NEW YORK, NY - The 98th running of the Millrose Games will
feature two 2004 Olympic medalists in the women's 60-meter hurdles,
while the men's pole vault, long one of the most popular events at the
prestigious meet, will include at least one Olympic medalist and the last
two Millrose Games and U.S. indoor champions.The Millrose Games will be held Friday, February 4 at New York City's
Madison Square Garden. NBC will broadcast the meet from 2-3:30 p.m.
on February 5. The meet is the second stop on USA Track & Field's
2005 Indoor Visa Championship Series, featuring over $1 million in
prize and athlete support dollars, including a $50,000 jackpot and prize
package going to the Visa Champions. Visa Champions will be the top
male and female performers of the Visa Championship series.
Women's hurdles head-to-head
Olympic gold medalist and 2004 Jesse Owens Award winner Joanna
Hayes will go head-to-head with two-time Olympic bronze medalist
Melissa Morrison in the women's 60-meter hurdles at Millrose. Gail
Devers' Millrose Games record, a then-American record of 7.78 seconds
set at the 2003 Millrose Games, could be in jeopardy as two of the
world's hottest hurdlers hit the track.
The 2003 Pan Am Games gold medalist in the 400 hurdles and 1995
USA Junior and Pan Am Junior champion in the 100 hurdles, Hayes ran
a stunning 12.37 seconds in the 2004 Olympic final to break the 16-
year-old Olympic record of 12.38, previously held by world record holder
Yordanka Donkova, to become only the second American ever to win
Olympic gold in the event. Hayes went on to win the World Athletics
Final (12.58), and she had three of the six fastest times in the world in
2004, including four clockings of 12.50 or faster. Indoors in 2004, Hayes
posted a personal best of 7.83 seconds in the semifinals of the World
Indoor Championships.
Morrison is a four-time U.S. indoor champion, winning crowns in 1998-
2000 and 2002, who is the only American woman to win two Olympic
medals in the sprint hurdles. The 2003 World Indoor bronze medalist
and 1997 U.S. outdoor champion was a surprise Olympic bronze
medalist in 2000; when she replicated that feat in Athens in 2004 it
solidified her place in hurdling history.
Hot men's pole vault on tap
The top two Millrose performers of the last two years will compete in a
high-wire competition in the Millrose Games men's pole vault.
Olympic silver medalist and effusive performer Toby Stevenson returns
to defend his 2004 Millrose title in the men's vault. His 2004 Millrose title
was the first hint Stevenson gave to the U.S. public that even bigger
things were to come for the 2003 Pan Am Games gold medalist.
Stevenson's astounding 2004 season included winning the USA indoor
title in March. Outdoors, he cleared the magical 6-meter barrier at the
Modesto Relays (6.0m/19-8.25) in May, then finished second at the U.S.
Olympic Trials and the Olympic Games in Athens. His outstanding
vaulting, unique showmanship and signature "crash" helmet has made
him a fan favorite and a threat to win any competition.
With the United States boasting the deepest and most talented troupe of
men's vaulters in the world, Stevenson will encounter competition from
his predecessor in 2003 Millrose and U.S. indoor champion, Derek
Miles. The seventh-place finisher in Athens and sixth at the 2003 World
Outdoor Championships, Miles has consistently cleared 19 feet each
year since 2001.