Hunt and Glave deliver sprint statements at UK Championships
Amy Hunt retained her national 100m title with victory over Dina Asher-Smith, while Romell Glave broke through with a first senior crown and a sub-10-second run.
Priya Mistry
Writer ·

Britain's sprint picture sharpened in Birmingham as Amy Hunt retained her national 100m title and Romell Glave broke through with a first senior crown at the UK Athletics Championships.
Hunt tightened her grip on the British 100m title by beating Dina Asher-Smith, adding another chapter to one of the country's most watchable sprint rivalries. Glave, meanwhile, announced himself emphatically in the men's event.
Between them, the two winners gave British sprinting plenty to think about as the international summer approaches.
Hunt holds off Asher-Smith
Hunt crossed the line in 11.01sec, aided by a following wind, with Asher-Smith second in a season's best of 11.13. The result underlined Hunt's standing as a leading contender for the European summer ahead.
It also showed that Asher-Smith, an Olympic and world medallist, remains close enough to keep the rivalry alive, a reminder that the women's event has genuine depth at the top.
Glave goes sub-10
The men's 100m produced an even sharper breakthrough. Glave won his first British title in a legal personal best of 9.98sec, edging Zharnel Hughes, who ran 10.01, and Louie Hinchliffe, who clocked 10.03.
The victory was notable as much for its timing as for the clock. Having fought back from a serious back injury, Glave arrived looking ready to turn promise into senior medals, and his sub-10 run places him firmly in the conversation for a strong international campaign.
Depth and a selection debate
For British sprinting, the championships offered strength in numbers as well as headline winners. Hunt's win over a decorated rival gives the women's event a figurehead with momentum, while Glave's emergence adds pressure to an already competitive men's group.
The performances set up a busy selection debate, with athletes peaking just as national form begins to count internationally. Birmingham did not settle every question, but it made clear that Britain's sprint squads have more than one route to medals this summer.
Source: This summary is based on reporting by The Guardian. The NE Times aggregates and rewrites news for readability; please refer to the original for the full report.
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