The 2026 CARIFTA Games, hosted on home soil in Grenada over the Easter holiday weekend, delivered a historic moment for Grenadian athletics as rising teen hurdler Tevaughn Hall secured a podium finish that ended a 25-year medal drought for the nation in the Under-18 400m hurdles.
The young Inter-Col Under-17 champion, who represents St Andrews Anglican Secondary School (SAASS), delivered a career-defining performance in front of thousands of cheering local spectators. Hall crossed the finish line in a new personal best of 53.45 seconds to claim the bronze medal, marking a dramatic 1.59-second improvement on his previous record of 55.04 seconds set just weeks earlier at the 2026 Inter-Col competition. SAASS went on to claim its 22nd boys’ team title at that same event, with Hall as one of its standout contributing athletes.
What makes Hall’s achievement particularly significant is its place in Grenadian track and field history. He is the first Grenadian athlete to earn a medal in any CARIFTA 400m hurdles event in 25 years. The nation’s last medal in the discipline came back in 2001, when Rodney George took home silver with a time of 54.39 seconds – a mark Hall’s new personal best already surpasses.
Following his standout performance at the regional games, the latest NACAC (North American, Central American, and Caribbean Athletics Association) Outdoor Rankings, updated on April 6, 2026, place Hall third overall in the region for the Under-18 400m hurdles. He trails only Jamaican athletes Oniel Lawrence, the CARIFTA gold medallist, and Kavian Minnot, the silver medallist, cementing his status as the highest-ranked athlete in the event outside of Jamaica, a regional powerhouse in track and field.
For local fans eager to see the young rising star compete again, the wait will be short. Hall is already scheduled to make his next competitive appearance at the 2026 Classique Lighting Communal Invitational, set to take place on April 25 and 26.
