Farquharson’s flying anchor leg lifts Jamaica to bronze as World Indoors close

Jamaica brought the 2026 World Athletics Indoor Championships to a spirited close on Sunday, securing bronze in the men’s 4×400-meter relay and finishing the meet with four medals overall after a determined final-day push in Toru, Poland.

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The quartet of Reheem Hayles, Delano Kennedy, Tyrice Taylor, and Kimar Farquharson combined for 3:05.99 minutes, good enough for third place and Jamaica’s final medal of the championships. The performance lifted the team’s total haul to two silver and two bronze medals, matching last year’s output and placing Jamaica 18th overall at the end of the meet.

The United States won the relay title in a championship-record 3:01.52 minutes, while Belgium took silver in 3:03.29 minutes.

Farquharson’s finishing burst turns the race

The medal was not handed to Jamaica early. It had to be chased down.

After taking the baton in fourth place, Farquharson produced the decisive run of the race for Jamaica, covering the anchor leg in a blistering 45.54 seconds to reel in the Netherlands and snatch bronze before the finish.

His late charge capped a relay effort that gathered strength as it progressed. Hayles opened in 47.60 seconds, Kennedy followed with 46.74 seconds, and Taylor’s 46.11 seconds on the third leg put Jamaica in striking position before Farquharson completed the job.

The relay team had also been reshaped for the final, with Kennedy coming in for Demar Francis, who had anchored the side in the morning preliminary round.

Jamaica’s medal count completed

The relay bronze rounded out Jamaica’s medal collection for the championships.

Earlier in the meet, Kishane Thompson captured silver in the men’s 60 meters, Jordan Scott took silver in the men’s triple jump, and Raymond Richards earned bronze in the men’s high jump.

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That left the men’s relay team to provide the closing medal, and they did so in emphatic fashion.

Simmonds reaches final and delivers personal-best form

Away from the relay, Megan Simmonds produced one of Jamaica’s most impressive individual performances of the final session in the women’s 60-meter hurdles.

Simmonds first advanced from the semi-finals by finishing second in her heat in a personal-best 7.82 seconds, then returned in the final and matched that time to place fifth in a world-class field.

Her semi-final mark lowered her previous best of 7.88 seconds, set earlier this year, and moved her level with Britney Anderson as the fifth-fastest Jamaican woman ever in the event.

Oneika Wilson also competed in the hurdles but did not advance after placing seventh in her semi-final in 8.12 seconds.

The final itself belonged to Devynne Charlton of The Bahamas, who made history by becoming the first woman to win the world indoor 60-meter hurdles title three consecutive times while equaling her own world record of 7.65 seconds. The Netherlands’ Nadine Visser took silver, and Poland’s Pia Skrzyszowska won bronze in front of the home crowd.

Robinson impresses in first major global championship

In the field, Nia Robinson turned in a composed performance in the women’s long jump, finishing fifth with 6.75 meters in her first major global championship appearance.

The 24-year-old improved steadily across her opening three attempts, moving from 6.50m to 6.53m and then 6.75m, a leap that briefly pushed her into fourth place. She qualified among the top six for the final rounds but fouled her remaining three attempts.

Robinson entered the championships with a personal best of 6.82m, achieved earlier this year, and her showing in Toru further strengthened her standing among Jamaica’s top women in the event.

Gayle and McLeod place in men’s long jump

Jamaica also had two representatives in the men’s long jump final.

Tajay Gayle, a three-time World Championships medalist outdoors, finished seventh with 8.12m, while Carey McLeod, a world indoor bronze medalist in Glasgow two years ago, ended ninth with 7.98m.

Championship closes with Jamaica still in the fight

By the close of the championships, Jamaica had not challenged the leading nations in overall medal numbers, but the team again demonstrated its ability to compete across multiple disciplines and deliver under pressure in key moments.

The United States finished atop the medal table with 18 medals, five gold, seven silver, and six bronze. Great Britain followed with four gold medals, while Italy placed third with three gold and two silver.

For Jamaica, though, the final image of the championships belonged to Farquharson charging down the home straight, pulling his team onto the podium, and ensuring the country left Toru with momentum, resilience, and another relay medal to add to its indoor record.

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