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France 24
4 days ago
- Sport
- France 24
Warholm in confident swagger towards Tokyo worlds
The Norwegian stormed the 400m hurdles in Saturday's meet in the Polish city of Chorzow in an astonishing 46.28 seconds. It was the third fastest time ever run over the distance, topped only by Warholm's own world record of 45.94sec and American Rai Benjamin's 46.19sec. Both of those times were set when the Norwegian won an iconic gold ahead of the American at the Covid-delayed Tokyo Olympics in 2021. Until Warholm broke the world record in that run, nobody had run the 400m hurdles faster than American Kevin Young in three decades. Four years on, Young's once unbeatable 46.78 is only the 24th-fastest time in history. In the years since, Warholm, Benjamin and Brazilian Alison Dos Santos have proceeded to redefine the gruelling event. The trio has pushed each other to ever greater heights, sharing out the global accolades between them. Warholm now owns nine of the top 23 times faster than Young's 1992 best. Benjamin, who succeded Warholm as Olympic champion at last year's Paris Games, also has nine and 2022 world gold medallist Dos Santos five. 'Great rhythm' "I had great rhythm and speed throughout," Warholm said of his race in Chorzow. "The time of 46.28 was even better than I expected. I knew I could do it. "I mean, I'm in that shape, but to get out there and actually do it. It's just something that has to come. "I'm very happy and proud that I was able to push those kind of times." Warholm chose to race both Diamond League meets in China before setting a new world best in the 300m hurdles on his home track in Oslo and then taking a break from competition. "I still think that my race in the Oslo Diamond League, the 300m hurdles world record is my best race this year," he said. Training, Warholm added, had been based on building speed and consistency over the last 100 metres. "Now I think we built the best version of myself," he said in broadside to Benjamin and Dos Santos ahead of the Diamond League finals later this month in Zurich, swiftly followed by the Tokyo worlds. "It's all a part of the plan. And I think people should never count us out. "I think we were very smart, me and my coach, and we always have plans, so I'm not as surprised by this time as everybody else." Warholm will travel from Zurich straight to Japan for a final training camp there. "I feel like we have a really good plan now, but my target now is that I've trained a lot, so I'm really confident that we did the work, and now it's just to build the shape towards Tokyo," he said. "I knew that I was very fast in the training camps that I did. It shows that I am on the right way.


The Guardian
4 days ago
- Sport
- The Guardian
Noah Lyles pipped by Kishane Thompson in first 100m head-to-head since Paris Olympics
Jamaica's Kishane Thompson exacted a measure of revenge by beating Olympic champion Noah Lyles over 100m at the Silesia Diamond League meet on Saturday. It was the first time the two sprinters have met since Lyles was awarded Olympic gold in Paris a year ago, just five-thousandths of a second ahead of Thompson. The fast-starting Jamaican timed a joint meet record of 9.87sec for victory in the Polish city of Chorzow, with Lyles second in 9.90sec. Another American, Kenny Bednarek, rounded out the podium in 9.96sec. 'It felt alright. My job is to get the job done,' said Thompson. The Jamaican, who missed the cut for the 2023 world championships in Budapest, will be one of the favourites for this year's edition in Tokyo on 13-21 September. But he downplayed the significance of the result. 'Honestly, I compete against myself, no offense to the competition,' he said. Lyles put a positive spin on his second place, saying it was a 'great stepping stone'. 'I needed to see a sub-10,' the American said. 'I needed to see winning, beating people, I took out some really big heads today, people who run 9.7 and 9.8. 'I am getting the confidence. It makes me really excited for not only today, but also for next week and Tokyo.' Lyles was drawn in lane seven, outside Bednarek and inside Christian Coleman, with Thompson in five and South African Akani Simbine to his left. But it was Thompson who stole the march in hot and humid conditions, rocketing out of his blocks to leave the field in his wake for a true gun-to-tape display. Lyles had the joint slowest reaction of the nine-man line-up and looked to be out of even a podium finish from the start before he came through strongly over the closing 20 metres to pinch second place from Bednarek. Thompson's winning time matched the 9.87sec meet record jointly held by Americans Ronnie Baker and Fred Kerley. It did not quite match the world-leading 9.75sec he set at the Jamaican trials in June, a time which puts him sixth on the all-time list.


CBC
4 days ago
- Sport
- CBC
2025 World Athletics Wanda Diamond League: Silesia
Aug 16: Watch all of the exciting track and field action during the latest stop of the 2025 World Athletics Wanda Diamond League season from the Silesian Stadium in Chorzow, Poland.
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Diamond League 2025: Silesia schedule and start times
The Diamond League season rolls on with some of the world's top athletes competing in Chorzow, Poland at the Silesia meet. After nearly a month off, the World Athletics series resumes for a fast and furious finish to the campaign with four stops in the next fortnight culminating with the two-day finals in Zurich on 27 and 28 August. With the World Championships looming ever larger into view, a strong field has been assembled with American sprint stars including Noah Lyles and Sha'Carri Richardson among those on show. Fresh from breaking his own world record (again), Mondo Duplantis will hope to soar once more in the pole vault in a busy field programme. Here's everything you need to know. When is the Silesia Diamond League event? The Silesia Diamond League event, also known as the Kamila Skolimowska Memorial, will take place on Saturday 16 August in Chorzow, Poland. How can I watch it? Viewers in the United Kingdom can watch the action live on BBC Two, with coverage on the channel from 3pm BST. A live stream will be available via the BBC iPlayer and BBC Sport website. Schedule1.05pm Men's Shot put 2.01pm Men's high jump 2.16pm Women's long jump 2.20pm Women's 100m hurdles Heat A 2.29pm Women's 100m hurdles Heat B 2.33pm Men's pole vault 2.40pm Men's 110m hurdles 2.52pm Women's 800m 3.04pm Women's 400m 3.16pm Women's 3000m 3.35pm Women's 100m hurdles final 3.44pm Women's 1500m 3.53pm Men's javelin 3.58pm Men's 100m 4.08pm Women's 400m hurdles 4.18pm Men's 1500m 4.32pm Women's 200m 4.42pm Men's 400m hurdles 4.53pm Women's 100m Full live results can be found here Diamond League 2025 venues 26 April: Xiamen, China 3 May: Shaoxing, China 16 May: Doha, Qatar 25 May: Rabat, Morocco 6 June: Rome, Italy 12 June: Oslo, Norway 15 June: Stockholm, Sweden 20 June: Paris, France 5 July: Eugene, United States 11 July: Monaco 19 July: London, United Kingdom 16 August: Chorzow, Poland 20 August: Lausanne, Switzerland 22 August: Brussels, Belgium 27-28 August: Diamond League finals (Zurich, Switzerland)
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Thompson eclipses Lyles and Hodgkinson makes stellar comeback
Kishane Thompson eclipsed Olympic 100m champion Noah Lyles at the Silesia Diamond League meet on Saturday and Keely Hodgkinson made an impressive comeback over 800m a year since winning gold at the Paris Games. A host of world and Olympic champions headlined by the likes of Karsten Warholm -- with an incredible performance in the 400m hurdles -- Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis, Faith Kipyegon and Femke Bol shone in hot and humid conditions in front of more than 40,000 fans in the Polish city of Chorzow. In their first meeting since Lyles won Olympic gold by just five-thousandths of a second in Paris last year, Thompson made an electric start and led from gun to tape for victory in 9.87sec. "My job is to get the job done," said Thompson. "I enjoyed competition against Noah today... nobody is perfect, but I am working on improving my strengths and improving on my weaknesses. "Paris last year was a big learning factor. I learned it is me against myself." Lyles had to be content with second in 9.90sec as the athletes fine-tune preparations for the September 13-21 world championships in Tokyo. "It makes me really excited for not only today, but also for next week and Tokyo," the American said. "The more I run, the better I am getting. I get more excited each day and it is working. I need to keep competing." There was a timely return for Hodgkinson as the 23-year-old Briton showed no sign of the lingering hamstring problems that had sidelined her for months as she clocked 1min 54.74sec, the fastest in the world this year. "I was just happy to step on the track after more than a year," Hodgkinson said. "I planned to run a fast time because I don't have five races anymore before Tokyo, I only have today and the meeting in Lausanne next week. So it had to be fast and I'm happy that it worked." Kenya's serial world record breaker Kipyegon missed out on the long-standing world record in the women's 3,000m. Six weeks after improving her own world 1,500m record in Eugene, Kipyegon clocked 8:07.04 over the non-Olympic distance, falling just short of the 8:06.11 world record set by China's Wang Junxia in 1993. "I am so happy. I wanted to run a longer distance," Kipyegon said. "It is all about Tokyo now, but Tokyo is a championship race, so anything can happen!" - Blistering Warholm - Warholm looked in astonishing form in the 400m hurdles after a two-month training block at home in Norway, timing a world-leading time of 46.28sec. It was the third fastest time ever run over the distance, topped only by the Norwegian's own world record of 46.28sec and American Rai Benjamin's 46.19sec. "That race was great! I had great rhythm and speed throughout," said Warholm. Dutch star Femke Bol comfortably extended her six-race win streak in the women's 400m hurdles this year with victory in 51.91sec -- another world-leading time. Duplantis, fresh from setting his 13th pole vault world record with 6.29m in Budapest on Tuesday, failed to hit those heights but secured victory in 6.10m, having failed three attempts at 6.20. World leader Melissa Jefferson-Wooden equalled Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce's meet record when she clocked 10.66sec for an impressive victory in the women's 100m. World champion Sha'Carri Richardson could only finish sixth after a troubled few weeks following her arrest for a violent altercation with her partner. Jamaica's two-time world champion Shericka Jackson claimed the honours in the 200m in 22.17sec as she powers back to form. Cordell Tinch left it late, but the in-form American powered past three-time world champion Grant Holloway for a third victory this season in the 110m hurdles in 13.03sec. Olympic champion Masai Russell came out on top of a stacked field in the 100m hurdles in a Diamond League record of 12.19sec ahead of American teammate Tonea Marshall. "This win is very important to me becaue these are the women I'm going to be racing against at the world champs," said Russell. Marileidy Paulino of the Dominican Republic edged Bahrain's Salwa Eid Naser for victory in 49.18sec in the women's 400m and Ethiopia's Gudaf Tsegay outpaced Kenya's Beatrice Chebet for the win in the women's 1500m in 3:50.62. lp/gj