TOUR EXPANDED

180 outings to feature in extended WA Continental Tour

More than 180 meetings are included in this year’s tour, which is divided into four levels – Gold, Silver, Bronze and Challenger.

In Summary

• The schedule of Gold meetings has increased by two, with the tour’s top tier now comprising 14 events spread across five of the six continental areas.

• New for the Gold tour in 2023 are events in Melbourne, Grenada and Botswana. The full calendar also currently includes 25 Silver, 55 Bronze and 95 Challenger meetings.

African 100m record holder Ferdinand Omanyala (R) in action with Olympic 100m silver medalist Fred Kerley and 200m silver medalist Kenneth Bednarek during the Kip Keino Classic at Moi Stadium, Kasarani
African 100m record holder Ferdinand Omanyala (R) in action with Olympic 100m silver medalist Fred Kerley and 200m silver medalist Kenneth Bednarek during the Kip Keino Classic at Moi Stadium, Kasarani
Image: FILE

The biggest World Athletics Continental Tour calendar yet has been confirmed for 2023, with one month to go until the first Gold level meeting of the season in Australia.

More than 180 meetings are included in this year’s tour, which is divided into four levels – Gold, Silver, Bronze and Challenger. The status of each meeting is determined by the quality of competition and prize money on offer.

The schedule of Gold meetings has increased by two, with the tour’s top tier now comprising 14 events spread across five of the six continental areas.

New for the Gold tour in 2023 are events in Melbourne, Grenada and Botswana. The full calendar also currently includes 25 Silver, 55 Bronze and 95 Challenger meetings.

Gold level action will kick off in Melbourne, Australia, on February 23 when the Maurie Plant Meet will welcome some of the world’s top athletes to the Lakeside Stadium.

Among them will be US sprint star Fred Kerley, who stormed to the world 100m title in Oregon last year and secured Olympic silver in Tokyo.

In Melbourne, the 27-year-old will test himself over 200m.

Two months later, the Grenada Invitational will take place at the Kirani James Athletic Stadium (April 22), before events in Gaborone in Botswana (April 29), Nairobi in Kenya (May 13), Yokohama in Japan and Devonshire in Bermuda (both May 21).

The Gold tour then moves on to Los Angeles, USA (May 27), before events in Hengelo in the Netherlands (June 4), Bydgoszcz in Poland (June 6), Turku in Finland (June 13), New York in USA (June 24) and Ostrava in Czech Republic (June 27).

One month before the world’s best athletes compete for global medals at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23, the Hungarian capital will host some of those stars for the Gyulai István Memorial on 18 July. The 2023 Gold tour will then end at the Memorial Borisa Hanzekovica in Zagreb, Croatia, on 8-10 September.

In 2022, 11,793 athletes from 159 countries competed in the Continental Tour, establishing two area records, 118 national records and 2396 personal bests across the 152 meetings.

Highlights included Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce’s 100m meeting record and Continental Tour best of 10.67 at the Kip Keino Classic in Nairobi in May. That would prove to be one of a record seven sub-10.70 100m races Fraser-Pryce would achieve throughout the season.

Femke Bol set a world 300m hurdles best at the Golden Spike in Ostrava later that month, while other big-name winners throughout the season included Mondo Duplantis, Sydney McLaughlin, Noah Lyles and Chase Ealey.

Currently TV rights for the 2023 Gold level meetings have been sold in 140 territories across the globe and for territories where broadcast coverage is not available either live or as delayed highlights, a live stream will be shown on the World Athletics YouTube channel.

Gold level meetings 

February 23 – Maurie Plant Meet, Melbourne (Aus)

April 22 – Grenada Invitational, St. George’s (Grn)

April 29 – Botswana Golden Grand Prix, Gaborone (Bot)

May 13 – Kip Keino Classic, Nairobi (Ken)

May 21 – Seiko Golden Grand Prix, Yokohama (Jpn)

May 21 – Usatf Bermuda Grand Prix, Devonshire (Ber)

May 27 – Los Angeles Grand Prix, Los Angeles (Usa)

June 4 – Fbk Games, Hengelo (Ned)

June 6 – Irena Szewinska Memorial, Bydgoszcz (Pol)

June 13 – Paavo Nurmi Games, Turku (Fin)

June 24 – Usatf Nyc Grand Prix, New York (Usa)

June 27 – Ostrava Golden Spike, Ostrava (Cze)

July 18 – Gyulai Istvan Memorial, Budapest (Hun)

September 8-10 – Memorial Borisa Hanzekovica, Zagreb (Cro)