(Ottawa, Canada---09 May 2026) David Moulongou competes in the Ottawa Spring Kick Start at the Terry Fox Athletic Facility.

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Moulongou Cracks Canadian Top 10 as Lions Shine Along Highway 401

David Moulongou continued his remarkable early-season form last week as Ottawa Lions athletes produced a series of standout performances across three World Athletics Continental Tour Bronze meets in southern Ontario.

Competing at the Bob Vigars Classic in London, the Royal City Inferno in Guelph, and the Johnny Loaring Classic in Windsor, Lions athletes combined for club records, personal bests, national-level performances and championship standards while travelling up and down Highway 401.

Moulongou delivered the performance of the week at the Royal City Inferno, clocking 49.92 in the 400-metre hurdles to break his own club record for the third time this season. The performance moved him to 10th on the Canadian all-time list and comfortably under the Commonwealth Games qualifying standard.

The University of Ottawa athlete opened the week with a 46.76 over 400m in London – the fourth-fastest performance in Club history – before closing the series with another impressive hurdles performance in Windsor, finishing third in 50.15, the second-fastest race of his career.

Moulongou was not the only Lion producing world-class performances.

Lauren Gale opened her week in Guelph, racing in a field that looked more like a Canadian championship final than an early-season meet. The two-time Olympian finished third in 51.95 behind national team members Diana Proctor and Zoe Sherar. Gale returned to Windsor three days later and turned the tables, taking victory in 51.97 as she continues her preparation for next week’s Canadian Track and Field Championships in Ottawa.

Middle-distance runner Safwan El Mansari continued his ascension over 800m in Windsor, running a personal best 1:49.91 to finish third in the strong field. The performance moved him to seventh on the Club’s all-time U23 list.

Stephen Evans also dipped under 1:50, running a season’s best 1:49.68 in Guelph, while Amy Stieh recorded a personal best 2:11.63 in the women’s 800 metres in London.

Several Lions athletes posted notable performances in the sprints and jumps.

Maria Okwechime opened her outdoor season in London with a 5.94-metre leap to finish second in the long jump. David Adeleye was third in the 110-metre hurdles with an all-conditions personal best of 13.80 (+2.2 m/s) before returning in Windsor to place second against a stronger field in 14.04.

Luca Nicoletti enjoyed a breakthrough weekend in Windsor, recording personal bests in both sprint events. The McGill standout ran 21.37 for second in the 200 metres before returning to finish third in the 400 metres in 48.78.

Rose Basu also doubled up on the podium, running a personal best 12.09 for second in the 100 metres before narrowly missing another personal best in the 200 metres, finishing second in 24.94.

Sharelle Samuel rounded out the weekend with a season’s best 55.89 in the 400 metres, her fastest performance since 2022.

Farah Jacques

Jacques and Bishop-Nriagu win in Montréal

The Lions wrapped up their two stop Montreal tour last night with La Classique d’Athlétisme de Montréal, a World Athletics Continental Tour Bronze event, with a pair of victories from Farah Jacques and Melissa Bishop-Nriagu.

Jacques, running under much better conditions than the rain storm that fell on the national final three days earlier, bested Mariam Abdul-Rashid in the tightest finish of the evening. The pair of runners were awarded equal times of 13.28 seconds, but it was Jacques who was able to out lean Abdul-Rashid, by just eight thousandths of a second, for gold.

Since returning from an early season competition tour in the United States, Jacques has seen a continual improvement in her results on the track including last night’s performance, which was the fourth fastest of her career. The 2016 Olympic finalist will be waiting this week to see if her efforts were strong enough to earn her another spot on Canada’s 4×100 metre relay team in Tokyo.

For Melissa Bishop-Nriagu, her spot in Tokyo is secure, and she has been using the recent series of domestic competitions to work on racing tactics in her run for an Olympic medal. The tactics were working well Tuesday night as she was victorious over an almost identical field to the OIympic Trials in a time of two minutes and 1.69 seconds.

Next up for the decorated runner will be the Monaco Diamond League event on July 9th followed by the London Diamond League four days later. The first round of the 800 metres in Tokyo goes in one month from today.

In the men’s 1500 metres, Robert Mitchell set a new lifetime best of 3:59.08 to finish eighth in the open section. This was Mitchell’s first time cracking four minutes in the 1500. The open women’s 400 metres was won by Alexandra Telford in 57.51 seconds. It was the second fastest time of Telford’s life in her first race since February 2020.

Rounding out the Lions contingent was Stephen Evans who placed sixth in the elite section of the men’s 800 metres with a time of one minute and 52.37 seconds.

Next up for the Lions is the kick off of the 34th annual Summer Twilight Series, which begin tonight at Terry Fox. For more information on upcoming twilight meets, please check out the schedule.