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Articles tagged #Faith Cherotich
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Kenyan Women Make History with Unprecedented Distance Sweep at World Championships
Kenya has written one of the greatest chapters in athletics history. For the first time ever—by men or women—one nation has swept every distance race at the World Championships, from the 800 meters all the way to the marathon. Six races, six gold medals. And they all belong to Kenya’s women.
A Golden Run Across Every Distance
It all began with Lilian Odira, who stunned the world in the women’s 800m. Running with patience and power, she stormed to victory in 1:54.62, a championship record that announced her as the new queen of the two-lap race.
Next came the familiar dominance of Faith Kipyegon. Already a legend of middle-distance running, she defended her crown in the 1500m, producing another masterpiece of speed and tactics with a time of 3:52.15.
From there, Beatrice Chebet took over the spotlight, showing remarkable versatility and endurance. She claimed double gold in both the 5000m (14:54.36) and 10,000m (30:37.61), solidifying her reputation as one of the greatest all-around distance runners of her generation.
In the steeplechase, Faith Cherotich displayed poise and precision, controlling the race from start to finish to secure gold in 8:51.59.
And finally, in the ultimate test of endurance, Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchir closed the sweep with a perfectly executed run in the marathon, clocking 2:24:43. Her victory sealed Kenya’s clean sweep of all women’s distance races—an achievement unmatched in the history of the sport.
A First in World Athletics History
No nation has ever before captured every distance title at a single World Championships. This is more than a collection of gold medals—it is a powerful statement about Kenya’s depth, resilience, and continued dominance in global distance running.
More Than Medals
This sweep is not just about records and times. It is a story of perseverance, discipline, and national pride. Each champion has walked a different journey, yet together they have created a moment that will inspire generations of runners around the world.
Kenya’s women have redefined what dominance looks like in athletics. They have set a standard so high it may never be equaled.
The world came to watch champions—but what they witnessed was history.
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Faith Cherotich is rewriting the women’s 3000m steeplechase narrative. The 20-year-old Olympic and World bronze medalist exploded onto the senior stage this year, slashing over 11 seconds off her personal best and firmly establishing herself among the all-time greats. With the World Championships set for Tokyo in 2025, she’s made it clear—she’s not done yet.
Olympic Roots, Meteoric Rise
Cherotich made her Olympic debut in Paris 2024, earning bronze in 9:04.24 behind Winfred Yavi and Peruth Chemutai. Just a year later, she’s running nearly 11 seconds faster.
At the 2023 World Championships in Budapest, she finished second in 9:00.69, already hinting at her vast potential. But 2025 has been a different level altogether.
Diamond League Domination
Cherotich’s progression this season has been remarkable:
• Doha Diamond League – 9:05.08
• Oslo Diamond League – 9:02.60 (meet record)
• Paris Diamond League – a stunning 8:53.37, now the world lead for 2025 and the 6th-fastest time in history
In Paris, she confidently shadowed 2020 Olympic champion Peruth Chemutai before surging ahead for the win.
“I am happy to have run a PB,” Cherotich said after the race. “It was not an easy race… after a few laps I got confident enough to take the lead and knew I could manage the race and win.”
All-Time Rankings & World Record Watch
• Fastest time ever: 8:44.32 — Beatrice Chepkoech (2018)
• Second-fastest: 8:44.39 — Winfred Yavi (Rome, 2024)
• Cherotich: Now #6 all-time with 8:53.37
Her consistency, combined with tactical growth, has vaulted her into serious world title contention
Focused on Tokyo 2025
With the World Championships returning to Tokyo, Cherotich is more motivated than ever:
“My target this season is to win the world title… I want to run good races… I am going to fight and do all my best to achieve my goal… It will be a different result this time in Tokyo.”
She currently leads the Diamond League standings by 10 points over rival Yavi and has shown she can beat any competitor on the day.
✅ Performance Summary
|
Meet |
Time |
Result |
|
Paris DL |
8:53.37 |
1st – PB, WL |
|
Oslo DL |
9:02.60 |
1st – MR |
|
Doha DL |
9:05.08 |
1st |
|
Budapest Worlds (2023) |
9:00.69 |
2nd – Silver |
|
Paris Olympics (2024) |
9:04.24 |
3rd – Bronze |
Cherotich isn’t just winning races—she’s chasing history. With the world title in her sights and her confidence growing with every lap, all roads now lead to Tokyo.
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With the season opener just days away, rivalries from 800m to 10,000m are heating up on the Road to Zurich
The 2025 Wanda Diamond League kicks off on April 26 in Xiamen, China, launching a new season of high-stakes track and field action. For the world’s best middle- and long-distance runners, this marks the beginning of the Road to the Final—a journey that will culminate in Zurich on August 27–28.
And if the early headlines are any indication, the upcoming season will be nothing short of electric.
Ingebrigtsen vs. Kerr: A Rivalry Rekindled
One of the fiercest rivalries in the sport will light up the men’s 1500m once again as Jakob Ingebrigtsen and Josh Kerr go head-to-head at the London Diamond League on July 19.
Their tension has been simmering since Kerr stunned Ingebrigtsen to win the world title in Budapest in 2023. The Norwegian responded with a strong victory in Zurich, but the scoreboard is far from settled.
Ingebrigtsen, now chasing his fifth career Diamond League title, will also line up against Olympic medalists Yared Nuguse and Cole Hocker in the Bowerman Mile at the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene on July 5, setting up another world-class clash.
Doha’s Steeplechase Rematch
The women’s 3000m steeplechase promises a rematch of Olympic proportions in Doha, where Winfred Yavi will face off against fellow medalists Peruth Chemutai and Faith Cherotich.
Yavi, the reigning Olympic champion, came within a whisker of the world record in Rome last season, while Cherotich enters 2025 as the Diamond League titleholder. Their early-season clash in Qatar could set the tone for one of the most compelling storylines in women’s distance running.
Eyes on Rome: A Distance-Lover’s Dream
The Pietro Mennea Golden Gala in Rome on June 6 is already shaping up to be one of the key middle- and long-distance showpieces of the year.
While final entries are still being confirmed, the women’s 800m is expected to feature a powerhouse lineup, potentially including Keely Hodgkinson, Athing Mu, and Mary Moraa. On the men’s side, stars like Emmanuel Wanyonyi, Marco Arop, and Djamel Sedjati are expected to battle for points in a crowded field of Olympic contenders.
Rome, known for producing fast times and historic finishes, could once again deliver career-defining performances.
2025: A Season Built for Distance Drama
The Wanda Diamond League includes 14 series meets across four continents, leading to the two-day Final in Zurich, where only the top point-earners will compete for the Diamond Trophy. With increased prize money—ranging from $30,000 to $50,000 per discipline at series meetings and $60,000 to $100,000 at the Final—and millions watching worldwide, every race matters.
2025 is already shaping up to be a banner year for middle- and long-distance running. With fierce rivalries, Olympic-level fields, and rising stars chasing career breakthroughs in the 800m, 1500m, mile, steeplechase, 5000m, and 10,000m, the stage is set for one of the most thrilling Diamond League seasons yet.
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Belgian authorities have denied an Ethiopian athlete a visa for the Diamond League final leaving Ethiopia with only one competitor.
Ethiopia will have only one chance in the women’s 3000m steeplechase at the Diamond League final in Brussels on September 14 after one of its star athletes Sembo Almayew was denied a visa.
Almayew, the newly crowned 2024 U20 3000m steeplechase gold medalist had to withdraw from the competition leaving Lomi Muleta as Ethiopia's only competitor.
The 18-year-old rising star’s absence will make the competition tougher for Muleta, who will face strong competitors from global steeplechase powerhouses such as Bahrain’s Winfred Yavi and Uganda’s Peruth Chemutai.
According to Almayew’s agent, Elite Running Team, the athlete failed to secure her visa in time due to new restrictions by the European Union (EU) on Ethiopian citizens.
The visa denial has sparked outrage in Ethiopian sporting circles especially given Almayew’s stellar performance this year including a fifth-place finish at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.
"We are very disappointed to announce that the newly crowned 2024 U20 3000mSC Gold Medalist, Sembo Alemayew of Ethiopia, will not be able to participate in next week's Diamond League Final at the Memorial Van Damme Meeting in Brussels due to a lack of visa," Elite Running Team said in a statement.
Almayew had been viewed as a strong contender in the 3000m steeplechase event having already established herself as a Diamond League Meet winner and a U20 national record holder for Ethiopia. However, despite her impressive accolades, she was unable to obtain the necessary visa to compete in Brussels.
"In April 2024, the European Union announced it will make it more difficult for Ethiopian citizens to receive European visas; in an attempt to leverage on the Ethiopian government, which is accused of failure to cooperate in taking back citizens found to be living illegally in the Schengen Zone," the statement added.
The agent went on to express frustration at how these visa restrictions were affecting Ethiopian athletes, particularly young talents like Almayew.
"This situation is hurting the opportunities and lives of many athletes, and we strongly hope it can be solved as quickly as possible; so that situations like this do not happen to any more athletes going forward," the statement concluded.
With Almayew unable to participate, Ethiopia's hopes now rest solely on Lomi Muleta. She will need to perform at her best to compete against the race favorite, Winfred Yavi of Bahrain.
Yavi enters the race with an impressive personal best of 8:44.39. She will be aiming to shatter her world record and cement her dominance in the steeplechase event.
Also competing is Uganda’s Peruth Chemutaic who holds a national record of 8:48.03. Chemutai has been in fine form, and many are eager to see whether she can reclaim the top spot on the podium.
Kenya’s Faith Cherotich, another promising contender with a personal best of 8:55.15, brings a youthful and strategic approach to the race, making her a potential threat to the established favorites.
From the USA, Valerie Constien is also set to compete, with her personal best of 9:03.22. While less experienced than some of her rivals, Constien has displayed incredible determination and could surprise the field.
Germany will be represented by Olivia Gürth and Gesa Felicitas Krause, the latter being a seasoned competitor with a personal best of 9:10.68.
The absence of Sembo Almayew will be felt, as her presence could have added an additional layer of excitement and competition to the Diamond League final.
However, for Ethiopia, the focus now shifts to Lomi Muleta who will aim to challenge the top contenders and prove that Ethiopia remains a force to be reckoned with in the steeplechase event.
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The curtains for the 2024 Paris Olympics fell on Sunday night with Kenya ranking 17th in the world after winning 11 medals.
Despite Kenya topping the African continent with 4 gold, 2 silver and 5 bronze medals, the results left a lot to be desired.
From 83 athletes competing in seven disciplines, a significant impact was expected from the Kenyan athletes and the world.
The show started with Judoka Zeddy Cherop falling 10-0 to Portugal’s Patricia Sampao in a record 22 seconds while Fencing African champion Alexandra Ndolo crushed out 13-12 to Ukranian Olena Kryvytska in her debut.
Maria Brunlehner and Ridhwan Mohamed finished 3rd and 4th in the women’s 50m freestyle and Men’s 400m freestyle heats respectively to crush out of contention for a swimming medal.
The sevens rugby team also crushed out in the group stage, after going down to Australia, Argentina and Samoa.
The women’s volleyball team booked their next flight after failing to win a single set following three identical 3-0 losses in a tough group B pool comprising Brazil, Poland and Japan.
Paris, the City of Love, had very little affection for Kenya as former world champion Julius Yego, finished a distant 5th in the javelin final with a 87.72m throw, to also bite the dust.
Africa's fastest man, Ferdinand Omanyala's 100m Olympic medal dream was shattered in the semi-finals after clocking 10.08 seconds to finish 8th.
However, Kenya redeemed herself with debutant Beatrice Chebet grabbing double gold in the 5000m and 10000m women’s races.
The best performer was followed closely by Faith Kipyegon who defended her 1500m gold and added the 5000m women’s silver.
Another debutant, Emmanuel Wanyonyi, grabbed the 800m gold, while Ronald Kwemoi struck the men’s 5000m silver.
Mary Moraa, the dancing queen, grabbed the 800m bronze, same as Faith Cherotich (3000m steeplechase) and Abraham Kibiwot (3000m steeplechase).
Hellen Obiri and Benson Kipruto rounded up the bronze tally in the men's and women's marathons.
Obiri failed in her quest for an Olympic medal having won silver in the women's 5000m in Tokyo, 2020 and Rio 2016 games.
History Making
Kenya will however keep pride in making history after Faith Kipyegon became the first woman to complete an Olympic hat trick after breaking her 1500m record in 3:51.29, before a fully packed iconic Stade de France.
Debutant Beatrice Chebet was the best performer entering the history books by winning a double gold in the women's 5000m and 10000m.
The feat makes Chebet the first Kenyan woman to win Olympic 10000m gold for Kenya since the race was introduced in the 1988 Olympics.
She is the third woman after Tirunesh Dibaba and Sifan Hassan to win the 5000m and 10000m double at the Olympic Games.
"I'm dedicating this medal to all Kenyans. I just want to hear my country is proud. This was for you, you were in my mind and heart in every lap; I might have made history but I will sleep better knowing Wananchi wataenjoy the weekend," she said.
Kenya’s legend Eliud Kipchoge failed to complete an Olympic marathon treble after dropping out of the race at the 20km mark.
Kipchoge later confirmed he won’t be running in the Los Angeles 2028 summer games.
“I felt a sharp pain in the stomach and I couldn’t continue. I'm disappointed that for the first time in my career, I failed to finish a race .” Kipchoge said.
Lady luck also smiled on Kenya after Kipyegon's 5000m silver medal was reinstated following an appeal, after a push and shove with Ethiopian nemesis, Gudaf Tsegay, had her initially disqualified.
In the 800m final, Canada appealed against Kenyan winner Emmanuel Wanyonyi's personal best of 1:41.91 in the 800m, claiming he obstructed silver medallist Marco Arop. Kenya won the appeal.
Tokyo 2020
Despite the dismal show in Paris, Kenya had bettered the 2020 Tokyo tally of 10 medals and a 19th spot finish.
The post-Covid games had challenges but Kenya grabbed four gold, four silvers and two bronze medals.
Emmanuel Korir (800m), Faith Kipyegon (1500m), Peres Jepchirhir (marathon), and Eliud Kipchoge (marathon) were the gold medalists while Hellen Obiri (5000m), Fergussin Rotich (800m), Brigid Kosgei (marathon) and Timothy Cheruiyot (1500m) won silver.
Benjamin Kigen and Hyvin Kiyeng won the men's and women's 3000m steeplechase races respectively.
Rio 2016
In the 2016 Rio De Janeiro games, Kenya managed six gold, six silver and one bronze medal for a tally of 13 medals.
Rio 2016 Olympics gold medalists were Jemima Sumgong in women's marathon, David Rudisha in 800m, Faith Kipyegon in 1500m, Conseslus Kipruto in 3000m steeplechase, Vivian Ceruiyot in 5000m and Eliud Kipchoge marathon.
Meanwhile, Vivian Cheruiyot (10000m); Paul Tanui (10000m); Hyvin Kiyeng (3000m steeplechase); Boniface Mucheru (400m hurdles); and Hellen Obiri (5000m) all grabbed silver, while Julius Yego managed a rare javelin silver. Margaret Wambui won bronze in women's 800m.
London 2012
The London 2012 Summer Games saw Kenya manage 2 gold, 4 silver and 7 bronze for a total of 13 medals.
Despite a cold and warm performance in the Queens land, Kenya won two gold medals to finish a distant 29th in the world rankings.
Legendary track masters Ezekiel Kemboi and David Rudisha grabbed gold in the men's 3000m and 800m races respectively.
Sally Kipyegon brought home the women's 10000m silver, while Priscah Jeptoo won the women's marathon silver medal as Vivian Cheruiyot grabbed the women's 5000m race.
Abel Kirui rounded up the silver medals haul after clinching the men’s marathon race.
Vivian Cheruiyot won bronze in the 10000m women's race, while Asbel Kiprop and Milcah Chemos clinched bronze in the men's and women’s 3000m steeplechase.
Timothy Kiptum and Pamela Jelimo clinched the men's and women's 800m race respectively while Thomas Longosiwa and Wilson Kipsang rounded off Kenya's bronze medals haul, winning the 5000m men's and women's marathon races.
What next?
As the nation awaits the Paris 2024 Games report on what worked and what didn't work, a lot will be looked into including preparations, sports science, lack of stadia and lack of funds among others.
However, one constant reminder is that Kenya must smell the coffee, lest our legacy is discarded by the improving rival nations every day.
The next Omanyala, Yego, Obiri and Kipchoge should be nurtured immediately if we are to remain world beaters in the summer games.
Beating the 2008 Beijing Summer Games remains the target, where Kenya sent a total of 46 athletes: 28 men and 18 women who brought home the best tally of six gold, four silver and six bronze medals.
The journey to the Los Angeles 2028 games starts with a new sheriff in town, CS Kipchumba Murkomen, at the helm of the Sports ministry.
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For this historic event, the City of Light is thinking big! Visitors will be able to watch events at top sporting venues in Paris and the Paris region, as well as at emblematic monuments in the capital visited by several millions of tourists each year. The promise of exceptional moments to experience in an exceptional setting! A great way to...
more...The third time is the charm. This is what 2019 World 3,000m steeplechase champion Beatrice Chepkoech is banking on as she braces up for a podium finish at the Olympic Games in Paris.
Chepkoech narrowly missed the podium in Rio 2016, finishing fourth (9:16.05) and placed seventh (9:16.33) in Tokyo 2021.
Tokyo saw Uganda's Peruth Chemutai (9:01.45), USA's Courtney Frerichs (9:04.79) and Hyvin Kiyeng (9:05.39) seal the podium while Rio Olympics top spots went to Bahrain’s Ruth Jebet (8:59.72), Kiyeng (9:07.12) and USA's Emma Coburn (9:07.63).
After heartbreaks in Rio and Tokyo, the 33-year-old is laser-focused on clinching the elusive Olympic medal.
“I have missed the podium in my last two Olympic appearances but I am optimistic on my third attempt. I will secure a podium finish,” Chepkoech revealed.
She also highlighted the importance of an Olympic medal to add to her rich trophy cabinet. “It is everybody’s dream to win an Olympic medal. I will be more than happy if I secure a podium in Paris,” she added.
Chepkoech’s impressive resume includes the 2019 world title in Doha, where she set a course record of 8:57.84 while leading Coburn (9:02.35) and Germany’s Gesa Felicitas (9:03.30) to the podium.
She also holds the African title having clocked 9:15.61 in Accra last year with Chemutai (9:16.07) and Ethiopia’s Lomi Muleta (9:26.63) sealing the podium.
Chepkoech is a bronze medallist in the 3,000m at the World Indoor Championships in Glasgow. She finished third in 8:22.68 behind Ethiopia’s Gudaf Tsegay (8:21.13) and USA’s Elle Purrier (8:20.87).
Despite strong competition from World Champion Winfred Yavi and Uganda’s Chemutai at the Paris Olympics, Chepkoech remains unfazed.
“Anything can happen in Paris, I can’t say I fear anyone. I am going to run my race and do my very best,” she stated.
Yavi edged out Chepkoech at the 2023 Championships in Budapest beating her to the title in 8:54.29 with Chepkoech settling for second in 8:58.98 and Faith Cherotich (9:00.69) sealing the podium.
Chemutai beat her to the Prefontaine Classic title on May 25, clocking 8:55.09 with Chepkoech clocking 8:56.51. At the Paris Diamond League earlier this month, Chepkoech finished ninth place in 9:27.21.
Yavi (9:03.68), Alice Finot (9:05.01) and Britain’s Elizabeth Bird (9:09.07) claimed the podium.
Chepkoech has been honing her skills at the Nyayo Stadium, where she has been training three times a week ahead of Paris.
“Training has been intense but rewarding. I do training on Monday, Wednesday and Friday and I have been focusing on my weaknesses to ensure peak form in Paris,” she shared.
In Paris, she will be joined by world U20 champions Jackline Chepkoech (2021) and Faith Cherotich (2022). The duo have been intensifying their training in Eldoret.
Chepkoech highlighted that training alone has been lonely but reiterated her desire to put in more effort.
“The other athletes are training in Eldoret so I am alone. It’s a challenge but I have to do my best to be ready for the Olympics,” Chepkoech stated.
She further highlighted the importance of having her coach along with the assigned coaches from the National Olympics Committee of Kenya.
“Training with my coach has been good because we can strategise on the areas we see weaknesses. It was a good initiative from the federation to have me train with my coach along with the assigned coaches,” she revealed.
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For this historic event, the City of Light is thinking big! Visitors will be able to watch events at top sporting venues in Paris and the Paris region, as well as at emblematic monuments in the capital visited by several millions of tourists each year. The promise of exceptional moments to experience in an exceptional setting! A great way to...
more...Going strictly by time, the Bowerman Mile at the Prefontaine Classic on Saturday (25) is one of the fastest races in the meeting’s 49-year history.
Add in the storylines, and it’s one of the most anticipated, too.
Featuring seven men with lifetime bests faster than 3:50, Olympic and world championship gold medallists, world record-holders and rivals whose banter has preceded the matchup for months, the mile caps a Wanda Diamond League meeting at Hayward Field whose potential for world-leading marks extends far beyond its final event.
Consider, for one, the women’s 800m, and the early window it will open into this summer’s Olympics. The field includes six of the eight competitors from last year’s World Championships final in Budapest, including gold medallist Mary Moraa and silver medallist Keely Hodgkinson. Notably absent will be bronze medallist Athing Mu, the Olympic champion, who was initially scheduled to race but has been withdrawn out of precaution because of a sore hamstring.
Raevyn Rogers, the 2019 world silver medallist whose image adorns a tower standing high above Hayward Field, also is entered, along with Jemma Reekie, Nia Akins and Halimah Nakaayi, who is coming off a victory at the USATF Los Angeles Grand Prix.
World champion Sha’Carri Richardson and Elaine Thompson-Herah headline the women’s 100m, along with world indoor 60m champion Julien Alfred and Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith, while world indoor 60m champion Christian Coleman and Ackeem Blake are among the fastest entered in the men's 100m.
Perhaps the most dominant athlete entering the meeting is Grant Holloway, the world 110m hurdles champion who has won all 10 races he has contested this year, including the indoor season and heats. That also includes running a world-leading 13.07 into a headwind to win in Atlanta last weekend.
The three-time world champion's last loss came on the very same Hayward Field track, at last September’s Prefontaine Classic. The only remaining gap on Holloway’s resume is an Olympic gold medal, and Saturday’s race could be an early preview of Paris, as the field includes five who raced in last summer’s World Championships final in Budapest, including silver medallist Hansle Parchment and Daniel Roberts, who earned bronze.
Shot put world record-holder and multiple world and Olympic champion Ryan Crouser will open his outdoor season in his home state and at the stadium where he owns the facility record, while trying to best Leonardo Fabbri’s world-leading mark of 22.95m.
Since 2023, Crouser has lost in just one final – and it was at September’s Prefontaine Classic to Joe Kovacs, who won in Los Angeles last weekend with 22.93m, and is entered again. Payton Otterdahl, who owns the world No.3 mark this year, also is in the field.
Those events offer no shortage of global medallists. Few, however, carry the prospect for as much drama as the mile.
Over the past year, Olympic 1500m champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen and Josh Kerr, who outkicked Ingebrigtsen for last year’s world title in Budapest, have carried on a battle of words through the press about who could prevail in Paris.
Commonwealth champion Olli Hoare, who is part of the field following his 1500m win in Los Angeles last week, said the sport was better for the attention drawn by the back-and-forth between Ingebrigtsen and Kerr – but added that other racers wanted to strike the appropriate level of respect for their competitors, such as Yared Nuguse, whose PB of 3:43.97 was set battling Ingebrigtsen (4:43.73) down to the line at September’s Pre Classic.
“This is a big one. This is going to be a big one for a lot of egos,” Hoare said in Los Angeles. “But I think it’s going to be a big one for me because it’ll be the first race where I’ll have an inkling of where I am with the world’s best. There’s a bit of tossing and turning with the banter but you can’t disrespect that field. If you do, you’ll get eaten alive.”
That list of seven men under 3:50, which includes Hoare, notably doesn’t include Jake Wightman, who will be racing Ingebrigtsen for the first time since their duel at the 2022 World Championships in Oregon, when Wightman won gold; Abel Kipsang, who was fourth at the Tokyo Olympics; Geordie Beamish, less than three months after he stormed to the world indoor title; or Lamecha Girma, the steeplechase world record-holder who is making his mile debut.
“Jake Wightman’s back, he’s a world champion,” Hoare said. “Yared Nuguse, 3:43 mile – these guys are keeping quiet and they’re going to wait for their opportunity to strike. And when they do strike, I guarantee they will make a comment.”
They are not the only accomplished names entered in the distances.
Athletics Kenya will determine its men's and women's Olympic 10,000m qualifiers at Hayward Field, with Kenya's two-time world cross-country champion Beatrice Chebet, the world leader at 5000m this season, part of a women's race that will include world champion Gudaf Tsegay of Ethiopia, eight months after Tsegay set the world 5000m record on the same track.
World record-holder Beatrice Chepkoech will attempt to retain her controlling hold over the steeplechase when she races top challenger Faith Cherotich. The Kenyan duo produced the two fastest times in the world this year at the Diamond League meeting in Xiamen, which Chepkoech won in 8:55.40 to Cherotich’s 9:05.91. Olympic silver medallist Courtney Frerichs will no longer run after injuring the ACL and meniscus in her right knee.
One week after winning in Los Angeles, Diribe Welteji leads the 1500m field that includes 13 women who have run under four minutes. World indoor 3000m champion Elle St Pierre, who won the 5000m in Los Angeles, is running her first 1500m of the season, with Laura Muir, Nikki Hiltz, Jessica Hull, Hirut Meshesha and Cory McGee also entered.
Multiple world and Olympic gold medallist Sifan Hassan, as well as world No.2 Ejgayehu Taye, will feature in the 5000m.
In the field, world and Olympic pole vault champion Katie Moon opens her outdoor season against Sandi Morris, and in the triple jump four of the top five women this season are entered, led by Thea LaFond, whose 15.01m jump to win the world indoor title in Glasgow still stands as the mark to beat.
Olympic discus champion Valarie Allman has not lost in Eugene in two years, a run that includes claiming September’s Diamond League final. That could change on Saturday because of the presence of world leader Yaime Perez, who finished second to Allman in Xiamen last month.
In the men’s 200m, top US sprinters who will duel at the Olympic trials only weeks later will face off. Kenny Bednarek, fresh off a world-leading 19.67 in Doha, is scheduled to race against world No.2 Courtney Lindsey (19.71), with world silver medallist Erriyon Knighton making his season debut. Joe Fahnbulleh and Kyree King, winner of the Los Angeles Grand Prix 100m, are also entered.
Another winner in Los Angeles, Rai Benjamin, headlines the men’s 400m hurdles, and he enters with considerable confidence after running 46.64, the ninth-fastest performance of all time.
“I think I’m the fastest guy in the field, honestly,” Benjamin said of potential Olympic chances.
The women’s 100m hurdles and women’s hammer will not count towards Diamond League points totals, but will be more potential previews for global championships.
Women who account for five of the year’s six fastest times, all of whom are separated by fractions of a second, will face off in the hurdles. Tonea Marshall, fresh off her victory in Los Angeles in 12.42, leads 2019 world champion Nia Ali, Olympic champion Jasmine Camacho-Quinn, two-time world champion Danielle Williams and world indoor champion Devynne Charlton.
Brooke Andersen’s 79.92m throw from earlier this month remains the world-leading hammer mark this season but she will be challenged by world champion Camryn Rogers, 2019 world champion DeAnna Price and world silver medallist Janee’ Kassanavoid, who own the next three farthest throws this season.
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The Pre Classic, part of the Diamond League series of international meets featuring Olympic-level athletes, is scheduled to be held at the new Hayward Field in Eugene. The Prefontaine Classicis the longest-running outdoor invitational track & field meet in America and is part of the elite Wanda Diamond League of meets held worldwide annually. The Pre Classic’s results score has...
more...World Under-20, 3,000m SC champion Faith Cherotich and Commonwealth 3,000m SC champion Jackline Chepkoech have been nominated for this year’s Women’s Rising Star Award.
The award will recognize the best U20 athlete at the World Athletics Awards.
Cherotich, 18, won the World U20 Championships Trials in 9:18.25 and also placed third at the Diamond League final in Zurich in 9:06.14. Chepkoech, 19, won the Diamond League edition of Brussels in 9:02.43.
Other nominees include South Africa’s Mine De Klerk who is the World U20 shot put champion, Jamaica’s Kerrica Hill who is the World U20 100m hurdles champion and Serbia’s Adriana Vilagos who is the World U20 javelin champion.
The nominations reflect the standout performances witnessed this year, at the World Under-20 Championships in Cali, the World Championships in Oregon and other events around the world.
The winner of the 2022 Women’s Rising Star Award will be selected by an international panel of experts and be announced on World Athletics’ social media platforms in early December.
The Men’s Rising Star Award nominees will be announced soon.
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The inaugural Memorial Agnes Tirop World Cross Country Tour Gold event became a huge success as fans turned out in large numbers to witness the exciting action at the Lobo Village in Eldoret on Saturday (12).
Several of the world’s best distance runners battled against each other in the Kenyan city on a warm, sunny and sometimes cloudy day. Combined with the tough course, the victories were earned the hard way by the runners.
The senior women’s race was almost a repeat of the Kenyan Cross Country Championships, though this time Joyce Chepkemoi won the race with a bigger margin than the one-second gap from Margaret Chelimo last month.
With about two laps of the 2km course remaining, Chepkemoi had made a surge and continued to create a gap on Chelimo. She did a solo front run in the last lap, eventually crossing the finish line in a time of 34:02 with Chelimo coming seven seconds later in 34:09. Nespine Jepleting was a distant third in 34:22.
Samuel Chebolei also repeated what he achieved here three weeks ago on the same course in the senior men’s 10km race. In an exciting last lap, Chebolei held off a determined chase from Nicholas Kimeli to emerge victorious in 29:46. Kimeli came in second at 30:00, while Michael Kibet completed the podium in 30:10.
After what looked like a wrong timing of breaking away too early in the race, disappointment followed for Pamela Kosgei, who had won both the Kenyan Championships and at the Discovery Kenya Cross Country events in the U18 women’s 5km race. She would eventually finish here in third place after being passed by Joyline Jepkemoi who won it in 18:05 and Jepkoech Maurine who was second in 18:14.
As they approached the last 2km in the 6K U18 men’s race, Ismael Kurui made a move and broke away from his two companions at the leading pack. He managed to hold off Vincent Maiyo in the last 200 meters as the latter was rapidly closing in on him. He edged him by a second as he crossed the finish line in 18:15 against Maiyo’s 18:16. Charles Rotich was a distant third in 18:21.
The U20 women’s was won by Purity Chepkirui in 20:49 improving her position at the Kenyan Cross Country Championships by one place. Lucy Nduta finished second in 21:09 while Faith Cherotich finished third in 21:18.
Shadrack Chirchir won the competitive U20 men’s 8km race that saw the race favorite, Benson Kiplangat dropped out with one and half laps to go, in 23:55. Gideon Rono followed in 24:02 ahead of Dennis Kipkirui in 24:10.
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Simon Koech from South Rift and Central Rift's Jackline Chepkoech will lead Kenya's assault in men and women's 3,000m steeplechase during the World Athletics Under-20 Championships in August in Nairobi.
Koech clocked eight minutes and 18.43 seconds to win the men's race, beating Amos Serem of Central Rift to second place in 8:20.26.
Koech and Serem now have now been bestowed with the honour of going to try and recapture the steeplechase title Kenya relinquished during the 2018 Tampere Championships.
"I am really impressed and I thank God since I have been waiting for this opportunity since last year," said Koech, who hails from Bureti, Kericho County but trains in Silibwet, Bomet County under veteran coach John Kimetto.
"I am going for nothing but gold so as to emulate my training mate Leonard Bett and the likes of Ezekiel Kemboi and Conseslus Kipruto," said Koech.
Serem is glad to represent Kenya for the first time.
"I used a lot of energy during the heats but I now known what to do...we all learn from mistakes," said Serem, who trains in Kaptagat, Elgeyo Marakwet.
"Kenyan trials are always tough and challenging hence you must be good to make the team. I thank God," added Serem.
Chepkoech timed 9:32.99 to edge out Faith Cherotich from South Rift to second in 9:33.02 with both earning places in Team Kenya.
They will be eying to succeed fellow countrywoman Celliphine Chespol, who won in 2016 Bydgozszc and 2018 Tampere.
"I still continued with my preparations despite the cancellation of the Africa Cross Championships in March in Togo," said Chepkoech. "It's never enough in terms of preparations."
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