Devynne Charlton isn’t chasing records anymore she’s reinforcing them.
At the World Indoor Championships in Poland, the Bahamian hurdler matched her own world record of 7.65 seconds in the 60m hurdles, securing her third consecutive world indoor title. And at this point, it’s not even surprising.
What makes this moment different isn’t just the time it’s the consistency. In a sport where milliseconds separate greatness from history, Charlton is operating in a space that feels… controlled. Intentional. Untouchable.
She’s not peaking. She’s sustaining.
For The Bahamas, it’s bigger than medals. It’s visibility. It’s dominance on a global stage where representation matters and where winning repeatedly shifts perception.
Charlton isn’t just showing up anymore. She’s setting the standard.