rare fusion of stamina and sprint capability. Training too high can blunt that sharpness, draining the very speed that separates champions from contenders. In Potchefstroom, Hodgkinson can execute high-intensity sessions—those punishing lactic-threshold workouts and relentless hill sprints—with precision and consistency, without overburdening her body.

Climate, too, plays a decisive role. While the United Kingdom endures long, cold winters, South Africa provides dry, sunlit conditions that are ideal for uninterrupted training blocks. The firm tracks, warm air, and predictable weather allow the M11 squad to push their limits day after day, building both physical resilience and technical excellence.

Yet performance is only one piece of the puzzle. Equally important is the environment beyond the stopwatch. Potchefstroom offers a sense of familiarity and balance—modern facilities, reliable infrastructure, and a relaxed social setting that enables athletes to mentally reset between sessions. This blend of professionalism and comfort creates a “home away from home,” where recovery is as intentional as training.

Behind the scenes, the team’s meticulous approach extends to every detail. With access to advanced medical support and carefully structured routines, their South African base has evolved into a finely tuned performance hub—one that prioritises longevity, consistency, and peak execution.

In choosing South Africa over Kenya, Hodgkinson and the M11 Track Club are not rejecting tradition—they are redefining it. Their strategy reflects a deeper understanding of the event’s demands and a commitment to tailoring every variable in pursuit of excellence.

For the world’s fastest 800m women, success is no longer just about where you train—it’s about how intelligently you do it.

(04/07/2026) Views: 336 ⚡AMP
by Erick Cheruiyot for My Best Runs.
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Keely Hodgkinson The Young Superstar Leading a New Era in the 800 Meters

Few athletes in track and field have risen as quickly—or as convincingly—as Britain’s Keely Hodgkinson. Still in her early twenties, she has already won Olympic gold, broken records, and established herself as the woman to beat in one of the sport’s most demanding events.

The 800 meters has always required a rare mix of speed, strength, and racing instinct. Hodgkinson seems to have all three.

Early Life and Family Support

Keely Nicole Hodgkinson was born on March 3, 2002, in the north of England and grew up in Atherton, Greater Manchester. Sport was part of her life from the beginning. Her parents were active and supportive, encouraging her to explore athletics at a young age.

She joined a local athletics club as a child and quickly showed unusual talent. By her mid-teens she was already competing at the national level and winning junior titles.

Her family has remained a steady presence throughout her rise. Hodgkinson often speaks about the importance of that support system during the years when her career accelerated from promising junior to global star.

A Teenager on the Olympic Stage

Hodgkinson first captured worldwide attention at the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021. At just 19 years old she ran fearlessly in the women’s 800 meters final, finishing second and winning the silver medal.

Her time of 1:55.88 set a new British record and made her one of the youngest athletes ever to medal in the event.

The performance signaled that a new force had arrived in middle-distance running.

Olympic Champion

Three years later she returned to the Olympic stage in Paris 2024 and took the next step.

Running with confidence and control, Hodgkinson won the Olympic gold medal in the 800 meters, becoming one of Britain’s great modern champions and the first British woman in decades to claim the title.

It was a moment that confirmed her place among the elite of global athletics.

Breaking the Indoor World Record

In February 2026 Hodgkinson delivered another historic performance.

At the World Indoor Tour meeting in Liévin, France, she ran 1:54.87, breaking the long-standing indoor 800-meter world record.

The performance was widely viewed as one of the greatest indoor middle-distance runs ever.

What made it even more remarkable was how controlled it looked. Hodgkinson ran aggressively but smoothly, maintaining form all the way through the final straight.

The Coach Behind the Champion

A key figure in Hodgkinson’s success has been her coach, former British international Jenny Meadows, herself a world-class 800-meter runner.

Their partnership has helped shape Hodgkinson’s development both physically and mentally. Meadows understands the tactical demands of the event and has helped guide Hodgkinson through the pressures that come with being one of the world’s top athletes.

Together they have built a training approach focused on speed, endurance, and smart racing.

Life Away From the Track

Despite her rapid rise, Hodgkinson has remained grounded. She still spends much of her time in the Manchester area, close to family and longtime friends.

Away from competition she enjoys music, fashion, and spending time with those closest to her. Like many athletes of her generation, she connects with fans through social media but keeps her private life relatively low-key.

Teammates and competitors often describe her as relaxed and approachable off the track—but fiercely competitive once the race begins.

One of the Faces of Modern Athletics

In recent years Hodgkinson has become one of the most recognizable figures in track and field. Her performances have drawn large audiences and renewed attention to the women’s 800 meters.

She represents a new generation of athletes who combine elite performance with personality and confidence.

For young runners watching around the world, she has quickly become a role model.

The Future

At an age when many middle-distance runners are still learning their event, Hodgkinson already owns Olympic gold, global medals, and one of the fastest times ever run.

The outdoor world record—long considered untouchable—now seems within reach.

If her progress continues, the coming years could see her move from superstar to legend.

For now, Keely Hodgkinson remains exactly what the sport needs: a fearless racer who makes every 800 meters must-watch.

(02/25/2026) Views: 521 ⚡AMP
by Bob Anderson for My Best Runs
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Olympic rematch between medalists Jessica Hull and Georgia Bell headlines 2025 NYRR Wanamaker Mile

In January 2024, if Georgia Bell wanted to run in an indoor meet, she had to go to the World Athletics website, look up the meet director’s email address, and beg. Bell and her coaches, Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows, would have to explain why a 30-year-old with a 4:06 personal best at 1500 meters and no accomplishments to speak of at the senior level deserved a spot on the start line.

In January 2025, meet directors are the ones begging Bell to run in their races. An Olympic bronze medal will do that.

On February 8, Olympic silver medalist Jessica Hull of Australia and Bell will headline the women’s NYRR Wanamaker Mile at the 2025 Millrose Games in New York alongside World Indoor medalists Nikki Hiltz and Emily Mackay of the United States. One year ago, the idea of Bell headlining any race — let alone one of the most glamorous events on the indoor circuit — would have seemed laughable, mainly because most of the running world did not know Bell existed.

“A lot has changed in this past year,” says Bell in an interview with LetsRun.com. “Being invited to be at such a prestigious event like Millrose, I’m just really appreciative and really excited to step on the start line and race there.”

A new year brings a new reality for Bell

Being in-demand by race organizers is just one of many aspects of Bell’s new reality as an Olympic medalist. A year ago, she was working an office job in cybersecurity, waking up at 6 a.m. to cycle before work and heading to the track for a session at 7 p.m. once she had finished. Now Bell is a full-time professional runner. Her shoe contract with Nike offers many benefits, not least of which is the freedom to sleep in until 9 a.m. if she so desires.

Bell’s goals have also evolved significantly over the past 12 months. This time last year, her biggest goal for the year was to make the British team for World Indoors.

“That was kind of my Olympics,” Bell says. “I was like, maybe if I really try, [I could make the team because] I thought a lot of people would be skipping indoors because they’re focusing on Paris in the summer.”

Bell did make the team and finished fourth in the 1500m final in Glasgow, one of many surprises in a breakout season that saw her drop her personal bests from 2:03 in the 800 and 4:06 in the 1500 to 1:56 and 3:52.

In 2025, Bell is thinking much bigger. Once again, she is targeting World Indoors, which will be held in Nanjing, China, from March 21-23, and this time, she wants a medal. Bell also plans on running at the European Indoor Championships in Apeldoorn, the Netherlands (March 6-9), as well as the outdoor World Championships in Tokyo (September 13-21).

 ”I want to come away with as much hardware as possible,” Bell says. “So that means competing at all of the major championships.”

But first is a trip to the United States, where Bell plans on racing at the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix on February 2 before heading down to Millrose six days later for a race that will look very similar to last year’s Olympics. While Olympic champion Faith Kipyegon will be absent — she has not run a single indoor race during her decorated career — four of the top seven from the women’s 1500m final in Paris will be at Millrose.

(01/07/2025) Views: 2,076 ⚡AMP
by Jonathan Gault
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NYRR Millrose Games

NYRR Millrose Games

The Pinnacle of Indoor Track & Field The NYRR Millrose Games, first held in 1908, remains the premier indoor track and field competition in the United States. The 2025 edition will once again bring the world’s top professional, collegiate, and high school athletes to New York City for a day of thrilling competition. Hosted at the New Balance Track &...

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Olympic champion to challenge 41-year-old 800m world record

Launching your own track meet and naming it after yourself is one thing–but Great Britain’s 800m Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson didn’t stop there. On Wednesday, British Athletics revealed that the inaugural Keely Klassic track meet, set for Feb. 15 in Birmingham, will conclude with Hodgkinson trying to break the 800m world record, which has stood for 41 years.

The record of 1:53.28, set by Czechoslovak athlete Jarmila Kratochvílová in 1983, is the longest-standing world record in athletics. Hodgkinson would need to run more than a second faster than her personal best (1:54.61) to even come close to taking it down. The run will mark Hodgkinson’s season opener and first race back from an injury that cut her 2024 season short.

At the Keely Klassic, Hodgkinson promises “a unique, immersive experience that will combine elite competition with an electrifying atmosphere” and extends the meeting invitation to Great Britain’s world-class track and field athletes.

The unveiling comes less than a day after Tuesday’s BBC Sports Personality of the Year (SPOTY) ceremony, where Hodgkinson took centre stage. The 22-year-old is the first track athlete to win since Mo Farah won in 2017, and the first female track athlete to win since 2004. Her win also marks the fourth consecutive year that a woman has won the award–the longest streak in history.

“I’m actually in a bit of shock,” Hodgkinson said upon accepting the trophy. “I’m actually more excited for my coach, to be honest, because I wouldn’t be where I am without his guidance, [which] I’ve had since I was 17.”

“This year has been absolutely incredible for me,” she continued. “I achieved everything I set out to do on the outdoor track, which is kind of rare, so I’m grateful to be in this position.”

Olympic triathlon champion Alex Yee was also a contender for the award.

Hodgkinson’s coaches, Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows, were awarded Coach(es) of the Year. Along with the Olympic 800m champion, the pair coaches Olympic 1,500m bronze medallist Georgia Bell.

Mondo Duplantis wins Sport Star of the Year

Pole vaulting legend Mondo Duplantis was also acknowledged at the event, winning World Sport Star of the Year. The Swedish-American world record holder was pitted against fellow sports icons, including gymnast Simone Biles, WNBA player Caitlin Clark and Olympic marathon champion Sifan Hassan.

“So sorry that I can’t be in attendance tonight–I’m back here in the States right now, training for the up and coming season. I know I’m in great company–the biggest legends of all time in sports have won this award. This really means a lot to me.”

(12/19/2024) Views: 1,573 ⚡AMP
by Cameron Ormond
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Mary Moraa 'back to the grind' ahead of tough 2025 season

Mary Moraa has resumed training as she plans to defend her world title amid the rise of strong 800m runners including Keely Hodgkinson and Athing Mu.

Mary Moraa has resumed training ahead of a tough 2025 season where she has a huge task of defending her world title at the World Championships in Tokyo, Japan.

The reigning world champion will battle for the title alongside very formidable 800m runners who have emerged this season. The Commonwealth Games champion lines up against Keely Hodgkinson, Tsige Duguma and Athing Mu alongside other 800m athletes.

Mary Moraa had a mixed season this year and she will be looking to work on the finer things so as to be ready next season. She was off to a great start to her season, winning the 400m at the African Games then anchored the 4x400m mixed relay team to a bronze medal.

The Kenyan 800m star then proceeded to claim the win at the Kip Keino Classic before reigning supreme at the Diamond League Meeting in Doha and finished second at the USATF Los Angeles Grand Prix and Prefontaine Classic.

Moraa then finished second at the Kenyan Olympic trials and then won the bronze medal at the Paris Olympics. She bounced back to take the win at the Diamond League Meeting in Lausanne and finished third in Silesia. She won the 600m in a world best time at the ISTAF 2024 and then claimed wins in Zurich and the Diamond League Meeting final in Brussels.

Mary Moraa rounded up her season with a second-place finish at the Athlos NYC. Going back into training, she hopes to polish a lot of things and bounce back stronger to maintain a winning streak in 2025.

“It's about time...back to the grind ?,” Mary Moraa shared in a post on her Facebook page, adding, “Nice morning cruise with Brandon and the gang after a deserved break.”

Her competitors are also not resting on their laurels with Keely Hodgkinson, the reigning Olympic champion, making it clear that she will be going for the world title since it’s one of the titles she has yet to win.

Her coaches, Jenny Meadows and Trevor Painter have also revealed that she will be attacking both the indoor and outdoor world records in the near future.

“There’s no silvers and bronzes, now we have to do gold all the way forward, we don’t want to take any backward step and I just hopefully think that Keely can dominate and we’ve got the indoor world record to go at and in the next couple of years we’ll go after the tough world record. I think she can do it,” Jenny Meadows said.

“If she’s got the leg speed to get closer to her rivals, then they can’t out strength her so it was magic. The indoor one is easier to get than the outdoor but we’ll have a crack of both and see what happens,” Trevor Painter added.

On her part, after a heartbreaking 2024 season marred with injuries and missing out on the Paris Olympic Games, Athing Mu has already started preparation for the 2025 season.

The former world champion noted that the World Championships are her major target for the season and she is working towards making it through the trials and then heading to Tokyo.

“Well, trackwise we have the World Championships in September next year and it’s in Tokyo…first of all I pray we make it through trials and then we make it to that race,” Athing Mu said.

“I feel like it’s going to be a circle moment for me because that’s basically where I started and then I had some highs and lows.”

(11/21/2024) Views: 1,705 ⚡AMP
by Abigael Wafula
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Hodgkinson and Muir lead the British charge in the middle and long distances in Munich 2022

For Keely Hodgkinson, another silver lining would come as nothing close to consolation at the Munich 2022 European Athletics Championships from 15-21 August, part of the wider multisport European Championships from 11-21 August.

Having finished in the runner-up position in the 800m finals at the World Athletics Championships and Commonwealth Games in the past three weeks - and in the Olympic final in Tokyo a year ago, for that matter – the 20-year-old Briton will be on a redemption run for gold in the Bavarian capital.

After missing out by a tantalising 0.08 in a titanic home straight tussle with Athing Mu at the World Championships in Oregon on 22 July, Hodgkinson had Commonwealth gold within her grasp on home ground in Birmingham last Saturday (6) until Kenya’s Mary Moraa came charging past halfway down the home straight.

It is a measure of the meteoric progress Hodgkinson has made under the guidance of Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows that major championship silver medals have come as a disappointment. It was only last year that she made her senior breakthrough, winning the European Indoor title in Torun at the age of 19.

First place in an outdoor European 800m final would be one better than her co-coach managed. Meadows finished second to Yvonne Hak of the Netherlands in Barcelona 2010 albeit after initial winner Mariya Savinova was disqualified for an anti-doping violation.

There have been two British winners of the two-lap event: Lynsey Sharp in Helsinki in 2012 - again retroactively - and the great Lillian Board in Athens in 1969. A third British success in Munich would be a poignant one, given the prodigiously talented Board’s tragic fate.

A 400m silver medalist at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City, she was cruelly cut down by cancer before she had a shot at 800m gold at the 1972 Olympics in Munich. After traveling to Munich in search of a cure, she died in a clinic in the city in December 1970, 13 days past her 22nd birthday.

Second fastest on the 800m entry-list - both in personal and season’s bests - is Hodgkinson’s British teammate Jemma Reekie. The 24-year-old Scot finished fourth in the Olympic final last year but has been struggling for form this summer in the wake of glandular fever, placing fifth in the Commonwealth 1500m final last Sunday (7).

Three other women in the field have run inside 1:59 this year: Slovenia’s former 400m specialist Anita Horvat, who finished a surprise seventh in the World Championships; France’s Renelle Lamote, silver medalist at the last two European Championships; and Elena Bello of Italy.

Switzerland also boasts two potential medal contenders: in 18-year-old world U20 silver medallist Audrey Werro, who clocked 1:59.53 in that race in Cali, and Lore Hoffmann, who narrowly missed out on a place in the final in Oregon.

Ukrainians Nataliya Krol (formerly Pryshchepa) and Olha Lyakhova, who won gold and bronze in Berlin 2018, are also on the entry-list but neither athlete has broken the sub-2:00 barrier so far in 2022.

A fourth major 1500m medal in 12 months beckons for Muir

Hodgkinson’s compatriot Laura Muir defends the 1500m crown she gained in Berlin four years ago in buoyant mood, having collected world bronze and Commonwealth gold at the distance in successive weeks, together with Commonwealth 800m bronze.

The Scot’s closest challengers are likely to be Poland’s fast-finishing Sofia Ennaoui, who took silver behind Muir in 2018 and who showed a timely return to form with fifth place in the Oregon final, and Ireland’s Ciara Mageean, who was an impressive runner-up to Muir in the colors of Northern Ireland in last Sunday’s Commonwealth final.

Another Scot who struck gold on the Commonwealth stage in Birmingham, Eilish McColgan, is entered for both the 5000m and 10,000m in Munich.

A stunning winner of the 10,000m in Birmingham, and silver medalist in the 5000m, the 31-year-old is due to tackle her third championship double in less than a month, having placed tenth in the 10,000m and eleventh in the 5000m at the World Championships.

McColgan, who is preparing to make her marathon debut in London in October, is as indefatigable as her celebrated mother and coach Liz, the 1991 world 10,000m champion, but cumulative championship fatigue could well undermine her – particularly in the 5000m.

Norway’s Karoline Grovdal finished eighth in the World Athletics Championships final and the 2018 steeplechase bronze medalist, who also finished third in the 10,000m in 2016, could start the marginal favorite.

Weakened after a bout of coronavirus, Germany’s Konstanze Klosterhalfen failed to make it beyond the 5000m heats in Eugene but should be in more robust form for her second home European Athletics Championships where she is planning to contest both the 5000m and 10,000m along with Turkey’s Yasemin Can.

Can completed a 5000/10,000m double in Amsterdam 2016 and will be contesting both events again in Munich. Other challengers to McColgan at the longer distance will be fellow Briton Jess Judd - who finished one place behind her, in eleventh, in the World Athletics Championships final - and reigning 10,000m champion Lonah Chemtai Salpeter of Israel who won gold on a brutally hot and humid evening in Berlin four years ago.

Salpeter has set herself a challenging schedule as she will be attempting to defend her European title only one month after winning bronze in the marathon at the World Athletics Championships in Oregon. 

(08/12/2022) Views: 2,568 ⚡AMP
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European Athletics Champioships

European Athletics Champioships

The27thEuropean Athletics Championshipswill be held from 10 to 16 August 2026 at theAlexander StadiuminBirmingham, United Kingdom.[1] This is the first time that a British city will have staged the European Athletics Championships although Birmingham has hosted many high-profile events, including the2007 European Athletics Indoor Championships, the2003and2018 IAAF World Indoor Championshipsand the2022 Commonwealth Games. Alexander Stadium was renovated between 2019 and...

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Jemma Reekie beats Laura Muir to set new British indoor 800m record

Scotland's Jemma Reekie has taken half a second off the British indoor record in an invitation women's 800m race at Glasgow's Emirates Arena.

Reekie, 21, posted a time of one minute 57.91 seconds to beat Jenny Meadows' mark of 1:58.43 from 2010.

British indoor champion Reekie beat training partner Laura Muir into second, with the four-time European Indoor champion finishing in 1:58.44. 

Reekie won double European Under-23 gold in Sweden last year.

 

(02/02/2020) Views: 2,295 ⚡AMP
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