• Home
  • Other Sports
  • Sprinting Santas Help Deliver Sackful Of Action At Christmas Classic

Sprinting Santas Help Deliver Sackful Of Action At Christmas Classic

Welsh Athletics Logo

Welsh Athletics Logo

A sackful of outstanding performances were delivered at this year’s Cardiff Metropolitan University Christmas Classic. The traditional annual curtain raiser to the Welsh indoor season saw a number of personal bests and thrilling competitions against a backdrop of Christmas tunes and officials in festive fancy dress. Perhaps the performance of the day was Owain Lloyd-Hughes’ blistering personal best in the 60m. The Neath Harrier shattered his previous best of 7.04 when he clocked 6.76 in the heats on Sunday – making him the third fastest Welshman indoors this year behind Jeremiah Azu and Kristian Jones.

By Owen Morgan

A sackful of outstanding performances were delivered at this year’s Cardiff Metropolitan University Christmas Classic.
The traditional annual curtain raiser to the Welsh indoor season saw a number of personal bests and thrilling competitions against a backdrop of Christmas tunes and officials in festive fancy dress.

Perhaps the performance of the day was Owain Lloyd-Hughes’ blistering personal best in the 60m.

 

The Neath Harrier shattered his previous best of 7.04 when he clocked 6.76 in the heats on Sunday – making him the third fastest Welshman indoors this year behind Jeremiah Azu and Kristian Jones.

Owain Lloyd Hughes wins the men’s 60m final.

Lloyd Hughes went on to win the final in fine style, albeit in a slightly slower time and, like all the day’s victorious athletes, enjoyed his pick of the presents from underneath the Christmas tree at Cardiff National Indoor Athletics Centre.

The youngster said afterwards: “I’m really happy. I smashed my PB. I wasn’t expecting anywhere near that time. Last year I was running about seven seconds dead and this year I’ve taken 0.3 off of that so it’s really, really good.

“Usually this time of year you are just starting 60m. This was the first competition for me and you really shouldn’t be running times like that, but it’s progress so I am really happy.

“Sixty has always been my weakness so to run like that now is the icing on the cake.

Looking ahead to 2020, Lloyd Hughes, who has enjoyed a breakthrough year, said: “I haven’t really thought about goals for the coming year really, PBs, that’s all I can say, I want PBs in all three events – 60, 100 and 200.

“I’ll be trying to aim for the British Championships again, just see what I can get into. I’m still young, it’s my last year at under-20s. So I’m just going to aim for everything that I can.”

The performance was enough to bring Lloyd-Hughes the Zip Travel male athlete of the meeting award.

Bethan Davies on her way to a festive first place at the Cardiff Christmas Classic.

The female athlete of the meeting award went to Cardiff Met student Adele Nicoll and race walker Bethan Davies.

Welsh international shot-putter and national champion , Nicoll, dominated the competition with her best distance of 15.81m measuring almost five-and-a-half metres further than her closest opponent.

Davies produced a superb performance in the 3,000m walk, which saw the clash of Britain’s top two race walkers.
Last season, Pembrokeshire’s Heather Lewis had enjoyed the upper hand over her Wales Commonwealth Games and Great Britain team mate Davies, of Cardiff Athletics.

But on Sunday, multiple British champion Davies, redressed the balance as she led from the start to clock an impressive time of 12:49.33. The fast pace also pulled Lewis through to an indoor 3K PB of 12:55.36.

Both women will hope to go head to head for the gold medal at the British Indoor Athletics Championships in Glasgow in the New Year.

There were a number of personal best performances throughout the day, including during an exciting men’s pole vault competition which saw Swansea University’s Ieuan Hosgood register a new best of 4.41m.

Ieuan Hosgood on his way to a new personal best in the pole vault.

Fellow Swansea athlete, Steffan Jones also clocked a personal best to win the 300m. The Swansea Harrier clocked an impressive time of 36.02, while another of the city’s sprinters, Gabrielle Fakande clocked a PB of 7.87 in winning the women’s 60m.

Cardiff Archer Daniel Murathodzic registered a lifetime’s best of 8.37 in winning the men’s 60m hurdles and Cardiff Athletics’ Lauren Evans matched the feat in the women’s hurdles registering a PB of 8.74.

One of the showpiece events of the day was the men’s 3,000m which featured a line-up including Cardiff Met’s European Under-23 Championship silver medallist Piers Copeland, who was defending his title against the likes of World Championships steeplechaser Ieuan Thomas, of Cardiff Athletics.

And it was Copeland who came out on top once again, winning in a time of 8:01.87 from top quality Leeds pairing Phil Sesemann and Ossama Meslek. Cardiff Met’s Jake Smith, who led for much of the race, was fourth in 8:06.11.

One of Santa’s little helpers signals one lap to go during Sunday’s races.

Cardiff’s Lucy Marland was the fastest woman home in the mixed 3,000m heats in a time of 9:43.69, ahead of Parc Bryn Bach’s Lauren Cooper and Amman Valley Harrier Jade Williams.

In the field events, Welsh Commonwealth Games long jumper Rebecca Chapman made a successful return to indoor competition following a gap of three years by winning the women’s competition with a leap of 5.89m.

There was an impressive performance in the men’s shot put where F44 athlete Harrison Walsh took the honours with a distance of 15.22m, which bodes well for the coming season during which he has ambitions to compete at the European Para Championships and the Tokyo Paralympics.

The traditional Santa Sprint saw Plymouth’s Aaron Miller ‘Blitzen’ the field to take home a sackful of presents from under the tree in a time of 7.49, pretty impressive stuff as all the athletes were clad in a full Santa suit and beard.

Full results are available on the OpenTrack website.

Related News

Glamorgan’s Ben Kellaway. Pic. Alamy

Glamorgan Given Ben Kellaway Boost After Tame Draw

Ben Kellaway is expected to return to fitness in around a fortnight after Glamorgan head coach Richard Dawson confirmed the all-rounder is making encouraging progress in his recovery.

David Williams | Apr 28, 2026
Elfyn Evans and Scott Martin, Toyota GR Yaris Rally1, action during the 2026 Rally Islas Canarias. Pic: Alamy

Elfyn Evans Feeling Up and Down Even Though He’s Back on Top

Elfyn Evans is back on top of the World Rally Championship standings but admitted to mixed feelings after gathering points at Rally Islas Canarias.

Gareth James | Apr 28, 2026
Mark Williams congratulates Barry Hawkins. Pic: Alamy

Mark Williams Admits Fourth World Title Remains a Bridge Too Far

Mark Williams bowed out of the Halo World Championship with trademark honesty and dignity after admitting Barry Hawkins was simply too strong for him at the Crucible.

Rhys Davies | Apr 26, 2026
Ben Kellaway leaves the field at Cardiff. Pic. Alamy

Ben Kellaway Spins Both Ways . . . But is Definitely Heading Upwards

Ben Kellaway is tipped for big things this season and wants to grasp his opportunities with both hands, as he tells Graham Thomas.

Graham Thomas | Apr 23, 2026
: Team Wales swimmer Matt Richards. Pic: Alamy

It’s All Kids’ Play for Matt Richards

Matt Richards reckons his biggest successes come when he stops overthinking and “races like I did when I was a little kid”.

David Williams | Apr 21, 2026
The Dragon Diary

Mark Williams is Still the Hottest Potter in Wales

Snooker’s World Championship gets into full swing this week, with Mark Williams – as ever, it seems – carrying Welsh hopes.

Graham Thomas | Apr 20, 2026