100M

200M

300M

400M

12 Events To Watch At The 2026 Prefontaine Classic

By David Melly

July 2, 2026

What better way to celebrate the 250th birthday of the U-S-of-A than with the best American track has to offer? That’s right, this weekend’s Prefontaine Classic, also known as the Eugene Diamond League meet, will coincide with the nation’s Fourth of July celebrations and offer an inter-World-Cup-rounds opportunity to cheer on your favorite U.S. stars as they take on the world’s top athletes.

Each year, the Pre Classic assembles some of the deepest and strongest fields in the world—with a decidedly American bent—and this edition is no different. Races like the women’s 100m or the men’s 110m hurdles could be more competitive than a global championship final, and we’re on world record watch in multiple events. Then, of course, all the action wraps up with the historic Bowerman Mile, where the crème de la crème of global middle distance studs come together to compete for one of the most prestigious regular-season accolades the sport has to offer.

You can find a full schedule of events and entry lists here (American fans, make sure you’re accounting for Pacific start times versus other time zones). Fans looking to watch every minute of the action will have to toggle between a few different networks, but the easiest and most consistent way to watch is on Peacock (subscription required), which will stream the final hour of Friday, July 3, from 11:30pm-12:30am EDT and the hot window Saturday, July 4, from 4:00pm-6:00pm EDT.

CITIUS MAG is partnering with TrackTown USA to put on live shows before both days of the meet! The shows will be Friday, July 3rd at 7:00 PM and Saturday, July 4th at 11:00 AM, both on the VIP Village and Fan Festival stage. The shows will feature previews of the meet as well as exclusive interviews with special guests and athletes. The shows will be streamed on the CITIUS MAG YouTube channel and available on our podcast feeds afterwards.

Here are twelve key events to watch at the 2026 Pre Classic:

(All times EDT)

Men’s 800m (12:07am)

Even though the men’s 800m is technically not part of the official Diamond League program, the Friday night (or very early Saturday morning, if you’re on the East Coast) event is still going to be a barn-burner. Three of the four fastest Americans in history unite for the first time this season, as American record holder Bryce Hoppel, reigning U.S. champ Donavan Brazier, and 17-year-old Cooper Lutkenhaus will hold a little reunion of last year’s USA final on the same track where they took the top three spots. Incredibly, it’s the high schooler who’s the outright favorite. Lutkenhaus hasn’t lost an 800m all season, including at the World Indoor Championships and two Scandinavian Diamond Leagues. The Americans will face a good fight from Belgium’s Eliott Crestan and Botswana’s Tshepiso Masalela, the other two 1:42 men in the field, but neither has shown that kind of form so far this season, or enough to likely make Lutkenhaus sweat.

Cooper Lutkenhaus | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathleticsCooper Lutkenhaus | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathletics

Cooper Lutkenhaus | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathletics

Men’s 2 Mile (12:16am)

Also in the waning hours of Friday/the wee hours of Saturday morning is a strong men’s two mile field, which caps off the first day of festivities. Here, the headliner is American record holder Grant Fisher, fresh off his first career Diamond League victory in Paris. Fisher’s indoor 8:03.62 is faster than the outdoor record—held by Matt Tegenkamp at 8:07.07—and heck, if he’s in shape to get under his old best, why not take a crack at being just the third man in history under eight minutes? To do that, he’ll likely need a strong challenge in the latter half of the race from someone like Andreas Almgren, the European record holder over 5000m, who took third behind Fisher in Paris. Like Fisher, Almgren isn’t afraid to do his own work, so if those two get rolling, a fast time could be on. Spoilers could come in the form of Mohamed Abdilaahi, who beat Almgren over 3000m to win the Shanghai DL, or Mezgebu Sime, the now-20-year-old Ethiopian who ran 12:49.80 as a teenager last year.

Grant Fisher | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathleticsGrant Fisher | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathletics

Grant Fisher | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathletics

Women’s Shot Put (12:30pm)

The best throwers in the world never seem to duck one another in competition, and this year’s Pre Classic ought to be yet another excellent showcase of that penchant for mixing it up. ALL NINE of the top-ranked shot putters are on the entry list, led by two red-hot stars who’ve battled back and forth all year, Jessica Schilder and Chase Jackson. Jackson, the World Indoor champ, has only lost twice outdoors this year and both times it took an absolutely monstrous effort from Schilder to beat her. Of course, Schilder only finished third behind two-time World Indoor champ Sarah Mitton and Olympic champ Yemisi Mabry in Paris last weekend, but almost certainly one of those four will be victorious. Schilder has already put one out over the fabled 21 meter line this season, and maybe the ever-increasing competition will finally push Jackson over the same mark she’s approached over and over again.

Men’s 400m (4:04pm)

Unlike many of the events on tap for Saturday’s program, the winner of the men’s 400m is probably a foregone conclusion. Collen Busang Kebinatshipi has been on an absolute tear this season, most recently setting a Diamond League record of 43.54 last week in Paris. That doesn’t set us up for a boring race by any means, however, as Kebinatshipi will surely have seen Samuel Ogazi’s 43.38 on this track last month and will set out to beat that mark. Ogazi isn’t in the race, unfortunately, but the secondary plotline revolves around hurdler Rai Benjamin taking on all the best flat 400m runners America has to offer, including Chris Bailey, Khaleb McRae, Michael Norman, and Jacory Patterson. The whole race is something of a flat-versus-hurdles throwdown, as Nathaniel Ezekiel and Chris Robinson will also skip the barriers this time. Benjamin’s PB is currently 44.21, and given how competitive he is and how strong the field around him looks, that thing is not surviving the weekend.

Collen Busang Kebinatshipi | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathleticsCollen Busang Kebinatshipi | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathletics

Collen Busang Kebinatshipi | Photo by James Rhodes / @jrhodesathletics

Men’s 110m Hurdles (4:12pm)

The reigning World champ and the new world record holder meet head to head… and it’s entirely possible neither of them win. Cordell Tinch, the 2025 gold medalist, has only won two of his six races this season and only has a SB of 13.10. Newly-turned-pro Ja’Kobe Tharp ran rampant through the collegiate ranks en route to his eye-popping 12.75 run (yup, also on this track) last month, but Jamal Britt has won three of the five Diamond League races this season and his most recent was his best yet, a 12.89 romp through Paris. He could be considered the favorite if you tilt toward pro experience, but it wouldn’t be a surprise to see Tharp, the reigning U.S. champ, pick up where he left off as he clearly loves Hayward Field.

Ja’Kobe Tharp | Photo by Darby Winter / @darbywinterphotoJa’Kobe Tharp | Photo by Darby Winter / @darbywinterphoto

Ja’Kobe Tharp | Photo by Darby Winter / @darbywinterphoto

Men’s 100m (4:37pm)

Much like the NCAA vs. pro matchup in the hurdles, the flat 100m features NCAA champ Kanyinsola Ajayi—Tharp’s Auburn former teammate—taking on a red-hot Kenny Bednarek, not to mention reigning World champ Oblique Seville, who’s rounding into form nicely after winning the Jamaican championships in 9.82. Most intriguingly, Ajayi and Bednarek both recently ran in the low 9.7s with the help of an illegal wind, and if Hayward’s fast track and favorable conditions align, it could take an all-time top-ten performance just to secure the victory.

Women’s Steeplechase (4:45pm)

For the first time since the Chinese Diamond Leagues, the three best steeplechasers in the world reunite as Peruth Chemutai, Winfred Yavi, and World champ Faith Cherotich toe the line. It’s easy to assume Cherotich would pick up where she left off in 2025, but Chemutai is the one who’s undefeated on the season and beat both women in Xiamen. At this race last year, Yavi came out on top and gave the 8:44.32 world record a scare, running 8:45.25. Yavi is the only athlete who’s been within a second of Beatrice Chepkoech’s mark from 2018 since it was set, and she’s now done it twice. With the three best active steeplers going head-to-head, it’s entirely possible Saturday is the day it finally falls—and it’s also entirely possible that Yavi isn’t even the one to do it.

Behind them, we’ll get another matchup of many of the best American steeplechasers, with Gabbi Jennings in the driver’s seat after beating a similar field at the LA Grand Prix. She’ll face good domestic competition from the likes of Lexy Halladay-Lowry, Angelina Napoleon, Emma Coburn, and Courtney Wayment. The true wild card is NCAA record holder Doris Lemngole, who may be on the war path after opting to focus on just the 5000m at NCAAs and then getting DQed. She finished fifth at Worlds in Tokyo but it wouldn’t be surprising to see her sneaking even closer to the Big Three here.

Women’s 100m Hurdles (5:04pm)

Speaking of world record watch… that’s where we’re living these days whenever Masai Russell gets in the blocks. After Russell ran 12.14 in Xiamen to break her own American record and give Tobi Amusan’s 12.12 world record a scare, the sky is the limit, and on Hayward Field’s historically hurdler-friendly track, it feels downright likely. Amusan, a fast closer, is also in the field to defend her mark and her honor, and hopefully both women will get pushed out the blocks early by World Indoor champ Devynne Charlton, a lethal starter. Russell is the favorite but this also has to be one of the strongest fields ever assembled, as six of the nine entrants have PBs under 12.30 and Charlton, the world indoor record holder over 60m hurdles, has the slowest lifetime best at 12.37.

Masai Russell | Photo by Liam Blackwell for Diamond League AGMasai Russell | Photo by Liam Blackwell for Diamond League AG

Masai Russell | Photo by Liam Blackwell for Diamond League AG

Women’s 800m (5:11pm)

How will Keely Hodgkinson respond to the sudden rise of Audrey Werro to the top of the pack in the women’s 800m? That’s the question on everyone’s minds, even with Werro on the other side of the world and not entered in this race. The other question, of course, hovering over Hodgkinson is her health, after the Olympic champion withdrew from the final of the 400m of the British champs. Her camp insists it was just a precaution and she’s still in fine form, but only the race itself will prove for certain. As far as competition goes, the biggest threats should come from of World champ Lilian Odira (who’s a bit of a mystery as she’s only raced outside Kenya once so far this season), Anais Bourgoin (coming off a big PB and French record in Paris), and freshly-minted NCAA champ and record-holder Sanu Jallow, who could knock even more time off her new 1:56.85 PB with the help of professional competition.

Women’s 100m (5:29pm)

Assuming everyone makes it through the heats and into the final, this should be the sprint event of the weekend. World champ Melissa Jefferson-Wooden takes on NCAA record holder Adaejah Hodge, and they’re not even the only 10.6 women in the race as Shericka Jackson and Sha’Carri Richardson are also entered. And if that wasn’t enough, throw in Tia and Tina Clayton, Dina Asher-Smith, Amy Hunt, and a handful of others in the 10.8 range. Just making the final may be harder than most global championships. And it’s not entirely crazy to suggest that someone could run under 10.80 and finish as far back as fifth. Jefferson-Wooden has been so good in situations like these that it’s hard to bet against her, but it’ll be a great barometer of the resurgences of both Jackson and Richardson as well as a sense of where Hodge stacks up on the senior international level.

Women’s Mile (5:37pm)

Last year at ATHLOS, Faith Kipyegon ran the fastest outdoor mile on U.S. soil (several others have run faster indoors) with a 4:17.78. Given that Kipyegon headlines the field at Pre and her personal best is over ten seconds faster, that particular stat will get totally rewritten over the course of four laps as Kipyegon will chase the only competition that really pushes her these days—the ghosts of her former performances. Another world record would be a tall order for the lightly-raced Kenyan, who’s only got one 5000m back in May on her track resume so far in 2026, but she’s the heavy, heavy favorite and will likely drag others behind her to fast times.

Nikki Hiltz could reclaim their American record from Sinclaire Johnson and potentially even crack the all-time top-ten with a run of 4:15.61 or better, and Georgia Hunter Bell’s comical 4:33.66 PB is toast given that her 1500m best converts to nearly 20 seconds faster. The Ethiopian subplot will revolve around whether Birke Haylom, a three-time DL winner already this season, can stay remotely close to Kipyegon, and whether Tsige Duguma’s flirtation with the longer middle distances continues to pay dividends as the 800m specialist moves up.

Faith Kipyegon | Photo by Kevin Morris / @kevmofotoFaith Kipyegon | Photo by Kevin Morris / @kevmofoto

Faith Kipyegon | Photo by Kevin Morris / @kevmofoto

Men’s Mile (5:50pm)

The meet ends, as it almost always does, with the historic Bowerman Mile. Two of the men fans would most want to see on the start list—Josh Kerr and Jakob Ingebrigtsen—are both skipping out on Eugene, but that doesn’t mean the field assembled isn’t chock-full of talent and intrigue. We’ll get a rematch between last year’s surprise winner, Niels Laros, and American record holder Yared Nuguse, with a beefed-up version of their clash from 2025. Laros, who surprised Nuguse with an out-of-nowhere (at the time) finishing kick, has been working on his speed, improving his 800m PB to 1:43.60. His closing ability won’t catch anyone unawares anymore. Nuguse, for his part, has shown an uncanny ability to win so far this season, expanding his resume as the most-decorated American distance runner on the Diamond League circuit with two 1500m wins and a runner-up finish in the Oslo Dream Mile. The Dream Mile champ, Timothy Cheruiyot, is also making the trip to Pre, and you can never count him out in a fast race.

Amazingly, we got this far in the preview before mentioning Olympic 1500m champ Cole Hocker, who could very well beat every guy mentioned above on any day of the week, and world leader Cam Myers, fresh off a huge 3:28.00 in Paris. They’re both serious threats to win this stacked, but somewhat evenly matched, field, and if the pace ticks a second or two slower, you shouldn’t discount the lethal finishing speed of Ethan Strand. Who takes this one is anybody’s guess, and a virtual guarantee that this year’s Pre Classic will finish on a high note.

For even more, listen to our event-by-event preview on the CITIUS MAG Podcast. You can find the episode on Apple Podcasts here and on Spotify here.

Get ready for an amazing meet by making sure you’re following us on Twitter, Instagram, and Bluesky as well as subscribing to our YouTube to make sure you don’t miss any athlete interviews or race analysis. Thanks for reading!

David Melly

Since David began contributing to CITIUS in 2018, he's done a little bit of everything, from podcast hosting to newsletter writing to race commentary. Currently, he coordinates the social media team and manages both the CITIUS MAG newsletter and The Lap Count, supplying hot takes and thoughtful analysis in both short- and long-form. Based on Boston, David breaks up his excessive screen time by training for marathons, crewing trail races, baking sweet desserts, and mixing strong cocktails.