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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] Norwegian Jakob Ingebrigtsen won the gold medal, followed by Mohamed Katir and Jacob Krop .
Men's 5000 metres World Championships record progression [18] Time Athlete Nation Year Round Date 13:43.36: Markus Ryffel Switzerland (SUI) 1983: First round: 10 August 13:32.34: Markus Ryffel Switzerland (SUI) 1983: Semi-final: 12 August 13:31.40: Dmitriy Dmitriyev Soviet Union (URS) 1983: Semi-final: 12 August 13:28.53: Eamon Coghlan Ireland ...
Muktar Edris was now ranked #13 in the world, Selemon Barega #3 and Mohammed Ahmed #4. Olympic Champion and world record holder Joshua Cheptegei was #1. And there was Jakob Ingebrigtsen with no ranking at all and a chip on his shoulder after losing the 1500 earlier in the Championships.
Uganda's Joshua Cheptegei produced a brilliant display of solo running to break Kenenisa Bekele's 16-year-old 5,000 metres world record by almost two seconds as athletics returned with a bang at ...
The 5,000-meter final on Saturday will now feature a more crowded field with 20 athletes vying for the podium. Among the competitors will be two-time reigning world champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen of ...
The official world records in the 5000 metres, or 5000-metre run, are held by Joshua Cheptegei with 12:35.36 for men and Gudaf Tsegay with 14:00.21 for women.. The first world record in the men's 5000 m was recognized by World Athletics (formerly called the International Association of Athletics Federations, or IAAF) in 1912.
But Hassan could be beaten, she was beaten in the 10,000 metres a few days earlier and world record holder in both events, Letesenbet Gidey was the prime beneficiary. The final took off at a pedestrian pace, Gidey's Ethiopian teammate Dawit Seyaum took the field through a couple of 80 second laps.
In July 2023, Fay broke the Irish 5000m record, running 13:01.40 at the Night of Athletics meeting in Heusden, Belgium. This was two seconds faster than the previous record, held by Alistair Cragg since September 2011. [10] Fay finished second in the race, won by Kenya’s Cornelius Kemboi.