Women's 800 metres
at the 2022 World Championships
VenueHayward Field
Dates21 July (heats)
22 July (semi-finals)
24 July (final)
Competitors48 from 29 nations
Winning time1:56.30
Medalists
gold medal    United States
silver medal    Great Britain
bronze medal    Kenya
Video on YouTube
Official Video

The women's 800 metres at the 2022 World Athletics Championships was held at the Hayward Field in Eugene from 21 to 24 July 2022.[1]

Summary

With the elimination of defending champion Halimah Nakaayi in the semis, the rest of the podiums of the Olympics and previous World Championships were represented in the final. Olympic Champion Athing Mu, silver medalist Keely Hodgkinson, Mary Moraa and Diribe Welteji all wanted to lead, the four spread shoulder to shoulder across the track after the break line. Welteji emerged the leader, Mu on her shoulder, Hodgkinson on the rail and Moraa boxing her in on the outside. They held that formation through the bell at 57.11 and into the turn putting a 2m gap on the remaining competitors. Just before the backstretch, Mu made her move into the lead, opening up a 2 m gap before the final turn. Hodgkinson got around Welteji and went off in search of Mu, putting 2m back to Moraa and Welteji with returning silver medalist, Olympic bronze medalist Raevyn Rogers and Natoya Goule coming back to join them. With 110m to go, Mu took the turn wide and seemed to slow, enough that Hodgkinson was able to grab the inside position on Mu. The two ran shoulder to shoulder down the home stretch, with Moraa and Welteji having a similar battle 2m behind them. Bumping elbows both in lane 1, Hodgkinson gained a slight advantage, then Mu came back to get the edge. Unlike the runaway in the Olympics, Mu barely opened a gap on Hodgkinson, taking a lean at the line just to be sure. Behind them, Moraa was able to separate from Welteji for the bronze. At age 21, Moraa was the senior citizen amongst the top four, the other three still age 20.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

Record Athlete & Nat. Perf. Location Date
World record  Jarmila Kratochvílová (TCH) 1:53.28 Munich, West Germany 26 July 1983
Championship record 1:54.68 Helsinki, Finland 9 August 1983
World Leading  Athing Mu (USA) 1:57.01 Rome, Italy 9 June 2022
African Record  Pamela Jelimo (KEN) 1:54.01 Zürich, Switzerland 29 August 2008
Asian Record  Liu Dong (CHN) 1:55.54 Beijing, China 9 September 1993
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Ana Fidelia Quirot (CUB) 1:54.44 Barcelona, Spain 9 September 1989
South American Record  Letitia Vriesde (SUR) 1:56.68 Gothenburg, Sweden 13 August 1995
European Record  Jarmila Kratochvílová (TCH) 1:53.28 Munich, West Germany 26 July 1983
Oceanian record  Catriona Bisset (AUS) 1:58.09 Chorzów, Poland 20 June 2021

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 1:59.50.[3]

Schedule

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

Date Time Round
21 July17:10Heats
22 July18:35Semi-finals
24 July18:35Final

Results

Heats

The first 3 athletes in each heat (Q) and the next 6 fastest (q) qualify to the semi-finals.[4]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
11Diribe Welteji Ethiopia (ETH)1:58.83Q
21Jemma Reekie Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)1:59.09Q
31Adelle Tracey Jamaica (JAM)1:59.20Q, PB
46Natoya Goule Jamaica (JAM)2:00.06Q
56Mary Moraa Kenya (KEN)2:00.42Q
64Rénelle Lamote France (FRA)2:00.71Q
76Anna Wielgosz Poland (POL)2:00.79Q
81Lindsey Butterworth Canada (CAN)2:00.81q
92Keely Hodgkinson Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:00.88Q
104Freweyni Hailu Ethiopia (ETH)2:00.93Q
114Ajeé Wilson United States (USA)2:01.02Q
126Majtie Kolberg Germany (GER)2:01.21q, SB
134Alexandra Bell Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:01.25q
143Athing Mu United States (USA)2:01.30Q
155Raevyn Rogers United States (USA)2:01.36Q
165Habitam Alemu Ethiopia (ETH)2:01.37Q
173Halimah Nakaayi Uganda (UGA)2:01.41Q
182Anita Horvat Slovenia (SLO)2:01.48Q
195Noélie Yarigo Benin (BEN)2:01.58Q
205Prudence Sekgodiso South Africa (RSA)2:01.60q
214Naomi Korir Kenya (KEN)2:01.61q
222Lore Hoffmann Switzerland (SUI)2:01.63Q
232Christina Hering Germany (GER)2:01.63q
246Louise Shanahan Ireland (IRL)2:01.71
253Ellie Baker Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:01.72Q
265Chrisann Gordon Jamaica (JAM)2:01.91
273Rose Mary Almanza Cuba (CUB)2:01.96
283Olha Lyakhova Ukraine (UKR)2:02.16
292Gayanthika Artigala Sri Lanka (SRI)2:02.35
301Jarinter Mwasya Kenya (KEN)2:02.35
316Jerneja Smonkar Slovenia (SLO)2:02.48
321Eveliina Määttänen Finland (FIN)2:02.68
335Madeleine Kelly Canada (CAN)2:02.71
342Elena Bellò Italy (ITA)2:02.87qR
354Shafiqua Maloney Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (VIN)2:03.00
361Déborah Rodríguez Uruguay (URU)2:03.04
371Mariela Luis Real Mexico (MEX)2:03.24
386Nozomi Tanaka Japan (JPN)2:03.56
393Assia Raziki Morocco (MAR)2:03.77
404Addy Townsend Canada (CAN)2:03.79
415Vanessa Scaunet Belgium (BEL)2:04.07
425Claudia Hollingsworth Australia (AUS)2:04.11
433Tess Kirsopp-Cole Australia (AUS)2:05.74
446Hedda Hynne Norway (NOR)2:06.27
452Catriona Bisset Australia (AUS)2:22.25qR

Semi-finals

The first 2 athletes in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualify to the final.[5]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
13Athing Mu United States (USA)1:58.12Q
23Diribe Welteji Ethiopia (ETH)1:58.16Q, PB
32Keely Hodgkinson Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)1:58.51Q
42Natoya Goule Jamaica (JAM)1:58.73Q
52Raevyn Rogers United States (USA)1:58.77q
63Anita Horvat Slovenia (SLO)1:59.60q, PB
71Mary Moraa Kenya (KEN)1:59.65Q
83Lore Hoffmann Switzerland (SUI)1:59.88SB
91Ajeé Wilson United States (USA)1:59.97Q
103Prudence Sekgodiso South Africa (RSA)2:00.01
112Freweyni Hailu Ethiopia (ETH)2:00.11
121Adelle Tracey Jamaica (JAM)2:00.21
133Elena Bellò Italy (ITA)2:00.34
141Habitam Alemu Ethiopia (ETH)2:00.37SB
151Jemma Reekie Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:00.43
162Anna Wielgosz Poland (POL)2:00.51
173Alexandra Bell Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:00.82
181Rénelle Lamote France (FRA)2:00.86
193Halimah Nakaayi Uganda (UGA)2:01.05
202Majtie Kolberg Germany (GER)2:01.36
211Lindsey Butterworth Canada (CAN)2:01.39
222Noélie Yarigo Benin (BEN)2:01.52
231Christina Hering Germany (GER)2:01.57
242Ellie Baker Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:02.77
253Naomi Korir Kenya (KEN)2:03.08
262Catriona Bisset Australia (AUS)2:05.20

Final

The final was started on 24 July at 18:35.[6]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Athing Mu United States (USA)1:56.30WL
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Keely Hodgkinson Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)1:56.38SB
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Mary Moraa Kenya (KEN)1:56.71PB
4Diribe Welteji Ethiopia (ETH)1:57.02PB
5Natoya Goule Jamaica (JAM)1:57.90SB
6Raevyn Rogers United States (USA)1:58.26
7Anita Horvat Slovenia (SLO)1:59.83
8Ajeé Wilson United States (USA)2:00.19

References

  1. Timetable
  2. "800 Metres Women − Records". IAAF. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  3. "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.
  4. Heats Summary
  5. Semi-finals Summary
  6. Final Results
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