EUGENE, Ore. — When the track announcer asked Grant Holloway what he thought of his latest win at U.S. track trials, America's best hurdler made it clear there are bigger things to come.
''If you're not training to win an Olympic gold medal," Holloway said, "then what the heck are you doing?''
That mantra has stayed planted in the 26-year-old's brain over the past three years, ever since an upset loss at the Tokyo Games left him with everything in this sport, except its biggest prize.
On Friday, the three-time world champion earned a trip back to the Olympics, winning the trials with the fourth-fastest time in history, 12.86 seconds, despite clipping the eighth of 10 hurdles in a not-so-subtle reminder of how fickle this event can be.
Others with unfinished business looming at the Olympics include Sha'Carri Richardson and Noah Lyles, each of whom blazed through their 200-meter semifinals to set up races Saturday to qualify for their second event.
Richardson faces a matchup against Gabby Thomas in what could be one of the best races of the trials.
Holloway's 110 hurdles was up there, too, though he's well aware that making the games and bringing home Olympic gold are two different things.
In Tokyo three years ago, he cleared all 10 hurdles but faded late and lost by 0.05 to Jamaica's Hansle Parchment, who runs in his country's national championship this weekend. Holloway called it one of the worst races he'd ever run and one of Parchment's best.