British athletics didn’t wait for the depths of winter to produce the first tremors of what promises to be a packed indoor season. Barely into December, a string of results from Loughborough and Lee Valley has already drawn unusual attention for a period usually dominated by cautious early-season outings.

Jody Smith: a 6.52 that shifts the landscape
Nothing suggested, at first, that Jody Smith would become one of the defining names of the early winter. At 25, the sprinter has long been regarded as a dependable performer over the short sprint, but never as a major force in the indoor scene. His 6.74 personal best told the story of steady progress, without the faintest hint of a breakthrough of genuine magnitude. Yet that is exactly what unfolded at the Loughborough Indoor Open, where Smith clocked 6.52, catapulting himself into an entirely different tier.
To cut 22 hundredths from a PB at this level is bordering on extraordinary. Very few 25-year-old sprinters manage such a dramatic jump in a single race. Within seconds, Smith shifted from being an outside contender to a credible — and increasingly serious — threat on the British sprinting landscape. The display was far from a one-off: he backed it up immediately with a 6.58, clear proof that this was no lucky alignment of conditions but the sign of a genuine new standard.
With that run, Smith has already achieved the UKA qualifying mark for the 2026 World Indoor Championships, a development that significantly alters his standing. In a British sprinting scene already buoyed by the presence of athletes such as Jeremiah Azu, the reigning world 60m champion, or the experienced indoor specialist Andrew Robertson, Smith’s sudden rise injects a fresh and exciting dynamic into the event.
The most intriguing question now surrounding him is simple: how fast can he go? Anything under 6.50 suddenly feels like a realistic target, and talk of a World Indoor final appearance no longer seems fanciful. What Smith produced in Loughborough goes far beyond the realm of a routine PB improvement — it has genuinely reshaped expectations for the months ahead.
A new, irresistible wave : Maguire emerges in long jump and Obinna-Alo rewrites the record books
The other major storyline of this early winter lies in the emergence of two prodigious young talents: on one side, a long jumper already unsettling the established order of Britain’s youth ranks; on the other, a 15-year-old sprinter ripping up a national record that had stood for nearly two decades.
In Loughborough, Michael Maguire, born in 2010, delivered a stunning 7.41m jump — the second-farthest indoor leap ever recorded by a British U17 athlete, trailing only Dominic Ogbechie’s 7.53m from 2018. For a 15-year-old, such a mark goes well beyond the label of “promising”. It signals a genuine shift in scale. British long jump may be entering a rich period, already hinted at last summer when Daniel Emegbor posted 7.80m to win the England U18 title. Maguire’s emergence only deepens the sense that the nation’s talent pool is exceptionally dense.
What stands out in his jump — beyond the sheer distance — is the precocity of the technique. Few young athletes combine such controlled acceleration on the approach, such capacity to preserve speed into the final strides, and such explosive commitment at take-off. Admittedly, one jump is not a career, but certain early markers carry the unmistakable feel of long-term potential. Maguire is already one of them.
Meanwhile in Lee Valley, it was Celine Obinna-Alo, aged just 15, who stole the headlines with a blistering 7.34 over 60m — breaking the British U17 record set by Asha Philip (7.35) back in 2007. Even if it fits within the trajectory of her already impressive development, the performance remains striking for its maturity.
Obinna-Alo had already claimed the national U17 title with 7.38 in 2025, and ran 11.69 for 100m in the spring despite a stiff –2.2 m/s headwind. Her December 2024 times (7.59 and 7.67) and her 7.38 from February 2025 suggested consistent progress, but nothing pointed to such a dramatic leap this early in the season.
Under the guidance of Richard Kilty, the former World Indoor champion, she has developed a rare blend of power and rhythm for her age. She doesn’t run like a junior athlete — she runs like a polished sprinter, which explains her dominance across her age group. The significance of her 7.34 goes far beyond national territory: she now sits 7th on the European U18 all-time list, level with compatriot Amy Hunt, now the world silver medallist over 200m.
And the most remarkable part? She is doing all of this in December, at a point when most teenage sprinters haven’t even opened their season.