There’s a particular kind of satisfaction in beating someone at their own game. Josh Kerr knows this better than most.
Seven weeks ago at the Millrose Games in New York, American Cole Hocker — the man who pipped Kerr for Olympic 1500m gold in Paris — beat him in a two-mile race and celebrated with Stephen Curry’s famous “night night” gesture. You know the one: both hands pressed to your cheek, eyes closed, telling the person across from you they’ve been put to sleep.
Kerr said nothing at the time. He didn’t need to.
On Saturday night at the World Indoor Athletics Championships in Toruń, Poland, Kerr crossed the finish line in the 3000m final, threw both hands to his face, and closed his eyes. Message delivered.
Chess, Not Track
Winning here wasn’t straightforward. Kerr spent the first two kilometers of the race sitting in sixth place — behind both Hocker and Paris bronze medalist Yared Nuguse — while Ethiopian pacers Addisu Yihune and Getnet Wale did the heavy lifting at the front. From the stands, it looked like he’d misread the race entirely.
He hadn’t.
“All I was saying to myself in the race was ‘Danny’s going to be so mad at my positioning,'” Kerr told reporters after the race, per The Guardian, referencing his coach, Danny Mackay. “I just had to be really calm in the chaos and just relax.”
As the Ethiopians faded, Kerr struck on the penultimate lap — moving wide at exactly the right moment to leave Hocker trapped on the inside rail. The American, famed for the blistering finishing kick that had shocked the world in Paris, couldn’t get off the kerb in time. By the time he could, the gap was three meters and growing.
Hocker closed a little in the final straight, but it was theater by then. Kerr won in 7:35.56 — Hocker silver, 0.24 seconds back; Frenchman Yann Schrub taking bronze.

The Celebration Heard Round the Track
Hocker, to his credit, took it well. Kind of.
“I can’t even be that mad,” he told LetsRun. “I flexed on him at Millrose. I know he can’t let that slide. All I’m saying is at least come up with your own celly. I get it, but it’s already been done before. I’ll remember that one, though, for sure.”
Kerr wasn’t particularly concerned. “Cole’s done such a great job the last couple of years,” he said, per LetsRun. “I was just letting him know that that was a huge motivational thing for me. Millrose was a big deal, but this is the North Star.“
The two have now traded wins and mind games across two continents in the span of two months. With Kerr’s longtime rival Jakob Ingebrigtsen sidelined with an Achilles injury, it seems Kerr has found himself a new sparring partner — one who gives as good as he gets, which makes for great viewing if you’re a fan of middle-distance running with a side of theatre.












