PHILADELPHIA — One of the most anticipated showdowns of the 130th Penn Relays Carnival at Philadelphia’s historic Franklin Field is set to unfold on the event’s second day, as Jamaica’s elite boys’ high school track and field programs clash for their final team competition of the 2024 season. With powerhouse programs bringing stacked rosters of top-ranked athletes to the iconic U.S. meet, fans and analysts are already predicting record-breaking performances across both relay and field events.
Leading the charge in the relay competitions are three of Jamaica’s most decorated programs: ISSA national champions Jamaica College, 4x100m title holders Calabar High, and perennial 4x400m powerhouse Kingston College. Kingston College will enter the 4x400m relay aiming to extend their unprecedented winning streak to five consecutive Penn Relays titles, a mark that would solidify their status as the most dominant program in the event’s history. Day two will host preliminary rounds for both the 4x100m and 4x800m relays, with the 4x400m preliminaries and final scheduled for the event’s closing day on Saturday.
A total of 29 Jamaican institutions have qualified for the 4x100m relay, with the top nine fastest teams across all competitors advancing to the Championships of Americas final on Saturday. The next nine fastest teams from outside the United States will move on to the International final. Alongside the pre-race favorites Jamaica College, Kingston College, defending champion Calabar High, and Excelsior High, several underdog programs including St George’s College, William Knibb Memorial, and St Elizabeth Technical (STETHS) are projected to compete for spots in the coveted finals.
In the 4x800m relay, Jamaican programs are coming into the 2024 meet with higher expectations than ever after a solid sixth-place finish from Kingston College (KC) in 2023. KC has posted a time of 7:38.95 this season, the third-fastest qualifying time heading into the Penn Relays, trailing only Union Catholic of New Jersey (7:32.78) and Florida’s IMG Academy (7:35.28). Other Jamaican contenders include Edwin Allen High (7:41.06), Jamaica College (7:43.75), along with entries from Bellefield High, STETHS, Alphansus Davis High, and Calabar High.
Beyond the relay track, Jamaican athletes are heavily favored to claim titles and break records across all scheduled boys’ field events on day two. Michael-Andre Edwards of Jamaica College enters the triple jump undefeated this season, holding a personal best of 16.25m that already outpaces the existing Penn Relays meet record of 16.01m set by O’Brien Wasome in 2016. With ideal track conditions matching Thursday’s opening day, Edwards is widely expected to break the record as he defends his 2023 title, where he won with a mark of 15.95m. He will face stiff competition from a deep field of Jamaican challengers, including KC’s Rekelme Hunter, Amani Phillips, and Demario Clarke, Calabar’s Antonio Anderson and Kaleel Samuels, and Wolmer’s Boys pair Roshane Francis and Kabiki Thomas.
In the discus throw, Jamaica College’s Joseph Salmon will look to improve on his second-place finish from 2023, entering the competition with a world-leading 67.55m throw with a 1.75kg discus. Salmon has his sights set on Traves Smikle’s Penn Relays record of 69.55m, set with the American standard 1.60kg implement. Another Jamaican favorite, Edwin Allen High’s Addison James, is projected to defend his 2023 javelin title, coming to Philadelphia with a personal best of 70.30m, the 10th best mark in the event this year. He will compete against a field that includes KC’s Daijon Budhai and Dylan Logan, Munro College’s Rajeem Street, and Calabar’s DeAndre Henry.
A last-minute disruption hit the boys’ shot put competition, as Munro College’s ISSA Class 1 gold medalist Javontae Smith was denied a U.S. entry visa and will not compete. In his absence, Kingston College’s Nksosana Johnson and Calabar High’s Khaleel Henry will lead the Jamaican contingent. In the high jump, STETHS’s ISSA Class 1 winner Santino Distin will compete alongside KC pair Tejahni Jaynes and Michael Neil, while the long jump features Omarion Miller (KC), Jaivar Cato (Jamaica College), Talshawn Edwards (Calabar High) and Svein Lawrence (Petersfield High).
