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Olympian Quincy Wilson and hurdler Natalie Dumas set to shine at Arcadia Invitational

A gold medallist at 16 and a hurdler chasing history—this year's Arcadia Invitational promises fireworks. Tickets drop this week for track's most thrilling high school showdown.

The image shows a black and white photo of a woman running on a track in front of a crowd of...
The image shows a black and white photo of a woman running on a track in front of a crowd of people, with buildings and poles in the background. At the bottom of the image, there is text which reads "Women's 100m Final at the 1956 Olympic Games".

Olympian Quincy Wilson and hurdler Natalie Dumas set to shine at Arcadia Invitational

Rich Gonzalez, the meet director for the Arcadia Invitational, remembers when LeBron James showed up at Pauley Pavilion in 2003 to play in a high school basketball tournament, filling the venue. Now he's pulled off the track equivalent with the announcement that 2024 Olympian Quincy Wilson, from Bullis School in Potomac, Md., is coming on April 11 to compete at the Arcadia Invitational at Arcadia High. Wilson competed at the 2024 Olympic Games as a 16-year-old running a leg in the qualifying for the 4x400 relay and earning a gold medal when the team won in the finals. The 400 meters is his specialty, and he's scheduled to run in that event along with the school's 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams. That means he'll get to face Servite, which has California's best 400-meter relay team. It also means no one is going to leave the meet early since the final event is the 4x400 relay. Loyola, Servite and Long Beach Poly will be challenging Bullis. Another star committed is from the girls ranks, Natalie Dumas from Eastern Regional High in Voorhees Township, N.J. She's coming to try to break the national record in the 300 intermediate hurdles held by Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone. Wilson is committed to Maryland and Dumas to Arkansas. The meet begins at 5 p.m. on April 11. Tickets will go on sale this week.

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