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2019 World Athletics Championships, Qatar - Discussion Thread

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2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

The 2019 World Athletics Championships begin on Friday - with the build-up dominated by issues over the heat and humidity of host city Doha, the low ticket sales and the controversies surrounding sprinter Christian Coleman and the Kenya team.

Great Britain, who held a training camp in Dubai in order to acclimatise, have brought a 73-strong team, with hopes of medals resting with sprinter Dina-Asher Smith, 1500m runner Laura Muir, heptathlete Katarina Johnson-Thompson and the relay teams.

Sprinter Richard Kilty was voted captain by his team-mates and told BBC Sport that they have had the ideal preparation before arriving in Qatar.

"I'm from the North East so I haven't coped with the weather as well as the others," joked the 30-year-old from Teesside, who is expected to compete in the men's 4x100m relay.

"It's humid and hot in this part of the world, so we have had to train in the evening. The first few days were tough but we're getting used to it now.

"They'll have air conditioning when we're competing, so that's a blessing."

The cooling technology inside Doha's refurbished Khalifa Stadium consists of a number of cylindrical vents, around the interior perimeter, blasting out cool air.

Recently re-elected IAAF president Sebastian Coe said: "It's jaw-dropping. I've sat in the stadium, it's been 38-40C outside and it's 23 in here.

"The technology for the athletes is going to be first class. The indoor warm-up facilities are air-conditioned, the call areas also. Under our auspices in Doha, we have the technology in the stadium where the athletes are probably going to be competing in perfect conditions."

However, the marathon runners and race walkers - competing away from the stadium - will not be as fortunate. Their events will take place late in the evening, with the marathons set to start a minute before midnight, when it will be slightly cooler.

Even so, the temperature is still expected to be around the low 30Cs; British runner Charlotte Purdue has prepared by training at the St Mary's University physiology laboratory in London, which recreated the heat and humidity.

"After the first session I thought I wouldn't be able to cope, but I ended up quite liking it," she said before Friday's first medal race.

"The course is flat, so it could be quite fast, although if it wasn't so hot then it'd be a rapid course."

Britain's Tish Jones will miss the marathon with injury, British Athletics announced on Friday.

The 34-year-old, who earned an automatic place in Doha after running a personal best in the London marathon in April, said she was "devastated" to have to pull out of the race.

"I wish my team-mate Charlotte Purdue and all of the other British athletes competing a wonderful and successful Championships," she added.

Meanwhile, the championships' organising chief Dahlan Al Hamad said on Thursday ticket sales had improved following news that only 50,000 had been sold for the entire 10 days, with the stadium's capacity at 40,000.

British Athletics' performance director Neil Black has not made public a target for the team, but it is widely expected the individual medals will come from Asher-Smith, Muir and Johnson-Thompson.

Jeanette Kwakye, the British world indoor 60m silver medallist, said that she expects Asher-Smith to win three medals in Doha.

"I don't see why she can't finish on the podium in both the 100m and 200m, and then the 4x100m relay," said Kwakye, who will be trackside for BBC Sport.

"She was amazing in winning the double at the Europeans last year, but she won those golds in world-class times which would have made her rivals sit up and take notice."

Johnson-Thompson faces Belgium's Nafissatou Thiam of Belgium, her great rival, as she bids to win her first outdoor medal at this level.

Toni Minichiello, who coached British world and Olympic champion Jessica Ennis-Hill, said it will be "cat and mouse" between the two athletes throughout the two days of competition.

"It's all about if Thiam has enough of a buffer after the javelin, the penultimate event, because Kat will be superior in the final 800m event," he told BBC Sport.

Muir is also seeking her first major world outdoor medal, having won the European 1500m last year.

However, she has not raced since July because of a calf problem, and prepared for these championships in South Africa instead of at the Dubai holding camp.

Fellow Scottish athlete Guy Learmonth told BBC Scotland: "I don't believe Laura would be there if she wasn't fit and if she didn't think she could take a medal."

American Christian Coleman won silver at the World Championships in London in 2017
Elsewhere, there will be extra focus on USA's Coleman and athletics super-power Kenya.

Coleman, 23, won 100m silver two years ago in London and is expected to duel with team-mate Noah Lyles for the right to be hailed as the new king of sprinting following Usain Bolt's retirement.

However, the American arrives in Doha having avoided punishment for three missed doping tests.

The fastest man over 100m this year will be concentrating on a sprint double but he will have to produce an incredible display to take a likely 200m gold from Lyles, who clocked 19.50 seconds in July - less than half a second slower than Bolt's world record.

As for Kenya's team, they compete after allegations made by a German broadcaster of doping by some of their athletes. The Athletics Integrity Unit is studying the documentary in which the claims were made.

Athletics Kenya said it "cannot deny or confirm the credibility or otherwise of the allegations made and circulated in the media" because of an "absence of any evidence or further information".

The 2019 World Athletics Championships begin on Friday - with the build-up dominated by issues over the heat and humidity of host city Doha, the low ticket sales and the controversies surrounding sprinter Christian Coleman and the Kenya team.

Great Britain, who held a training camp in Dubai in order to acclimatise, have brought a 73-strong team, with hopes of medals resting with sprinter Dina-Asher Smith, 1500m runner Laura Muir, heptathlete Katarina Johnson-Thompson and the relay teams.

Sprinter Richard Kilty was voted captain by his team-mates and told BBC Sport that they have had the ideal preparation before arriving in Qatar.

"I'm from the North East so I haven't coped with the weather as well as the others," joked the 30-year-old from Teesside, who is expected to compete in the men's 4x100m relay.

"It's humid and hot in this part of the world, so we have had to train in the evening. The first few days were tough but we're getting used to it now.

"They'll have air conditioning when we're competing, so that's a blessing."

The cooling technology inside Doha's refurbished Khalifa Stadium consists of a number of cylindrical vents, around the interior perimeter, blasting out cool air.

Recently re-elected IAAF president Sebastian Coe said: "It's jaw-dropping. I've sat in the stadium, it's been 38-40C outside and it's 23 in here.

"The technology for the athletes is going to be first class. The indoor warm-up facilities are air-conditioned, the call areas also. Under our auspices in Doha, we have the technology in the stadium where the athletes are probably going to be competing in perfect conditions."

However, the marathon runners and race walkers - competing away from the stadium - will not be as fortunate. Their events will take place late in the evening, with the marathons set to start a minute before midnight, when it will be slightly cooler.

Even so, the temperature is still expected to be around the low 30Cs; British runner Charlotte Purdue has prepared by training at the St Mary's University physiology laboratory in London, which recreated the heat and humidity.

"After the first session I thought I wouldn't be able to cope, but I ended up quite liking it," she said before Friday's first medal race.

"The course is flat, so it could be quite fast, although if it wasn't so hot then it'd be a rapid course."

Britain's Tish Jones will miss the marathon with injury, British Athletics announced on Friday.

The 34-year-old, who earned an automatic place in Doha after running a personal best in the London marathon in April, said she was "devastated" to have to pull out of the race.

"I wish my team-mate Charlotte Purdue and all of the other British athletes competing a wonderful and successful Championships," she added.

Meanwhile, the championships' organising chief Dahlan Al Hamad said on Thursday ticket sales had improved following news that only 50,000 had been sold for the entire 10 days, with the stadium's capacity at 40,000.

British Athletics' performance director Neil Black has not made public a target for the team, but it is widely expected the individual medals will come from Asher-Smith, Muir and Johnson-Thompson.

Jeanette Kwakye, the British world indoor 60m silver medallist, said that she expects Asher-Smith to win three medals in Doha.

"I don't see why she can't finish on the podium in both the 100m and 200m, and then the 4x100m relay," said Kwakye, who will be trackside for BBC Sport.

"She was amazing in winning the double at the Europeans last year, but she won those golds in world-class times which would have made her rivals sit up and take notice."


Johnson-Thompson faces Belgium's Nafissatou Thiam of Belgium, her great rival, as she bids to win her first outdoor medal at this level.

Toni Minichiello, who coached British world and Olympic champion Jessica Ennis-Hill, said it will be "cat and mouse" between the two athletes throughout the two days of competition.

"It's all about if Thiam has enough of a buffer after the javelin, the penultimate event, because Kat will be superior in the final 800m event," he told BBC Sport.

Muir is also seeking her first major world outdoor medal, having won the European 1500m last year.

However, she has not raced since July because of a calf problem, and prepared for these championships in South Africa instead of at the Dubai holding camp.

Fellow Scottish athlete Guy Learmonth told BBC Scotland: "I don't believe Laura would be there if she wasn't fit and if she didn't think she could take a medal."

Elsewhere, there will be extra focus on USA's Coleman and athletics super-power Kenya.

Coleman, 23, won 100m silver two years ago in London and is expected to duel with team-mate Noah Lyles for the right to be hailed as the new king of sprinting following Usain Bolt's retirement.

However, the American arrives in Doha having avoided punishment for three missed doping tests.

The fastest man over 100m this year will be concentrating on a sprint double but he will have to produce an incredible display to take a likely 200m gold from Lyles, who clocked 19.50 seconds in July - less than half a second slower than Bolt's world record.

As for Kenya's team, they compete after allegations made by a German broadcaster of doping by some of their athletes. The Athletics Integrity Unit is studying the documentary in which the claims were made.

Athletics Kenya said it "cannot deny or confirm the credibility or otherwise of the allegations made and circulated in the media" because of an "absence of any evidence or further information".
 
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World Athletics Championships: Lynsey Sharp out in 800m first round

Briton Lynsey Sharp was left is disbelief as she went out of the women's 800m on the opening day of the World Athletics Championships.

Sharp, ranked fourth in the world of those competing in Doha, ran out of steam in the home straight as she finished fourth in her heat.

The 29-year-old Scot's time of two minutes 03.57 seconds was not good enough for a fastest losers' spot.

Shelayna Oskan-Clarke and Alexandra Bell progressed to the semi-finals.

With South Africa's Olympic and world champion Caster Semenya absent, along with fellow Rio 2016 medallists Francine Niyonsaba of Burundi and Margaret Wambui of Kenya, Sharp was tipped to challenge for a medal in Monday's final.

Semenya is not competing in Doha after governing body the IAAF introduced a rule that athletes with differences of sexual development (DSD) must either take testosterone-reducing medication in order to compete in track events from 400m to the mile or change to another distance.

Despite being among the pack in the home straight, Sharp failed to find the burst of speed needed to finish in a top-three spot, which would have earned automatic qualification.

She sat on the track in shock watching the replay of the final stages of her heat.

World indoor bronze medallist Oskan-Clarke produced a brilliant sprint to take second in her heat while fellow Briton Bell, fifth at the 2018 Commonwealth Games, battled her way to third.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/athletics/49856494
 
Indian runner Pillyalil just ran well in the 400 metres hurdles to finish 3rd and qualify for the next round.
 
Christian Coleman, Justin Gatlin, Zharnel Hughes & Adam Gemili into men's 100m semi-finals
GB's Lynsey Sharp out in women's 800m first round
Shelayna Oskan-Clarke & Alexandra Bell reach 800m semi-finals
Holly Bradshaw qualifies for women's pole vault final
Morgan Lake fails to reach women's high jump final
 
2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

Kenya's Ruth Chepngetich won the women's marathon at the World Championships as 28 of the 68 starters withdrew in gruelling conditions in Doha.

In a race that started at midnight local time, Briton Charlotte Purdue was among the athletes to pull out in temperatures of 32C and with humidity reaching over 70%.

Organisers decided to go ahead with the event in its scheduled slot despite fears that the conditions might not be conducive for marathon running.

Ethiopia's marathon coach Haji Adillo Roba witnessed his trio of athletes stop, including Tokyo Marathon winner Ruti Aga.

"We never would have run a marathon in these conditions in our own country," he told BBC Sport during the race.

"I'll be interested to see how many finish."

Chepngetich, 23, took the first gold of the championships in two hours 32 minutes 43 seconds with athletes attempting to complete six 7km loops of the Corniche in the Qatar capital.

Bahrain's defending champion Ruth Chelimo, 39, was second in 2:33.46 and Commonwealth champion Helalia Johannes of Namibia, also 39, took bronze in 2:34.15.

Purdue, the third fastest British female marathon runner in history, withdrew after the start of the third loop. Compatriot Tish Jones pulled out before the race with a leg injury.

Four athletes are driven to the finish area in a kart after pulling out of the women's marathon
The heat and humidity took its toll with Ethiopia's Ruti Aga among four athletes driven to the finish area in a kart after pulling out
Chepngetich was among a small group that included Chelimo, two-time champion Edna Kiplagat, Kenya's Visiline Chepkesho and Johannes that broke clear from the rest as early as the fifth kilometre.

Israel's European champion Lonah Chemtai Salpeter was among the pack but dropped out as the quartet stretched away from her.

It became a two-horse race between Chepngetich and Chelimo before the eventual winner surged again, this time decisively, to secure her first major championships medal.

"I was not expecting to be a medallist in such tough conditions," Chelimo told AFP.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49860159
 
Read somewhere that a lot of the people who ran the marathon gave up midways due to the hot climate in Doha.
 
World champion decathlete Kevin Mayer says holding the World Athletics Championships in Doha is a "disaster".

The championships started on Friday but 28 runners dropped out of the women's marathon because of 32C temperatures even though it was held at midnight.

Crowds in the Khalifa International Stadium have so far been sparse.

"We can all see it's a disaster, there is no-one in the stands, and the heat has not been adapted at all," the French world record holder, 27, said.

"There have already been nearly 30 withdrawals in the women's marathon. It's sad.

"We have to leave reason aside and more concentrate on the passion, because if not I would have boycotted these championships.

"We haven't really prioritised athletes when organising the championships here. It makes it difficult."

The women's marathon was run in 70% humidity as 28 runners dropped out, including Britain's Charlotte Purdue, from a starting field of 68.

Although track and field athletes will be aided by an air-conditioned stadium, which IAAF president Sebastian Coe said reduces the temperature to 23C, the marathon and walking races are held outside.

The men's and women's 50km walk are set to begin at 23:30 local time on Saturday.

Before the women's marathon was held, athletics' governing body the IAAF issued a statement saying it had "done everything possible to minimise the heat-related risks" and that the race would be "run at an acceptable level of health risk".

France's Yohann Diniz will be attempting to retain his world title in the 50km walk but said: "I am extremely upset. If we were in the stadium we would have normal conditions, but outside they have placed us in a furnace, which is just not possible.

"They are making us guinea pigs."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49863734
 
US sprinter Christian Coleman wins men's 100m gold in 9.76 secs

Jamaican Tajay Gayle triumphs in men's long jump final

Dutch runner Sifan Hassan wins women's 10,000m

Hammer gold for USA's DeAnna Price

That was a superb run by Coleman, controlled the race from start to finish.
 
Portugal's Joao Vieira defied "hell" in the 50km walk in Doha to become the oldest man to win a medal in World Championship history.

The 43-year-old took silver behind Japan's Yusuke Suzuki as the heat continued to hamper athletes.

"For me, it was hell - very, very hot," Vieira said. "How did I cope? Just a lot of ice and cold water."

On Friday, 28 runners withdrew from the women's marathon because of 32C temperatures despite a midnight start.

Vieira criticised the 23:30 start time after finishing the race in four hours four minutes 59 seconds.

"That's the time to leave a nightclub. I usually go to sleep at 10 o'clock in the evening," said Vieira, who added to the 20km bronze medal he won at the 2013 World Championships in Moscow.

French world champion decathlete Kevin Mayer has said that holding the event in Qatar was a "disaster" for athletes because of the heat and humidity.

Track and field athletes will be aided by an air-conditioned stadium which reduces the temperature to 23C, but the marathon and walking races are held outside the arena.

Following criticism, athletics world governing body IAAF said it took extra precautions for the 50km walking races by increasing the number of refreshment points and the presence of medical staff.

In the men's race, 14 walkers dropped out from a field of 46 as Canada's Evan Dunfee took bronze.

Four were disqualified, including Britain's Cameron Corbishley and Dominic King.

Six of 24 competitors did not finish the women's 50km race, which started at the same time.

China's Liang Rui won gold in 4: 23:26 ahead of compatriot Li Maocuo and Italian Eleonora Anna Giorgi.

Organisers said they moved the start time of the women's 20km race walk on Sunday from 23:30 to 23:59 to "attain the best possible conditions for athletes".

The temperature at midnight is expected to be 28C.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49868920
 
Christian Coleman defended himself against criticism over his three missed doping tests after his stunning win in the World Championships 100m final.

The 23-year-old blew away his rivals to win his first major title in 9.76 seconds - the sixth-fastest time ever.

His win came just weeks after he avoided a ban for missed tests over a technicality.

He said: "It's sad when people say the things they say when they don't really know me."

Dreams of winning gold in Doha appeared more distant in August, when the US Anti-Doping Agency charged Coleman with missing three drugs tests in 12 months.

However, it then withdrew the case after it was proved there had been a filing irregularity regarding the date of the first missed test.

"I have proved myself over the years to be a guy who does everything the right way," added the American, who won silver two years ago.

"All I can do is focus on myself and my family. I came out with a gold medal, I'm blessed."

In the interview with BBC World, he added: "Coming from where we come from, you're not supposed to be here and be a world champion. From Atlanta. People don't make it outside of that bubble, especially being a black man in America."

Coleman will look to complete a sprint double when he begins his challenge for the 200m title on Sunday.

Compatriot Justin Gatlin, who also has a zhaving served two doping bans, produced an exceptional display to take silver in 9.89. His victory at the age of 37 comes 15 years after he made his mark on the world stage with victory in the 100m at the Athens Olympics in 2004.

The veteran said he now wants another crack at Olympic gold.

"It's surreal for me, it's like my career is in reverse," he told BBC World. "I felt like I arrived at the beginning of my career and now I have crossed that finishing line so many times I am just thankful.

"I find motivation from the fans, they still wish me well. I've got a few races left in me. Hopefully I'll be in Tokyo - I don't get a bye for that one so I'll have to run hard."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/amp/athletics/49867141?__twitter_impression=true
 
Dina Asher-Smith became the first British woman to win an individual World Championships sprint medal in 36 years as she claimed silver in the 100m final with Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce taking gold.
It is the 23-year-old's first major global medal outdoors with the 200m to follow, where she is a strong contender for gold.
Fraser-Pryce, 32, powered to 10.71 seconds for her eighth world title while Asher-Smith's 10.83 is a new British record.
Ivory Coast's Marie-Josee Ta Lou took bronze.
 
Ethiopia's Kenenisa Bekele fell two seconds short of the world marathon record as he won in Berlin in two hours one minute 41 seconds.

The former Olympic and world 5,000m and 10,000m champion, 37, missed out on Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge's 2:01:39, set in the same race last year.
Bekele's run is the second fastest marathon in history.

"I am very sorry. I am not lucky. But I still can do this. I don't give up," Bekele said.
Kipchoge was absent as he prepares for his sub-two-hour marathon attempt in Vienna on 12 October.
Bekele, who set his previous best time 2:03:03 at the 2016 Berlin Marathon, was a second ahead of world-record pace at the halfway point.

He slipped to more than a minute behind after 30km of the 26.2-mile (42km) race, and fell narrowly short of Kipchoge's time despite a sprint finish.

Birhanu Legese finished second - 1min 7secs behind Bekele in the third fastest time in history - with Sisay Lemma was a further 48 seconds behind to complete an Ethiopian clean sweep.

Ashete Bekere won the women's race in 2 hours 20:14, beating fellow Ethiopian Mare Dibaba by eight seconds in a sprint finish.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/athletics/49868922
 
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2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

Dina Asher-Smith became the first British woman to win an individual World Championships sprint medal in 36 years as she claimed silver in the 100m final with Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce taking gold.

It is the 23-year-old's first 100m global medal outdoors with the 200m to follow, where she is a strong contender for gold.

Jamaica's Fraser-Pryce, 32, powered to 10.71 seconds in Doha for her eighth world title while Asher-Smith's 10.83 is a new British record.

"I have worked so hard for these championships and hopefully I'll go on to do even bigger things," Asher-Smith told BBC Sport.

"I'm really pleased to come away with a personal best and national record. That is more than you could ever ask for in a world final.

"I was thinking on the line: this is your time to go."

Ivory Coast's Marie-Josee Ta Lou took bronze in 10.90.

British athletics has waited a long time for someone to emulate the achievement of Kathy Cook, who won 200m bronze in the inaugural World Athletics Championships, back in 1983 in Helsinki.

Few showed the potential to do so in the intervening years before Asher-Smith's emergence. The Kent-born athlete was a double European junior gold medallist in 2013, before taking the world junior 100m title the following year.

She grew in stature when she became the first British women to dip under 11 seconds in 2015 before winning the European 100m title in 2016.

Relay medals followed at world and Olympic level before she won three European golds last year.

Expectations grew of what she could now achieve at world and Olympic level, but prior to this competition Asher-Smith told BBC Sport that she avoided making any predictions public - stating that her aims were only shared by those close to her, including her long-time coach John *******.

Her tunnel vision and mental fortitude took her to a different level this season, and she has now been rewarded with world 100m silver.

Asher-Smith is now aiming to win a further two medals - in the 200m and 4x100m relay.

"I think we've all got to dare to dream, simply because it's the championships," Asher-Smith said of her 200m hopes, with the heats beginning on Monday from 15:05 BST.

"I'm going to go to bed, hopefully get some sleep and turn up in the right state of mind for tomorrow."

Fraser Pryce, who carried son Zyon on her lap of honour, told BBC Sport: "To be standing here as world champion again after having my baby, I am elated.

"Having my son and coming back, performing the way I did, I hope I can give inspiration to all the women starting a family or thinking of starting a family. You can do anything."

In the end it was a straight duel between Fraser-Pryce and Asher-Smith, who had defeated the Jamaican in the Brussels Diamond League final earlier in September.

The Briton came to Doha having recorded times under 11 seconds in every 100m race she had run this season - six in total - bar the heats of the British Championships. She maintained that consistency here, clocking 10.96 in Saturday's heats and then 10.87 in her semi-final two hours before Sunday's final.

But Fraser-Pryce looked that little bit sharper. The 32-year-old, whose first major global gold was the Beijing 2008 Olympic 100m title, set the fastest time in a World Championships heat with 10.80 before cruising to 10.81 in her semi-final.

In the final, Asher-Smith gave all she could but it was not enough to overhaul one of world sprinting's all-time greats.

However, the fillip for Asher-Smith is that Fraser-Pryce is not on the startlist for the 200m while Bahamian Shaunae Miller-Uibo, who easily beat the Briton in the Birmingham Diamond League, will only race in the 400m because of the schedule.

The Briton is ranked first in the event this season, although both Nigeria's Blessing Okagbare and Jamaica's Olympic champion Elaine Thompson have run faster times.

By the time the 100m final took place at 23:20 local time, the stadium was virtually deserted and Fraser-Pryce, Asher-Smith and Ta Lou had few people for company as they completed their lap of honour.

The poor attendances over the first three days in Doha have been a major talking point and BBC Sport pundit Denise Lewis said on Sunday that athletics' governing body the IAAF "has let our athletes down massively".

She added: "I walked into the stadium tonight, looked around and said, 'is this the World Championships?' We've waited until October to have stands like this. Empty. Absolutely shocking. I think the athletes, they work so hard, they try to peak at the right time for an empty stadium. I just think it's not right.

"I didn't expect it to be this bad. We want to see people. The athletes deserve people, an energy and an atmosphere to thrive on."

The IAAF told BBC Sport that Friday's day-one attendance at the 40,000-capacity Khalifa International Stadium was 11,800 ticket-holders with up to 2,000 guests, while Saturday's crowd was 11,300 plus guests. Sunday's figures were not yet available.

In the women's pole vault final, European bronze medallist Holly Bradshaw narrowly missed out on a first global outdoor medal, finishing fourth with a best clearance of 4.80m - just 1cm below her British record.

She twice failed at 4.85m, and then with a last-ditch attempt at 4.90m.

"I honestly couldn't have given any more. I was gutted that I couldn't get 4.85m because I feel it's within me, but I'm really happy/slash torn. I can't complain, though," Bradshaw, 27, told BBC Sport.

The gold was won by Russian Anzhelika Sidorova, under the Authorised Neutral Athlete flag, with 4.95m. USA's Sandi Morris took silver and 2017 champion Katerina Stefanidi claimed bronze.

Meanwhile, American athletics great Allyson Felix secured her 12th world title as her quartet won the first 4x400m mixed relay final at a World Championships.

The 33-year-old, who only returned to competitive racing earlier in September 10 months after giving birth to her first child by emergency caesarean, ran the second leg as USA won in a world record time of three minutes 09.34 seconds. Jamaica claimed silver and Bahrain took bronze.

Great Britain's team of Rabah Yousif, Zoey Clark, Emily Diamond and Martyn Rooney finished fourth.

World Athletics Championships: USA take gold ahead of Jamaica
In the men's 200m, Britain's sprinters Adam Gemili, Miguel Francis and Zharnel Hughes all advanced from their heats to qualify for Monday's semi-finals.

American Christian Coleman, the 100m champion, withdrew shortly before the heats because he said he was "feeling the strain".

Gemili, 25, won his heat in 20.06 - his fastest time for three years and his fourth quickest ever - and said the display was "a bit of redemption" for narrowly failing to reach the 100m final.

"To mentally park [yesterday] for the moment was difficult, but I've been working a lot on my psychology," said Gemili, who was edged out in a photo-finish on Saturday.

"I wanted to get a good semi-final so hopefully this has guaranteed that. A bit of redemption for yesterday because I feel like a let a lot of people down, which was disappointing for me."

Francis, the fastest Briton this year having run 19.97 in London, and Hughes, fresh from coming sixth in the 100m final, both eased through.

European 100m champion Hughes, who ran a modest 20.24 in finishing second, said: "Last night I didn't get any sleep as I was held up by anti-doping so I fell asleep about 4am this morning and then I had to be up for 8am. I know once I get back to warm-up, get an ice bath, I'll be OK."

The event's outstanding favourite Noah Lyles of the USA, whose 19.50 seconds in Lausanne this year is the fourth fastest ever, was in third gear as he came second in his heat in 20.26.

There will be no British representation in the 800m final with Elliott Giles, Jamie Webb and Kyle Langford all falling short in the semi-finals.

Elsewhere, USA's Christian Taylor won an incredible fourth triple jump title with a fifth-round effort of 17.92m. Compatriot Will Claye was second with 17.74m and there was a first major medal for Burundi's Hugues Fabrice Zango, who clinched bronze with 17.66m - an African record.

China's Liu Hong, who returned from maternity leave in 2018, won her third world women's 20km walk title in one hour 32 minutes 53 seconds.

Compatriots Qieyang Shenjie (1: 33:10) and Yang Liujing (1: 33:17) claimed silver and bronze respectively.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49872732
 
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2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

The IAAF is "disappointed" by the small crowds at the World Championships in Doha but believes athletes are still enjoying a "positive experience", says its chief executive Jon Ridgeon.

Just 13,288 people watched Friday's session at the Khalifa International Stadium and attendances dwindled over the following two days.

Denise Lewis is among several current and former athletes to comment, saying it was "absolutely shocking".

"We want bigger crowds," said Ridgeon.

"Rest assured we are working really hard with the local organising committee to generate bigger crowds."

Speaking on BBC Two, he added: "I think one of the biggest challenges has been, if you look back to a couple of days ago, we did actually fill 65-70% of those available seats, but by the time the big finals came along later in the evening, actually a lot of the audience had gone home because the working day starts early the next morning.

"When you judge a championship, clearly the size of the audience and the atmosphere created is one really important element, but there are other elements as well, and I think we can all agree the athletics has been stunning."

The stadium holds 40,000 people but its capacity was cut to about 21,000 for the championships, which were awarded to Doha in 2014 ahead of Barcelona and Eugene in Oregon, USA.

Qatar was placed under an economic blockade by four of its neighbouring countries in 2017 and Ridgeon believes it has played its part on audience numbers.

"You must remember when this event was awarded six or seven years ago, it was always positioned as a celebration of athletics within the Middle East," he said.

"Clearly, geo-politics has shifted since, there is a blockade of this country from all the neighbouring surrounding countries and that has impacted.

Asked by host Gabby Logan if the IAAF was blaming the small crowds on the blockade, Ridgeon said: "We would like more people here, but you have to accept this is a small country. There are some 700,000 residents here in Doha, and it was always positioned as a celebration of the whole region.

"There would be an awful lot more people here if the blockade was not in place. The blockade is one of the factors."

He added: "I'm not blaming it, but it's one of the factors, but you have to understand the political challenges this country faces right now, which was never envisaged when this meeting was awarded."

In a statement earlier on Monday, the Doha 2019 organising committee said it was confident its "renewed efforts" would encourage more to attend the championships.

It revealed attendance had reached 70% and 67% on the first two days of the event but numbers fell to below 50% on day three, when Britain's Dina Asher-Smith won 100m silver behind Jamaican Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce.

"We are confident that our renewed efforts will encourage the local community to come and witness the stunning performance of the world's best athletes," said a spokesperson.

"The challenge we face with a competition schedule that is geared to support global TV viewership, is that some finals are not starting until the late evening. This impacts on the number of spectators remaining until the end of the session.

"We are confident with our additional communications, we will see more attendees for longer periods."

It added: "The pattern of the attendance so far follows the interests of the local community, with middle and long distance races pulling in the biggest crowds, rather than traditional sprint events.

"Our vision was for a first world championship in the Middle East. An IAAF World Athletics Championship that would welcome the world and connect to new fans. Despite facing unique challenges as hosts, in terms of the political blockade, that ambition remains.

"Whether it is understanding athlete performances in endurance events or stadium design, this championship is benefitting world sport and important progress is being made."


https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49883093
 
2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October
Coverage: Watch live on BBC TV, BBC iPlayer and BBC Sport website and app; Listen live on BBC Radio 5 Live; Live streams, clips and text commentary online.
Norway's Karsten Warholm said he felt he was "going to die" as he held off close rival Rai Benjamin to defend his world 400m hurdles title in Doha.

The 23-year-old took the lead with 150m remaining and stayed just ahead of the American to win in 47.42 seconds, with Qatar's Abderrahman Samba third.

"This was a very tough race. I actually felt my heart was going to stop," Warholm told BBC Sport.

"I thought 'I'm going to die but it's going to be worth it'."

Warholm's shocked reaction in winning his first world title two years ago became one of the most iconic moments of London 2017.

His form has been equally brilliant this season in the build-up to the championships, having recorded 46.92 to move to second on the all-time list behind the USA's Kevin Young, whose world record of 46.78 has stood for 27 years.

However, Benjamin, 22, also dipped under 47 seconds this season, which made the men's 400m hurdles one of the most eagerly anticipated of the championships.

"This is only the beginning and I am very lucky to win," Warholm added. "It's deserved but in the future these guys will be tougher to beat. Tomorrow I have to get up and work again. That is what I love.

"Norway is a small country. For me to be showing off on the world stage, it's better than anything else."

Another final lived up to its hype as Ethiopia's Muktar Edris defended his 5,000m title by holding off teenage compatriot Selemon Barega in the home straight to win in 12 minutes 58.85 seconds.

It was a magnificent final 400m as Norway's European champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen took up the front running only to be reeled in by the duo, who were roared on by a large section of Ethiopian fans.

Canada's Mohammed Ahmed claimed bronze, while the youngest of the Ingebrigtsen brothers came fourth. Henrik Ingebrigtsen was 13th and the other sibling, Filip, did not finish.

There was a shock in the women's 800m as Uganda's Halimah Nakaayi clinched gold in one minute 58.04 seconds after world number one Ajee Wilson of the USA ran out of steam with 60m to go, having led around the final bend.

Wilson was then overtaken by team-mate Raevyn Rogers, who produced a great late finish.

This was a competition without reigning world and Olympic champion Caster Semenya.

The South African was not competing in Doha after the IAAF, the sport's governing body, introduced a rule that athletes with differences of sexual development (DSD) wishing to compete in track events from 400m to the mile must either take testosterone-reducing medication or change to another distance.

In the women's high jump, Russian Mariya Lasitskene, competing under the Authorised Neutral Athlete flag, cleared 2.04m to win a third successive world title.

Ukraine's Yaroslava Mahuchikh also managed 2.04m, on her third attempt, but called it a day after becoming the youngest ever world field medallist, at 18 years and 11 days. The USA's former world indoor champion Vashti Cunningham took bronze.

Kenya's Beatrice Chepkoech led from almost start to finish as she won the 3,000m steeplechase, having initially set off at world record pace. She clinched gold in a championship record time of eight minutes 57.84 seconds, with defending champion Emma Coburn of the USA taking silver and Germany's Gesa Krause in bronze position.

Swede Daniel Stahl claimed his first world title in the discus, having had to settle for silver two years ago. His third-round 67.59m throw was enough for gold. Jamaica's Fedrick Dacres was second and Austria's Lukas Weisshaidinger took bronze.

The 27-year-old celebrated by racing down the length of the discus field before clearing a hurdle set up for the 400m hurdles final.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49887185
 
2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

Noah Lyles capped off a marvellous season with victory in the world 200m final in 19.83 seconds but Briton Adam Gemili narrowly missed out on a medal.

Gemili led coming off the bend but was picked off by the American, Canada's Andre de Grasse, who took silver, and Alex Quinonez.

The 25-year-old finished in 20.03 - only five hundredths of a second behind the Ecuadorian.

"I am gutted, I am so sorry," a distraught Gemili told BBC Sport.

"All my form went out of the window and I ran like such an amateur."

The former European champion twice set season's bests in the build-up to the final and matched his semi-final time in the final but it proved not to be enough.

It was reminiscent of the Rio 2016 Olympics final when he missed out on bronze by three thousandths of a second.

As for Lyles, he was the clear pre-event favourite, having run the fourth fastest time in history earlier in the season.

With the withdrawal of compatriot and fiercest rival Christian Coleman it would require an outstanding display from someone else to take the title from the charismatic Florida-based runner, but that never materialised.

Lyles did not get close to the time of 19.50 he managed in Lausanne, but the 22-year-old did not need to push himself to the limit as he collected his first global title.

"So many times I thought in my brain I'm going to be world champion this year," the American, tipped by many as the man to take over from Usain Bolt as the face of the sport, told BBC Sport.

"I have it on my phone, I've been saying it since the season started, every day I've been hitting my car window on the way back from practice saying, 'I'm going to be world champion this year,' as the music blasted out.

"This is my first one and I don't know a lot of people who can say they came to their first world championships and grabbed the gold."

Gemili was left slumping his head over an advertising hoarding in disappointment at the end.

"This was such an opportunity. I can't believe that I let it go when I had it," said the Briton, who in recent seasons has been hampered by hamstring problems,

"I feel like I have let so many people down. The last two years I have been plagued with injuries and got back to where I should be. To not break 20 seconds is so disappointing and heartbreaking. I had the medal and it slipped out of my hands."

Gemili had his funding cut from that of an individual athlete to a relay athlete last year and has said previously that it has given him extra fire. This performance in Doha has now added to that with next year's Tokyo Olympics on the horizon.

"I have to take the positives I guess," he said. "It's re-lit something inside of me now. Go to Tokyo next year, it's winnable."

No British male has won a medal in this event since John Regis took silver in 1993.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49900160
 
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South Asia with approximately 25% of the world's population collectively achieving zilch. Man us desis are such an embarrassment :facepalm:.

India qualified for finals in just 2-3 events and finished among the bottom there, getting a single bronze appears next to impossible. We have won just a single bronze in this event, women's long jump over 15 years back. Even the Lankans have won 2 medals.

All time medal table in this link, Kenya is second wow.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IAAF_World_Athletics_Championships#All-time_medal_table
 
Asher-Smith with Britain's first gold medal of the Championships.
 
Asher-Smith with Britain's first gold medal of the Championships.

2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

Dina-Asher Smith became the first British woman to win a major global sprint title as she stormed to victory in 200m at the World Championships.

The 23-year-old, who won silver in the 100m, was the outstanding favourite and outclassed the field to take gold in a British record of 21.88 seconds.

"I'm lost for words. I dreamed of this and now it's real," she told BBC Sport. "I don't think it's properly sunk in."

Brittany Brown took silver (22.22) and Swiss Mujinga Kambundji bronze (22.51).

Asher-Smith is also the first Briton to win a world or Olympic sprint title since Linford Christie at Stuttgart 1993.

"I woke up today thinking, 'This is it. This is the moment you did all your work for'. The tiredness disappeared," she added.

"[My coach] John [*******] and I knew I could do it, it means so much."

There was no light show as seen in some other showpiece finals here in Doha, but instead a loud cheer greeted Asher-Smith as she smiled on her way to her starting blocks.

The race itself was formality. Asher-Smith came off the bend with her nose in front before powering away from the rest of the pack in the final 60m.

Like on the celebration lap following the women's 100m final there were rows of empty seats in the Khalifa Stadium but Asher-Smith, who paraded the flag after winning silver on Sunday, enjoyed her victory with a large British contingent. There were also tears as she embraced her mother Julie.

Many had already placed the gold medal around the European champion's neck after the pre-event withdrawal of 100m champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce followed by that of fellow Jamaican and Olympic champion Elaine Thompson. And before the championships Bahamas' Shaunae Miller-Uibo, unbeaten in the 200m this season, opted only to run in the 400m because of the tight scheduling.

But bar the Bahamian, Asher-Smith had got the better of her other rivals during the Diamond League season. The lack of competition simply made the task easier for the Kent athlete.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49914205
 
Katarina Johnson-Thompson clinches heptathlon gold by winning 800m
KJT breaks Jessica Ennis-Hill's British record with 6,981 points
Laura Muir reaches 1500m final; GB's Sophie McKinna 11th in shot put final
Bahrain's Salwa Eid Naser shocks Shaunae Miller-Uibo to win women's 400m gold
Maicel Uibo leads decathlon with 1500m left (22:25 BST)
 
2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

Katarina Johnson-Thompson has ended her wait for her first global outdoor title by powering to heptathlon gold at the World Championships.

The 26-year-old, previously without an outdoor medal at this level, won with a British record 6,981 points, beating 2017 champion Nafissatou Thiam by 304 points.

Austria's Verena Preiner took third.

It is Great Britain's third medal in Doha following Dina Asher-Smith's 200m gold and 100m silver.

"This is the result of so many attempts of trying to perform on this stage," Johnson-Thompson told BBC Sport.

"The low moments have helped me come back and look at myself. This has been my dream.

"It has been such a long road. I am just happy that I'm coming into my best in these two big years.

"I just want more."

Johnson-Thompson led Thiam by 137 points going into the concluding 800m and stormed to victory in two minutes 07.26 seconds - her fourth personal best of the competition.

The omens looked good for her when in the first event on day one she took 0.21 seconds off her previous best to win the 100m hurdles in 13.09 seconds.

The Briton's high jump of 1.95cm was matched by Thiam, before she scored a huge personal best in the shot put - one of her weaker events. The distance of 13.86m was 71cm further than she had ever gone before.

After the 200m, the Briton had a 96-point overnight lead over the Belgian, nine better than her advantage at last year's European Championships where she eventually finished second.

The pattern continued on Thursday as Johnson-Thompson's consistency, paired with a below-par Thiam, saw the Liverpool athlete extend her lead.

In the long jump, another of her strong events, she leapt to 6.77m. Thiam, who managed 6.86m in Birmingham in August and defeated the Briton, could only register 6.40m.

Then came the moments that effectively clinched gold for Johnson-Thompson as first she recorded another PB by throwing the javelin to 43.93m before Thiam, who had been struggling with an elbow injury, only managed 48.04m - her best is 59.32m - and skipped her final throw.

That gave Johnson-Thompson the 137-point lead over the Belgian going into the 800m, having previously trailed her rival at this stage.

She kept her cool during the final event which she won before laying down on the track to contemplate what she had achieved.

Her points total surpassed the previous British best of 6,955 set by Dame Jessica Ennis-Hill at the London 2012 Olympics.

Thiam finished with 6,677 points with bronze medallist Preiner on 6,560.

Johnson-Thompson breaks through after previous heartaches

To some, it has taken longer than expected for Johnson-Thompson to reach this level, with errors costing her medals at previous championships, coupled with the emergence of Thiam.

When double world and 2012 Olympic champion Ennis-Hill was coming towards the end of her career, the focus turned to the young pretender to continue the great recent tradition of British heptathlon success. But luck and form kept deserting Johnson-Thompson.

She finished well down the heptathlon field at the 2015 Worlds after three fouls in the long jump, while below-par performances in the shot put and javelin cost her a medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

At the London 2017 World Championships, she underperformed in one of her favourite events - the high jump - which again damaged her podium hopes.

Find out how to get into athletics with our special guide.

By this stage she had moved her training base to Montpellier in France where she has been coached by Bertrand Valcin, who also works with Kevin Mayer, the world record holder in the decathlon.

Johnson-Thompson finally began to see positive effects from the move last year when she won the World Indoor pentathlon gold and the Commonwealth title before taking silver behind Thiam at the European Championships in Berlin.

A new personal-best score of 6,813 followed in winning at the traditional multi-event Gotzis meeting this year, and now she has eclipsed all of her previous achievements with success in Doha.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49924526
 
Qatar’s Mutaz Essa Barshim becomes the first male athlete to successfully defend his high jump title with a leap of 2.37 at the World Athletics Championships in Doha
 
Qatar’s Mutaz Essa Barshim becomes the first male athlete to successfully defend his high jump title with a leap of 2.37 at the World Athletics Championships in Doha

He was brilliant.

Fantastic to watch.
 
2019 World Athletics Championships
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

Dina Asher-Smith's hopes of a third 2019 World Championships medal remained intact as both Britain's 4x100m relay teams qualified for Saturday's finals.

Britain's men, the defending champions, made it through their heat with a world lead time of 37.56 seconds in Doha.

Britons Neil Gourley, Josh Kerr and Jake Wightman looked in good shape as they reached Sunday's 1500m final.

USA's Dalilah Muhammad set a world record for the second time this year as she won the women's 400m hurdles final.

Following much scrutiny over the small crowds at the event, the Khalifa Stadium was almost full to capacity on Friday as the Qataris cheered on home favourite Mutaz Essa Barshim who defended his men's high jump title.

Asher-Smith, the 200m champion and 100m silver medallist, will be brought into the quartet for the final after sitting out Friday's heat.

She relied on Asha Philip, Imani-Lara Lansiquot, Ashleigh Nelson and Daryll Neita and they kept their composure to bring the baton safely around in a season's best time of 42.25 seconds.

At the World Relays earlier in the year, Nelson was involved in a baton-exchange error, but her exchange with Neita, on the anchor leg, was faultless.

Neita told BBC Sport: "We've practised so hard. We've had an amazing camp coming into this. I feel like we're moving away from the technical side and moving in to the trust.

"We all trust each other. I'm really proud of us and Saturday is going to be great."

Jamaica's quartet, which included 100m gold medallist Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, won the heat in 42.11.

Defending champions USA won their heat to take their place in the final.

The British men's team of Adam Gemili, Zharnel Hughes, Richard Kilty and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake were also impressive as they won their race with clear distance between themselves and the Americans, who included 100m champion Christian Coleman and came third with Brazil second.

Gemili, fourth in the men's 200m, told BBC Sport: "I'm actually good. I feel really fresh. It's always an honour to come out with these guys. We were looking for redemption, especially myself and Zharnel, after what happened in the individuals."

Great Britain captain Kilty added: "We knew the key to this was relaxation. I said to the lads at the start - this is one seamless effort of taking the baton round, and we've done that nicely We're full of confidence, relaxed and ready to go again."

Mitchell-Blake said: "Right now we've got to rewrite the history books and focus at what's on hand right now."

'It's time for us to show up on the biggest stage'

World Athletics Championships: History made as GB trio qualify for men's 1500m final
In the men's 1500m, Scots Gourley, Kerr and Wightman made history as it is the first time three British men have reached a 1500m final at a World Championships.

Gourley, 24, came third in the first semi-final and Kerr, 21, was fourth in the second with Commonwealth bronze medallist Wightman, 25, taking the final qualification spot as one of two fastest losers in three minutes 36.85 seconds.

There was only 0.35 seconds separating the fastest qualifier, Marcin Lewandowski of Poland, and Wightman, who told BBC Sport: "I still don't believe it - there's the 'Q' on the big screen. I made hard of work of that but it bodes well for the final that we all got through."

Asked about three Scots progressing, Kerr said: "It's fantastic. We've had a clean sweep in the British Championships in the last couple of years and it's time for us to show up on the biggest stage."

Norway's European champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen finished third in the second semi-final to go through but brother Filip, a 2017 world bronze medallist, missed out after coming seventh in the first semi-final.

Muhammad sets second world record this year

Dalilah Muhammad breaks women's 400m hurdles world record to win gold
In the women's 400m hurdles, Muhammad, 29, held off compatriot Sydney McLaughlin in a thrilling final, winning in 52.16 seconds - 0.04 faster than the time she set in July.

McLaughlin, 20, produced a brilliant late sprint to clock 52.23, which is the third fastest ever. Jamaica's Rushell Clayton took bronze in 53.74.

The men's 3,000m steeplechase was decided by a photo-finish as Kenya's defending champion Conseslus Kipruto snatched gold from Ethiopia's Lamecha Girma.

Rio champion Kipruto, 24, who has only recently recovered from a stress fracture in his foot, won in eight minutes 01.35 seconds - 0.01secs ahead of the 18-year-old. Britain's Zak Seddon finished 15th.


Kenya's Kipruto wins gold in sensational steeplechase finish
The loudest cheers of the night were reserved for home favourite Barshim, who retained his title and won Qatar's first gold with an effort of 2.37m.

The 28-year-old's fitness was in question for these championships having ruptured ankle ligaments in July 2018 attempting to break Javier Sotomayor's world record of 2.45m.

They were allayed when he cleared a season's best of 2.29m in qualification before outjumping Russian silver medallist Mikhail Akimenko (2.35m) and his compatriot Ilya Ivanyuk (2.35m), both competing as Authorised Neutral Athletes, in the final.

In the men's 400m final, Bahamas' Steven Gardiner stunned favourite Fred Kerley of the USA to take gold in 43.48 seconds - the sixth fastest time in history.

Colombia's Anthony Jose Zambrano was a surprise second in 44.15 and Kerley, who ran 43.64 in the summer, took bronze a further 0.02secs back.

Japan's Toshikazu Yamanishi won the men's 20km walk in one hour 26 minutes 34 seconds, with Russian Vasily Mizinov - another Authorised Neutral Athlete - second in 1:26.49 and Sweden's Perseus Karlstrom third in 1:27.00.

In temperatures of around 31C, Britain's Tom Bosworth finished seventh in 1:29.34, but compatriot Callum Wilkinson was left near to tears after being disqualified.

Wilkinson, who led briefly around the 6km mark, was shown a fourth red card in the closing stages of the race.

In the women's discus final, it was a Cuban one-two as Yaime Perez took gold with 69.17m.

Compatriot Denia Caballero clinched silver (68.44m) and Croatian's Sandra Perkovic, a two-time Olympic and world champion, won bronze with 66.72m.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49940990
 
Sifan Hassan completed an unprecedented world championship double by taking gold in one of the fastest 1500m races in history as Great Britain’s Laura Muir missed out on a medal, finishing fifth.

The Dutch athlete became the first woman to ever win gold in the 1500m and 10,000m at the same world championships as she ran 3:51.95 to move to number six on the all-time list.

The race included four national records, while six of the top seven broke their personal bests as Kenya’s Faith Kipyegon took silver and Ethiopia’s Gudaf Tsegay the bronze.

Muir has had a heavily disrupted season, and arrived at these championships having not raced since the London Diamond League in July, but progressed well through the rounds.

It was Muir who tried to go with Hassan as she kicked off an already fast pace at the bell, but others judged their efforts better while the Scot faded down the home straight, though she still season’s best 3:55.76, her second-fastest run ever.

Earlier in the evening, a quartet of Laviai Nielsen, Jodie Williams, Jess Turner and Zoey Clark took Great Britain safely into the final of the 4x400m relay, where they look to have a chance of a medal on Sunday.

However, there was disappointment for the men’s team, who could only finish fifth in their heat, and missed out on a fastest loser spot by 0.33 seconds.

https://www.standard.co.uk/sport/at...le-as-laura-muir-finishes-fifth-a4255006.html
 
Venue: Khalifa International Stadium, Doha Dates: 27 September-6 October

Dina Asher-Smith became the first Briton to win three medals at a major global athletics championships as the 4x100m relay team won world silver.

Asher-Smith, who won 200m gold and 100m silver this week, was on the second leg instead of the anchor leg after a late change as Great Britain finished behind Jamaica.

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, the 100m champion, won her second title in Doha.

Defending champions the United States took bronze.

Fraser-Pryce did the damage on the second leg as she gave Jamaica a clear advantage over the field. Jonielle Smith maintained the lead coming off the bend before Shericka Jackson brought the baton home in 41.44 seconds.

Asha Philip - a late call-up after Imani-Lara Lansiquot pulled out after sustaining an injury during the warm-up - Asher-Smith and Ashleigh Nelson performed faultless changeovers before Daryll Neita held off USA's Kiara Parker to cross the line in a season's best of 41.85.

The United States' 42.10 was also their best time of the year.

An ecstatic Asher-Smith revealed the British quartet for the final had not practised the baton changes in the warm-up.

"I think we all handled the pressure between us which is testimony to how much experience we have got as a squad," she told BBC Sport.

"It's been a good champs but obviously it's a team event."

Neita, who was moved to the anchor leg from the opening leg, added: "I'm just so proud of us girls. It was a great leg to run and we're showing we have strength in depth in this team. Last-minute changes but we can still get the job done."

That third medal for Asher-Smith and silver for the men's 4x100m team means Great Britain have five medals in total.

The team will be hopeful of adding to the tally on the final day, with events including the men's 1500m final and women's 4x400m final.


https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49947680
 
Gold medal - Nia Ali (USA) : Women's 100m hurdles final

Women's long jump - Malaika Mihambo wins; GB's Abigail Irozuru seventh & Shara Proctor 11th
Men's 10,000m final - Uganda's Joshua Cheptegei wins gold
Kenya's Timothy Cheruiyot wins 1500m title
 
Final tally

USA top medal table : The United States will leave Doha with 29 medals, including 14 golds, 11 silver and two bronze.

Kenya are second with 11 medals in total and Jamaica third with 12.

Great Britain leave with five medals - two golds and three silver - that leave them in sixth place overall.



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The 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha were the "best we have ever had" in terms of athletic performance, says IAAF chief Lord Coe.

And Coe once again defended the hosting of the event in Qatar as the 10-day competition drew to a close.

There has been criticism of the poor attendances and scheduling, while issues of alleged human rights abuses in Qatar were raised.

"Our sport is in pretty good shape," said the Briton.

"It is pretty clear to us on athlete performance this is the best World Championships we have ever had."

USA sprinter Allyson Felix broke Usain Bolt's record for the most World Championship gold medals, winning her 12th in the 4x400m mixed relay and her 13th in the women's event - 11 months after giving birth.

Other highlights included Felix's fellow American Dalilah Muhammad improving her own world record in the 400m hurdles, while Dina Asher-Smith became the first British athlete to win three medals at a major global championships.

Elsewhere, the USA's Noah Lyles outlined his potential as Bolt's heir apparent with 200m gold and Mutaz Essa Barshim thrilled the home crowd by retaining his high jump title.

"It is really important the sport moves around the world, and it cannot forge its relationships based on political structures or transitory political systems," added Coe.

"We would not have sporting relationships [otherwise]. That is why sport will continue to work and sweat as hard as it does to make social change.

"We are not competitors, we are collaborators and organisations that are smart are actually partnering as they realise they can elicit that change."

Speaking on the championships' final day, former 1500m Olympic champion Coe added: "It's important sport can rise above political structures.

"Fundamentally, I believe sport is the best diplomat we have."

'The first two days were difficult'
Poor attendances were one of the major talking points with only the second Friday having crowds of more than 40,000 inside the Khalifa Stadium, which holds 48,000.

Last Sunday - the day of the women's 100m final, when Asher-Smith won silver - only 7,266 were present. The average attendance during the first eight days was 20,000.

It was also announced that tickets had been bought by the organising committee, partners and public institutions and distributed to "embassies, employees, schools and higher education".

Doha 2019 organising chief Dahlan Al Hamad said: "Filling the stadium is the challenge for all sports.

"The first two days were hectic and difficult. I hope you saw in the past few days the stadium fill up because people had started to see results of athletes.

"We are really thrilled we received these championships and expanded the horizon of athletics in the Middle East region."

'I haven't read Salazar report'

A shadow was also cast over the championships when Alberto Salazar - Mo Farah's former coach - was banned from the sport for four years after being found guilty of doping violations.

Many athletes who are members of Salazar's Nike Oregon Project faced questions on their relationship with the Cuban-born American, including Sifan Hassan who won an unprecedented 1500m-10,000m double - the former in a championship record.

"This was a very hard week for me and I was just so angry," said the Dutchwoman. "I've been clean all my life. I work hard."

Coe said the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) would conduct a review of Salazar's case after calls to investigate athletes linked to the coach.

"We have an Athletics Integrity Unit that clearly will take a big interest in the findings of Usada [United States Anti-Doping Agency]," he said.

"I'm entirely confident that the AIU will want to look at the whole case and will want to think about the implications of that."

However, the IAAF chief admitted he had not read the Usada report.

"I've read the executive summary," he said. "That and the announcement of the suspension was enough for me to get into business mode."

The decision to bring the championships [to Doha], there were far more more negatives than positives. I think it was a mistake and I think the athletes would say the same thing.

The other thing we learned is that doping continues to be a problem in the sport and fans have zero tolerance for it. But I remind them that this sport leads in catching people and punishing people. That we should be proud of.

The athletes are always amazing. This sport is amazing. It's no surprise the athletes put on fantastic performances. Kudos to them.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/49954736
 
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