Adelaide, Australia; 7 February 2024 –  The biggest names in Australian athletics will descend upon Adelaide for the opening meet of the 2024 Summer Series, with Saturday’s Chemist Warehouse Adelaide Invitational lighting the flame for a season of high-stakes competition as all roads lead to Paris 2024.

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Freshly crowned Australia’s fastest woman over 100m, 19-year-old Torrie Lewis will step up to her traditionally preferred 200m as the reigning national champion in both events – with Commonwealth medallist Ella Connolly and New Zealand rivals Georgia Hulls and Rosie Elliot awaiting the challenge.

Connolly holds a 6-1 record over the teenager in the discipline and is one of three sub-23 second women in the field along with the Kiwi combination of Hulls and Elliot – setting up an enticing showdown with the white-hot Lewis.

Ella Connolly

“My favourite event these days is just what I’m doing better in. So right now, the 100m is my favourite, but maybe after this weekend the 200m can get that favourite spot back again. The field is looking really strong, the Adelaide crowd always gets behind us and the atmosphere is really great there,” Lewis said.

“I always aim for my 100m’s and 200m’s to be as good as each other, so the 200m has some catching up to do and hopefully I can get that started on the weekend.”

 

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Meanwhile, World Under 20 bronze medallist Calab Law and Adelaide local Aidan Murphy will be hard to go past in the Men’s 200m.

The sprinting action will also feature Japanese national record holder at 9.95-seconds Ryota Yamagata (JPN) in the Men’s 100m, taking on the in-form Joshua Azzopardi and Jacob Despard, while the Women’s 100m is headed by Naa AnangBree Masters and Ebony Lane.

Reigning Diamond League champion Matthew Denny will spearhead the action in the field as he launches his Paris 2024 Olympic Campaign in Adelaide, but the Australian won’t have it all his own way in the Men’s Discus as a host of internationals land for a summer down under, including a heated contest at the Maurie Plant Meet – Melbourne, days later.

Matthew Denny in action at the athletics Diamond League. (Photo by Paul Harding – British Athletics/British Athletics via Getty Images)

The Australian record holder at 68.43m will need to bring his best against the likes of Lawrence Okoye (GBR, 68.24m), Connor Bell (NZL, 66.23m) and Nicholas Percy (GBR, 65.00m), while the Women’s Discus features six nations as Australia’s World Championships representative Taryn Gollshewsky faces off against the international credentials of Daisy Osakue (ITA) and Jade Lally (GBR).

Fellow Australian record holder Joseph Deng is bound for a blockbuster 800m showdown in the final event of the evening. Deng made history in 2023 when becoming the first Australian man in history to shatter the 1:44 barrier, clocking 1:43.99 to clinch back the record he first claimed in 2018, now returning to the Chemist Warehouse Summer Series as he eyes a dream Olympic debut in Paris.

With a 50.5-second opening lap requested, the pace will be hot for the field featuring newly minted Australian Under 20 record holder Peyton Craig (1:45.77), while fellow 1:45 performers Jye PerrottJack LunnJames Preston (NZL) and 2023 World Championships representative Riley McGown all mount strong cases to draw first blood on the national scene in 2024.

The credentials are easily matched in the Women’s 800m as national record holder Catriona Bisset toes the line as Australia’s undisputed premier 800m woman, but challenges will come from the star-studded including Abbey CaldwellBendere Oboya and training partner Linden Hall. Ranked seventh in the world leading into the Olympic year, Bisset plans to bring the heat to Adelaide with the pacemaker locked in for a first lap of 57.5-seconds.

The middle-distance action is only set to roll on over 1500m as eyes turn to the teenage duo Cameron Myers, who clocked a series of world age bests in 2023,  and Claudia Hollingsworth, along with Tokyo Olympian Jye Edwards and reigning national champion Callum Davies.  Previously announced in the field, Peter Bol has withdrawn from the competition citing a minor hamstring concern.

Australia’s triple jumpers are ready to get the party started in Adelaide after a resurgent 2023 campaign, with Pacific Games champion Connor Murphy, rising star Aiden Hinson and Julian Konle set to welcome Andre Anura (MAS) down under. With just 11cm separating the Australian trio’s career-bests led by Hinson’s 16.72m, Adelaide will set the scene for the first bout of the Chemist Warehouse Summer Season.

The action is not limited to Australia’s Olympic and World Under 20 Championships hopefuls, with a quartet of 2023 World Para Athletics Championships stars set to do battle in the 1500m B race – as the Paralympic Games draw closer for Michael RoegerReece LangdonAngus Hincksman and Deon Kenzie.

T67DY6 Paralympic athlete, Michael Roeger, (AUS), competing in the 2019 London Marathon. He finished first in the T45/46 Category, in a time of 02:22:51

The 2024 Chemist Warehouse Adelaide Invitational is a World Athletics Continental Tour Bronze meet, and will take place at the SA Athletics Stadium, beginning at 6:30pm ACDT on Saturday February 10 with tickets available HERE.  Australian viewers can tune in via Seven’s digital platform 7plus.

Full entry lists and the timetable for the 2024 Chemist Warehouse Adelaide Invitational can be found via ROSTER (or the ROSTER app).

The Adelaide Invitational will be bolstered by the 2024 Chemist Warehouse Australian (and Oceania) 20km Race Walking Championships on Sunday February 11, with entry lists to be found HERE and a preview to follow.