Women's 5000 metres
at the 2023 World Championships
VenueNational Athletics Centre
Dates23 August (heats)
26 August (final)
Competitors40 from 23 nations
Winning time14:53.88
Medalists
gold medal    Kenya
silver medal    Netherlands
bronze medal    Kenya

The women's 5000 metres at the 2023 World Athletics Championships was held at the National Athletics Centre in Budapest on 23 and 26 August 2023.[1]

Summary

As temperatures rose in Budapest, meet officials moved the heats from Tuesday morning to Wednesday evening. Still, with the heats being conducted in the heat of 31°C (88°F) temperatures, the elite athletes had little interest in running a hard race except World U20 double Champion Agate Caune. In the first heat, the 19 year old captured the crowd by taking the pace out. After getting jostled in a tight slow moving pack for the first 200 metres, she stepped to the side and around the pack. Quickly, she separated from the pack, clicking off 70 second laps, while the peloton was doing more relaxed 73s. By the ninth lap, she had a 23 second, about 150 metre, advantage. Slowly the peloton began to reel in the rebellious teenager as the strain began to show on her face. 600 metres from the finish, 10,000 metre gold medalist Gudaf Tsegay started an extended kick for home. Returning silver medalist Beatrice Chebet and 2019 silver medalist Margaret Kipkemboi followed her and the pack stretched out, the gap to Caune was shrinking. She eventually was caught but kept her wits about her. Caune continued on to finish in fourth place qualifying her for the finals with a new personal best. In the second heat, they ran about 25 seconds faster, with the two favorites; new world record holder Faith Kipyegon and triple threat Olympic Champion Sifan Hassan sprinting it out to satisfy their competitive juices. Hassan won the heat by .02 seconds.

With all the drama just to qualify for the final, could the final live up? Even before the start, Caune did not appear due to a pelvic injury. With new rules in place, she was replaced at the last minute by the #17 qualifier Francine Niyomukunzi. The race started off with Tsegay moving out to a 65-second first lap opening up a gap. Then she backed off the accelerator, letting Ejgayehu Taye take the pace down to 75. Then she sped up to a 70 as both the Ethiopian and Kenyan teams dominated the front, then slowed down to 77. Kipyegon came forward to guide the pace to the slower speeds. Lilian Kasait Rengeruk took a couple of laps until Tsegay moved up to the 71 and a couple of 70-second laps. Through all these maneuvers, 14 women were still in contact with the lead, waiting. With a lap and a half to home, it was racing time. Kipyegon hit the front. Hassan moved up from mid-pack to Kipyegon's shoulder. The pace was quickening but only a few were dropping off the back. From 300 to 200 to go, they sped into a controlled sprint. Tsegay couldn't keep up. A gap appeared with Kipyegon, Hassan, and Chebet as the likely medalists. All three sprinted for home but the order and spacing didn't change. 13 women finished in less than 7 and a half seconds. Kipyegon got her double. After falling in the 10,000 finish, Hassan is leaving with medals in her other two events, anticipating running the Chicago Marathon in just 6 weeks.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

Record Athlete & Nat. Perf. Location Date
World record  Faith Kipyegon (KEN) 14:05.20 Paris, France 9 June 2023
Championship record  Hellen Obiri (KEN) 14:26.72 Doha, Qatar 5 October 2019
World Leading  Faith Kipyegon (KEN) 14:05.20 Paris, France 9 June 2023
African Record  Faith Kipyegon (KEN) 14:05.20 Paris, France 9 June 2023
Asian Record  Bo Jiang (CHN) 14:28.09 Shanghai, China 23 October 1997
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Alicia Monson (USA) 14:19.45 London, Great Britain 23 July 2023
South American Record  Joselyn Daniely Brea (VEN) 14:47.76 Walnut, United States 6 May 2023
European Record  Sifan Hassan (NED) 14:13.42 London, Great Britain 23 July 2023
Oceanian record  Kim Smith (NZL) 14:39.89 New York, United States 27 February 2009

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 14:57.00.[3]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC +2), was as follows:

Date Time Round
23 August19:02Heats
26 August20:50Final

Results

Heats

First 8 of each heat (Q) qualified to the final.[4][5]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
12Sifan Hassan Netherlands (NED)14:32.29Q
22Faith Kipyegon Kenya (KEN)14:32.31Q
32Ejgayehu Taye Ethiopia (ETH)14:33.23Q
42Freweyni Hailu Ethiopia (ETH)14:34.16Q
52Lilian Kasait Rengeruk Kenya (KEN)14:36.61Q
62Nozomi Tanaka Japan (JPN)14:37.98Q, NR
72Nadia Battocletti Italy (ITA)14:41.78Q
82Laura Galván Mexico (MEX)14:43.94Q, NR
91Beatrice Chebet Kenya (KEN)14:57.70Q
101Gudaf Tsegay Ethiopia (ETH)14:57.72Q
111Margaret Chelimo Kipkemboi Kenya (KEN)15:00.10Q
121Agate Caune Latvia (LAT)15:00.48WD, PB
131Elise Cranny United States (USA)15:01.53Q
141Medina Eisa Ethiopia (ETH)15:03.07Q
151Alicia Monson United States (USA)15:03.35Q
161Maureen Koster Netherlands (NED)15:05.13Q
171Francine Niyomukunzi Burundi (BDI)15:05.24Q
182Natosha Rogers United States (USA)15:06.58
191Rose Davies Australia (AUS)15:07.93SB
201Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal Norway (NOR)15:08.96
211Ririka Hironaka Japan (JPN)15:11.16SB
222Joselyn Daniely Brea Venezuela (VEN)15:11.16
232Amy-Eloise Markovc Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)15:13.66SB
242Camilla Richardsson Finland (FIN)15:13.84
251Sarah Chelangat Uganda (UGA)15:14.89
262Jessica Hull Australia (AUS)15:15.89
271Megan Keith Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)15:21.94
281Julie-Anne Staehli Canada (CAN)15:24.09
292Mariana Machado Portugal (POR)15:28.97
301Viktória Wagner-Gyürkés Hungary (HUN)15:29.42
311Ludovica Cavalli Italy (ITA)15:32.95
322Anjelina Nadai Lohalith Athlete Refugee Team (ART)15:35.25
332Prisca Chesang Uganda (UGA)15:37.02
341Lauren Ryan Australia (AUS)15:40.23
351Briana Scott Canada (CAN)15:42.56
362He Wuga China (CHN)15:54.30
372Erin Teschuk Canada (CAN)15:56.54
381Yuma Yamamoto Japan (JPN)16:05.57
2Fedra Aldana Luna Sambran Argentina (ARG)DNF
2Sarah Lahti Sweden (SWE)DNS

Final

The final was started on 26 August at 20:50.[6]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Faith Kipyegon Kenya (KEN)14:53.88
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Sifan Hassan Netherlands (NED)14:54.11
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Beatrice Chebet Kenya (KEN)14:54.33
4Margaret Chelimo Kipkemboi Kenya (KEN)14:56.62
5Ejgayehu Taye Ethiopia (ETH)14:56.85
6Medina Eisa Ethiopia (ETH)14:58.23
7Freweyni Hailu Ethiopia (ETH)14:58.31
8Nozomi Tanaka Japan (JPN)14:58.99
9Elise Cranny United States (USA)14:59.22
10Laura Galván Mexico (MEX)14:59.32
10Lilian Kasait Rengeruk Kenya (KEN)14:59.32
12Maureen Koster Netherlands (NED)15:00.78
13Gudaf Tsegay Ethiopia (ETH)15:01.13
14Alicia Monson United States (USA)15:04.08
15Francine Niyomukunzi Burundi (BDI)15:15.01
16Nadia Battocletti Italy (ITA)15:27.86

References

  1. "Downloadable Timetable | Budapest 23 - World Athletics" (PDF). 19 August 2023. Retrieved 19 August 2023.
  2. "5000 Metres Women − Records". World Athletics. Retrieved 19 August 2023.
  3. "Qualification system published for World Athletics Championships Budapest 23" (PDF). World Athletics. worldathletics.org. 19 August 2022. Retrieved 19 August 2023.
  4. "RESULTS 5000 metres Women - Heats" (PDF). International Association of Athletics Federations. 22 August 2023. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  5. "SUMMARY 5000 metre Women - Heats" (PDF). International Association of Athletics Federations. 23 August 2023. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  6. "RESULTS 5000 Metres Women - Final" (PDF). International Association of Athletics Federations. 27 August 2023. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
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