Grand Slam Track – a concept conceived by four-time Olympic champion Michael Johnson – offers a $12.6m (£10m) prize pot in its first season.
The inaugural event took place in Kingston, Jamaica, last month but there were huge swathes of empty seats at the National Stadium throughout the three-day event.
Also on the opening day of action in Miami – the second of four slams – Olympic champion Masai Russell set an American record in the women’s 100m hurdles in a time of 12.17 seconds, the second-fastest in history.
Compatriot Melissa Jefferson-Wooden won the women’s 100m but her fast time of 10.75 was recorded with an illegal tailwind. Britain’s Daryll Neita finished eighth in 11.16.
Briton George Mills, one of 48 ‘challengers’ at the Miami event, was third in the men’s 3,000m in 8:17.77 to give himself a chance of overall victory in Sunday’s 5,000m.
Olympic 400m silver medallist Matthew Hudson-Smith placed seventh in the men’s 200m in 20.64 before competing in his favoured full-lap event on Saturday.
Athletes receive points for their finishing position in both races, with their combined results determining the champion at each slam.
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