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Articles tagged #1:54.33
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Sometimes a loss says more than a victory ever could.
At the Bauhaus-Galan Diamond League meeting in Stockholm, Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson delivered one of the finest performances of her career—and one of the greatest 800m races ever witnessed. Yet when she crossed the finish line, she was not the winner.
The British star opened her 2026 season in spectacular fashion, clocking a stunning 1:54.33, a new British record and a personal best. In almost any race in history, that performance would have guaranteed victory. Instead, it became the fastest non-winning time ever recorded in the women's 800 metres.
What unfolded in Stockholm was a race of extraordinary quality.
For much of the contest, Hodgkinson and Switzerland’s Audrey Werro separated themselves from the rest of the field, turning the race into a relentless head-to-head battle. Hodgkinson looked in control as she surged off the final bend and powered into the home straight, appearing ready to begin her season with a statement victory.
But Werro had one final answer.
The Swiss athlete produced a breathtaking late charge, drawing alongside Hodgkinson in the closing metres before edging ahead to win in a sensational 1:53.98. The performance made Werro the third-fastest woman in history over the distance, while Hodgkinson's 1:54.33 immediately became one of the fastest times ever run.
The statistics underline just how remarkable the race was. Two of the six fastest women's 800m performances in history were produced in the same event, elevating the Stockholm showdown into the sport's record books.
For Hodgkinson, the result may officially go down as a defeat, but it felt more like a declaration. After battling injury setbacks earlier in the year, the Olympic champion returned with the fastest race of her life, proving she remains at the very centre of one of athletics' most exciting eras.
History will remember Werro as the winner. It will also remember Hodgkinson as the athlete who ran faster than any woman ever had in defeat.
And if Stockholm was merely the opening chapter of her season, the months ahead could produce something even more extraordinary. The stopwatch suggests Hodgkinson is not chasing history anymore—she is helping redefine it.
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Stockholm delivered pure middle-distance history as the Wanda Diamond League witnessed a truly extraordinary women’s 800m—one that will be remembered as one of the fastest races in the event’s modern era.
Switzerland’s rising star Audrey Werro produced the performance of her life, storming to victory in a breathtaking 1:53.98, a world-leading mark and a national record. In doing so, she became the third-fastest woman in history over 800m, coming within just 0.70 seconds of the legendary world record of 1:53.28 set by Jarmila Kratochvílová in 1983.
It was a fearless, perfectly timed run—controlled early, explosive down the back straight, and devastating in the final 200 metres as Werro pulled away in a finish of historic quality.
Right behind her, Keely Hodgkinson from Great Britain once again proved her consistency at the very highest level. The British star delivered a sensational 1:54.33, setting a new British national record and securing her place as the third-fastest woman in history. Despite finishing second, her performance was another statement of world-class dominance in a golden era for women’s 800m running.
Behind the leading duo, the rest of the field produced high-quality performances in a race where almost every athlete was pushed to season’s or personal best levels.
Official Results – Women’s 800m (Stockholm DL)
1. Audrey Werro — Switzerland — 1:53.98 (WL, NR)
2. Keely Hodgkinson — Great Britain — 1:54.33 (NR)
3. Roisin Willis — United States — 1:57.56 (PB)
4. Anaïs Bourgoin — France — 1:57.68
5. Prudence Sekgodiso — South Africa — 1:57.70
6. Anna Wielgosz — Poland — 1:57.92 (PB)
7. Raevyn Rogers — United States — 1:57.94 (SB)
8. Sage Hurta-Klecker — United States — 1:58.26
9. Nigist Getachew — Ethiopia — 1:58.59
10. Pernille Karlsen Antonsen — Norway — 1:58.82 (PB)
11. Gabriela Gajanová — Slovakia — 2:02.88
DNF. Rachel Klopfenstein (Pacer)
From start to finish, the race unfolded at an unforgiving pace, with the front pack shredding expectations and rewriting the limits of women’s 800m running. Multiple athletes dipped under 1:58, highlighting just how exceptional the conditions and competition were.
As the dust settles in Stockholm, one question now rises above the rest: are we witnessing the beginning of a new era where the long-standing world record from 1983 finally comes under serious threat?
If this race is any indication, history may not only be under pressure—it may already be closing in.
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