EUGENE, Oregon — A meet record in the sprints and a women's distance double helped close out the 2023 USATF U20 Championships on a high note at Hayward Field. Breaking a 200m meet record that had stood since 2014, Shawnti Jackson moved to No. 7 on the all-time U.S. U20 performer list with a 22.48, winning by .34 over Elise Cooper, who passed Camryn Dickson in the final meters to clock 22.82 for silver. Dickson took bronze in 22.85. Yesterday's men's 100m gold medalist Christian Miller completed the sprint double with a 20.51, and Garrett Kaalund earned silver at 20.65. Ellie Shea held off late charges by 800m winner Sophia Gorriaran and steeplechase winner Angelina Napoleon to win the women's 1,500m in 4:19.58. Shea had a lead of almost five seconds through 800m in 2:18.71 and continued to hold that margin at the bell, but Gorriaran turned in a 64.6 final lap to draw closer and took silver in 4:21.10. Napoleon earned bronze in 4:22.62. Shea came back an hour later to win the 3,000m in 9:46.56, repelling a late challenge from silver medalist Zariel Macchia, who moved up from fourth to second on the final lap, finishing in 9:47.68. A huge PB in the women's 400m moved USC's Christine Mallard to No. 6 on the all-time U.S. U20 performer list at 50.74. The Pac-12 fourth-place finisher, Mallard came into the meet with a 51.41 PB and was ranked behind Lauren Lewis, but she went past the Texas state champion in the early stages of the race and Lewis settled for silver in 51.21, just outside her PB. Virginia Tech's Judson Lincoln was also a convincing winner in the men's 400m, rounding the oval in 45.47 to beat runner-up Jacob Andrews by .44 seconds. Two women surpassed 50m in the javelin, led by Pennsylvania state champion Evelyn Bliss. Bliss hit 51.79m/169-11 on her initial attempt and that stood up for gold, with Princeton's Shea Greene taking silver at 51.18m/167-11. Adding high jump gold to the heptathlon title she won yesterday, Washington high schooler JaiCieonna Gero-Holt was the only athlete to go clear at 1.80m/5-10.75. Oregon's Rheinhardt Harrison blistered a 54.13 final 400m to win the men's 1,500m in 3:48.30 ahead of future Duck teammate Tayson Echohawk, who was second in 3:50.28. Those two passed leader Evan Thornton-Sherman with 300m to go and engaged in a sprint battle while Thornton Sherman held on for bronze in 3:50.57. Closing like a runaway freight train, Missouri's Andrew Rogers passed two men on the final straight to grab gold in the men's 5,000m, crossing the line in 14:57.55 after a 13.3 last 100m. Liam Tilton and Will Ryan had been battling for the lead through the final lap before being passed by Rogers, and Tilton outleaned Ryan to earn silver by .01 seconds in 14:57.86. Miami's Sanaa Hebron was fastest off the final barrier in the women's 400m hurdles and sped to a 56.22 win over a pair of Vanderbilt runners. Allyria McBride, who was seventh in the SEC Championships, clipped .32 off her PB with a 56.40 for silver ahead of teammate Mya Georgiadis, who clocked 57.74 to trim almost a second off her previous PB. Leading coming into the 10th barrier in the men's 400H, Damon Frabatta of Boston College hit the barrier with his lead leg and that allowed Gage Gose to gain an advantage that carried him to a 51.67 victory, with Frabatta earning silver in 51.89. Moving into the lead on the point standings after the javelin, Aiden Carter ran well enough in the 1,500m to protect his lead and win the men's decathlon with 6,915 points. Koby Kessler won the final event in 4:30.34 but it wasn't enough to pass Carter and he took silver with 6,872.