Women's 3000 metres steeplechase
at the 2022 World Championships
VenueHayward Field
Dates16 July (heats)
20 July (final)
Competitors45 from 25 nations
Winning time8:53.02
Medalists
gold medal    Kazakhstan
silver medal    Ethiopia
bronze medal    Ethiopia

The women's 3000 metres steeplechase at the 2022 World Athletics Championships was held at the Hayward Field in Eugene on 16 and 20 July 2022.[1]

Summary

With 3 of the last four World Championships (and the last 15 Men's) were born in Kenya. Kenyan dominance in the steeplechase is expected, particularly in Kenya. Returning champion, world record holder Beatrice Chepkoech didn't return due to injury, two of their representatives did not make it out of the heats, leaving only #6 of all time Celliphine Chespol to wear their uniform. However two additional Kenyan born runners were representing other countries; #4 of all time Winfred Yavi representing Bahrain and #3 of all time Norah Jeruto recently becoming eligible to run for Kazakhstan. The poaching of international free agent athletes has been quite an issue World Athletics has been trying to deal with. World Athletics blocked eligibility transfers in an attempt to revise the rules.[2]

In the first heat, Jeruto ran an impressive, but unnecessary 9:01.54, the #26 time in history simply to be the leading qualifier. Ten seconds behind her Marwa Bouzayani, wearing a hijab uniform was an automatic qualifier.

In the final, Jeruto went to the front off the line, tracked immediately by Yavi. The pack strung out to single file, with 2017 champion, returning silver medalist Emma Coburn, Olympic gold medalist Peruth Chemutai, Mekides Abebe and Werkuha Getachew latching onto the front of that train. By three laps, that group had separated from the rest of the pack, the approximate 1K mark reached in 2:57. On the next lap, Yavi moved to the front, still pushing the pace. Only Jeruto and Getachew could hold on, the second kilometer covered in 3:01. Abebe was still hanging on 6 metres behind the leading three, trying to bridge back to the front. Over the penultimate lap, Abebe managed to get back to the group just before the bell. At the sound of the bell, Yavi edged back in front of Jeruto, but Jeruto would have none of that, reclaiming the lead halfway into the turn. With Yavi on the outside, Getachew took the inside track to come closer to Jeruto down the backstretch. Coming into the water jump, Yavi made another run at the lead, with Jeruto looking at her. Jeruto took the water jump cleanly, leaping to a 2 metre lead, Yavi took it awkwardly, stopping before taking the final step out of the water, with both Ethiopians passing her in the process. From there Jeruto expanded her lead, with Getachew then Abebe following her home. Yavi took the final barrier poorly and the fight for a medal was over.

Jeruto's 8:53.02 was the Championship record and the #3 time ever run, still less than a second faster than she had run a year earlier on this same track at the Prefontaine Classic. Getachew's 8:54.61 moved her to the #4 position in history, with Abebe's 8:56.08 putting her in #5.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[3]

Record Athlete & Nat. Perf. Location Date
World record  Beatrice Chepkoech (KEN) 8:44.32 Monte Carlo, Monaco 20 July 2018
Championship record  Beatrice Chepkoech (KEN) 8:57.84 Doha, Qatar 30 September 2019
World Leading  Winfred Mutile Yavi (BHR) 8:56.55 Paris, France 18 June 2022
African Record  Beatrice Chepkoech (KEN) 8:44.32 Monte Carlo, Monaco 20 July 2018
Asian Record  Ruth Jebet (BHR) 8:52.78 Paris, France 27 August 2016
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Courtney Frerichs (USA) 8:57.77 Eugene, United States 21 August 2021
South American Record  Tatiane da Silva (BRA) 9:24.38 Watford, Great Britain 11 June 2022
European Record  Gulnara Samitova-Galkina (RUS) 8:58.81 Beijing, China 17 August 2008
Oceanian record  Genevieve Lacaze (AUS) 9:14.28 Paris, France 27 August 2016

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 9:30.00.[4]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC−7), was as follows:

Date Time Round
16 July10:35Heats
20 July19:45Final

Results

Heats

The first 3 athletes in each heat (Q) and the next 6 fastest (q) qualified to the final.[5]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
11Norah Jeruto Kazakhstan (KAZ)9:01.54Q
21Werkuha Getachew Ethiopia (ETH)9:11.25Q
31Marwa Bouzayani Tunisia (TUN)9:12.14Q, PB
42Alice Finot France (FRA)9:14.34Q, NR
52Mekides Abebe Ethiopia (ETH)9:14.83Q
62Luiza Gega Albania (ALB)9:14.91Q
72Courtney Wayment United States (USA)9:14.95q
81Emma Coburn United States (USA)9:15.19q
92Peruth Chemutai Uganda (UGA)9:16.66q
103Celliphine Chepteek Chespol Kenya (KEN)9:16.78Q
113Maruša Mišmaš-Zrimšek Slovenia (SLO)9:17.14Q, SB
123Winfred Mutile Yavi Bahrain (BHR)9:17.32Q
133Courtney Frerichs United States (USA)9:17.91q
142Aimee Pratt Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)9:18.91q, NR
152Gesa Felicitas Krause Germany (GER)9:21.02q, SB
163Sembo Almayew Ethiopia (ETH)9:21.10
172Amy Cashin Australia (AUS)9:21.46PB
182Chiara Scherrer Switzerland (SUI)9:22.15
193Daisy Jepkemei Kazakhstan (KAZ)9:23.07
201Elizabeth Bird Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)9:23.17
212Irene Sánchez-Escribano Spain (ESP)9:23.94PB
223Nataliya Strebkova Ukraine (UKR)9:25.85
233Tatiane Raquel da Silva Brazil (BRA)9:26.25
242Purity Kirui Kenya (KEN)9:26.88SB
251Jackline Chepkoech Kenya (KEN)9:27.50
263Carolina Robles Spain (ESP)9:28.24PB
271Belén Casetta Argentina (ARG)9:29.05SB
281Lea Meyer Germany (GER)9:30.81
293Ceili McCabe Canada (CAN)9:32.73
301Regan Yee Canada (CAN)9:36.22
312Parul Chaudhary India (IND)9:38.09PB
321Xu Shuangshuang China (CHN)9:39.17SB
331Brielle Erbacher Australia (AUS)9:40.55
343Cara Feain-Ryan Australia (AUS)9:43.41
353Adva Cohen Israel (ISR)9:44.74
363Kinga Królik Poland (POL)9:44.74
372Grace Fetherstonhaugh Canada (CAN)9:49.85
381Simone Ferraz Brazil (BRA)9:53.52
391Nilani Rathnayaka Sri Lanka (SRI)9:54.10
403Reimi Yoshimura Japan (JPN)9:58.07
412Carolina Lozano Argentina (ARG)10:03.51
421Yuno Yamanaka Japan (JPN)10:18.18

Final

The final was started on 20 July at 19:45.[6]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Norah Jeruto Kazakhstan (KAZ)8:53.02CR, NR
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Werkuha Getachew Ethiopia (ETH)8:54.61NR
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Mekides Abebe Ethiopia (ETH)8:56.08PB
4Winfred Mutile Yavi Bahrain (BHR)9:01.31
5Luiza Gega Albania (ALB)9:10.04NR
6Courtney Frerichs United States (USA)9:10.59SB
7Aimee Pratt Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)9:15.64NR
8Emma Coburn United States (USA)9:16.49
9Marwa Bouzayani Tunisia (TUN)9:20.92
10Alice Finot France (FRA)9:21.40
11Peruth Chemutai Uganda (UGA)9:21.93
12Courtney Wayment United States (USA)9:22.37
13Celliphine Chepteek Chespol Kenya (KEN)9:27.34
14Maruša Mišmaš-Zrimšek Slovenia (SLO)9:40.78
15Gesa Felicitas Krause Germany (GER)9:52.66

References

  1. Timetable
  2. "IAAF freezes transfer of allegiance process | PRESS-RELEASE | World Athletics".
  3. "3000 Metres Steeplechase Women − Records". IAAF. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  4. "Competitions Entry Standards 2022 – IAAF World Championships – PDF title, Qualification Standards for the IAAF World Athletics Championships Oregon 2022" (PDF). iaaf.org. 9 July 2022.
  5. Round 1 Summary
  6. Final results
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.