Men's 5000 metres
at the 2023 World Championships
Final of the event
VenueNational Athletics Centre
Dates24 August (heats)
27 August (final)
Competitors44 from 24 nations
Winning time13:11.30
Medalists
gold medal    Norway
silver medal    Spain
bronze medal    Kenya

The men's 5000 metres at the 2023 World Athletics Championships was held at the National Athletics Centre in Budapest on 24 and 27 August 2023.[1]

Summary

There was a little drama in the opening heats. World record holder Joshua Cheptegei did not run. In the first heat, Sam Parsons tripped. As he went down, Stewie McSweyn tripped over him and was taken out of contention. Referees awarded McSweyn a place in the final.

Seventeen athletes toed the line. After sorting things out for two laps at 68 seconds per lap pace, Ishmael Rokitto Kipkurui threw in a 62 and nobody went with him. They let him have his day in the sun for 4 laps, then the peloton reeled him in. A leading pack mostly led by Berihu Aregawi then picked up the pace, 65, 62, 63, but the pack stayed as a group, very few were dropping off the pace. Three laps to go, it was time to race. While the Ethiopians Aregawi and Hagos Gebrhiwet were driving the pace, Luis Grijalva, Mohamed Ismail and Jimmy Gressier were always lurking on the front of the pack, defending champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen and Mohamed Katir, both of whom had competed in the 1500, were towards the back. Both felt they had something to prove. Ingebrigtsen was upset he had only won a silver medal in the 1500, losing gold to a Scottsman, this time Josh Kerr, for the second championships in a row. Katir, a bronze medalist from 2022, was upset he did not even make the 1500 final. With 3 laps to go Katir, followed by Ingebrigtsen, drifted towards the front. This move also brought the attention of Jacob Krop, Yomif Kejelcha and Mohammed Ahmed. The next 62 second lap strung out the back of the pack while there was a crowd near the front. The next lap at 58 pace congealed to 9. Coming in to the bell, there was a scramble. Seeing an opening one the inside as Aregawi drifted out, Gressier tried to sneak by on the inside. Aregawi closed the door and Gressier drifted back. Gebrhiwet, riding Aregawi's shoulder, was the reason he drifted out in the first place. When one door closed, it opened another for Gebrhiwet who pounced into the lead at the bell. Through the turn, Katir followed Gebrhiwet. Onto the backstretch, Katir used his 1500 speed to move to the lead, opening up 2 metres. Behind him, Ingebrigtsen had been boxed to the inside by Kejelcha. Ingebrigtsen had to drift out to lane 3 with Kejelcha still to his outside. Then he had to outrun Aregawi to get running room. Through the final turn Ingebrigtsen got around Gebrhiwet, the last of the three Ethiopians, spending considerable effort. Coming off the turn, he looked back to see if they were still mounting a challenge, no problem there, then he took off after Katir quickly getting to within a metre. But Ingebrigtsen was not making any more progress. Halfway down the straightaway it was as if he thought to himself, "I could just run in to get a Silver medal. No, I'm here to get Gold." He made one more push, slowly getting past Katir. Having given all he could to the effort, he even leaned for the line to make sure. It was not easy, but Ingebrigtsen had defended the title. 10 metres in back of the duo, the rest of the large pack were still battling the three Ethiopians. Six runners, four lanes wide halfway down the home stretch, Grijalva, Ahmed and Krop were racing for bronze. Sprinting down lane 3, from seventh place with 200 to go, Krop emerged in front to take the third medal.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

Record Athlete & Nat. Perf. Location Date
World record  Joshua Cheptegei (UGA) 12:35.36 Monte Carlo, Monaco 14 August 2020
Championship record  Eliud Kipchoge (KEN) 12:52.79 Saint-Denis, France 31 August 2003
World Leading  Berihu Aregawi (ETH) 12:40.45 Lausanne, Switzerland 30 June 2023
African Record  Joshua Cheptegei (UGA) 12:35.36 Monte Carlo, Monaco 14 August 2020
Asian Record  Albert Rop (BHR) 12:51.96 Monte Carlo, Monaco 19 July 2013
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Grant Fisher (USA) 12:46.96 Brussels, Belgium 2 September 2022
South American Record  Federico Bruno (ARG) 13:11.57 Palo Alto, United States 21 April 2023
European Record  Mohamed Katir (ESP) 12:45.01 Monaco 21 July 2023
Oceanian record  Craig Mottram (AUS) 12:55.76 London, Great Britain 30 July 2004

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 13:07.00.[3]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+2), is as follows:[1]

Date Time Round
24 August19:00Heats
27 August20:20Final

Results

Heats

The first 8 athletes in each heat (Q) qualified for the final.[4] The overall results were as follows:[5][6]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
12Luis Grijalva Guatemala (GUA)13:32.72Q
22Yomif Kejelcha Ethiopia (ETH)13:32.83Q
32Mohammed Ahmed Canada (CAN)13:33.16Q
42Berihu Aregawi Ethiopia (ETH)13:33.23Q
52Oscar Chelimo Uganda (UGA)13:33.40Q, SB
62Mohamed Ismail Djibouti (DJI)13:33.51Q
72Ishmael Rokitto Kipkurui Kenya (KEN)13:33.63Q
2Jacob Krop Kenya (KEN)13:33.63Q
92Thierry Ndikumwenayo Spain (ESP)13:34.03
102Rodrigue Kwizera Burundi (BDI)13:35.81
111Mohamed Katir Spain (ESP)13:35.90Q
121Hagos Gebrhiwet Ethiopia (ETH)13:36.15Q
131Jakob Ingebrigtsen Norway (NOR)13:36.21Q, SB
141Ouassim Oumaiz Spain (ESP)13:36.35Q
152Magnus Tuv Myhre Norway (NOR)13:36.36
161Abdihamid Nur United States (USA)13:36.37Q
171Jimmy Gressier France (FRA)13:36.42Q
181Paul Chelimo United States (USA)13:36.51Q
191Narve Gilje Nordås Norway (NOR)13:36.55Q
201Andreas Almgren Sweden (SWE)13:36.57
211Egide Ntakarutimana Burundi (BDI)13:37.53
222Jonas Raess Switzerland (SUI)13:37.84
231Ben Flanagan Canada (CAN)13:38.69
242Henrik Ingebrigtsen Norway (NOR)13:38.80
251Mike Foppen Netherlands (NED)13:38.94
261John Heymans Belgium (BEL)13:39.67
272Hugo Hay France (FRA)13:39.76
282Sean McGorty United States (USA)13:40.28
291Nicholas Kimeli Kenya (KEN)13:40.43
301Birhanu Balew Bahrain (BHR)13:41.00
311Brian Fay Ireland (IRL)13:42.86
322Morgan McDonald Australia (AUS)13:43.58
331Cornelius Kemboi Kenya (KEN)13:44.32
342Hyuga Endo Japan (JPN)13:50.49
351Kazuya Shiojiri Japan (JPN)13:51.00
362Emil Danielsson Sweden (SWE)13:54.35
372Robin Hendrix Belgium (BEL)13:55.81
381Stewart McSweyn Australia (AUS)13:56.81qR
391Sam Parsons Germany (GER)14:03.14
402Samuel Freire Cape Verde (CPV)14:03.14PB
412Ferenc Soma Kovács Hungary (HUN)14:11.99SB
422Mohamed Hrezi Libya (LBA)14:14.72SB
431Valentin Soca Uruguay (URU)14:16.15
1Joshua Cheptegei Uganda (UGA)DNS

Final

The final was started on 27 August at 20:20.[7]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Jakob Ingebrigtsen Norway (NOR)13:11.30SB
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Mohamed Katir Spain (ESP)13:11.44
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Jacob Krop Kenya (KEN)13:12.28
4Luis Grijalva Guatemala (GUA)13:12.50
5Yomif Kejelcha Ethiopia (ETH)13:12.51
6Hagos Gebrhiwet Ethiopia (ETH)13:12.65
7Mohammed Ahmed Canada (CAN)13:12.92
8Berihu Aregawi Ethiopia (ETH)13:12.99
9Jimmy Gressier France (FRA)13:17.20
10Ishmael Kipkurui Kenya (KEN)13:21.20
11Mohamed Ismail Djibouti (DJI)13:23.89
12Abdihamid Nur United States (USA)13:23.90
13Stewart McSweyn Australia (AUS)13:26.58
14Narve Gilje Nordås Norway (NOR)13:28.73
15Paul Chelimo United States (USA)13:30.88
16Ouassim Oumaiz Spain (ESP)13:31.99
Oscar Chelimo Uganda (UGA)DNF

References

  1. 1 2 "Timetable - Budapest 23 - World Athletics Championship - Men 5000 Metres". WorldAthletics.org. IAAF. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  2. "5000 Metres Men − Records". IAAF. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  3. "World Athletics Championships Budapest 23 - Qualification System and Entry Standards" (PDF). iaaf.org. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  4. "START LIST 5000 Metres Men - Round 1" (PDF). International Association of Athletics Federations. 24 August 2023. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  5. "RESULTS 5000 Metres Men - Round 1" (PDF). International Association of Athletics Federations. 24 August 2023. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  6. "SUMMARY 5000 Metres Men - Round 1" (PDF). International Association of Athletics Federations. 24 August 2023. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  7. "RESULTS 5000 Metres Men - Final" (PDF). International Association of Athletics Federations. 27 August 2023. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
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