Caribbean National Weekly

The Champions rise! Miami Slam Night 2 delivers thrills, surprises, and $100K glory

By Ian Burnett··4 min read
The Champions rise! Miami Slam Night 2 delivers thrills, surprises, and $100K glory
Key Points(5)
  • In a whirlwind evening of elite performances, unforgettable comebacks, and emotional triumphs, four athletes emerged as Slam Champions on Night 2 of <a href="https://x.com/GrandSlamTrack?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor">Grand Slam Track</a> Miami on Saturday.
  • With a packed house at the Ansin Sports Complex and $100,000 on the line for each title, the night lived up to its billing—blistering speed, world-leading marks, and one very special reunion.
  • <h2>Melissa Jefferson-Wooden: The Slam Queen stands alone</h2> Coming into the evening as the defending overall Slam Champion, Melissa Jefferson-Wooden had one job: place third or better in the 200m to retain her crown.
  • The stakes were steep—the reigning Olympic gold medalist Gabby Thomas was seeking redemption after missing the 100m podium on Night 1 Friday.
  • Thomas unleashed a stunning performance, clocking 21.95 seconds, the second-fastest time in the world this year.

In a whirlwind evening of elite performances, unforgettable comebacks, and emotional triumphs, four athletes emerged as Slam Champions on Night 2 of Grand Slam Track Miami on Saturday.

With a packed house at the Ansin Sports Complex and $100,000 on the line for each title, the night lived up to its billing—blistering speed, world-leading marks, and one very special reunion.

Melissa Jefferson-Wooden: The Slam Queen stands alone


Coming into the evening as the defending overall Slam Champion, Melissa Jefferson-Wooden had one job: place third or better in the 200m to retain her crown. The stakes were steep—the reigning Olympic gold medalist Gabby Thomas was seeking redemption after missing the 100m podium on Night 1 Friday.

Thomas unleashed a stunning performance, clocking 21.95 seconds, the second-fastest time in the world this year. But Jefferson-Wooden, showing composure under pressure, powered from behind to snatch third place, locking up the Slam Championship and writing her name in the history books as the first back-to-back champion in Grand Slam Track history.

“I feel like Grand Slam is doing what it set out to do and that’s putting the best against each other every single time we step on the track,” said Jefferson-Wooden. “It’s all about right now and who has it on that day.”

Her victory was made sweeter by a surprise appearance from her cousin, Stephan Washington Jr., a U.S. Army serviceman stationed in South Korea. He flew halfway across the world to watch her race for the very first time. Their tearful reunion underscored the night’s emotional resonance.

Redemption runs and ruthless times: The men’s titles are claimed


Though Jereem Richards didn’t win his 400m final, his overall consistency earned him the Men’s Long Sprints title. The event itself was seized by Jacory Patterson, who shocked the field with a world-leading 43.98, a personal best that obliterated expectations and sent ripples through the sprint world.

“Forget about me, this man ran 43,” Richards laughed, gesturing to Patterson. “I felt like I was good. Jacory waited for me to kick and then kicked after me.”

Patterson, who balances full-time work loading trucks at UPS, stood humbled by his performance.

“It’s crazy. I can’t even put it into words,” he said. “Everything we are doing has just been hitting.”

In the Men’s Short Distances, Josh Kerr proved that sometimes grit outpaces glory. After a stirring win in the 1500m on Night 1, the Brit returned to post a personal best 1:45.01 minutes in the 800m—good enough for fifth, but just enough to secure the Slam title.

“I think progress was definitely the name of the game this week,” said Kerr. “We’re having fun with it.”

Meanwhile, Canada’s Marco Arop turned heads with a world-leading 1:43.69 minutes to win the 800m, capping a stunning bounce back from a disappointing Day 1.

Ackera Nugent: A birthday, a breakthrough, and a big bag


No one captured both the race and the Slam crown on the same night—except Jamaica’s Ackera Nugent.

The 2025 World Indoor bronze medalist, just days after turning 23, surged to a personal best 11.09 seconds in the 100m, securing her Slam Championship in the Women’s Short Hurdles group. Her journey from a third-place finish in the 100m hurdles the night before to triumph showed both resilience and range.

“You can’t reflect on the bad. You have to focus on the good and work in the areas that you can correct,” she reflected.

Masai Russell, who set an American record in the 100mH with 12.17 just the night before, finished runner-up in the group.

Stars still shining: World leads and near records light up the track


Several marquee athletes continued their dominance:

  • Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, the queen of the 400m hurdles, extended her undefeated streak with a commanding 52.07-second performance, nearly two full seconds ahead of Jamaica’s Andrenette Knight.

  • Kenny Bednarek exploded to a wind-aided 9.79 seconds in the 100m, preserving his flawless Slam campaign in the Men’s Short Sprints. With a just-over-legal wind of +2.4mps, six of the eight men in the field dipped under 10 seconds.

  • Trey Cunningham, making his Slam debut, unleashed a personal best 13.00 seconds in the 110m hurdles, edging out defending champion Sasha Zhoya in a razor-thin finish.

  • In the women’s 1500m, Freweyni Hailu of Ethiopia closed strong to take the win in 4:06.96 minutes, outkicking American Nikki Hiltz. The Women’s Short Distance group now looks ahead to Sunday’s decisive 800m.


More than medals: The Slam story continues


Grand Slam Track isn’t just rewriting records—it’s rewriting the playbook on what professional track and field can look like: head-to-head battles, bold storytelling, real prize money, and emotionally charged moments that transcend lanes and lines.

As the circuit heads toward its next stop, one thing is clear: in this league, legacy is earned in real time.

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