The stage is set for a action-packed finale to the Chemist Warehouse Summer Series, as the 2025 Australian Athletics Championships continue in Perth with the Open and Under 20 events this Thursday through to Sunday.

As the final stop on what has been a landmark season for Australian athletics, the Championships represent more than national glory. They are a celebration of a sport riding a wave of momentum from the Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games, and a sensational domestic season that included the first sell-out one-day meeting since 2001 with the Maurie Plant Meet – Melbourne last Saturday night.

Held at WA Athletics Stadium, Australia’s Open and Under 20 athletes will follow the lead of their junior counterparts who have set the stage in Perth, with stacked fields and match ups across all four days.

The resurgence of Australian sprinting will take centre stage, as an exciting group of young men hit maximum velocity in the race to join Patrick Johnson as the only Australian man to shatter the 10-second barrier in wind-legal conditions.

World Indoor 60m silver medallist Lachlan Kennedy (QLD), and New South Wales Institute of Sport Olympians Rohan Browning, Sebastian Sultana and Joshua Azzopardi will all line up in the 100m, with bragging rights and history on the line as they take their marks on one of the fastest track in the country.

Lachlan Kennedy, Josh Azzopardi, Christopher Ius, and Calab Law as the record-breaking 4x100m Relay Team at the Sydney Track Classic earlier this year. Credit: Australian Athletics.

The Men’s 200m is also set to sizzle after a showdown at the Maurie Plant Meet – Melbourne, which saw Kennedy upset teen phenom and Australian record holder at 20.04, Gout Gout (QLD) with the rematch looming large in the west.

“I’m aiming for a sub-10 time for sure,” Kennedy said.

“In one of the rounds I’ll do it, and then I want to try and break the Australian record in the 100m, and I really want to go for 19-seconds in the 200m. I think that’s more than possible, it’ll just be how my body can handle the rounds.”

“I’m confident I can win the double. I mean, Gout is obviously incredible. He’s the Australian record at 17-years-old for a reason, it’s nuts. But that’s not going to stop me running with confidence now.”

“It’ll be five races across three days so that’s obviously different to running one race at a Track Classic but If I’m good to go and I feel good, I will try my best to double up and I’m confident I can win both events.”

With the Open 200m as his main event, Gout will also continue his quest in the 100m, lining up with his Under-20 counterparts, while fellow teenagers Cameron Myers (ACT) and Claudia Hollingsworth (VIC) continue to show off the talent of the next generation in the middle distance events. 

In the field, all eyes will be skyward as global medallist Kurtis Marschall (WA) returns home from the international indoor season, eyeing the six-metre mark on his home track in the Men’s Pole Vault, while the Women’s High Jump promises to be a spectacle headlined by Olympic medallists and NSWIS athletes Nicola Olyslagers and Eleanor Patterson – both medallists at last month’s World Athletics Indoor Championships.

Nicola Olyslagers and Eleanor Patterson at the World Indoor Championships in Nanjing, China earlier this year. Credit: Australian Athletics.

Liam Adcock (NSW) will also look to light up the runway in the Men’s Long Jump, returning to the same venue where he soared to 8.33m at the Perth Track Classic – a performance that saw him leap onto the world stage with bronze at the World Athletics Indoor Championships, while Olympic silver medallist and NSWIS athlete Jessica Hull (NSW) will lead an all-star cast in the 1500m, with Australia’s finest middle distance stars including Australian 3000m champion Georgia Griffith (VIC) ready to stake her claim. 

Jessica Hull on the podium at the World Indoor Championships in Nanjing, China earlier this year. Credit: Australian Athletics.

While this year’s Championships do not serve as an official trial for the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo, they are a critical opportunity for athletes to post qualifying marks and make a compelling case to selectors, with depth rapidly growing across a number of disciplines.

The para athletics program will once again be a must-watch, with multiple World and Paralympic champions fine-tuning preparations ahead of the World Para Athletics Championships. Perth’s own Rhiannon Clarke (WA, T38) will race against rising star, NSWIS scholarship holder Mali Lovell (NSW, T36) in the 100m and 200m, while James Turner (ACT, T36) who unofficially broke the Men’s 100m T36 world record earlier this season, will make to look it official in Perth.

Mali Lovell at the recent Maurie Plant Meet in Melbourne. Credit: Michael Dawson / Australian Athletics.

The middle-distance magic continues in the para ranks as well, with Angus Hincksman (SA) and Reece Langdon (VIC) going head-to-head in the Men’s 1500m Ambulant as both close in on T38 world record, while Michael Roeger (ACT) and fellow Paralympic medallists Vanessa Low (ACT, T61), Dayna Crees (VIC, F34), Michal Burian (VIC, F64) and NSWIS athlete Rheed McCracken (NSW, T34) round out a powerful program, each of them vying to tick of the selection criteria at this meet ahead of the World Para Athletics Championships.

Rheed McCracken training at NSWIS HQ with coach Louise Sauvage. Credit: NSWIS.

The 2025 Australian Athletics Championships is delivered by Australian Athletics, with the support of VenuesWest and Athletics West, and eight hours of action will be broadcast live and free on Seven’s digital platform, 7plus.

Tickets can be purchased HERE.

Sascha Ryner, Australian Athletics                                                      

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.