
Keely Hodgkinson smashes 23-year meeting record to win Diamond League 800m in final race before World Championships
Keely Hodgkinson continued her remarkable return from injury as she smashed a 23-year-old meeting record in her last race before the World Championships.
The Olympic champion destroyed the rest of the 800 metres field at Wednesday night's Diamond League event in the Swiss city of Lausanne, winning in a rapid 1min 55.69sec despite the wet conditions.
Hodgkinson's time bettered the previous Lausanne best of 1:56.25 set by Maria Mutola in 2002.
And it was the second fastest time in the world this year – behind only the 1:54.74 she ran in Silesia, Poland on Saturday in her first race since striking gold in Paris last summer.
'It was a shame about the weather, but I was really happy to run that in those conditions,' admitted a drenched Hodgkinson.
The 23-year-old finished more than a second and a half clear of home favourite Audrey Werro, while her British team-mate and training partner Georgia Hunter Bell was third in 1:57.55.
Keely Hodgkinson claimed victory in her last race before the World Championships
The British star destroyed the rest of the 800 metres field to smash the meeting record
Hodgkinson will now not race again until the World Championships in Tokyo, which start on September 13.
But she will head to Japan as huge favourite for gold, following silvers at the previous editions of the event in 2022 and 2023.
Hodgkinson's runs in Silesia and Lausanne were respectively the second and fourth fastest of her career.
And they have come despite an injury-enforced 376-day absence from competition, having torn both her hamstrings this year.
'Things have gone really well,' added Hodgkinson about her return. 'The body's a lot stronger. All I've done is train all year, so I'm definitely in a really good place physically.'
One of Hodgkinson's main rivals in Tokyo is likely to be Hunter Bell, who was disappointed with her third-place finish last night in Lausanne.
'I wanted a bit faster on the time,' said the Olympic 1500m bronze medallist, who trains with Hodgkinson in Manchester. 'I really want to run 1:55 this year and I think I am capable. It was a little bit cold and wet, but we are from England, so we cannot really complain.'
Meanwhile, British sprint stars Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita finished fifth and seventh respectively in a women's 200m won by American Brittany Brown.
Zharnel Hughes was fifth in the men's 100m in 10.09sec, with Jamaican Oblique Seville producing the performance of the night to win in 9.87sec, ahead of Olympic champion Noah Lyles in 10.02sec.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
29 minutes ago
- Sky News
Why Germany's top football league is turning to this man
The growing popularity and reach of the Premier League globally is leaving rival European football competitions struggling to compete. Not only to find an audience, but to find outlets to even show the matches. So German football had to think differently - going to where Gen Z is engaging with football through content creators. And that's why tonight, Harry Kane's Bayern Munich will begin their defence of the Bundesliga title live to 1.4 million subscribers on the That's Football channel on YouTube. It's run by Mark Goldbridge, known for passionate but often provocative, punchy commentary about players on streams going viral. His brand was built by being filmed reacting to watching Manchester United matches. "People need to appreciate that we have a certain content style, and that's very, very popular," Goldbridge told Sky News. "That is an area that needs to be catered [to] and that's why, without the rights, we've had such big, big audiences." Goldbridge revealed he isn't paying to show his 20 Friday night matches this season - reinforcing how the Bundesliga struggled to find a buyer in Britain. Sky Sports previously had a four-year rights deal to exclusively show those German matches here, but will now only show the prestige Saturday evening slot live. European leagues are finding it increasingly difficult in this market to sell their rights because domestic football is so dominant and appealing. The focus of football budgets is on domestic games for Sky as well as Discovery-owned TNT Sports, which also focuses its European football coverage on men's continental competitions, including the Champions League. More Premier League matches will be shown live than ever before - with at least 215 on Sky, the parent company of Sky News, and others on TNT. Sky Sports also has live men's rights to the English Football League and Scottish matches, as well as sharing the Women's Super League with the BBC. The Bundesliga is also making the games broadcast by Goldbridge's channel available to the BBC to stream online. They will further be on The Overlap, a YouTube channel part-owned by Gary Neville. 'A progressive step' Bundesliga International CEO Peer Naubert said: "Our approach is as diverse as our supporters: by combining established broadcasters with digital platforms and content creators, we are taking a progressive step in how top-level football can be experienced. "This multi-layered strategy allows us to connect with more audiences across the UK and Ireland, giving every supporter the chance to engage … in the way that suits them best." While the former England and Manchester United player is a star pundit on Sky, he could also be seen as a rival to the Comcast-owned broadcaster by attracting fans to newer outlets of his channel. Goldbridge doesn't see himself as a rival yet to long-established broadcasters. "We're not looking to replace what you can find on Sky or the BBC or anything like that," he said. "This is a community that will be live with us, watching the Bundesliga, learning about it. "And if I get a pronunciation wrong, or I don't know about a player, then I've got my community there to back me up. I don't profess to know everything." 'This is the future' But he can be relatable to audiences, with more than two million subscribing to his The United Stand channel, earning him millions of pounds over the last decade. "We've been there growing in the background and I think certain media outlets have ignored that, maybe hoping it would go away," he said. "I certainly think synergy and collaboration need to happen more because there are things in the mainstream that I don't like and there will be people out there that really don't like the way we watch football, but a lot of people do. "And it's about offering that choice to people and there are different ways people listen to football on the radio, people watch it with a commentator, some people turn the audio off completely, some people watch things like this (watch-a-long).


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Inside the West Ham camp: What the dressing room was REALLY like following Sunderland defeat, the area Graham Potter needs to improve – plus latest on transfer targets
Graham Potter was on the offensive as soon as he stepped through the door. 'Must have been a bad result at the weekend,' he remarked as he turned to face a rare packed media room at Rush Green. He could say that again.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Sam Kerr fans go berserk over Matildas star's HUGE news
Matildas star Sam Kerr has insisted there's no reason why she can't get back to her prolific goal-scoring best as she reveals she's on the verge of her long-awaited playing return with Chelsea. Kerr hasn't played for club or country since tearing her ACL on a Chelsea training camp in January 2024. Her rehabilitation has had setbacks, including requiring further surgery earlier this year, while she also endured a high-profile court case in February. There is still no fixed date for her return but Kerr is now back training with her teammates, who have been on a training camp in the Netherlands. Australia's greatest goalscorer, who has enjoyed a trophy-laden six years at Chelsea, backed herself in to deliver when she returns for her club. 'My contribution is goals; it's as simple as that,' Kerr told Chelsea's website. 'For the last, however many years, I've been within the top goalscorers, if not the top goalscorer in the team, and that's where I want to come back to, I've got high expectations of myself. 'I have a lot of confidence in my ability, so the contribution for me is straightforward. It's goals. That's what I'm here to do, and that's what I normally do, so there's no reason why I can't do it again.' Kerr has relished her return to more regular programming at Chelsea, who open their season against Manchester City at Stamford Bridge on September 5, after her horror injury run. 'During an injury, you're alone a lot,' Kerr said. 'So it's good to be back with the girls, just doing the same training sessions as them rather than solitary rehab sessions. 'It's nice to be back with the girls, back on the pitch, and yeah, I'm excited. I'm most looking forward to being out there, scoring goals and having fun.' Soccer fans couldn't contain their joy over the update. 'LFG!!!!!!' one wrote on X. 'This year will be next level!' added another. 'Coming for that golden boot,' wrote another fan, referring to the award for the world's best player. 'The moment she steps back onto the pitch will be glorious,' another commenter wrote. Kerr's enthusiasm will be welcome news for Matildas coach Joe Montemurro, who hopes to have her back firing ahead of next year's Asian Cup, along with Mary Fowler, who recently started running as she attempts to return from her own ACL tear. Chelsea will be especially keen to have her back in their attacking fold, with England dynamo Lauren James to miss the start of the season through an ankle injury suffered in the Women's Euros final win over Spain. Kerr, who has been joined by Matildas teammate Ellie Carpenter at Chelsea, is also keen to play under manager Sonia Bompastor for the first time. 'Sonia's very demanding as a manager,' she said. 'I've only been back in training for a couple of weeks with her, but I enjoy working under her and Cami (assistant coach Camille Abily), they're great.