NEW YORK CITY — Olympic gold medalists, world champions and many of Team USATF's brightest stars will be on display Saturday at the 115th Millrose Games at the Nike Track & Field Center at The Armory. The meet is the fourth stop on the World Athletics Indoor Tour - Gold. Pole vaulter Katie Moon and shot putter Ryan Crouser took gold at the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021 and came back last year to capture World Championships titles on home turf at Eugene. They will be joined by men's 200m world champion Noah Lyles and women's shot put world champion Chase Ealey in the final tune-up for many athletes before the USATF Indoor Championships next week at Albuquerque. Moon won the Tokyo pole vault gold with a second-attempt clearance at 4.90m/16-0.75 and outdueled Sandi Morris for the world gold in Eugene, going over 4.85m/15-11 on her first attempt while Morris needed two tries and had to settle for silver. Here she will go up against current U.S. leader Bridget Williams, who won the New Balance GP last weekend with a 4.77m/15-7.75 clearance. Moon's Eugene teammate, Gabriela Leon, set an indoor lifetime best last week in Boston, while Washington high school twins Amanda Moll and Hana Moll will fly the flag of the youth movement. Amanda Moll bettered the U.S. U20 indoor record with her 4.61m/15-1.5 effort at the Pole Vault Summit in Reno on Jan. 13. Twice an Olympic champion, Crouser added world gold to his glittering resumĂ© last summer and had another awesome year with 11 meets over 22m and a pair of U.S. titles. He is the world record holder indoors and outdoors, and whenever he steps in the ring expectations soar. Crouser will need to be at his best as he goes against archrival Joe Kovacs, the silver medalist at Eugene and Tokyo and the 2019 world champion. Kovacs became the fourth member of the 23m club last year with a 23.23m/76-2.75 to take the Diamond League title, putting him second on the all-time performer list. Tripp Piperi, the 2022 NCAA champion for Texas and a World Championships finalist, opens his season with hopes of joining the 22m club. Earning the Jesse Owens Award as the top male track and field athlete in the U.S. last year, Lyles broke a 26-year-old American record in the 200m with his 19.31 to win at the World Championships. He is coming off a win in the 60m at the New Balance GP, where he set a lifetime best of 6.51, and he has his eye on a possible 100m/200m double next year at the Paris Games. Standing in his way this week is the formidable figure of world record holder and 2018 World Indoor champion Christian Coleman. Coleman, last year's Millrose winner, ran 6.34 to win the USATF Indoor gold in 2018 at Albuquerque and went on to take the 2019 World Championships 100m gold. A small but potent women's shot field has Ealey, the world indoor silver medalist last March and co-holder of the indoor American record at 20.21m/66-3.75, throwing against current U.S. leader Maggie Ewen, who was fifth at the 2022 World Indoor Championships and has a PB of 19.79m/64-11.25 that she set in winning the USATF Indoor Championships, as well as Jessica Woodard, who was eighth at the World Championships in Eugene and set a lifetime best of 19.40m/63-7.75 to place third at the USATF Championships last June. Runner-up in 2022, Josette Andrews will try to move atop the podium in the women's Wanamaker Mile, bringing a PB of 4:20.81 from that race last year. Her top American challengers should include Nikki Hiltz and Sage Hurta-Klecker, both of whom have broken 4:26 indoors in the mile in their careers. Hurta-Klecker climbed up the all-time U.S. performer list in the 1,000m with a 2:36.37 two weeks ago. Australia's Olli Hoare set a national indoor record of 3:50.83 to win the men's Wanamaker Mile last year and is opening his 2023 campaign here. Looking to knock him off the top of the podium will be American sub-3:51 performers Cole Hocker, Sam Prakel and Johnny Gregorek, as well as Yared Nuguse, who bettered the American indoor record for 3,000m a couple weeks ago. Prakel leads the U.S. list with a 3:53.58 from last week in Boston and was ninth in the 1,500m at the 2022 World Indoor Championships. Hocker, the NCAA and Olympic Trials 1,500m winner in 2021, zipped to a 3:50.35 indoor mile last year in Chicago to move to No. 4 on the all-time U.S. performer list. Gregorek is No. 2 on that all-time U.S. list with a PB of 3:49.98 and he is second on this year's national list at 3:53.99. Could a world best in the women's 300m be in the offing? Looking at the recent form of USATF Championships 200m winner and double World Championships relay gold medalist Abby Steiner, it is certainly possible. Steiner, who ran 21.77 to win the U.S. gold last June, went 35.80 in December and recently set an indoor PB of 50.59 in the 400m. The WB is 35.45, set 30 years ago by Russia's Irina Privalova, while the American indoor record is 35.71 by Quanera Hayes in 2017. Pushing Steiner all the way will be 2019 World Championships 200m silver medalist Brittany Brown, who has a 35.95 PB in the 300m. A veritable Who's Who of women's dash specialists are slated to fight it out in the 60m, led by Aleia Hobbs, who moved to third on the all-time U.S. indoor performer list with a 6.98 in January. Hobbs won the New Balance GP last week in Boston and is one of only four American women ever to dip under 7.00. Another member of that select club is Mikiah Brisco, last year's World Indoor Championships silver medalist with a PB 6.99 and the runner-up to Hobbs in Boston. Marybeth Sant Price earned bronze at the World Indoor Championships behind Brisco, equaling her PB of 7.04, while Melissa Jefferson won the NCAA indoor 60m gold before a victory in the 100m at the USATF Championships and a gold in the 4x100m relay at the World Championships. Tamari Davis, who will turn 20 next week, chopped a big chunk off her lifetime best last week with a 7.07 in South Carolina. Separated by only thousandths of a second last week in Boston, Noah Williams and Trinidad's Jereem Richards will line up again in the men's 400m. Williams edged Richards with a late surge in the inside lane, winning in 45.88, but this time he will have Tokyo 4x400m relay gold medalists Michael Cherry and Bryce Deadmon to watch for. Cherry took silver in the 400m at the 2018 World Indoor Championships and has a PB of 45.24, while Deadmon has run 45.22 on the indoor oval and was a gold medalist in the 4x400m last year at Eugene. Five of the women scheduled to run in the 60m hurdles have lifetime bests faster than 8.00, led by Sharika Nelvis, the No. 2 American ever with a PB of 7.70. Nelvis won USATF indoor golds in 2018 and 2019 and was fourth at the 2018 World Indoor Championships. Nia Ali won the 2019 World Championships 100mH gold and is a two-time World Indoor champion, winning in 2014 and 2016. She has a PB of 7.80. Former LSU star Tonea Marshall has gone 7.95 already this season, and multi-eventer Anna Hall, the bronze medalist in the heptathlon at the World Championships in 2022, lowered her PB to 8.18 last month. 2021 NCAA 100mH/400mH double gold medalist Anna Cockrell took silver in the 60mH at the 2018 NCAA Indoor Championships in a PB of 7.93. American indoor 800m record holder and reigning World Indoor champion Ajee' Wilson and 2015 World Championships 400m hurdles silver medalist Shamier Little meet halfway in the women's 600m. Wilson is No. 3 on the all-time U.S. indoor performer list at 1:23.84, with Little moving up to No. 5 earlier this season with her 1:24.65 PB. Both are capable of threatening the AR of 1:23.57 on a good day. Allie Wilson has run 1:58.09 outdoors for 800m but hasn't competed in anything shorter than 800m as a professional. High schooler Sophia Gorriaran is No. 2 on the all-time prep indoor performer list with a 1:27.02 PB. Last year's World Indoor Championships bronze medalist, Bryce Hoppel, is the best of the field in the men's 800m, bringing in an indoor PB of 1:44.37 that ranks him second on the all-time U.S. indoor performer list. Hoppel also holds the No. 2 spot on the all-time U.S. indoor 1,000m list and was the USATF indoor and outdoor champion in 2022. Rio 2016 bronze medalist Clayton Murphy won USATF indoor 1,000m golds in 2017 and 2019 and has an indoor 800m best of 1:45.92. Three-time NCAA indoor and outdoor champion Isaiah Harris was seventh at the 2022 World Indoor Championships, and many eyes will be on Mississippi's Cade Flatt, a schoolboy star in Kentucky last year who made it to the semis of the USATF Outdoor Championships. Two of the top American women in the distances toe the line in the 3,000m, with Alicia Monson and Elise Cranny chasing the AR of 8:25.70. Monson won the mile at the Dr. Sander Invitational two weeks ago with a then-world leading 4:23.55 and she is No. 4 on the all-time U.S. indoor 3,000m performer list with her PB of 8:31.62. Cranny set an indoor AR in the women's 5,000m last February, going 14:33.17, and she won the last two USATF outdoor 5,000m titles. Not to be overlooked is steeplechaser Courtney Wayment, who was the NCAA indoor 3,000m champion in 2021 and 12th in the steeple at the World Championships last year. North Carolina State's Katelyn Tuohy set collegiate indoor records in the 1,500m and mile two weeks ago and was the NCAA cross country champion in the fall. The men's 3,000m has a similarly talented lineup, headed by 2022 USATF 1,500m champion Cooper Teare. Teare, who is No. 3 on the all-time U.S. indoor mile performer list with a PB of 3:50.17, has run 7:39.61 for 3,000m and won the 2021 NCAA 5,000m gold. Coming off a huge PB of 12:54.99 in the 5,000m at Boston two weeks ago, last year's USATF 10,000m champion Joe Klecker has a lifetime best of 7:44.91, while Northern Arizona's Nico Young and Tennessee's Dylan Jacobs are outstanding young talents who have risen to the top of the collegiate ranks. Jacobs set an American indoor collegiate record for 5,000m of 13:11.01 two weeks ago and was last year's NCAA 10,000m champion. Olin Hacker won the NCAA outdoor 5,000m gold for Wisconsin in 2022 and recently lowered his 3,000m PB to 7:45.46. Fans can watch the action live on USATF.TV+ from 11:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET and on NBC and Peacock from 4:00 - 6:00 p.m. ET. A full schedule, along with live results, can be found here. Join the conversation with USATF on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook using the hashtag #JourneyToGold.