
Team USA weekly: Lyles 9.88, Duplantis falls, Stockholm sweep
Noah Lyles ran a season-best 9.88 in Rome and Trey Cunningham broke 13 seconds in the hurdles for the first time. At Stockholm, Team USA swept three events — Bednarek's second consecutive Diamond League 200m win, Jefferson-Wooden's 100m, and 17-year-old Cooper Lutkenhaus's stunning DL debut in the 800m. The week's biggest story: Armand Duplantis's 40-meet pole vault winning streak ended at home in Stockholm. Oslo (June 10, 12:45 PM ET) is next, with 15+ US athletes on the start lists.

8/6/2026 · 2:24
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A 17-year-old won his Diamond League debut. A 40-meet winning streak ended on home soil. And Team USA's sprinters, hurdlers, and field athletes collected podium finishes across two continents. Here is everything from June 1–7.
Diamond League Rome — Lyles headlines a five-sub-10 race
The Rome Golden Gala Pietro Mennea (June 4, Stadio Olimpico) opened the week with the men's 100m race of the season so far. Noah Lyles (USA, Olympic 100m champion) ran 9.88 seconds (wind +0.4 m/s, season best) to win, with four other men also finishing under 10 seconds — Emmanuel Eseme (CMR) 9.94 (national record), Letsile Tebogo (BOT) 9.95 (season best), Jordan Anthony (USA) 9.96, and Marcell Jacobs (ITA) 9.99 (season best). 1 2
"Ten metres before the finish line I knew the race was over and I had already won it. I was thinking about how I was going to celebrate it," Lyles said afterward. 1

The rest of the US contingent produced a series of podium finishes across Rome's full program:
- Trey Cunningham (USA) won the men's 110m hurdles in 12.98 (wind +0.5) — a world lead, meeting record (breaking Allen Johnson's 1999 mark of 13.01), and his first-career sub-13. 2 "This was a long time coming. I hoped to run this last year. Beating the meeting record of Allen Johnson, who is all-time great, set 27 years ago, is special," Cunningham said. 2
- Anna Cockrell (USA, Olympic 400m hurdles silver medalist) ran 52.77 (season best) for second in the women's 400m hurdles; Dalilah Muhammad (USA, former world-record holder) was fourth in 53.39 (season best); Jasmine Jones (USA) sixth in 53.92 (season best). The winner, Emma Zapletalova (SVK), ran 52.58 — a world lead and second straight national record for her. 2 3
- Melissa Jefferson-Wooden (USA, world 100m/200m champion) ran 22.17 (season best) for second in the women's 200m behind Julien Alfred (LCA) 21.93. 3
- Joe Kovacs (USA) threw 21.87m for second in the men's shot put; Ryan Crouser (USA, three-time Olympic champion) added 21.50m for third. Kovacs, Crouser, Jordan Geist (21.30m, sixth), Roger Steen (20.85m, eighth), and Adrian Piperi (20.10m, tenth) all finished in the top 10. 3
- Kendra Harrison (USA) ran 12.54 for second in the women's 100m hurdles. 3
- Nikki Hiltz (USA) ran 3:59.26 (season best) for third in the women's 1500m. 3
- Curtis Thompson (USA) threw 83.89m for third in the men's javelin. The winner, Rumesh Tharanga Pathirage (SRI), threw 92.62m — a meeting record, world lead, and national record, and the first throw over 90m in 2026. 3 2
Rome also confirmed what Rabat (May 31) had already shown: Kovacs, Crouser, Jacory Patterson (400m, 44.11 meeting record in Rabat), Yared Nuguse (1500m, 3:30.35 meeting record in Rabat), and Valarie Sion Allman (discus, 68.75m meeting record in Rabat) have been building momentum through the Diamond League's early European stretch. 4
Diamond League Stockholm — three wins, one shock
The week's biggest stories came from Stockholm's BAUHAUS-Galan on June 7, where Team USA swept three events — and Armand Duplantis lost for the first time in nearly three years.
Kenny Bednarek (USA, two-time Olympic 200m silver medalist) won the men's 200m in 19.87 — the only sub-20 of the night — giving him back-to-back Diamond League 200m victories after his 19.69 meeting record in Rabat. 5
Jefferson-Wooden, fresh off her Rome 200m silver, won the women's 100m in 10.84. 5
The most striking result of the session came in the men's 800m. Cooper Lutkenhaus — 17 years old, making his Diamond League debut — won in 1:42.70 (season best), beating world champion Marco Arop (CAN) in a field of the world's best senior middle-distance runners. 5 Lutkenhaus became the youngest world indoor champion in history at the Torun World Indoor Championships earlier this year (1:44.24) and has now won every 800m race he has entered outdoors in 2026.
And then there was the pole vault.

Armand Duplantis (SWE, world-record holder at 6.31m) had not lost a Diamond League pole vault in nearly three years — 40 consecutive wins. On June 7, on his home track at Stockholm Olympic Stadium, Australia's Kurtis Marschall cleared 5.90m on his third attempt to take the win while Duplantis was stuck at 5.80m. Duplantis cleared 5.60m (second attempt) and 5.80m but failed at 6.00m twice and 6.05m on his final jump.
"It was time to lose, it was a very long time since the last time. I can't fathom that I won 40 in a row, it's pretty sick, but it's also sick that I lose in Stockholm, which is the most important competition of the year for me," Duplantis said. 5 He also acknowledged a potential distraction: "You're either lucky in love or lucky in life. The wedding is soon, so maybe it's a huge silver lining to the whole thing." 5
Sam Kendricks (USA, two-time world pole vault champion) was entered at Stockholm; his final result was not captured in available post-meet reporting, which focused on the Marschall-Duplantis result. Kendricks heads to Oslo on Tuesday.
Several additional Stockholm results — including the women's 800m (Keely Hodgkinson vs. Audrey Werro), men's 1500m (Yared Nuguse), men's steeplechase, and women's discus (Valarie Sion Allman) — were not yet available in official results at the time this briefing was prepared.
What's next: Oslo Bislett Games — Tuesday, June 10
The Diamond League moves to Oslo's Bislett Games on Tuesday, June 10, starting at 12:45 PM ET (4:45 PM UTC). The US entry list is as deep as any meet on the 2026 calendar. 7 8
| Event | US athletes entered | World ranking (season best) |
|---|---|---|
| Men's 800m | Cooper Lutkenhaus | SB 1:42.70, PB 1:42.27 |
| Dream Mile (men's 1 mile invitational) | Yared Nuguse, Hobbs Kessler | Nuguse WR 4, Kessler WR 14 |
| Men's 5000m | Nico Young, Grant Fisher, Graham Blanks, Parker Wolfe, Sam Gilman | Young WR 3, Fisher WR 12 |
| Men's pole vault | Sam Kendricks, Zachery Bradford | Kendricks SB 5.70 |
| Women's shot put | Chase Jackson, Maggie Ewen, Jaida Ross | Jackson WR 2, SB 20.66 |
| Women's 400m hurdles | Jasmine Jones | SB 53.92, PB 52.08 |
| Men's 400m hurdles | Trevor Bassitt, Caleb Dean | Bassitt WR 6 |
The men's 200m is the Oslo race that has nothing to do with Team USA but everything to do with LA28 context: Gout Gout (AUS, 19-year-old with a 19.67m personal best) makes his senior Diamond League debut against Letsile Tebogo (BOT, world lead 19.46) and Kenny Bednarek — who by June 10 would have raced three DL 200m events in 10 days. 7
How to watch: FloTrack holds US streaming rights for all 2026 Diamond League events outside the Pre Classic (Eugene). 8
USA Gymnastics: Pan Am Rio rosters set, Nationals in Tulsa on June 22
USA Gymnastics has confirmed its rosters for the 2026 Pan American Artistic Gymnastics Championships, scheduled for June 17–21 at Parque Olímpico – Arena Carioca 01 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 9 10

A total of 27 athletes (including alternates) will represent the US:
Senior women (5 + 1 alternate): Charleigh Bullock, Claire Pease, Lila Richardson, Hezly Rivera (2024 Paris Olympic gold medalist, 2026 Winter Cup all-around champion), Simone Rose. Alternate: Alessia Rosa. 9
Senior men (5 + 2 alternates): Taylor Burkhart (2025 US horizontal bar champion), Patrick Hoopes (2025 World Championship pommel horse bronze medalist), Riley Loos, Yul Moldauer (2024 Olympian, team leader), Kameron Nelson. Alternates: Donnell Whittenburg (traveling), Brandon Dang. 10
Junior women (4 + 1 alternate): Vivi Crain, Amia Pugh-Banks, Addalye VanGrinsven, Sydney Williams. Alternate: Paisley Ritger. 9
Junior men (4 + 1 alternate): Maksim Kan (US junior champion), Ori Reilly (2025 US junior pommel horse silver medalist), Anthony Ruscheinsky (2026 development horizontal bar champion), Hunter Simpson. Alternate: Jay Watkins. 11
The US is defending 2025 team championship titles for both senior programs. One clarification on LA28 stakes: the Pan American Championships are not on the FIG's direct Olympic qualification pathway. They serve as a stepping stone toward the 2026 World Championships (Rotterdam, October 17–25), which is the first event awarding LA28 team spots (three per gender). 12
The 2026 USA Gymnastics Championships follow two weeks later in Tulsa, Oklahoma (June 22–27), with elite competition at the BOK Center (June 25–27). The event covers acrobatic gymnastics, rhythmic gymnastics, and trampoline and tumbling — not artistic gymnastics, which holds its national championship in Phoenix in August. Around 2,000 athletes are expected to compete; tickets start at $30 per session through Ticketmaster. 13 14
On the radar
Roland Garros. The French Open concluded with no American men's or women's singles finalists. Alexander Zverev (GER, world No. 3) won his first Grand Slam title, defeating Flavio Cobolli (ITA) 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-1 in the men's final. Mirra Andreeva (19, world No. 8) won the women's title, defeating qualifier Maja Chwalinska 6-3, 6-2 on June 6. No American player advanced past the round of 16 in singles. The lone US title: Taylor Townsend (USA), partnered with Katerina Siniakova (CZE), won the women's doubles on June 7. 15 16
WTCS Quiberon — June 20–21. The World Triathlon Championship Series (the Olympic triathlon tour's top tier) holds its fourth 2026 stop on the Quiberon Peninsula in Brittany, France, with a sprint-distance race and mixed relay — both counting toward LA28 Olympic quota standings. Taylor Spivey (USA) currently sits 8th in WTCS standings; Taylor Knibb (USA, Paris Olympic silver medalist) is 11th after Alghero. Start lists were published June 2–3. Live on TriathlonLive.tv. 17
ISSF Hangzhou World Cup — July 20–29. USA Shooting's next major international competition is the ISSF World Cup (Rifle/Pistol/Shotgun) in Hangzhou, China. The team went without a medal in Munich (May 24–31, 0-for-28 athletes). Hangzhou will be an important test ahead of the ISSF World Championships in Doha in November, where LA28 rifle and pistol quota spots are at stake. 18
ISU Congress — June 10–12. The International Skating Union (governing body for figure skating, speed skating, and short track) holds its 60th Ordinary Congress in Tenerife, Spain this week. ISU President Jae Youl Kim is the sole candidate for re-election. The 2026–27 US calendar already confirmed includes a Grand Prix stop in Everett, Washington, and a Speed Skating World Cup in Salt Lake City. 19
U.S. Ski & Snowboard Stifel Awards. With alpine and cross country both in off-season, the sport marked the 2025–26 season on June 4 with the annual Stifel Awards. Lindsey Vonn (40) was named Alpine Athlete of the Year and Best Comeback award co-winner alongside Ryan Cochran-Siegle. Jessie Diggins and Ben Ogden won Cross Country Athlete of the Year. 20
Cover photo: Diamond League trophy at Stadio Olimpico, Rome, June 4. Diamond League AG / Marta Gorczynska.
Fuentes de referencia
- 1Olympics.com: Lyles 9.88 season best to win Rome DL
- 2Watch Athletics: Rome Diamond League report
- 3Athletics Illustrated: Full results Rome Diamond League
- 4Wanda Diamond League: Records tumble in Rabat
- 5Sportstar (The Hindu): Stockholm DL — Duplantis stunned at home
- 6BBC Sport: Duplantis suffers shock loss in Stockholm
- 7Oslo Diamond League: Programme & Results
- 8FloTrack: 2026 Wanda Diamond League Oslo
- 9USA Gymnastics: U.S. women's team for 2026 Pan American Championships
- 10USA Gymnastics: 2026 Pan American Championships men's team announced
- 11USA Gymnastics: Junior men's Pan Am and Berlin Team Cup
- 12FIG: Olympic Qualification System LA28 — Artistic Gymnastics
- 13USA Gymnastics: 2026 USA Gymnastics Championships, Tulsa
- 14USA Gymnastics: Tickets on sale for 2026 Championships
- 15Roland Garros / FFT: RG Live Sunday June 7
- 16Roland Garros / FFT: RG Live Saturday June 6
- 17World Triathlon: 2026 WTCS Quiberon event page
- 18ISSF: Calendar
- 19ISU: 60th ISU Congress preview
- 20U.S. Ski & Snowboard: 2026 Stifel Awards
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