2026 World Athletics Indoor Championships

2026 World Indoor Championships: Day Three Results and Recap

2026 World Indoor Championships: Day Three Results and Recap

Live results and updates from the 2026 World Indoor Track and Field Championships in Torun, Poland.

Mar 22, 2026 by FloSports Staff
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Day three of the 2026 World Indoor Championships concluded in Toruń, Poland, as the final set of world champions were crowned.

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Women's 4x400m Final (4:11 p.m. ET)

The American women brought out the brooms in the grand finale of the championships, following the men's world title with one of their own. Bailey Lear, Rosey Effiong, Paris Peoples, and none other than Shamier Little threw down a new SB of 3:25.81.

The Netherlands and Spain rounded out the podium in 3:26 and 3:26.04, with Poland finishing fourth in 3:26.17.

The Dutch were represented by Lieke Klaver, Myrte van der Schoot, Nina Franke, and Eveline Saalberg, while the Spanish squad was made up of Paula Sevilla, Ana Prieto, Rocio Arroyo, and Blanca Hervas.

Women's 4x400m Final:

  1. United States – 3:25.81
  2. Netherlands – 3:26.00
  3. Spain – 3:26.04
  4. Poland – 3:26.17
  5. Great Britain & NI – 3:28.09
  6. Slovak Republic – 3:32.77

Men's Long Jump Final (3:59 p.m. ET)

In the final round, Gerson Baldé (POR) quite literally saved his best for last, soaring 8.46m to secure the world title and set a new world lead. The 26-year-old, who had never won a global medal prior to these championships, took down a loaded field that included Olympic and world champion Miltiadis Tentoglou (GRE).

Baldé was the only athlete to surpass 8.40m. Mattia Furlani (ITA) and Bozhidar Sarâboyukov (BUL) followed in second and third with jumps of 8.39m and 8.31m.

The lone American in the final, Jeremiah Davis, placed fifth with a season best of 8.21m.

Men's Long Jump Final:

  1. Gerson Baldé (POR) – 8.46
  2. Mattia Furlani (ITA) – 8.39
  3. Bozhidar Sarâboyukov (BUL) – 8.31
  4. Jorge A. Hodelín (CUB) – 8.26
  5. Jeremiah Davis (USA) – 8.21
  6. Miltiadis Tentoglou (GRE) – 8.19
  7. Tajay Gayle (JAM) – 8.12
  8. Eusebio Cáceres (ESP) – 8.04
  9. Carey McLeod (JAM) – 7.98
  10. Thobias Montler (SWE) – 7.94
  11. Liam Adcock (AUS) – 7.92
  12. Steffin McCarter (USA) – 7.89
  13. Heng Shu (CHN) – 7.76
  14. Kristian Pulli (FIN) – 7.71
  15. Luka Herden (GER) – 7.68
  16. Temoso Masikane (RSA) – 7.37

Women's Pole Vault Final (3:47 p.m. ET)

Adding to the list of British gold medalists in Toruń this weekend, Molly Caudery (GBR) stood alone atop the podium, clearing 4.85m for a season best to claim her second world indoor title after winning in Glasgow two years ago.

Tina Šutej (SLO) avoided the chaos behind her, matching her season best of 4.80 to secure her third world indoor medal and second consecutive silver.

In an unusual finish, Amálie Švábíková (CZE), Imogen Ayris (NZL), and Angelica Moser (SUI) shared bronze after each cleared 4.70m.

The result marked the first world indoor medals for Švábíková and Ayris, and a second bronze for Moser.

Women's Pole Vault Final:

  1. Molly Caudery (GBR) – 4.85
  2. Tina Šutej (SLO) – 4.80
  3. Amálie Švábíková (CZE) – 4.70
  4. Imogen Ayris (NZL) – 4.70
  5. Angelica Moser (SUI) – 4.70
  6. Eliza McCartney (NZL) – 4.70
  7. Juliana De Menis Campos (BRA) – 4.70
  8. Marie-Julie Bonnin (FRA) – 4.70
  9. Jessica Mercier (USA) – 4.70
  10. Jacqueline Otchere (GER) – 4.55
  11. Wilma Murto (FIN) – 4.55
  12. Chloe Timberg (USA) – 4.35
  13. Marleen Mülla (EST) – 4.35

Men's 4x400m Final (3:43 p.m. ET)

Despite heavy contact on Justin Robinson’s opening leg, the American quartet of Robinson, Chris Robinson, Demarius Smith, and Khaleb McRae held firm to run 3:01.52, a new championship record.

Belgium and Jamaica took silver and bronze, respectively. The Belgian squad of Jonathan Sacoor, Christian Iguacel, Julien Watrin, and Alexander Doom clocked 3:03.29 (SB), while Jamaica’s team of Reheem Hayles, Delano Kennedy, Tyrice Taylor, and Kimar Farquharson finished in 3:05.99.

Men's 4x400m Final:

  1. United States – 3:01.52
  2. Belgium – 3:03.29
  3. Jamaica – 3:05.99
  4. Netherlands – 3:06.05
  5. Portugal – 3:08.34
  6. Hungary – 3:09.51

Women's 60mH Final (3:36 p.m. ET)

Less than two hours after lowering her own world lead in the final semifinal, Devynne Charlton (BAH) did it again, capturing her third consecutive world indoor title.

Charlton led a wave of fast times, as all but one athlete in the field recorded either a season best or personal best. She stopped the clock in 7.65, matching her own world record from the 2023 World Athletics Indoor Championships.

Behind her, Nadine Visser (NED) and Pia Skrzyszowska (POL) delivered strong performances, both running 7.73 to take silver and bronze.

In front of the home crowd, Skrzyszowska broke Zofia Bielczyk’s long-standing national record of 7.77, which had stood for 46 years.

Women's 60mH Final:

  1. Devynne Charlton (BAH) – 7.65
  2. Nadine Visser (NED) – 7.73
  3. Pia Skrzyszowska (POL) – 7.73
  4. Ditaji Kambundji (SUI) – 7.75
  5. Megan Simmonds (JAM) – 7.82
  6. Alia Armstrong (USA) – 7.85
  7. Denisha Cartwright (BAH) – 7.90
  8. Marlene Meier (GER) – 7.90

Women's Pentathlon - 800m (3:21 p.m. ET)

Despite doing everything she could over the five events, 2025 World Athletics Outdoor champion Anna Hall (USA) came up just short of Sofie Dokter (NED) in the final standings, finishing with 4860 points to Dokter’s 4888, which also established a new world lead.

Hall closed with a championship-record 2:06.32 in the 800m to score 1019 points. Kate O’Connor (IRL) and Ellen Barber (GBR) followed in 2:10.26 and 2:10.86, both personal bests.

O’Connor, who sat in silver heading into the fifth and final event, slipped to bronze but still secured a global medal and a new Irish national record of 4839 points.

For Dokter, this is her second world indoor medal after winning bronze at the 2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Glasgow. 

800m Results:

  1. Anna Hall (USA) – 2:06.32 (1019)
  2. Kate O'Connor (IRL) – 2:10.26 (961)
  3. Ellen Barber (GBR) – 2:10.86 (952)
  4. Sveva Gerevini (ITA) – 2:11.69 (940)
  5. Sofie Dokter (NED) – 2:12.27 (932)
  6. Szabina Szűcs (HUN) – 2:12.28 (932)
  7. Paulina Ligarska (POL) – 2:12.54 (928)
  8. Adrianna Sułek-Schubert (POL) – 2:13.10 (920)
  9. Sandrina Sprengel (GER) – 2:14.32 (902)
  10. Beatričė Juškevičiūtė (LTU) – 2:16.24 (875)
  11. Anastasia Ntragkomirova (GRE) – 2:35.82 (622)

Pentathlon Standings (Final):

  1. Sofie Dokter (NED) – 4888
  2. Anna Hall (USA) – 4860
  3. Kate O'Connor (IRL) – 4839
  4. Adrianna Sułek-Schubert (POL) – 4638
  5. Szabina Szűcs (HUN) – 4618
  6. Paulina Ligarska (POL) – 4557
  7. Sveva Gerevini (ITA) – 4522
  8. Sandrina Sprengel (GER) – 4475
  9. Beatričė Juškevičiūtė (LTU) – 4392
  10. Ellen Barber (GBR) – 4387
  11. Anastasia Ntragkomirova (GRE) – 4120

Women's 800m Final (2:56 p.m. ET)

Through two laps, indoor world record holder Keely Hodgkinson (GBR) was in a class of her own, and there was little anyone in the field could do to challenge her. The 24-year-old delivered a championship-record performance in Poland, cruising to victory in 1:55.30 to secure her fifth win of the year.

Audrey Werro (SUI) comfortably took silver in a Swiss national record of 1:56.64, while American Addy Wiley claimed bronze, edging Nigist Getachew (ETH), 1:58.36 (PB) to 1:59.73.

Women's 800m Final:

  1. Keely Hodgkinson (GBR) – 1:55.30
  2. Audrey Werro (SUI) – 1:56.64
  3. Addison Wiley (USA) – 1:58.36
  4. Nigist Getachew (ETH) – 1:59.73
  5. Hayley Kitching (AUS) – 2:00.50
  6. Clara Liberman (FRA) – 2:03.30

Men's 800m Final (2:42 p.m. ET)

In his first 800m world final, 17-year-old Cooper Lutkenhaus (USA) had the entire field and the world's eyes on him, and even with the added pressure, the high school sensation didn't succumb to the bright lights. 

In a near-perfectly run final, Lutkenhaus held on despite late charges from Eliott Crestan (BEL) and Mohamed Attaoui (ESP), with the trio finishing in 1:44.24, 1:44.38, and 1:44.66, respectively. 

Lutkenhaus is now the youngest world indoor champion in history, surpassing Mohammed Aman (ETH), who won the 800m at the 2013 IAAF World Championships, and has a strong case for the best spring break story when he heads back to school next week.'

Men's 800m Final:

  1. Cooper Lutkenhaus (USA) – 1:44.24
  2. Eliott Crestan (BEL) – 1:44.38
  3. Mohamed Attaoui (ESP) – 1:44.66
  4. Peter Bol (AUS) – 1:45.14
  5. Marino Bloudek (CRO) – 1:45.31
  6. Allon Tatsunami Clay (JPN) – 1:45.42

Women's 1500m Final (2:26 p.m. ET)

Through 400m, it was 20-year-old Birke Haylom (ETH) who took control of the World Championship final, splitting 62 seconds and building a four-second lead on the field by 700m.

Georgia Hunter Bell (GBR) and Jessica Hull (AUS) led the chase pack for much of the race, steadily closing the gap lap by lap before catching Haylom just as the bell sounded.

A blistering final lap saw Hunter Bell and Hull pull away to run 3:58.53 and 3:59.45, respectively. Nikki Hiltz (USA) surged past Agathe Guillemot (FRA) at the line to claim bronze, breaking 4:00 for the first time and moving to No. 3 all-time among American indoor performers.

Hull’s runner-up finish marked a new Oceanic record, as she became the first athlete from the region to break 4:00 indoors. Georgia Hunter Bell’s winning time ranks her No. 3 all-time among European performers and stands as the current world lead.

Women's 1500m Final:

  1. Georgia Hunter Bell (GBR) – 3:58.53
  2. Jessica Hull (AUS) – 3:59.45
  3. Nikki Hiltz (USA) – 3:59.68
  4. Agathe Guillemot (FRA) – 3:59.71
  5. Birke Haylom (ETH) – 4:01.34
  6. Klaudia Kazimierska (POL) – 4:02.80
  7. Gracie Morris (USA) – 4:03.75
  8. Susan Lokayo Ejore-Sanders (KEN) – 4:04.05
  9. Ludovica Cavalli (ITA) – 4:10.10

Women's 60mH Semi-Final (1:55 p.m. ET)

The first of three semifinals was fast and highly contested, as Nadine Visser (NED) and Megan Simmonds (JAM) secured the two automatic qualifying spots for today’s final, with both athletes clocking 7.82.

Simmonds, Marlene Meier (GER), and Charisma Taylor (BAH) also set or equaled personal bests.

For the second consecutive heat, the top two qualifiers crossed in identical times, as home favorite Pia Skrzyszowska (POL) and defending 100mH world champion Ditaji Kambundji (SUI) both ran 7.76 to set a new world lead.

Less than five minutes later, Devynne Charlton (BAH) lowered that mark, cruising to win the third and final heat in 7.74. Alia Armstrong (USA) followed as runner-up in 7.84.

Rounding out the eight-woman final, Denisha Cartwright (BAH) and Marlene Meier (GER) secured the two time-qualifier spots with times of 7.90 and 7.91.

Women's 60mH Final Qualifiers:

  1. Devynne Charlton (BAH) – 7.74
  2. Pia Skrzyszowska (POL) – 7.76
  3. Ditaji Kambundji (SUI) – 7.76
  4. Nadine Visser (NED) – 7.82
  5. Megan Simmonds (JAM) – 7.82
  6. Alia Armstrong (USA) – 7.84
  7. Denisha Cartwright (BAH) – 7.90
  8. Marlene Meier (GER) – 7.91

Men's 1500m Final (1:49 p.m ET)

With just over 1000 meters to go, the field was pretty congested, but as the pace began to shift shortly after the 500m mark, we started to see a little more separation. As the bell sounded, it was still wide open, but Spain’s Mariano García proved strongest down the stretch, holding on for the win in 3:39.63. Isaac Nader (POR) and former Wisconsin Badger Adam Spencer (AUS) rounded out the podium in 3:40.06 and 3:40.26.

For García, the victory marks his second World Indoor title after winning the 800m in 2022. Nader, who captured a dramatic 1500m title in Tokyo last fall, adds another global medal to his resume, while Spencer earns his first on the world stage. 

American Nathan Green placed sixth in 3:40.78.

Men's 1500m Final:

  1. Mariano García (ESP) – 3:39.63
  2. Isaac Nader (POR) – 3:40.06
  3. Adam Spencer (AUS) – 3:40.26
  4. Samuel Pihlström (SWE) – 3:40.59
  5. Samuel Chapple (NED) – 3:40.59
  6. Nathan Green (USA) – 3:40.78
  7. Federico Riva (ITA) – 3:40.98
  8. Carlos Sáez (ESP) – 3:42.46
  9. Titouan Le Grix (FRA) – 3:42.69

Women's Pentathlon - Long Jump (1:38 p.m. ET)

In the penultimate event of the five-event multi, event leader Sofie Dokter (NED) recorded a season-best leap of 6.52m, adding 1,014 points to her total. She heads into the 800m with a 78-point lead over Kate O’Connor (IRL) and a 115-point advantage over Anna Hall (USA). Dokter sits at 3,956 points overall, while O’Connor and Hall follow with 3,878 and 3,841, respectively.

Long Jump Results:

  1. Sofie Dokter (NED) – 6.52 (1014)
  2. Martha Araujo (COL) – 6.48 (1001)
  3. Kate O'Connor (IRL) – 6.38 (969)
  4. Szabina Szűcs (HUN) – 6.29 (940)
  5. Anna Hall (USA) – 6.21 (915)
  6. Sandrina Sprengel (GER) – 6.20 (912)
  7. Sveva Gerevini (ITA) – 6.15 (896)
  8. Paulina Ligarska (POL) – 6.13 (890)
  9. Ellen Barber (GBR) – 5.99 (846)
  10. Adrianna Sułek-Schubert (POL) – 5.98 (843)
  11. Beatričė Juškevičiūtė (LTU) – 5.87 (810)
  12. Anastasia Ntragkomirova (GRE) – 5.86 (807)
  13. Allie Jones (USA) – 5.15 (601)

Pentathlon Standings (Through Four Events):

  1. Sofie Dokter (NED) – 3956
  2. Kate O'Connor (IRL) – 3878
  3. Anna Hall (USA) – 3841
  4. Adrianna Sułek-Schubert (POL) – 3718
  5. Szabina Szűcs (HUN) – 3686
  6. Martha Araujo (COL) – 3666
  7. Paulina Ligarska (POL) – 3629
  8. Sveva Gerevini (ITA) – 3582
  9. Sandrina Sprengel (GER) – 3573
  10. Beatričė Juškevičiūtė (LTU) – 3517
  11. Anastasia Ntragkomirova (GRE) – 3498
  12. Ellen Barber (GBR) – 3435
  13. Allie Jones (USA) – 2994

Sunday, March 22 - World Indoor Championship Schedule

Morning Session

  • 4:05 AM: Women's 60 Meter Hurdles- Pentathlon
  • 4:20 AM: Women's Long Jump Final
  • 4:43 AM: Women's High Jump- Pentathlon
  • 4:48 AM: Men's 4x400 Meter Relay Round 1
  • 5:23 AM: Men's Shot Put Final
  • 6:05 AM: Women's 4x400 Meter Relay Round 1
  • 6:55 AM: Women's 60 Meter Hurdles Round 1

Evening Session

  • 11:40 AM: Women's Long Jump- Pentathlon
  • 11:45 AM: Women's Pole Vault Final
  • 12:38 PM: Men's 1500 Meters Final
  • 12:51 PM: Women's 60 Meter Hurdles Semi-Final
  • 1:12 PM: Men's Long Jump Final
  • 1:22 PM: Women's 1500 Meters Final
  • 1:38 PM: Men's 800 Meters Final
  • 1:53 PM: Women's 800 Meters Final
  • 2:03 PM: Women's 800 Meters- Pentathlon
  • 2:13 PM: Women's 60 Meter Hurdles Final
  • 2:26 PM: Men's 4x400 Meter Relay Final
  • 2:47 PM: Women's 4x400 Meter Relay Final

How To Watch The World Indoor Track And Field Championships?

The 2026 World Indoor Track and Field Championships will air live this weekend on Peacock. Additional coverage may be available on NBC and CNBC.

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