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Canada's Aaron Brown: Grand Slam Track brought platform, professionalism to sport
Canada's Aaron Brown: Grand Slam Track brought platform, professionalism to sport

CTV News

time3 hours ago

  • Sport
  • CTV News

Canada's Aaron Brown: Grand Slam Track brought platform, professionalism to sport

Aaron Brown crosses the finish line ahead of Brendon Rodney as they compete in the 200m finals at the Canadian Track and Field Olympic trials in Montreal, Sunday, June 30, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi It was meant to be quite the finale in the City of Stars this weekend. Instead, the inaugural Grand Slam Track season came to a halt with the cancellation of its final leg in Los Angeles earlier in June. The league became a talking point and a source of excitement for track athletes signed to Grand Slam Track, especially those from North America. It provided an opportunity for athletes to compete against the best without having to travel overseas. Toronto sprinter Aaron Brown, who competed in the most recent event in Philadelphia, feels the league brought something greater to the sport for Canadians. 'For athletes in Canada or athletes in America, being able to just stay within the country or go to Jamaica somewhere on this similar time zone, you know, not having to go overseas it's a huge benefit,' he said. 'It allows us to have better performances too because you're not having a deal with such jet lag, ... you don't have to show up (to the meet) super early you can train a little bit longer and harder and be in your the comfort of your own home for a longer time.' Michael Johnson, the founder and commissioner of Grand Slam Track, said the league is looking ahead to 2026 and beyond. 'Sometimes we have to make moves that aren't comfortable, but what's most important is the future and sustainability of the league,' he said as part of a statement. Brown says the opportunity is there for fans in North America to get used to the faces of the sport's stars that will be at the 2028 L.A. Olympics. 'I think meets like the Grand Slam are finally going to get us to that point where we can take advantage of it,' he said. 'Especially heading into L.A. 2028, that's a huge opportunity for people to get used to who the stars are going to be in L.A., get an early look at them, and be able to follow them into their, into the journey to that meet. 'Which is huge because it adds a narrative and incentive for you to pay attention. And so I just think that if track and field wants to have a professional league, this is the best way for them to do it. And, you know, I'm invested in their success.' Seven-time Olympic medallist Andre De Grasse of Markham, Ont., is another one of Canada's stars to have competed in Grand Slam, in addition to 2023 800-metre world champion and 2024 Olympic silver medallist Marco Arop, who competed in both the 800 and 1,500 as a short-distance racer. Arop stood out among the Canadian cohort, winning the 800 races in the three Grand Slam events held. Although he didn't fare as well in the 1,500, Arop was among the top point-getters in the short distance group, finishing no lower than second and being first at the Philadelphia event. Competition aside, Brown said Grand Slam Track provided things that are not typically offered at other meets. Brown said locally-sourced snacks were provided, on top of a drip check done to shoot athletes and display their outfits. Collab posts to helped athletes push each other's audiences. He also said athletes got their own rooms for accomodations, were given per diems that were provided 'to go select the food ourselves,' and that the prize money was 'significantly more than any other meet that's available to the athletes.' 'I think at the very least, it gave us the blueprint of how a meet could be run and what's possible,' Brown said. 'Getting out of that myopic viewpoint that we have to follow the same model and do things that we've been doing for decades that has led to stagnation in the sport and not allow us to evolve and grow and adapt like all the other sports have. 'So, I think just showing that athletes can be at the forefront. We have stars in our sports, and the more support we get behind it, the bigger it's going to be.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 28, 2025. Abdulhamid Ibrahim, The Canadian Press

Canada's Aaron Brown: Grand Slam Track brought platform, professionalism to sport
Canada's Aaron Brown: Grand Slam Track brought platform, professionalism to sport

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Canada's Aaron Brown: Grand Slam Track brought platform, professionalism to sport

It was meant to be quite the finale in the City of Stars this weekend. Instead, the inaugural Grand Slam Track season came to a halt with the cancellation of its final leg in Los Angeles earlier in June. Advertisement The league became a talking point and a source of excitement for track athletes signed to Grand Slam Track, especially those from North America. It provided an opportunity for athletes to compete against the best without having to travel overseas. Toronto sprinter Aaron Brown, who competed in the most recent event in Philadelphia, feels the league brought something greater to the sport for Canadians. "For athletes in Canada or athletes in America, being able to just stay within the country or go to Jamaica somewhere on this similar time zone, you know, not having to go overseas it's a huge benefit," he said. "It allows us to have better performances too because you're not having a deal with such jet lag, ... you don't have to show up (to the meet) super early you can train a little bit longer and harder and be in your the comfort of your own home for a longer time." Advertisement Michael Johnson, the founder and commissioner of Grand Slam Track, said the league is looking ahead to 2026 and beyond. "Sometimes we have to make moves that aren't comfortable, but what's most important is the future and sustainability of the league,' he said as part of a statement. Brown says the opportunity is there for fans in North America to get used to the faces of the sport's stars that will be at the 2028 L.A. Olympics. "I think meets like the Grand Slam are finally going to get us to that point where we can take advantage of it," he said. "Especially heading into L.A. 2028, that's a huge opportunity for people to get used to who the stars are going to be in L.A., get an early look at them, and be able to follow them into their, into the journey to that meet. Advertisement "Which is huge because it adds a narrative and incentive for you to pay attention. And so I just think that if track and field wants to have a professional league, this is the best way for them to do it. And, you know, I'm invested in their success." Seven-time Olympic medallist Andre De Grasse of Markham, Ont., is another one of Canada's stars to have competed in Grand Slam, in addition to 2023 800-metre world champion and 2024 Olympic silver medallist Marco Arop, who competed in both the 800 and 1,500 as a short-distance racer. Arop stood out among the Canadian cohort, winning the 800 races in the three Grand Slam events held. Although he didn't fare as well in the 1,500, Arop was among the top point-getters in the short distance group, finishing no lower than second and being first at the Philadelphia event. Competition aside, Brown said Grand Slam Track provided things that are not typically offered at other meets. Advertisement Brown said locally-sourced snacks were provided, on top of a drip check done to shoot athletes and display their outfits. Collab posts to helped athletes push each other's audiences. He also said athletes got their own rooms for accomodations, were given per diems that were provided "to go select the food ourselves," and that the prize money was "significantly more than any other meet that's available to the athletes." "I think at the very least, it gave us the blueprint of how a meet could be run and what's possible," Brown said. "Getting out of that myopic viewpoint that we have to follow the same model and do things that we've been doing for decades that has led to stagnation in the sport and not allow us to evolve and grow and adapt like all the other sports have. "So, I think just showing that athletes can be at the forefront. We have stars in our sports, and the more support we get behind it, the bigger it's going to be." This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 28, 2025. Abdulhamid Ibrahim, The Canadian Press

Kenny Bednarek knows what he wants, if he can just relax: ‘Make money, get gold medals and just run fast'
Kenny Bednarek knows what he wants, if he can just relax: ‘Make money, get gold medals and just run fast'

New York Times

time11 hours ago

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Kenny Bednarek knows what he wants, if he can just relax: ‘Make money, get gold medals and just run fast'

Kenny Bednarek knows you are a product of your environment. Born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, he was adopted at the age of four. 'What made me love track was, as a kid, I didn't have control over my life. I was kind of terrified,' he says. 'Track was something I had control of — the only control I had in my life. Advertisement 'All of the hard work I put in, I would get the outcome. It was where I felt most free, where I had no care in the world. 'As soon as the gun went off, I was just running, having fun.' The 26-year-old is certainly running and having fun now. He has Olympic and World Athletics Championships 200-metre silver medals and this year, won six races at three Grand Slam Track (GST) meets in Kingston, Miami and Philadelphia. Bednarek clocked a wind-assisted 9.79 seconds in the 100m in Miami before running a wind-legal 200m in 19.84s. At Franklin Field in Philadelphia, he closed out the meet with a 100m personal best (PB) at 9.86s, which was also a franchise record. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) champion Jordan Anthony is the only other American athlete with sub-10s and sub-20s times over 100m and 200m this year. 'My favourite meet was Miami and it was more because I had to prove to people that the first race (Kingston) wasn't a fluke. But I think the Philly 100m was my favourite. I had a poor reaction time — 0.2s — and I still ended up getting to the top guy at 30 to 40 metres. I didn't panic, and I came out with 9.86s.' There are few better habits than winning. 'It's getting addicting,' Bednarek says. 'I'm trying to go on a win streak that will give me gold medals. If I get my three golds, then fast times are going to come. That's the sole focus this year — PBs will come when they come — just medals. I've only got three silver ones, and I'm trying to get some golds.' He wants to win the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay at the World Championships in Tokyo this September. Those medals would be the priceless additions to a 2025 haul which has included three six-figure paydays from GST. Since turning professional in 2019, he has been part of Star Athletics, the Miami-based training group under coach Dennis Mitchell. 'It's a tense group,' he says. 'Every day is like a race. That's the main reason I'm at this level.' Advertisement 'I was getting my butt whooped every single time,' he says of the early days, when American sprinter Justin Gatlin, at the end of his career, was part of the group. Kyree King and Sha'Carri Richardson, now top-level American sprinters, joined in 2019, and the group features Olympic relay medallists Aaron Brown (Canada) and Tee Tee Terry (United States). 'Coming down from running 400m and 200m (in college), I didn't have that aggressiveness to get out of the blocks and the mechanics weren't really there. I had more of that wide-open-stride 400m mechanics.' So he worked on his block starts and acceleration phase. 'With the addition of (American sprinter) Christian Coleman, that's been a big game changer this year for me. The dude is the 60m world-record holder — you already know every single time he steps on that line, he's gonna get out (fast).' It is a group where 'iron sharpens iron'. He and Coleman 'use' each other to work on their respective weak spots — the 100m start for Bednarek and the end for Coleman — but they are ultimately team-mates. 'We go to work, have fun, we're hurting together, we're all talking s**t together,' he says. 'It's fun.' You might know Bednarek as the man with the headband, nicknamed 'Kung Fu Kenny'. 'I wanted to have something unique because we're at a point where you got all the Adidas people signed, Nike, Puma — everybody's wearing the same thing.' He has a designer who makes a bespoke headband for him for each race. 'It's just showing respect to the people out there that we're running in front of.' At the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene last year, he wore one with 'curve' and 'conqueror' written on either side. A post shared by Kung Fu Kenny (@kenny_bednarek) Bednarek won the 200m in 19.89s that day, when there was a 1-2-3 sweep not just for the U.S., but for Star Athletics, too. Courtney Lindsey was second, and King third. 'I'm not a person that really wants to be like, 'Look at me, I'm him', and stuff like that. I just want to go in and handle business.' Advertisement At no point does he namecheck Noah Lyles here, but the comparison with the U.S. No 1 comes easily. Lyles, an average build for a sprinter at 5ft 11in (180cm), is loud and expressive. He always jumps up high before settling into the blocks. Bednarek, despite being 6ft 2in and physically imposing, is quieter. 'When I get on the line, I always have a bow,' he says. 'I came up with the name Kung Fu Kenny. It ties with my name, and I like kung fu, martial arts, and anime. Kung fu also has a set of values that pertain to me: openness, discipline, respect and dedication.' Bednarek is one of the very few athletes who have beaten Lyles in his specialist event, the 200m, but three global finals in the past four years have seen Bednarek finish second in the 200m. In 2021, he was running in the lane outside Andre De Grasse when the Canadian earned his country's first track gold since 1996 and first 200m gold for nearly a century. Bednarek ran a personal best (19.68) for silver, but De Grasse set a national record (19.62). One year later, Lyles beat him at the World Championships in Eugene, Oregon, running the fourth-fastest 200m ever (19.31). It was a scintillating defence of his world title, and Lyles became only the third man to retain that crown. Bednarek, in 19.77, was beaten by nearly half a second, finishing closer to seventh than to Lyles. Last summer, Bednarek ran 19.62 in the Olympic final in Paris. He had matched De Grasse's performance from Tokyo and beaten Lyles on the track — the only problem was that Letsile Tebogo ran an African record of 19.46 to take Botswana's first Olympic gold medal. Bednarek reflects on what he describes as a missed opportunity. 'The biggest thing, the difference between getting first place and second place? It's always me tensing up,' he says. Advertisement 'I'm always going to come out of the bend first. That's kind of a given now from the past four years.' He was two-hundredths ahead of Tebogo at the 100m mark in last summer's final. 'I got off the turn, Tebogo was right there next to me, kind of using me as a rabbit. That shocked me, so then I tried to do a little bit too much — I would try to muscle it out — and then I started decelerating. 'That's when he got the edge over me and then he ran his 19.4s. If I ended up sticking to my race plan, I should have won.' It is the age-old sprinting principle that the winner is not the one who can go the fastest but who slows down the least and can hold their form best. 'My coach was trying to get it through my head like, 'Hey, you need to relax'. (I'd say) 'Yeah, yeah, I get it', but then, once the gun went off, I was always like, 'OK, screw it. I'm gonna just try to go'.' None of this is said with even a hint of bitterness. 'He (Tebogo) was also fighting for his mom. She passed away last year. I was happy for him that he got the gold medal. Now he's a big thing in Botswana.' Bednarek speaks with a softness that belies his size and power. His tete-a-tete with Tebogo continued after the Olympics when the pair raced at the Diamond League meets in Zurich and Brussels. Tebogo ran him down in Zurich when Bednarek tied up again. The American was one-tenth clear at halfway, down to two-hundredths at 150m, and Tebogo beat him on the line. The outcome was positive — he lowered his PB to 19.57 — but he wanted even more. Things clicked at the Diamond League finals in Brussels, where he held Tebogo off to win by more than one-tenth of a second — daylight in sprinting terms. 'The only thing I was thinking about coming off the bend is, 'Relax, relax, relax'. 'That's what I've been working on this whole past off-season. There's no reason to try to press when I can just use my (long) levers to my advantage. I fixed the end of my race in the 200m. I improved my start, too, so if I put those things together, nobody's going to beat me.' Bednarek's route to the top was unconventional. He wanted to go to the University of Oregon but his grades were not good enough. 'I was a kid in high school. I would do the bare minimum because I didn't really feel like it was a focal point or it was something important to me,' he says. It meant that, despite clocking 20.43s for 200m and repeatedly going sub-47 seconds over 400m as a high school senior, he had to go to Indian Hills junior college for a year. Advertisement There, he worked harder and ran even faster — 44.73s for 400m and sub-20s twice in the 200m, including a heavily wind-assisted 19.49s. 'That's when the agents started hitting me up. I was like, 'I guess I'm going pro now'.' After winning 16 collegiate races in 2019, he first raced as a pro that June. Bednarek describes his 200m at the Rabat Diamond League and a 400m in Ostrava, the Czech Republic, as ''welcome to the pros, rookie' moments'. He was in good shape from his college season but the elites had started later because that year's World Championships in Doha, Qatar, were not until late September. 'I'm looking at the times and I'm like, 'Oh, I'm about to roll everybody up. They're running slow',' he says. 'I got into the race, started running… and started dying. That's when you see zoom, zoom, zoom (as others run past you).' He came fourth in Morocco and sixth in Ostrava. Despite a hamstring issue, and early signs that his competitive edge can spill into over-exertion, he made his first senior U.S. team for the World Championships. 'I actually didn't want to go. (After nationals) I was like, 'OK, I can finally rest, go home, recover the hamstring'. Then they called me and told me I made the team, so I was, like, 'Damn, I've got to keep going'. 'I went to Doha in the mindset of, 'I'm just here for experience'. I didn't even make it past the first round.' He came seventh out of eight in his 200m heat in 21.5s, his slowest time in that distance all year. He is one of the forgotten men from the 100m final in Paris last August, which was his first individual appearance over that distance at a global championships after running a 9.87s PB at U.S. trials to make the team. Lyles edged out Jamaica's Kishane Thompson by five-thousandths to take gold in the deepest men's 100m Olympic final. Bednarek was the fastest seventh-place ever. Advertisement 'Initially, I was quite upset,' he says, 'but after a few days of thinking about it, there were good things. I didn't have the perfect race or execute the way that I wanted to, but I still ran 9.88 — that says a lot about me. 'If I do that under those circumstances, what can I do when I actually stick to my race plan? I kind of wanted it too badly. I tried to do something that I usually don't do and I tensed up. I had a good start and felt like I didn't.' Sprinting might look flat-out from the start but athletes need to build through the phases. 'When I'm more relaxed, then my top-end speed can kick in and I reel people in, but I didn't do that at all in the final. 'I locked up my whole body. My acceleration phase wasn't where it needed to be going to 50m and 60m. I was green, I was the newbie going into the finals, and it was a learning experience.' He learned, too, from the 4x100m relay, where the U.S. men continued their record of disqualifying, further stretching their Olympic medal drought in the event to at least 24 years (since silver at Athens 2004). 'I don't know what happened. We all felt good about it (before the race). I just made a slight mistake.' Bednarek, on the second leg, took off too early as Coleman led off around the bend. They were disqualified for passing the baton outside the changeover zone. 'The thing that will fix all our problems is just consistency in training,' he says. 'If we say, 'Hey, this is the team, we need to start practising a couple months before', then I think everything will be a lot better.' Bednarek's biggest limitation in recent years has been injuries. He reels off a list including pulled hamstrings and a broken toe. Last year, his season featured 24 races across six months. 'A healthy Kenny is a dangerous Kenny, because with me not dealing with all this little BS, I can put everything together and then I'll be dominant,' he says. Advertisement In 2021, he clocked 10 wind-legal, sub-20s 200m performances, the most by any athlete in a single season. 'That just comes with the recovery factor. I'm always going to do a workout, and excel at it, but to survive at this level, you have to take care of your body.' It is why he eats gluten-free and organic now, and has installed a sauna, cold plunge, red-light therapy and a PEMF (pulsed electromagnetic field therapy) machine at home. 'It's a lot of money, but at the end of the day, our body is an investment,' he says. 'Track and field is not forever, so you might as well put the money down, recover and get ready for the next day and try to survive. 'Make money, get gold medals and just run fast.' He can cross 'make money' and 'run fast' off the list this year. Now, for those 'three golds', he just needs to relax.

‘The biggest events that Athletics Canada has': Officials detail work that went into landing two major track and field events
‘The biggest events that Athletics Canada has': Officials detail work that went into landing two major track and field events

CTV News

time13 hours ago

  • Sport
  • CTV News

‘The biggest events that Athletics Canada has': Officials detail work that went into landing two major track and field events

Tourism London officials say years of work went into their bid for a pair of major Canadian athletic events. CTV's Gerry Dewan reports. It's the culmination of years of work resulting in London being awarded two major track and field events, both Olympic qualifiers. London will host the 2027 Canadian Track and Field Championships and the 2028 Bell Track and Field Trials. Chloe Knox competes in long jump and triple jump and was getting some work at Western Alumni Stadium Friday morning, 'I've trained here since I was like seven years old. So, it's like, ideal for me.' Last year, Knox won gold in the U-Sports Track and Field competition and bronze in the Canadian Track and Field Championships. She's recovering from injury this year, but wants the chance to compete in her hometown, 'I'm not sure that I'll compete this outdoor season. But my goal moving forward would be to finish on the podium for the next couple of Canadian Championships.' 'The biggest events that Athletics Canada has,' emphasized Zanth Jarvis. Jarvis is director of Sport Tourism for Tourism London. 'We're so fortunate to work with them and all of our partners around the city to really showcase our community and the talent and the support we have for the sport of track and field here.' Western Alumni Stadium Thomas Helland and Morgan Reevie train at Western Alumni Stadium on June 27, 2025. (Gerry Dewan/CTV News London) Like a track athlete getting in shape for a major competition, Western University has spent years getting Western Alumni Stadium in shape for the upcoming events. 'It makes it a fantastic facility,' said Christine Stapleton. She is Western's Director of Sports Recreation. 'Great for the smallest track and field incoming athlete in the clubs here, to an Olympian like Alysha Newman and Damian Warner.' The track, infield, grandstands, stadium lighting, scoreboard and sound systems have been, or will be, upgraded. Stapleton says they all contribute to being able to achieve and retain certification from track and field's governing bodies, 'In order to maintain that certification, we have to adhere to the standards. So, the lines were painted by an I.A.A.F. (International Association of Athletics Federations) certified line painter, brought in from Europe to paint the lines for us.' That effort is giving local athletes a special opportunity. Thomas Helland specializes in running the 400m race, 'I've grown up in London, we always had to travel to meets like this. It's nice to have these big events here for us to just kind of showcase without having to go far. It makes use of a nice facility like you see here, and it highlights like local talent.' Morgan Reevie is a sprinter. She told CTV News the announcement had an immediate impact, 'It kind of lit a fire under everyone's butt to just really keep everything in gear, and to just get there, be healthy and be ready to go.' Jarvis says the event is another opportunity to showcase London to athletes, their families, and friends from across Canada. But Jarvis said organizers also want to inspire the next generation of young competitors, 'We're hoping that an event like this can create that legacy for the next generation. To see these athletes firsthand grow our community sport groups grow the sports.'

Turkey's collecting of unhappy foreign athletics stars shows it knows money matters
Turkey's collecting of unhappy foreign athletics stars shows it knows money matters

CBC

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • CBC

Turkey's collecting of unhappy foreign athletics stars shows it knows money matters

Social Sharing Last week Turkey's athletics federation undertook a seismic spending spree, rattling international track and field right down to its foundations. Two Jamaican throwers, Rojé Stona and Rajindra Campbell; two Jamaican jumpers, Wayne Pinnock and Jaydon Hibbert; and one Nigerian sprinter, Commonwealth Games silver medallist Favour Ofili, all agreed to become, for the purposes of international competition, Turkish. Immediately, pending final sign-off from World Athletics. Each athlete will reportedly receive a $500,000 US signing bonus, plus a monthly allowance. We're used to international transfers in track and field, usually one-offs that happen for personal or political reasons. American-born Andrew Hudson runs for Jamaica because his parents are from the island. Pablo Pedro Pichardo jumps for Portugal because he defected from his native Cuba. But the scale of Turkey's current campaign is unprecedented. Five elite performers, in their prime years, switching countries in the same week. It's difficult to come up with a label for a move that bold, but here's a start: It's a bargain. Consider the $2.5 million (all figures US) a down payment on short-term success, and the monthly stipend a modest ongoing cost. In return, Turkey fields medal contenders in five events, maybe as soon as this September at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo. The deal doesn't provide the kind of depth traditional track and field powers have, but it proves you can buy top-end talent. WATCH | Why are foreign athletes transferring to Turkey?: Why are Jamaican field athletes transferring to Turkey? 1 hour ago Duration 7:35 Cheaply, by the standards of pro sports. I don't know what $2.5 million gets you in the NBA, but I know what it doesn't get you: Any closer to the final. If any member of this recruiting class makes the top eight in September, Turkey will have broken even on a modest investment. Each podium finish is a windfall. So track and field isn't just the jewel of the Olympic program every four years, a place to build attributes team sports treasure, or a sports marketing afterthought hoping a Netflix series can keep it on mainstream fans' minds. It's also a market inefficiency that sports power brokers in Turkey hope to exploit, the straightest path to prominence for a federation willing to invest in scouting and talent procurement. Maybe swapping cash for national allegiance seems crass but last week's transactions are honest in their own way, and provide a clear picture of the current state of the sports industry. In a triple-threat match between sport, business, and patriotism, business wins out, almost every time. If you don't like the idea that top-tier athletes can or will compete for the country that cuts the biggest cheque, you might want to blame somebody. It makes sense, but understand this: the buck doesn't even pause with the athletes. These folks, after all, are elite performers in a sport where guaranteed money is scarce. Contracts with shoe manufactures are famously riddled with conditions and reduction clauses, and exit ramps for the company. A handful of stars command the most lucrative shoe deals, and the fattest appearance fees at track meets, and that setup leaves hundreds of world class athletes hustling over whatever's left. Male sprinters, especially if they're North American, can always try to monetize their speed on the gridiron. A 10.15-second 100-metre runner might not make the top 24 at the Olympics, but in the NFL he's fast enough to warp time. But that option depends on an ability to catch, and a willingness to risk concussions. If you have neither, what are your options? Maybe you can dress up like a super hero and race civilians, like The Freeze used to at Atlanta Braves games. Or you can try to broker a showdown with iShowSpeed, except his calendar only has a few openings, and he's likely saving those for people he knows he can beat. If you're a musclebound influencer, you're in. If you can reliably run 10.9 or faster, try selling your footspeed elsewhere. And if you're a jumper or a thrower, or a woman with 10.8 speed but no viable path to the NFL, your options are even more narrow. It all helps explain why Grand Slam Track – which promised four meets and $12.6 million in prize money – was such a welcome addition to the sport's landscape. Big money, big platform, four big dates. Athletes could plan their schedules and their finances around Grand Slam. And we know what happened after that. The money ran out before the season did, and Grand Slam cancelled its Los Angeles meet, originally scheduled for this weekend, saying they need to focus their money and energy on 2026. If you understand the frustration of cancelling a payday at short notice, you'll know why these six-figure bonuses from the Turkish federation are so appealing. Unlike the organizers of Grand Slam Track, the Turkish government has no worries about financing – provided everyday Turks keep paying their taxes. So if we're seeking scapegoats we can blame Turkey for buying a track program instead of developing one. But also notice that every new signee fits a profile – world-level medal contenders in high-profile disputes with their home federations. Is Gout Gout living up to the 'next Usain Bolt' hype? 1 hour ago Duration 6:57 Hibbert finished fourth in the triple jump at last summer's Olympics, while Stona, accolade here, has spoken publicly about not feeling supported by Jamaica's federation. After filing to join team Turkey, Campbell, an Olympic bronze medallist who is still unsponsored, cited a lack of financial support from the federation, and told media that he had to make the best decision for himself. And then there's Ofili, who just broke the 150-metre world record. She finished sixth in the 200 metres in Paris, but missed the 100 because of an administrative error by the Nigerian federation. She qualified for Tokyo 2021 was sidelined entirely by the federation's failure to complete her paperwork. It's a scenario straight out of a late 1990s Quiet Storm slow jam. A bull-headed man who doesn't know what a gem his partner is. An RnB Casanova like Joe Thomas sizing up the situation and whispering in the woman's ear that her soon-to-be ex doesn't understand her worth. Like Turkey's athletics program, he built a brand around capitalizing on situations like this. "Baby, I'm the kinda man who shows concern," he sings in " I Wanna Know," foreshadowing Turkey's sales pitch to a quintet of frustrated athletes. "Any way that I can please you, let me learn." Now the track and field world is re-learning what every company should already know about retaining talent. If you don't make your best people feel valued, your competitors will do it for you. Team Turkey might lack tact but they speak volumes with their money, and that's everyone's love language.

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