Jamaica’s National Stadium played host to a thrilling edition of Velocity Fest 19 on Sunday, where emerging talents and seasoned Olympic champions delivered a day of electric sprinting action and unexpected upsets that kept spectators on the edge of their seats.
The men’s 100m delivered one of the standout performances of the entire event, rising star Bryan Levell cementing his status as one of the world’s top sprinters with a blistering 9.90-second finish (+1.3 m/s wind assistance). Fresh off his bronze medal win in the 200m at the 2025 World Championships, Levell outpaced Sprintec’s Kadrian Goldson, who crossed the line second in a 9.99s personal best. Levell’s result marks the second-fastest men’s 100m time globally this season, trailing only Botswana’s Busang Kebinatshipi’s 9.89s, while Goldson’s effort slots him into seventh place on the year’s world rankings.
In the women’s 100m, double Olympic gold medalist Elaine Thompson-Herah turned heads even before the final, clocking an impressive 10.92s (+0.8 m/s) in the qualifying heat to secure the top seed for the final. However, the Jamaican star later withdrew from the championship round, opening the door for Dynamic Speed’s Lavanya Williams to take the title in a personal best 10.96s (+0.7 m/s). MVP’s Jonielle Smith closed hard to claim second in a time that matched her own personal best of 10.99s, with Sprintec’s Jodean Williams rounding out the podium in 11.09s. Thompson-Herah still holds third place on the women’s 100m world rankings this year, and the event highlighted Jamaica’s unprecedented depth in the discipline: six of the top 10 fastest women’s 100m times this season belong to Jamaican sprinters, with Williams fourth, Shanoya Douglas fifth, Smith seventh, and Jodean Williams 10th.
The most shocking upset of the day came in the men’s 200m, a race stacked with elite World Championship medalists. The field featured 2025 100m World champion Oblique Seville, 2023 400m World champion Antonio Watson, and 60m Indoor bronze medalist Ackeem Blake—all widely expected to dominate the podium. But it was relative unknown Adrian Kerr who stole the show, crossing the line first in 20.28s (+0.4 m/s) to take the win. Seville, who appeared out of peak racing shape, finished second in 20.43s, with Blake holding on for third in 20.58s, while Watson crossed fourth in 20.82s. Kerr’s winning time moves him into 18th place on the global 200m rankings for the season, announcing his arrival as a new contender to watch.
Trinidad and Tobago’s Shaniqua Bascombe, competing for Uptimum Track Club, claimed the women’s 200m title in a personal best 22.68s, upsetting a talented trio of young Jamaican stars: Alana Reid (22.89s), Tina Clayton (23.02s), and Tia Clayton (23.04s), all of whom notched personal best times in the race. Top sprint hurdler Ackera Nugent finished fifth in 23.91s.
In other track events, Deandre Watkins of Elite Track Club took the men’s 400m title in 45.50s, beating Racers’ Jeremy Bembridge (45.63s) to the line. In the women’s 400m, MVP’s Shericka Jackson, a multiple World Championship medalist, was upset by her clubmate Sada Williams of Barbados, who won in 51.38s. Jackson crossed second in 52.55s, with Sprintec’s Shiann Salmon taking third in 52.77s. High school standout Dejour Russell continued his successful comeback from injury, winning the men’s 110m hurdles in 13.53s (+0.8 m/s), while Racers’ Alexi James claimed the women’s 100m hurdles title in 12.94s.
In field events, Shawn-D Thompson of Sprintec won the men’s long jump with a 7.78m leap, while UTech’s Canniga Powell took the women’s long jump title with a 5.68m mark. Tio-Josh Mowatt of Explosive Movement claimed the men’s shot put with a 15.29m throw, and UTech’s Altonique James won the women’s shot put with a 13.00m effort. MVP’s Samantha Hall broke the event’s meet record in the women’s discus with a 64.00m throw, adding to her already impressive season: her 66.39m throw at the Throw Town meet in the U.S. earlier this season slots her into seventh place in the global discus rankings.
