At the Florida Relays 2026 in Gainesville, Shaunae Miller-Uibo delivered a reminder of her class, clocking 22.44 seconds to win the women’s 200m Olympic Development race — her fastest time in nearly four years.
Racing at the University of Florida, the Bahamian star opened her outdoor season with authority, recording her quickest 200m since 22.32 at the Bahamas Championships in June 2022.
A comeback gaining speed after motherhood and injury
Now 31, Miller-Uibo has been navigating a demanding return since giving birth to her son, Maicel Uibo Jr, in April 2023. She raced at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 2023 just four months later, finishing seventh in her 400m heat. An injury-affected campaign followed, and she exited in the heats at Paris 2024 Olympics.
This 22.44, however, signals that her trademark speed endurance is returning.
Teen prodigies push the champion
Miller-Uibo didn’t win in isolation. Behind her came two extraordinary 14-year-olds:
Camryn Dailey – 22.73 (new U14 world record)
Melanie Doggett – 22.80
The generational contrast made the race even more compelling: an Olympic legend holding off the sport’s newest phenoms.
Miller-Uibo’s résumé remains among the finest in modern sprinting:
- 400m Olympic gold at Rio 2016 Olympics
- 400m Olympic gold at Tokyo 2020 Olympics
- 400m world title at World Athletics Championships Eugene 2022
The 200m performance in Gainesville suggests the foundation for another serious 400m campaign is being rebuilt.
Other notable results in Gainesville
Makanakaishe Charamba won the men’s 200m Olympic Development race in 20.31
Steven Gardiner finished third in 20.46
18-year-old Quincy Wilson won the boys’ 400m in 45.97
A 22.44 over 200m may seem routine for a champion of Miller-Uibo’s stature. Context makes it powerful. After pregnancy, injury setbacks, and two difficult global championships, this was not just a win — it was evidence that one of the sport’s great 400m runners is accelerating back toward peak form.



















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