By: Elizabeth Egan
Published on: Feb 03, 2026
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It is easy to be blinded by the numbers as the indoor season blasted out of the blocks, so to speak, records tumbled and qualifications standards were set left, right and centre.
But January 2026 must surely be remembered foremost for the breakthrough performances by Irish athletes at the World Cross Country Championships, with all three senior athletes finishing in the top 25 in Tallahassee.
Brian Fay in 16th, Niamh Allen in 21st, Fiona Everard 23rd; it’s been a long time since three Irish athletes finished in the top 25 in senior races at the World Cross Country Championships. Twenty-four years, in fact, and, on that occasion, four athletes finished in the top 25 in the now-discontinued short-course races.
Brian Fay’s 16th place was the best result by an Irish athlete at this level since Fionnuala McCormack finished 14th in the women’s race in 2013, and the best result for an Irish man since Alistar Cragg finished 16th in the short course race in 2004.
Noah Harris went with the early pace in the U20 men’s race, and was just half a lap short of also returning a great result. He was inside the top 20 going onto the final lap, but faded over the final stages to finish 38th.
Mark English broke his own Irish records over both 600m (1:15.80) and 800m (1:44.65) in the space of five days. The former was essentially a solo run at the NIA, the later on the way to an impressive WIT silver win in Luxembourg.
Efrem Gidey was another to break his own Irish record, as he ran 27:38 in Valencia, the site of his previous best 12 months ago. He was pushed all the way by Jack O'Leary, who also dipped under the previous mark.
Diarmuid O'Connor added two points to his own national heptathlon performance with 5596 in Philadelphia.
Elizabeth Ndudi added 1cm to Kelly Propper’s national long jump record with 6.63, just short of her own outdoor record of 6.68m.
Sarah Leahy also bettered the best time recorded for 50m, with 6.41in Switzerland.
Among the numerous age-group records set in January were new U23 marks for Nick Griggs at both 3000m (7:32.79) and 5000m (13:19.90); an U23 800m record for Emma Moore (2:01.21) and a new U23 mark for Liam Lyons over 1000m (2:21.16). Ndudi’s aforementioned long jump mark was also a national U23 record.
With qualification only opening in November, no Irish athletes had officially secured the standard for the World Indoors coming into 2026, though ranked second in the heptathlon, Kate O'Connor is already guaranteed qualification.
By the month’s end Bori Akinola (60m), English (800m), Griggs (3000m), Andrew Coscoran (3000m) and Sarah Lavin (60m Hurdles) had hit the World Athletics qualification standards.
Ciara Neville and Lauren Roy (60m), Moore and Maeve O'Neill (800m), and Ndudi (Long Jump) also bettered the Athletics Ireland B standard and, at the time of writing, are all currently within quota spots for the championships.
Irish athletes on Road to Toruń
Unsurprisingly, it’s been a quieter month for European Championship qualification, though O’Leary secured the standard for the 10,000m, courtesy of his run in Valencia.
Ndudi (Long Jump) and Roy (200m) also secured Athletics Ireland B standards, which would make them eligible to be selected should they finish within quota spots based on world rankings for their respective events. Some of the sprinters, including Bori Akinola and Ciara Neville, are quietly adding to their ranking scores thanks to their fine recent form over 60 metres.
Irish athletes on Road to Birmingham
Cian McPhillips was a clear winner of the 600m at the New Balance Grand Prix in Boston, the only WIT Gold meeting in January. Andrew Coscoran finished second in the 3000m at the same meeting and just missed the Irish record he set when winning this race in 2025. Griggs was fourth, Brian Fay 10th and James Dunne set the pace, in a race won by Australian emerging star Cameron Myers.
In addition to the WIT Silver meeting win for English in Luxembourg, Moore finished second, also at 800m in Luxembourg, while Sarah Lavin finished second in the 60m hurdles at the silver meeting in Paris. Bronze wins went to Akinola (60m) in Lyon and Lauren Callaghan (long jump) in Nantes. Akinola and Callaghan went on to set personal bests and take Challenger wins in Glasgow, where Niamh Carr added the mile win to the 2000m win she picked up the previous week at a Challenger meeting in Portugal.
Laura Nicholson won the mile at the Continental Tour Bronze meeting in Whanganui, New Zealand. Elsewhere, Darragh McElhinney got his season off to a good start with an impressive win over 3000m in Boston (Cat F meeting), though it looks like he’d need to go second on the Irish all-time list to secure a spot at the World Indoors, unless Coscoran opts to only contest the 1500m.
Laura Frawley (Nenagh Olympic) retained the national pentathlon title, while Mohammed Ibrahim Halil (Raheny) took the heptathlon title. The mixed 4x400m relay title went to Ratoath AC.
And if you thought January was busy, wait until you see what February has in store!