Athletics News

2024 GB Trials: Women’s Middle Distance

2024 GB Trials: Women's Middle Distance

This is the fourth and final article on the 2024 British Trials by Stuart Weir, our senior writer for all things European. Stuart wrote this piece on Phoebe Gill, the seventeen-year-old phenom. 

GB Trials: Women’s Middle distance

Josh Kerr, Jake Wightman, Ben Pattison, Laura Muir, Keely Hodgkinson… Britain is strongest in the middle distance. As I may just have mentioned in a previous post, the quirkiness of our selection process, the automatic selection of individual medal winners at the 2023 World Champs for the Olympics, and the practice of allowing those medalists to run different events at trials add another layer of complication to the day.

The women’s 1500 had a strong field, with five athletes already having the Olympic standard. The smart money was on Laura Muir, who usually wins but who was beaten into second place last year by Katie Snowden.

The 2024 results were:

1 Georgia Bell 4:10.69

2 Laura Muir 4:11.59

3 Revee Walcott Nolan 4:11.70

4 Melissa Courtney-Bryant 4:12.39

5 Katie Snowden 4:12.94

It was surprising to see Bell outsprint Muir over the closing meters, but as Muir pointed out, five qualified athletes chasing two automatic places made for a cagey race.

Laura Muir wins in Stockholm DL, photo by Diamond League AG

Muir commented: “This is the most nervous I have ever been for a UK Champs. It is the most nervous I have been for a race in a long time. I just wanted to come away from today and ultimately book my spot for Paris, so I am thrilled. I didn’t run the race very well. People were getting clipped and tripped a little bit, so I didn’t run it well, but I confirmed my place at the Olympics and am pleased with the result. The other girls are running so competitively now that you can’t make mistakes now”.

Bell, who had run in the European Championships, taking a silver medal—while Muir had skipped the event to train—said: “It is amazing and hard to take in at the moment, but I am sure it will hit me later that I have qualified. I was confident going into today, taking a lot from my silver at the Europeans a few weeks ago. The Europeans were so useful in learning how to navigate a championship.”

All three athletes finishing 3rd to 5th can reach the Olympic final, but only one will get the chance – another selection dilemma.

The women’s 800m was an eagerly awaited race. In early May, Phoebe Gill, less than a month after her 17th birthday,  ran 1:57.86 in Belfast, the world under-18 record. To show it wasn’t a fluke, she…

CLICK HERE to Read the Full Original Article at runblogrun…