There is something quietly powerful about being the only one.
At the 2026 staging of the ISSA/GraceKennedy Boys and Girls Championships in late March, where school pride is measured in points, medals and noise, Brianna Carr found herself carrying St Hugh’s High almost single-handedly, but she was far from invisible.
By the time things wrapped up at the National Stadium, the 19-year-old sixth-form student had done more than just show up. She had put her school on the board, scoring its only points of the championships with a fifth-place finish in the heptathlon, tallying 3941 points in the process.
And for Carr, that mattered. A lot.
“It was very important to me that I did that regardless of, you know, making my school known,” she said. “For me, who wants a scholarship overseas, it was very important that I went out and executed to the best of my ability, which I ended up doing.”
You get the sense she understands the moment, not just the performance, but what it could mean.
Because Champs is more than just a meet, especially in Jamaica. It is exposure, opportunity, sometimes even a doorway. And Carr, competing in one of the toughest events on the programme, made sure she walked through it.
The heptathlon is unforgiving. It asks for everything – speed, strength, endurance, coordination, and then a bit more on top of that. Funny enough, Carr did not set out to end up there.
“Originally… I want to be the best sprinter there is,” she admitted. “But… I just ended up trying out a little bit of every event. I was like, wait, I can do every event.”
That moment, as simple as it sounds, changed her direction.
But her relationship with track and field goes back even further, to her days at St George’s Primary, when the spark first lit. Like so many young Jamaican athletes, she found inspiration in Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce.
“My idol was Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce… she fast, and me say, you know, I’m fast too, I’m going to be like Shelly,” she said, recalling how those early impressions shaped her thinking about the sport.
From there, it has been a gradual climb, not spectacular at first, just steady. Qualifying in her early years, making a final, finishing ninth in the Class 2 long jump, missing a season altogether because of injury, and now, finally, scoring points at Champs.
But this year was not smooth either.
The hamstring issue had been there, lingering, something she traced back to overwork and dehydration. In the weeks leading up to Champs, she was not even doing much running, mostly strength work, trying to keep things together.
Still, she lined up.
And for a while, it looked like it might end in something even bigger.
“I was actually really close. Before the 800 metres, I was actually in second place,” she said.
That’s the part that stays with you.
Because the heptathlon always comes down to that final 800 metres, and for Carr, that was where the injury caught up.
“Imagine if I did not have to do the 800, I would have ended up on the podium,” she said.
There is no bitterness in it, just a quiet acknowledgement of what might have been.
And maybe that is what makes her story feel real. It is not perfect, it is not wrapped up in a medal, but it is honest, and it is still moving forward.
Because for Carr, this is not just about one Champs.
It is about what comes next.
A scholarship is the immediate goal, she does not hide that. She wants to get to the United States, continue competing, and build something beyond athletics as well.
“To show that… you can invest in us track kids as well,” she said, speaking not just for herself but for athletes at a school not always known for track and field. Back at school, the impact was immediate; and a little unexpected.
“I had people I did not know telling me congratulations,” she said. “It was really a positive impact.” Teachers reached out, students stopped her in passing, and within the team, her role feels a bit bigger now.
“They look up to me because I offer a lot of advice… I’m always at training, I’m always putting in the work, I’m always there early, I’m the last to leave,” she said. It is not something she says with ego, more like a responsibility she has grown into. Her journey at Champs reflects that growth.
First year, just qualifying. Next, making a final. Then a year lost to injury. Now, finally, points on the board. “Every year is just a new improvement,” she said.
Next up is college, hopefully sooner rather than later. She is already in discussions, weighing options, thinking about what life might look like in a new environment. “I want to do physiotherapy or athletic training,” she said, leaning toward kinesiology and sports science.
Beyond that, she is not rushing the picture. Maybe professional sport, maybe something else alongside it, she is leaving space for things to unfold. And that feels fitting.
Because in a championship filled with powerhouse schools and big-name performances, Brianna Carr’s story sits a little differently.
No relay team, no wave of medals, just one athlete, finding a way to make her mark. Sometimes, that is enough. Sometimes, that is everything.
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