Key eventsShow key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to use this featureKeely and Georgia are with BBC, the latter feeling her call to pick the 8 over the 15 was vindicated. She ran her fastest time ever and is really happy, telling herself not to get dropped when it was quick early doors, to kick at the end.Hodgkinson says she might’ve wasted energy tussling and surging, but she was “in it to win it” and if you go for gold you risk being run out of the medals entirely. She’s proud of her and her mate and seeing what she’s been through this year she’s proud even if she’s not got what she came for.Did she feel Odire coming on strong? “Not really, I thought I had it” but she did her best to hold on but her legs “were falling off a little bit because the first lap was so quick, but I ran it how I ran it and this is what the result is.”It’s been a really difficult year, she’s disappointed, but it’s her fifth podium in a row, so.Back to Hunter Bell, she and Hodgkinson are both looking forward to a break, and she’s very grateful to her coaches and feels lucky to be part of the team.They’re both so thoughtful, mature and likeable.ShareHarker will have felt injustice after his 1500m DQ – with no reason, he hauled himself through the runners in front of him – but if it inspired him to this, who cares? He had so much left at the end; “USA ON TOP!” he shouts into a camera. Ho hum.ShareCole Harker of USA wins the men's 5000m in 12.58.30Redemption! Isaac Kimeli of Belgium takes silver and Jimmy Gressier of France, the 10,000m champ, nabs bronze.ShareHarker has timed this to perfection!ShareMehary is sprinting now, Kimeli of Belgium next, and Harker is looking strong coming around the bend!ShareUpdated at 07.02 EDTIngenrigtsen moves to the front! I don’t think anyone expected that, the defending champ clearly not in his best racing shape after coming back from an Achilles injury. But he probably knows he can’t stretch it out as he would ordinarily, the others go with him, and with 700m to go, almost anyone can win. This is going be a kicking contest, and what we’re seeing a fair bit in championships is someone surprising coming on strong in the final 50m. At the bell, Mehary leads from Kimeli and Gressier, the 10000m champ, is also in the mix!ShareThe pace increases again, Gebrhiwet still leading and looking comfy, as Fisher moves alongside and past. Mills is miles off the back now, I’m not sure why – the pace is quick but not that quick – and through 3000m, there are 14 in the main group, all with a chance of something.ShareNow Gebrhiwet hits the front as we near the halfway stage, Fisher and You0ng behind, then Mehary of Ethiopia; Mills is miles off, five metres behind Ingebrigtsen.ShareAt 1870m, Young leads from Gebrhiwet, the Americans taking it in turns to lead as the pace slows a little.ShareBack with the women’s high jump, they’re up to 1.97 with Olyslagers and Mahuchikh already over.ShareNow Fisher, Young and Gebrhiwet of Ethiopia inject some pace, briefly escaping before the pack catch up; George Mills of GB is at the back, behind Ingebrigtsen; 1200m or so gone.ShareCole Hocker, America’s Olympic 1500m champ, disqualifed from that event here for schlepping himself between the men boxing him, leads. Behind him is Fisher, then Robinson of Australia and Young, also of USA.ShareI really wish I could spend the next hour deconstructing an absolute epic, but for reasons of telly, I imagine – and perhaps perceived attention-spans too – the races come so quickly we’ve no time to reflect nor build up. There are worse ills – it’s hard to whinge when there’s a men’s 5000m final just starting – but another 15 minutes of interviews and analysis is the least atyletes and viewers deserve.ShareWatching the finish again, I guess if Hodgkinson goes a little later, she might see it out, but Odira ran a perfect race and actually had plenty left at the end. An amazing performance to seize a brilliant race – the top three all run under 1.55 – and I can’t wait to watch them go at it again, all the more so once Werro has had another winter strengthening.ShareHunter Bell, meanwhile, ran her race and diddled her mate on the line, almost thrusting an arm across her to make sure she hauled herself over the line first. She and Hodgkinson are hugging, which is lovely to see; both of them look chuffed with how it shook out, and we might just be seeing the start of something. If Odira can run that time in a final, she’s not going away.ShareIn the end, Hodgkinson didn’t quite have the speed endurance to see it out – she’s been out a year after all. Odira, who no one knew could run this fast, waited and waited, having not blown herself out keeping up with the pace, and that was a majestic performance.ShareLilian Odira of Kenya wins the women's 80om in a championship record of 1.54.62Georgia Hunter Bell takes silver and Keely Hodgkinson bronze!ShareHodgkinson stretches them out, Hunter Bell is second, and into the home straight here comes Odira of Kenya! She’s going to win!ShareMorra still leads at the bell, it’s still quick, and Hodgkinson is still on the shoulder, Hunter Bell and Werro still nicely placed, but HERE COMES KEELY!ShareUpdated at 06.44 EDTMorra leads, Hodgkinson tucks in behind and it’s quick for the first 200…ShareMary Moraa of Kenya looks confident in lane two – she’ll have to get off sharply to avoid being boxed, AND OFF WE GO!ShareThe athletes are on the line, pacing, waiting for the joyous release of public suffering. This is going to be immense, and it’s very, very nearly time,ShareNow Hodgkinson looks nervous and in the studio, her coach says she wants a fast race, adding that, as we thought, Hunter Bell won’t go with her if she puts it in early, but won’t get too far away.Share“Worth a mention of the Berlin Marathon if you are covering athletics I think,” writes Ben Tuff. “Unless it is London, we seem to so under-appreciate these epic events. No WR today because of the heat but Sawe won it at a canter. Great to see Akasaki in second, albeit four mins back. Wanjiru was a long way off her WR but much closer race for the women.Also, some crazy people have been running around Battersea track in the Self Transcendence 24-hour Track Race for the last 23 hours and 42mins. The leader, Julien Cazorta, has completed 234km so far…”Goodness me, that is absurd. And the men’s marathon final in this competition – judged by photo-finish – was one of most mind-boggling things I’ve seen this year.ShareAha, we’re with the women’s high jump now, Olyslagers of Australia clearing 1.93, first go and by miles; Ukraine’s Mahuchikh does likewise, so too Patterson, also of Australia. Those are the three favourites, but we’ll see how it goes.ShareWe’re 12 minutes away…ShareI guess she’s got the pressure of expectation, but the way she comes across, that’s likely to inspire her. I’d expect her to hit the front early, turn up the pace, and continue to so do. I imagine Werro goes with her, while Hunter Bell looks to leave it a little later to try and guarantee a medal, rather than unload the suitcase seeking gold to potentially end up with nowt.ShareThere’s so much confidence about Hodgkinson and rightly so. To come back last month after a full year off and to set the fastest time in the world this year is a serious statement. If the distance was 1500m, I’d wonder if one of the others could foil her tactically by slowing it down and out-kicking, or running the finish out of her somehow, but over two laps, I’m just not quite sure what you do to stop her running her fastest race and winning.ShareWe’ve yet to be shown any women’s high jump, but Morgan Lake, the first British woman to hit 2.00m, has a dart at a medal. At 28, she’s still improving on her PB, and her career might just be peaking.ShareIt must take so much to coach Keely to beat Georgia and Georgia to beat Keely. I think, if Keely runs well, she’s close to unbeatable because she’s not far off the world record – before she got injured, she’d planned a hack at it – and over just two laps, there’s not much scope for things to go wrong tactically. If she’s got her PB in here, she can just run it in the knowledge it’ll probably be too hot for the rest.ShareIt must seriously try the patience, waiting a whole meet to compete. And indeed, as I type, Jenny Meadows, Hodgkinson and Hunter Bell’s coach, says “I need this 800m to be out of my life”. I think we can be certain BBC will be filming her during the race and I feel for her; I’ve a mate who’s a tennis coach, and he haaaaates it when his two charges face each other.ShareOur programmeSharePreambleこんにちは – kon’nichiwa – and welcome to the World Athletics Championships – night nine!I’m afraid we’re here: after this, it’s over. But what a way to go out!We begin with the women’s high jump and what should be a really entertaining tussle between Nicola Olyslagers, the best in the world this year – so far – and Yeroslava Mahuchikh, the Olympic champion and world record-holder.And what a race comes next! Keely Hodgkinson, the Olympic 800m champion, went a year without racing after winning in Paris, resting then injured. But she’s looked pretty useful in qualifying, knows she can deliver when the pressure is at its most revolting, and has run faster than anyone in the field, ever and also this year; she’s the favourite for a reason.However there are howevers, one of which comes in the shape of her teammate and roommate, Georgia Hunter Bell. Having dropped down from the 1500, in which she won Olympic bronze, she doesn’t have Hodgkinson’s raw speed, but her speed endurance might just compensate, and we can be sure that so keen a tactician will have a plan.Meantime, looking to supplant both is Audrey Werro, a 21-year-old Swiss still exploring the extent of her talent. It might be one championship too soon for her to take gold, but it might also be the time she announces herself to the world.After that comes the men’s 5000m, a wide-open scuffle with Grant Fisher its most likely winner. Jakub Ingebrigtsen, undercooked in the 1500m, also didn’t impress in qualifying at this distance, with the various others in the shake-up too numerous to list here. Or, in other words, this should be a lot of fun with a potentially surprising winner.Next up is the men’s discuss final, after which come our relay finals and the poor old decathletes dragging their exhausted carcasses through three-and-three-quarter laps of the track, because what else would no one want to do after nine events in two days.Here we go!Share
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