Eugene’s Hayward Field last weekend hosted the US Junior Championships; the final event at the historic venue ahead of the 2014 IAAF World Junior Championships, which kick off in exactly two weeks from today.
If
the record-breaking results of last weekend are anything to go by, then
Oregon 2014 is set to be a special championship indeed.
Among the
winners of US junior titles were the likes of Kaylin Whitney, who broke
the world youth bests in the 100m and 200m, and heptathlon specialist
Kendell Williams, who set a US junior record in the 100m hurdles.
They
were the latest top junior performers during a season in which the
world junior 100m record was broken by Trayvon Bromell and it looks as
though the host nation will field one of its strongest ever junior
teams.
The US has topped the medals table at six of the past 10
editions of the IAAF World Junior Championships. Their best medal haul
came in 2002 when they bagged 21 medals, but their best tally of gold
medals came two years later in 2004 when they topped the podium no fewer
than 13 times.
Another target for the US team to chase is the record haul of 22 medals, achieved by the Soviet Union in 1988.
Yesterday
(7) marked the deadline for final entries and exact figures will be
published later this week, but with 177 member federations having
already expressed an interest, the event is set to become the biggest
ever IAAF competition on US soil.
In the 28-year history of the event,
there have been countless stars of the sport who first came to
prominence at the IAAF World Junior Championships. And before the month
is out, we will catch a glimpse of the future generation when the
world’s top teenage talents descend upon Eugene from 22-27 July.