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2019 World Athletics Championships

The 2019 IAAF World Athletics Championships (Arabic: بطولة العالم لألعاب القوى 2019) was the seventeenth edition of the biennial, global athletics competition organised by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), since renamed World Athletics.[2] It was held between 27 September and 6 October 2019 in Doha, Qatar, at the renovated multi-purpose Khalifa International Stadium,[3] but reduced to 21,000 available seats. 1,772 athletes from 206 teams competed in 49 athletics events over the ten-day competition, comprising 24 events each for men and women, plus a mixed relay. There were 43 track and field events, 4 racewalking events, and 2 marathon road running events. The racewalking and marathon events were held in Doha Corniche.

IAAF World Athletics Championships
Doha 2019
Host cityDoha
Country Qatar
OrganisersWorld Athletics, Qatar Athletics Federation
Edition17th
Nations206
Athletes1,772
SportAthletics
Events49 (24 men, 24 women, 1 mixed)
Dates27 September – 6 October
Opened byEmir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani
Main venueKhalifa International Stadium
Individual prize money (US$)60,000 (gold)
30,000 (silver)
20,000 (bronze)[1]
Team prize money (US$)80,000 (relay gold)
40,000 (silver)
20,000 (bronze)[1]
Websiteiaafworldathleticschamps.com/doha2019

It was the first edition of the competition under its modified name, having previously been known as the World Championships in Athletics, and the last held before the IAAF assumed its new identity as World Athletics. It was also the first time the competition was in the Middle East and also the first time it ended in October. Due to the hot climate, there were no morning sessions and events were held in the late afternoon onward. Long-distance road events were scheduled to start around midnight local time.[4] For the first time, sponsors of national teams were permitted to appear on the kit that the athletes compete in.[5][6]

Some athletes competing in Doha criticised the lack of spectators, the flat atmosphere, the heat, and the timing of events, and also questioned why Doha was awarded the championships at all; despite this, World Athletics President Sebastian Coe described the 2019 Championships as the best in history, in terms of the quality of performances produced by the athletes.

Three world records were set, and six championships records were broken. A total of 43 nations reached the medal table, and 68 nations had an athlete with a top eight finish. Based on the IAAF scoring tables, the best male and female performers were men's shot put gold medallist Joe Kovacs, and women's long jump gold medalist Malaika Mihambo.[7]

Organisation edit

Host selection edit

Three cities entered the bidding process to host the event.[8] Assessment of the bids was carried out by the IAAF Evaluation Commission, which consisted of three IAAF Council Members (IAAF Vice President Sebastian Coe, Abby Hoffman and Katsuyuki Tanaka), three IAAF Office members (Essar Gabriel, Nick Davies and Paul Hardy), public relations staff from Dentsu (Ryo Wakabayashi) as well as marketing staff from Athletics Management & Services (Nigel Swinscoe).[9]

 
Hayward Field, venue of the Eugene bid, which failed to win the 2019 hosting rights but was awarded the 2022 event. The next event was to have been held in 2021, but the 2021 Summer Olympics rescheduling as a byproduct of the COVID-19 pandemic forced World Athletics to change the date a year on 30 March 2020.

Both Doha and Eugene are hosts of IAAF Diamond League meetings. Doha had previously applied for and failed to win the bid for the 2017 World Championships in Athletics, and had hosted the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships. Sheikh Saoud bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, a member of Qatar's ruling family, led the Doha bid. The bid was part of a movement among the leaders of Qatar to make the country a destination for international sports tourism, within the framework of the Qatar National Vision 2030, which included the hosting of global sports events, such as the 2014 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m), 2018 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships, the 2022 FIFA World Cup, and a Doha bid for the 2020 Summer Olympics.[10][11]

Eugene had hosted the 2014 World Junior Championships in Athletics. Barcelona hosted the 2012 World Junior Championships in Athletics and the 2010 European Athletics Championships, as well as the annual Míting Internacional d´Atletisme Ciutat de Barcelona. The final selection of the host city was carried out on 18 November 2014 in Monaco.[12]

City Country Round 1 Round 2
Doha Qatar 12 15
Eugene United States 9 12
Barcelona Spain 6

Barcelona was eliminated in the first round of voting, receiving only six of the 27 votes, then Doha prevailed in the final round with fifteen votes to Eugene's twelve. The IAAF later awarded Eugene the hosting rights for the next championships, which was later moved to 2022.[13][14] IAAF President said that the Doha bid would develop the country and its community through sport.[15] José María Odriozola, the president of the Royal Spanish Athletics Federation, said that the worst bid had won the vote and "the only thing they have there is money".[16]

In 2016, the French newspaper Le Monde claimed the selection of the host would have been paid with US$3.5 million transferred between October and November 2011 according to the US tax administration, to Papa Massata Diack, the son of Lamine Diack (former president of the IAAF). In 2019 The Guardian reported documents showing an agreement to pay US$4.5 million to Sporting Age, a Singapore-based company linked to Papa Massata Diack, in order to transfer the value of World Championships ticket sales and sponsorship to Qatari officials.[17] In 2019, the French prosecutors charged some protagonists for corruption: the head of beIN Sports Yousef Al-Obaidly, the former president of IAAF Lamine Diack, and the head of Paris Saint Germain Nasser Al-Khelaifi.[18] A French judge opened investigations into Dentsu and Athletics Management & Services in 2019, on the basis that the companies (which had been involved in the host evaluation) had played key roles in the diversion of funds to Papa Massata Diack.[19]

The selection of Doha as the host city was later criticised by numerous athletes present at the championships. Marathon fifth-placer Volha Mazuronak said organisers were disrespectful to athletes to make them compete in the conditions, and 50 km walk world champion Yohann Diniz was unhappy that the road events had not been located in the air-conditioned stadium instead. Decathlon world record holder Kevin Mayer said organisers had not prioritised athletes in respect of the climate and low spectator attendance.[20] In response to low attendances, the stadium capacity was reduced to 21,000 for the championships, with large banners covering the empty seats, yet on the third day less than half these seats were filled despite the organisers giving free tickets to migrant workers and children. In response to the issue, IAAF Chief Executive Jon Ridgeon worked with the local organisers to take attendance-boosting measures. Ridgeon suggested that sessions were organised late in the evening for European television audiences, which meant working Qataris had gone home before the last event finals had begun (around 11 pm local time).[21] He also said the IAAF's plan had been for the championships to serve people across the Middle East, but the Qatar diplomatic crisis had blocked people from other countries in the region from attending.[22][23] Three days before the competition it was reported that 50,000 tickets had been sold for the 10-day event, signalling a 90% reduction in sales compared to the 2017 World Championships in Athletics.[24] In response, local organisers purchased tickets and distributed them for free to ensure sizeable attendances, and also ran an initiative to allow spectators to enter the stadium and fill vacant seats left by audience members who left mid-session.[25]

The issue of human rights in Qatar was also raised as over 6,000 migrant labourers, some involved in construction and cleaning of the host stadium, had lodged complaints over unpaid wages against Qatari companies.[26] IAAF President Coe responded that the championships was a way to achieve social change and "rise above political structures".[27]

Venue edit

The decision to hold the World Athletics Championships in the Middle East presented organisational challenges due to the hot and humid climate in Doha in September and October. In previous years the World Championships had mostly qualifying competitions in morning sessions and finals mostly in afternoon sessions. Weather conditions meant that traditional arrangement was not workable and in Doha the schedule was redesigned to have a "pre-session" in the afternoon and a "main session" in the evening.[28] The Khalifa International Stadium used an open-air conditioning system to bring the temperature of the stadium to below 25 °C (77 °F), which was a world first for a stadium.[29][30]

In collaboration with Seiko, a starting blocks camera view was broadcast from the Khalifa International Stadium's Block Cams.[31] The intimate views from the blocks were the subject of complaint by the German Athletics Association, which said its female sprinters had not been consulted on the broadcasting of the images. The IAAF agreed to only show Block Cam images of athletes immediately prior to the starting pistol and to delete video data at other times on a daily basis.[32] Gina Lückenkemper said the technology was "unpleasant" as it captured close images of athletes' crotches in tight clothing.[33] The stadium also features an advanced lighting system, which was used in the introductions of some event finals, projecting coloured lines on to the lane boundaries and the competing athlete's names moving around the 400 m track.[34] New graphical detail of athletes' performance was provided in television coverage, including top speed of athletes in the track and jumping events, angle and release speed in the throws, and the distance of each phase of a triple jump.[31]

Non-stadium racewalking and marathon events were set on a looped course around the Doha Corniche – a 7-kilometre (4.3 mi) waterfront promenade.[35] Organisers set the start time around midnight local time for road events to avoid the hottest conditions, although the women's marathon still began at a temperature of 32 °C (90 °F) and humidity over 70%.[36][37] The IAAF and local organisers undertook preparation for the conditions by recruiting medical experts to inform their preparations, as well as increasing water and refreshments, ice baths, and medical support along the route. It sent advisory notices to all national federations in the six months before the competition with recommendations for athletes.[38] However, postponement of the events until after the championships was deemed a last resort. The IAAF President Sebastian Coe stated his belief that the humidity was a greater challenge for runners than the temperature itself.[30]

The Khalifa Stadium hosted the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships in April before the world event.[1]

For training and warm-up purposes, an outdoor venue attached to the Khalifa Stadium is available for athletes in running and jumping events, while all athletes (including throwing events) have full training facilities available at the Qatar Sports Club venue near Doha Corniche. At the Aspire Zone, indoor training facilities are available for running and jumping disciplines while a separate outdoor throws training venue is also available.[1]

Mascot edit

The event mascot was "Falah", an anthropomorphic falcon dressed in athletic gear in the maroon colour of the flag of Qatar. The mascot was designed by a Filipino expatriate in Doha, Theodore Paul Manuel, and his design was announced as the winner of the design competition on Qatar's national sports day. Twenty-one sketches were submitted and a group of young Qataris were invited to vote on their favourite designs. Following this, the head of the Qatar Olympic Committee Joaan bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and members of the local organising committee narrowed the choices down to a shortlist of three for final voting.[39]

Entry standards edit

The IAAF announced that athletes would qualify by their IAAF World Rankings position, wildcard (reigning world champion or 2019 IAAF Diamond League champion) or by achieving the entry standard.[40][41][42] Following criticism that the qualification method was biased the IAAF reverted to their traditional qualifying method.[43][44] The qualification period for the 10,000 metres, marathon, race walks, relays, and combined events ran from 7 March 2018 to 6 September 2019. For all other events, the qualification period runs from 7 September 2018 to 6 September 2019. Wild Card as:

Countries who have no male and/or no female athletes who have achieved the Entry Standard or considered as having achieved the entry standard (see above) or qualified relay team, may enter one unqualified male athlete OR one unqualified female athlete in one event of the championships (except the road events and field events, combined events, 10,000 m and 3000 m steeplechase).

Target numbers edit

At the end of the qualification period, the 2019 IAAF World Rankings published on 6 September 2019 were used to invite additional athletes to the World Championships where the target number of athletes had not been achieved for that event through other methods of qualification. The maximum of three athletes per country in individual events is not affected by this rule. National athletics associations retained the right to confirm or reject athlete selections through this method. Where the highest ranked athletes were from a country that had already had three or more entrants for the event, or where the national association rejected an entrant, the next highest ranked athlete became eligible for entry via world rankings.[45][46]

Event schedule edit

Sex Event 27
Sep
28
Sep
29
Sep
30
Sep
1
Oct
2
Oct
3
Oct
4
Oct
5
Oct
6
Oct
Men 100 m P S
H F
200 m H S F
400 m H S F
800 m H S F
1500 m H S F
5000 m H F
10,000 m F
Marathon F
3000 m steeplechase H F
110 m hurdles H S
F
400 m hurdles H S F
Decathlon F F
High jump Q F
Pole vault Q F
Long jump Q F
Triple jump Q F
Shot put Q F
Discus throw Q F
Hammer throw Q F
Javelin throw Q F
20 km walk F
50 km walk F
4 × 100 m relay H F
4 × 400 m relay H F
Women 100 m H S
F
200 m H S F
400 m H S F
800 m H S F
1500 m H S F
5000 m H F
10,000 m F
Marathon F
3000 m steeplechase H F
100 m hurdles H S
F
400 m hurdles H S F
Heptathlon F F
High jump Q F
Pole vault Q F
Long jump Q F
Triple jump Q F
Shot put Q F
Discus throw Q F
Hammer throw Q F
Javelin throw Q F
20 km walk F
50 km walk F
4 × 100 m relay H F
4 × 400 m relay H F
Mixed 4 × 400 m relay H F

Results edit

Men edit

Track edit

Chronology: 2015 | 2017 | 2019 | 2021 | 2023
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
Christian Coleman
  United States
9.76 WL Justin Gatlin
  United States
9.89 Andre De Grasse
  Canada
9.90 PB
200 metres
details
Noah Lyles
  United States
19.83 Andre De Grasse
  Canada
19.95 Álex Quiñónez
  Ecuador
19.98
400 metres
details
Steven Gardiner
  Bahamas
43.48 NR Anthony Zambrano
  Colombia
44.15 AR Fred Kerley
  United States
44.17
800 metres
details
Donavan Brazier
  United States
1:42.34 CR, AR Amel Tuka
  Bosnia and Herzegovina
1:43.47 SB Ferguson Rotich
  Kenya
1:43.82
1500 metres
details
Timothy Cheruiyot
  Kenya
3:29.26 Taoufik Makhloufi
  Algeria
3:31.38 SB Marcin Lewandowski
  Poland
3:31.46 NR
5000 metres
details
Muktar Edris
  Ethiopia
12:58.85 SB Selemon Barega
  Ethiopia
12:59.70 Mohamed Ahmed
  Canada
13:01.11
10,000 metres
details
Joshua Cheptegei
  Uganda
26:48.36 WL Yomif Kejelcha
  Ethiopia
26:49.34 PB Rhonex Kipruto
  Kenya
26:50.32
Marathon
details
Lelisa Desisa
  Ethiopia
2:10:40 SB Mosinet Geremew
  Ethiopia
2:10:44 Amos Kipruto
  Kenya
2:10:51
110 metres hurdles
details
Grant Holloway
  United States
13.10 Sergey Shubenkov
  Authorised Neutral Athletes
13.15 Pascal Martinot-Lagarde
  France
Orlando Ortega
  Spain
13.18
13.30[47]
400 metres hurdles
details
Karsten Warholm
  Norway
47.42 Rai Benjamin
  United States
47.66 Abderrahman Samba
  Qatar
48.03
3000 metres steeplechase
details
Conseslus Kipruto
  Kenya
8:01.35 WL Lamecha Girma
  Ethiopia
8:01.36 NR Soufiane El Bakkali
  Morocco
8:03.76 SB
20 kilometres walk
details
Toshikazu Yamanishi
  Japan
1:26.34 Vasiliy Mizinov
  Authorised Neutral Athletes
1:26.49 Perseus Karlström
  Sweden
1:27.00
50 kilometres walk
details
Yusuke Suzuki
  Japan
4:04.20 João Vieira
  Portugal
4:04.59 Evan Dunfee
  Canada
4:05.02
4 × 100 metres relay
details
  United States
Christian Coleman
Justin Gatlin
Mike Rodgers
Noah Lyles
Cravon Gillespie*
37.10 WL   Great Britain
Adam Gemili
Zharnel Hughes
Richard Kilty
Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake
37.36 AR   Japan
Shuhei Tada
Kirara Shiraishi
Yoshihide Kiryū
Abdul Hakim Sani Brown
Yuki Koike*
37.43 AR
4 × 400 metres relay
details
  United States
Fred Kerley
Michael Cherry
Wilbert London
Rai Benjamin
Tyrell Richard*
Vernon Norwood*
Nathan Strother*
2:56.69 WL   Jamaica
Akeem Bloomfield
Nathon Allen
Terry Thomas
Demish Gaye
Javon Francis*
2:57.90 SB   Belgium
Jonathan Sacoor
Robin Vanderbemden
Dylan Borlée
Kevin Borlée
Julien Watrin*
2:58.78 SB
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

* Indicates the athletes only competed in the preliminary heats and received medals.

Field edit

Chronology: 2015 | 2017 | 2019 | 2021 | 2023
Event Gold Silver Bronze
High jump
details
Mutaz Essa Barshim
  Qatar
2.37 m WL Mikhail Akimenko
  Authorised Neutral Athletes
2.35 m PB Ilya Ivanyuk
  Authorised Neutral Athletes
2.35 m PB
Pole vault
details
Sam Kendricks
  United States
5.97 m Armand Duplantis
  Sweden
5.97 m Piotr Lisek
  Poland
5.87 m
Long jump
details
Tajay Gayle
  Jamaica
8.69 m WL, NR Jeff Henderson
  United States
8.39 m SB Juan Miguel Echevarría
  Cuba
8.34 m
Triple jump
details
Christian Taylor
  United States
17.92 m SB Will Claye
  United States
17.74 m Hugues Fabrice Zango
  Burkina Faso
17.66 m AR
Shot put
details
Joe Kovacs
  United States
22.91 m CR Ryan Crouser
  United States
22.90 m PB Tom Walsh
  New Zealand
22.90 m AR
Discus throw
details
Daniel Ståhl
  Sweden
67.59 m Fedrick Dacres
  Jamaica
66.94 m Lukas Weißhaidinger
  Austria
66.82 m
Javelin throw
details
Anderson Peters
  Grenada
86.89 m Magnus Kirt
  Estonia
86.21 m Johannes Vetter
  Germany
85.37 m
Hammer throw
details
Paweł Fajdek
  Poland
80.50 m Quentin Bigot
  France
78.19 m SB Bence Halász
  Hungary
Wojciech Nowicki
  Poland
78.18 m
77.69 m[48]
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

Combined edit

Chronology: 2015 | 2017 | 2019 | 2021 | 2023
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Decathlon
details
Niklas Kaul
  Germany
8691 PB Maicel Uibo
  Estonia
8604 PB Damian Warner
  Canada
8529
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

Women edit

Track edit

Chronology: 2015 | 2017 | 2019 | 2021 | 2023
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce
  Jamaica
10.71 WL Dina Asher-Smith
  Great Britain and Northern Ireland
10.83 NR Marie-Josée Ta Lou
  Ivory Coast
10.90
200 metres
details
Dina Asher-Smith
  Great Britain and Northern Ireland
21.88 NR Brittany Brown
  United States
22.22 PB Mujinga Kambundji
  Switzerland
22.51
400 metres
details
Salwa Eid Naser
  Bahrain
48.14 AR, WL Shaunae Miller-Uibo
  Bahamas
48.37 AR Shericka Jackson
  Jamaica
49.47 PB
800 metres
details
Halimah Nakaayi
  Uganda
1:58.04 NR Raevyn Rogers
  United States
1:58.18 SB Ajeé Wilson
  United States
1:58.84
1500 metres
details
Sifan Hassan
  Netherlands
3:51.95 CR, AR Faith Kipyegon
  Kenya
3:54.22 NR Gudaf Tsegay
  Ethiopia
3:54.38 PB
5000 metres
details
Hellen Obiri
  Kenya
14:26.72 CR Margaret Kipkemboi
  Kenya
14:27.49 PB Konstanze Klosterhalfen
  Germany
14:28.43
10,000 metres
details
Sifan Hassan
  Netherlands
30:17.62 WL Letesenbet Gidey
  Ethiopia
30:21.23 PB Agnes Jebet Tirop
  Kenya
30:25.20 PB
Marathon
details
Ruth Chepngetich
  Kenya
2:32:43 Rose Chelimo
  Bahrain
2:33:46 Helalia Johannes
  Namibia
2:34:15
100 metres hurdles
details
Nia Ali
  United States
12.34 PB Kendra Harrison
  United States
12.46 Danielle Williams
  Jamaica
12.47
400 metres hurdles
details
Dalilah Muhammad
  United States
52.16 WR Sydney McLaughlin
  United States
52.23 PB Rushell Clayton
  Jamaica
53.74 PB
3000 metres steeplechase
details
Beatrice Chepkoech
  Kenya
8:57.84 CR Emma Coburn
  United States
9:02.35 PB Gesa Felicitas Krause
  Germany
9:03.30 NR
20 kilometres walk
details
Liu Hong
  China
1:32.53 Qieyang Shijie
  China
1:33.10 Yang Liujing
  China
1:33.17
50 kilometres walk
details
Liang Rui
  China
4:23.26 Li Maocuo
  China
4:26.40 Eleonora Giorgi
  Italy
4:29.13
4 × 100 metres relay
details
  Jamaica
Natalliah Whyte
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce
Jonielle Smith
Shericka Jackson
Natasha Morrison*
41.44 WL   Great Britain
Asha Philip
Dina Asher-Smith
Ashleigh Nelson
Daryll Neita
Imani-Lara Lansiquot*
41.85 SB   United States
Dezerea Bryant
Teahna Daniels
Morolake Akinosun
Kiara Parker
42.10 SB
4 × 400 metres relay
details
  United States
Phyllis Francis
Sydney McLaughlin
Dalilah Muhammad
Wadeline Jonathas
Jessica Beard*
Allyson Felix*
Kendall Ellis*
Courtney Okolo*
3:18.92 WL   Poland
Iga Baumgart-Witan
Patrycja Wyciszkiewicz
Małgorzata Hołub-Kowalik
Justyna Święty-Ersetic
Anna Kiełbasińska*
3:21.89 NR   Jamaica
Anastasia Le-Roy
Tiffany James
Stephenie Ann McPherson
Shericka Jackson
Roneisha McGregor*
3:22.37 SB
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

* Indicates the athletes only competed in the preliminary heats and received medals.

Field edit

Chronology: 2015 | 2017 | 2019 | 2021 | 2023
Event Gold Silver Bronze
High jump
details
Mariya Lasitskene
  Authorised Neutral Athletes
2.04 m Yaroslava Mahuchikh
  Ukraine
2.04 m WU20R Vashti Cunningham
  United States
2.00 m PB
Pole vault
details
Anzhelika Sidorova
  Authorised Neutral Athletes
4.95 m WL, PB Sandi Morris
  United States
4.90 m Katerina Stefanidi
  Greece
4.85 m
Long jump
details
Malaika Mihambo
  Germany
7.30 m WL, PB Maryna Bekh-Romanchuk
  Ukraine
6.92 m SB Ese Brume
  Nigeria
6.91 m
Triple jump
details
Yulimar Rojas
  Venezuela
15.37 m Shanieka Ricketts
  Jamaica
14.92 m Caterine Ibargüen
  Colombia
14.73 m
Shot put
details
Gong Lijiao
  China
19.55 m Danniel Thomas-Dodd
  Jamaica
19.47 m Christina Schwanitz
  Germany
19.17 m
Discus throw
details
Yaime Pérez
  Cuba
69.17 m Denia Caballero
  Cuba
68.44 m Sandra Perković
  Croatia
66.72 m
Hammer throw
details
DeAnna Price
  United States
77.54 m Joanna Fiodorow
  Poland
76.35 m PB Wang Zheng
  China
74.76 m
Javelin throw
details
Kelsey-Lee Barber
  Australia
66.56 m Liu Shiying
  China
65.88 m SB Lü Huihui
  China
65.49 m
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

Combined edit

Chronology: 2015 | 2017 | 2019 | 2021 | 2023
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Heptathlon
details
Katarina Johnson-Thompson
  Great Britain and Northern Ireland
6981 WL, NR Nafissatou Thiam
  Belgium
6677 Verena Preiner
  Austria
6560
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

Mixed edit

* Indicates the athletes only competed in the preliminary heats and received medals.

Event summaries edit

Sprints edit

In the men's 100 metres, the semi-finals were dominated by world leader Christian Coleman from the United States, finishing in 9.88 seconds while no other qualifiers broke 10 seconds.[49] In the final, defending champion American Justin Gatlin got a good start to gain a step on the field, except Coleman got a better start, gaining that step on Gatlin and extending his lead to a dominating victory in 9.76 seconds, a new personal best and world-leading time for the season that becomes the 6th best in history, just 2 ticks behind Gatlin's best. Returning to form, Canada's Andre De Grasse closed and nearly caught Gatlin at the line in 9.90, a new wind-legal personal best, though he has run as fast as 9.69 wind-aided.[49][50]

Middle distance edit

Long distance edit

The women's marathon began at midnight local time on 28 September with the temperature at 32 °C (90 °F) and 70 per cent humidity.[51] By the end of the race, 28 of the 68 starters had dropped out, including all three Ethiopian runners.[52] Five runners in a lead pack stayed together for the first 20 km (12 mi) and the pack was down to only four athletes by 35 km (22 mi), including Ruth Chepngetich and Edna Kiplagat of Kenya, Bahrain's Rose Chelimo and Namibia's Helalia Johannes.[51] Chepngetich broke out into a sprint in the final lap to finish at 2:32:43, followed by Chelimo (2:33:46) and Johannes (2:35:15).[51]

The women's 10,000 metres began the following night with Germany's Alina Reh taking an early lead before falling back and eventually dropping out. By the ninth lap, a lead pack of three Kenyans and three Ethiopians developed. By the half-way point, the Netherlands' Sifan Hassan had latched on to back of the lead pack, headed by Kenya's Rosemary Wanjiru and Agnes Tirop. Letesenbet Gidey of Ethiopia surged with four laps remaining with Hassan following close behind. Hassan took the lead on the final lap and finished in 30:17.33, more than three seconds ahead of Gidey, and almost eight seconds ahead of Tirop in third place.[53][54]

Hurdles edit

In the men's 400 m hurdles, most of the top ranked athletes reached the final, though world number 4 Ludvy Vaillant was eliminated.[55]

Jumps edit

The last place qualifier to the men's long jump final was Jamaica's Tajay Gayle with 7.89 m (25 ft 10+12 in).[56] In the final on 28 September, Gayle jumped a personal best 8.46 m (27 ft 9 in) to take the lead in the first round. No other jumper would beat that mark. World leader Juan Miguel Echevarría from Cuba jumped 8.25 m (27 ft 34 in) while giving up the entire 20 cm (7.9 in) width of the board. His jump was bettered by American Jeff Henderson with an 8.28 m (27 ft 1+34 in) three jumpers later. In the third round, Echevarría improved to 8.34 m (27 ft 4+14 in) and Henderson responded again with 8.39 m (27 ft 6+14 in), which ultimately settled the medal positions. In the fourth round, Gayle improved his winning jump to 8.69 m (28 ft 6 in).[57][58]

Relays edit

Throws edit

In the men's shot put, 4 men surpassed the previous Championship Record, with 22.53, a distance surpassing any winning mark in any global championship to this time, only falling in 4th. Joe Kovacs won with 22.91, silver went to Ryan Crouser with 22.90(22.71), and Tom Walsh took bronze with 22.90(22.56).With world record holder and defending champion Anita Włodarczyk absent from the women's hammer throw due to injury,[59] world leader DeAnna Price seized the opportunity on the second throw of the competition with 76.87 m (252 ft 2 in), then a best of 77.54 m (254 ft 4 in) in the third round – no athlete could match her. The next thrower into the ring was Włodarczyk's Polish teammate Joanna Fiodorow, who threw her personal best 76.35 m (250 ft 5 in) to win the silver medal and drop Zalina Petrivskaya's first throw of the competition to third place after the first three throwers. Although Petrivskaya threw 74.33 m (243 ft 10 in) in the third round and maintained that position, China's Wang Zheng threw the hammer to 74.76 m (245 ft 3 in) to grab the bronze medal in the middle of the fifth round.[60][61][62]

Walks edit

The men's 50 kilometres walk started at midnight local time on 29 September. Most walkers were wary of starting too fast; only the 20K world record holder, Japan's Yusuke Suzuki, went out fast, opening up a gap just a few minutes into the race. By 5K he had a 10-second lead over a chase pack and by 20K he had expanded the lead to two minutes. Suzuki crossed the halfway point at 2:01:07 and, by 35K, Suzuki had opened his lead up to 3:34.[63] Suzuki first showed signs of cracking, stopping at the water station at 44K before getting back on stride. At that point he still had two minutes on China's Niu Wenbin, an additional minute on Portugal's João Vieira, with the next chaser Canada's Evan Dunfee another minute back, now ahead of China's Luo Yadong. Suzuki struggled through the final lap while Vieira and Dunfee were applying the pressure. Both passed Niu, with Dunfee closing down his gap to Vieira. Suzuki got across the finish line first, only 39 seconds ahead of Vieira, who held off Dunfee by only three seconds.[63]

In its second appearance since the event's debut in 2017, the women's 50 kilometres walk began simultaneously with the men's. A lead quartet of China's Liang Rui and Li Maocuo with Italy's Eleonora Giorgi and Portugal's Inês Henriques crossed the 10K mark together, before Giorgi and Henriques dropped back. Liang continued to expand her lead with Li following comfortably ahead of Giorgi as the athletes reached 40K mark. Liang won the race in 4:23:26, more than three minutes ahead of her teammate Li, to become the first Chinese athlete to win the world title at that distance. Giorgi finished almost four minutes behind Li to win bronze.[64]

Combined edit

Daily highlights edit

Day one to three edit

One final was contested on the first day: Kenyan Ruth Chepngetich won the women's marathon in 2:32:43, beating the defending champion Rose Chelimo of Bahrain in the first ever World Championships race to start at midnight.[65] Braima Sundar Dabo of Guinea Bissau won plaudits for assisting competitor Jonathan Busby of Aruba to the finish of the men's 5000 m heats. A record 17 athletes qualified for the women's pole vault final. Cuban Juan Miguel Echevarría's jump of 8.40 m (27 ft 6+12 in) was the best performance in men's long jump qualifying for ten years. Christian Coleman had the first sub-10 run of the championships in the men's 100 metres heats.[66] Athletics Weekly noted the lack of spectators on the first day and the difficultly in travelling to the stadium, while decathlon World Champion Kevin Mayer was highly critical: "it's a disaster, there is no-one in the stands and the heat has not been adapted at all...We haven't really prioritised athletes when organising the championships here".[67]

There were six finals on the second day of competition. DeAnna Price became the first American to win the women's hammer throw while Tajay Gayle became Jamaica's first men's long jump world champion, surprising the field by adding 37 centimetres to his personal best and improving to tenth on the all-time lists.[68] Sifan Hassan broke the African dominance of the women's 10,000 metres that stretched back to 1997, by taking gold for the Netherlands.[69][70] America's Christian Coleman won the men's 100 metres final in a time of 9.76 seconds. The qualifiers for the mixed 4 × 400 m relay resulted in the first world record of the championships, with the American quartet finishing in 3:12.42 minutes. Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce ran the fastest time ever recorded in the heats stage of the women's 100 metres with 10.80 seconds.[71]

On the third day, five finals were scheduled. Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce won her fourth world title in the women's 100 m, recording her second fastest time ever (10.71) to hold off the British record-breaking Dina Asher-Smith. In the, Christian Taylor also won a fourth title in the men's triple jump, with compatriot Will Claye finishing runner-up as he had in 2017, and Hugues Fabrice Zango winning Burkina Faso's first ever World Championships medal in third. The mixed 4 × 400 m relay final brought another world record (3:09.34) and a twelfth gold medal for Allyson Felix, taking her ahead of Usain Bolt on the all-time medal tally. Poland drew interest in the mixed relay for its choice to place men on the two middle legs – the opposite of all the other teams. Anzhelika Sidorova won her first world title in the women's pole vault final, competing as an Authorised Neutral Athlete. Liu Hong was the last winner of the day, taking her third World Championships gold in the women's 20 km walk, where Qieyang Shenjie and Yang Liujing helped make it a medal sweep for the Chinese team.[72] Liu, Felix and Fraser-Pryce all returned victorious to the World Championships after having had children in the previous two years,[73] and in her post-race interview Fraser-Pryce said she hoped to inspire other women to start families and return to elite sport.[74][75]

Day four to six edit

Day four featured six gold medal events. In men's discus throw Daniel Ståhl won Sweden's first gold medal in the event, while runner-up Fedrick Dacres won Jamaica's first discus medal and Lukas Weisshaidinger became Austria's first male World Championships medallist. Mariya Lasitskene defended her title in the women's high jump, winning on countback ahead of Yaroslava Mahuchikh, who set a world under-20 record of 2.04 m (6 ft 8+14 in). Sprint finishes from Muktar Edris and Selemon Barega made it an Ethiopian 1–2 in the men's 5000 metres final, where the early leader Jakob Ingebrigtsen collapsed over the line and missed a medal. Beatrice Chepkoech was dominant in the women's steeplechase, establishing a significant lead on her way to a championships record of 8:57.84 minutes. In her first global final, Halimah Nakaayi surprised with a Ugandan national record of 1:58.04 minutes to win the women's 800 metres. Karsten Warholm kept the men's 400 m hurdles final to the form book by retaining his world title, while Abderrahman Samba's bronze medal added the host nation Qatar to the medal table.[76]

On the fifth day, the United States team won three of the four finals. Donavan Brazier broke records that had lasted over 30 years in the men's 800 metres final with a championship record and American record of 1:42.34 minutes. Silver medallist Amel Tuka gave Bosnia and Herzegovina's best ever performance of the championships. Noah Lyles had a clear victory in the men's 200 metres final.[77] Sam Kendricks won the men's pole vault on countback in a closely fought final – the medallists Kendricks, Armand Duplantis and Piotr Lisek celebrated together on the landing mat with a synchronised backflip.[78] The fourth gold medallist of the evening was Australia's Kelsey-Lee Barber, who surprised China's Liu Shiying and Lü Huihui by moving up from fourth to first place with her final throw of the competition. In qualifying Amalie Iuel set a Norwegian record as the second fastest qualifier in the women's 400 m hurdles, while Abdalelah Haroun of the host nation Qatar exited the men's 400 m in the first round.[77]

There were three finals on the sixth day. Poland's Paweł Fajdek won a record fourth straight title in the men's hammer throw final, and officials played a role in the minor medals – fourth-placer Wojciech Nowicki was also awarded a bronze medal as irregularities with Bence Halász's bronze medal-winning throw was adjudged to have disadvantaged Nowicki,[79] while Great Britain was unsuccessful in its appeal over Nick Miller's second round throw, which looked to be good enough for a silver medal but was judged a foul.[80] In his international debut, Grant Holloway won the gold medal in the men's 110 metres hurdles final, where defending champion Omar McLeod collapsed after hitting several hurdles. McLeod crashed into Orlando Ortega impeding the Spaniard and although the Spanish team's appeal to have the race re-run was rejected,[81] Ortega was instead awarded an additional bronze medal.[82] Dina Asher-Smith won the women's 200 metres final by a large margin, becoming Britain's first global champion in the women's sprints with a British record time.[83] In the first day of combined events, thirty points separated the top three in the men's decathlon (Damian Warner, Pierce LePage and Kevin Mayer) while in the women's heptathlon Katarina Johnson-Thompson set the fourth best ever day one score for a 96-point lead over defending champion Nafissatou Thiam.[79]

Day seven to ten edit

The four finals of the seventh day centred around the conclusion of the combined events. Katarina Johnson-Thompson defeated Nafi Thiam in the heptathlon with a British record score of 6981 points, which moved her up to sixth on the all-time lists. The second day of the decathlon brought surprises as world record holder Kevin Mayer dropped out and Germany's Niklas Kaul set a championship decathlon best in the javelin to help him surge from eleventh place to the gold medal, making him the youngest winner of the title at age 21. The women's 400 metres final was among the fastest ever with five women under 50 seconds for the first time at the championships – 21-year-old Salwa Eid Naser of Bahrain seized the lead early on and crossed the line in 48.14 seconds for the third fastest time ever, leaving the Olympic champion Shaunae Miller-Uibo in second place with 48.37 seconds (becoming the sixth fastest athlete ever). China's Gong Lijiao defended her women's shot put title, reaching the podium for a sixth straight championships, while silver medallist Danniel Thomas-Dodd made history as Jamaica's first woman to win a global medal in the throws.[84]

Among the six finals of the eighth day, the men's high jump final helped fill out the stadium for the first time as Qatari Mutaz Essa Barshim won a high quality contest for the host nation.[85] Barshim, Mikhail Akimenko and Ilya Ivanyuk all cleared 2.35 m (7 ft 8+12 in) before the home athlete topped 2.37 m (7 ft 9+14 in) to win his country's first gold of the event. In the women's 400 metres hurdles final, Americans Dalilah Muhammad and Sydney McLaughlin turned the race into a duel which resulted in Olympic champion Muhammad setting a world record of 52.16 seconds to hold off 20-year-old McLaughlin, who ran the third fastest time ever. Ethiopian Lamecha Girma attempted to break Kenya's winning streak in the men's steeplechase final but was edged out on the line by Kenya's defending champion Conseslus Kipruto, with one hundredth of a second separating the two. Steven Gardiner of the Bahamas had a dominant run to win the men's 400 metres final, finishing over half a second ahead of the field and setting a Bahamian record of 43.48 seconds.[86] Gardiner's presence was only possible due to a public fund-raising campaign for his national team, as Hurricane Dorian had devastated the Caribbean nation just one month earlier.[87] The women's discus final was a Cuban affair between Yaime Pérez and Denia Caballero, with Pérez ultimately winning the gold with a fifth round effort of 69.17 m (226 ft 11 in). The first round of the men's and women's 4 × 100 metres relay saw athletes run an African record, a South American record and three national records.[86] Toshikazu Yamanishi took the gold medal in the men's 20 km walk in the overnight session.[88]

Six finals were scheduled for the ninth day. The men's shot put final saw four men surpass the previous championships record. Only one centimetre separated medallists Tom Walsh, Ryan Crouser, and Joe Kovacs, with Kovacs getting the win in 22.91 m (75 ft 1+34 in) – the best performance in nearly three decades. Yulimar Rojas was dominant in the women's triple jump final, taking the gold medal with a mark of 15.37 m (50 ft 5 in) – the fourth best jump ever. Sifan Hassan became the first woman to achieve a 1500/10,000 m double at the championships, and her winning time of 3:51.95 minutes was a championship and European record. Hassan gave an emotional post-race interview, defending herself against doping accusations which had arisen due to the four-year doping ban of her coach Alberto Salazar in the previous days.[89] Hellen Obiri defended her title in the women's 5000 metres final and ran a championship record of 14:26.72 minutes in order to do so. The men's 4 × 100 metres relay final brought a slew of records with the United States winning with a national record time of 37.10 seconds (the third fastest ever) and Great Britain, Japan and Brazil setting continental area records for the next three places.[90] Lelisa Desisa and Mosinet Geremew made it a 1–2 for Ethiopia in the late-night men's marathon, held in easier weather conditions than the women's race.[91]

On the tenth and final day of the championships, seven finals were held. Malaika Mihambo of Germany won a clear gold in the women's long jump final by producing the twelfth best ever performance of 7.30 m (23 ft 11+14 in). In the men's 1500 metres final Kenya's Timothy Cheruiyot set a quick pace and surged at the end to take the gold medal. Joshua Cheptegei of Uganda held off Yomif Kejelcha in the men's 10,000 metres final to claim his second world of the year, having already topped the 2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships podium. Anderson Peters of Grenada upset a field of more decorated European athletes in the men's javelin throw final as no one bettered his opening throw of 86.89 m (285 ft 34 in), while silver medallist Magnus Kirt of Estonia injured himself in the effort to beat his rival. Nia Ali of the United States surprised in the women's 100 metres hurdles final by winning gold in 12.34 seconds, making herself the ninth fastest of all-time and pushing the more favoured Danielle Williams and Kendra Harrison into the minor medals. The championships was brought to a close with the men's and women's 4 × 400 metres relay finals. The United States won both in world leading times to finish as the medal leader – its haul of 29 medals and 14 gold medals was almost three times that of second-placed Kenya (five golds and eleven medals). Jamaica ranked third on the medal table with three golds and twelve medals – its final bronze coming from the women's 4 × 400 metres relay after a successful appeal against an initial disqualification.[92][93]

Statistics edit

Medal table edit

  *   Host nation (Qatar)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  United States1411429
2  Kenya52411
3  Jamaica35412
4  China3339
5  Ethiopia2518
  Authorised Neutral Athletes[1]2316
6  Great Britain2305
7  Germany2046
8  Japan2013
9  Netherlands2002
  Uganda2002
11  Poland1236
12  Bahrain1113
  Cuba1113
  Sweden1113
15  Bahamas1102
16  Qatar*1012
17  Australia1001
  Grenada1001
  Norway1001
  Venezuela1001
21  Estonia0202
  Ukraine0202
23  Canada0145
24  Belgium0112
  Colombia0112
  France0112
27  Algeria0101
  Bosnia and Herzegovina0101
  Portugal0101
30  Austria0022
31  Burkina Faso0011
  Croatia0011
  Ecuador0011
  Greece0011
  Hungary0011
  Italy0011
  Ivory Coast0011
  Morocco0011
  Namibia0011
  New Zealand0011
  Nigeria0011
  Spain0011
   Switzerland0011
Totals (43 entries)494951149
Source: [94]

^[1] IAAF does not include the medals won by athletes competing as Authorised Neutral Athletes in their official medal table.[94]

Placing table edit

The Placing table assigns points to the top eight athletes in the final, with eight points to first place, seven to second place, and so on until one point for eighth place. Teams or athletes that do not finish or are disqualified do not receive points.[94]

Source for the table: IAAF[95]
Rank Country       4 5 6 7 8 Pts
1   United States 14 11 4 7 6 4 9 8 310
2   Kenya 5 2 4 3 3 3 3 2 122
3   Jamaica 3 5 4 3 1 3 1 2 115
4   China 3 3 3 2 4 2 1 2 99
5   Ethiopia 2 5 1 3 1 2 0 1 83
6   Great Britain and Northern Ireland 2 3 0 5 2 2 3 0 82
7   Germany 2 0 4 3 1 2 1 2 69
8   Poland 1 2 3 0 2 1 2 1 56
9   Canada 0 1 4 0 2 3 2 3 55
10   Ukraine 0 2 0 2 3 2 1 0 44
11   Japan 2 0 1 0 0 2 2 1 33
12   Cuba 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 30
12   Netherlands 2 0 0 0 0 2 4 0 30
14   Bahrain 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 28
15   Belarus 0 0 0 1 2 3 1 1 25
15   Brazil 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 1 25
15   France 0 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 25
15   Sweden 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 25
15   Uganda 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 25
20   Colombia 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 22
20   South Africa 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 22
22   Belgium 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 20
22   Norway 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 20
24   Spain 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 3 19
25   Estonia 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 17
26   Bahamas 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 16
26   Italy 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 3 16
26   Switzerland 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 16
29   Australia 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 14
29   Qatar 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 14
31   Portugal 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 13
32   Austria 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 12
32   Grenada 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 12
32   Nigeria 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 12
35   Turkey 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 11
36   Ivory Coast 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 10
36   Croatia 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 10
36   Hungary 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 10
36   Trinidad and Tobago 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 10
36   Venezuela 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 10
41   Morocco 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 9
42   Algeria 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 8
42   Czech Republic 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 8
42   Ecuador 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 8
42   New Zealand 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 8
42   Romania 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 8
47   Bosnia and Herzegovina 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
48   Burkina Faso 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6
48   Greece 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6
48   Namibia 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6
51   Cyprus 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 5
51   Finland 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5
51   British Virgin Islands 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5
51   Moldova 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5
55   Azerbaijan 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 4
55   Costa Rica 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4
55   Puerto Rico 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4
58   Barbados 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
58   Eritrea 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
58   The Gambia 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
58   India 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 3
58   Ireland 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
63   Bulgaria 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
63   Denmark 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
63   Iran 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
66   Benin 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
66   Malaysia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
66   North Korea 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1

Records edit

At the 2019 World Athletics Championships, three world records, one world under-20 record, six championships records, 21 area records and 86 national records in athletics were set.[96] Furthermore, two championship combined event bests were set and 23 world-leading performances (WL) were achieved at the competition.[97]

Allyson Felix became the most decorated athlete in World Championships, reaching a career total of 13 gold medals through wins in the women's and the mixed 4 × 400 metres relays.[98]

Source for the records tables: IAAF[97]

Individual edit

Sex Event Athlete Country Result Record Date
Men 100 metres Stern Noel Liffa   Malawi 10.72 NR 27 September 2019
Men 100 metres Dinesh Kumar Dhakal   Bhutan 11.64 NR 27 September 2019
Women 3000 metres steeplechase Anna Emilie Møller   Denmark 9:18.92 NR 27 September 2019
Men 400 metres hurdles Andrea Ercolani Volta   San Marino 52.60 NR 27 September 2019
Women 100 metres Sarswati Chaudhary   Nepal 12.72 NR 28 September 2019
Men 400 metres hurdles Abdelmalik Lahoulou   Algeria 48.39 NR 28 September 2019
Men Long jump Tajay Gayle   Jamaica 8.69 NR, Commonwealth 28 September 2019
Men Triple jump Hugues Fabrice Zango   Burkina Faso 17.66 AR 29 September 2019
Women 100 metres Dina Asher-Smith   Great Britain and Northern Ireland 10.83 NR 29 September 2019
Men 200 metres Noureddine Hadid   Lebanon 20.84 NR 29 September 2019
Men 200 metres Ahmed Al-Yaari   Yemen 22.37 NR 29 September 2019
Women 3000 metres steeplechase Gesa Felicitas Krause   Germany 9:03.30 NR 30 September 2019
Women 3000 metres steeplechase Anna Emilie Møller   Denmark 9:13.46 NR 30 September 2019
Women 3000 metres steeplechase Luiza Gega   Albania 9:19.93 NR 30 September 2019
Men Discus throw Apostolos Parellis   Cyprus 66.32 NR 30 September 2019
Women Javelin throw Annu Rani   India 62.43 NR 30 September 2019
Women 200 meters Aminatou Seyni   Niger 22.58 NR 30 September 2019
Men 800 meters Donavan Brazier   United States 1:42.34 AR 1 October 2019
Men 400 metres Jessy Franco   Gibraltar 47.41 NR 1 October 2019
Men 400 metres Todiasoa Rabearison   Madagascar 46.80 NR 1 October 2019
Women 400 metres hurdles Amalie Iuel   Norway 54.72 NR 1 October 2019
Men 3000 metres steeplechase Avinash Sable   India 8:25.23 NR 1 October 2019
Women 400 metres hurdles Sage Watson   Canada 54.32 NR 2 October 2019
Men 400 metres Anthony José Zambrano   Colombia 44.55 NR 2 October 2019
Women 200 metres Dina Asher-Smith   Great Britain and Northern Ireland 21.88 NR 2 October 2019
Women 400 metres Salwa Eid Naser   Bahrain 48.14 AR 3 October 2019
Women 400 metres Shaunae Miller-Uibo   Bahamas 48.37 AR, Commonwealth 3 October 2019
Women Hepthatlon Odile Ahouanwanou   Benin 6210 NR 4 October 2019
Women Hepthatlon Katarina Johnson-Thompson   Great Britain and Northern Ireland 6981 NR 4 October 2019
Women 400 metres hurdles Dalilah Muhammad   United States 52.16 WR 4 October 2019
Men 400 metres Steven Gardiner   Bahamas 43.48 NR 4 October 2019
Men 400 metres Anthony José Zambrano   Colombia 44.15 AR 4 October 2019
Women 100 metres hurdles [99] Marthe Koala   Burkina Faso 52.16 NR 2 October 2019
Men 3000 metres steeplechase Lamecha Girma   Ethiopia 8:01.36 NR 4 October 2019
Men 3000 metres steeplechase Avinash Sable   India 8:21.37 NR 4 October 2019
Men Shot put Tommy Walsh   New Zealand 22.90 AR, Commonwealth 5 October 2019
Women 100 metres hurdles Andrea Carolina Vargas   Costa Rica 12.68 NR 5 October 2019
Women 100 metres hurdles Andrea Carolina Vargas   Costa Rica 12.65 NR 6 October 2019
Women 100 metres hurdles Andrea Carolina Vargas   Costa Rica 12.64 NR 6 October 2019
Men Javelin throw Norbert Rivasz-Tóth   Hungary 83.42 NR 5 October 2019
Men Javelin throw Arshad Nadeem   Pakistan 81.52 NR 5 October 2019
Women 1500 meters Sifan Hassan   Netherlands 3:51.95 AR 5 October 2019
Women 1500 meters Faith Kipyegon   Kenya 3:54.22 NR 5 October 2019
Women 1500 meters Shelby Houlihan   United States 3:54.99 AR 5 October 2019

Relay edit

Sex Event Athlete Country Result Record Date
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Tyrell Richard
Jessica Beard
Jasmine Blocker
Obi Igbokwe
  United States 3:12.42 WR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Nathon Allen
Janieve Russell
Roneisha McGregor
Javon Francis
  Jamaica 3:12.73 NR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Musa Isah
Aminat Jamal
Salwa Eid Naser
Abbas Abubakar Abbas
  Bahrain 3:12.74 AR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Rabah Yousif
Zoey Clark
Emily Diamond
Martyn Rooney
  Great Britain and Northern Ireland 3:12.80 AR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Austin Cole
Aiyanna-Brigitte Stiverne
Madeline Price
Philip Osei
  Canada 3:16.76 NR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Mame-Ibra Anne
Amandine Brossier
Agnès Raharolahy
Thomas Jordier
  France 3:17.17 NR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Anderson Henriques
Tiffani Marinho
Geisa Coutinho
Lucas Carvalho
  Brazil 3:16.12 AR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Robin Vanderbemden
Camille Laus
Imke Vervaet
Dylan Borlée
  Belgium 3:16.16 NR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Seika Aoyama
Kota Wakabayashi
Tomoya Tamura
Saki Takashima
  Japan 3:17.17 NR 28 September 2019
Mixed 4 × 400 metres relay Wil London
Allyson Felix
Courtney Okolo
Michael Cherry
2019, world, athletics, championships, 2019, iaaf, world, athletics, championships, arabic, بطولة, العالم, لألعاب, القوى, 2019, seventeenth, edition, biennial, global, athletics, competition, organised, international, association, athletics, federations, iaaf,. The 2019 IAAF World Athletics Championships Arabic بطولة العالم لألعاب القوى 2019 was the seventeenth edition of the biennial global athletics competition organised by the International Association of Athletics Federations IAAF since renamed World Athletics 2 It was held between 27 September and 6 October 2019 in Doha Qatar at the renovated multi purpose Khalifa International Stadium 3 but reduced to 21 000 available seats 1 772 athletes from 206 teams competed in 49 athletics events over the ten day competition comprising 24 events each for men and women plus a mixed relay There were 43 track and field events 4 racewalking events and 2 marathon road running events The racewalking and marathon events were held in Doha Corniche IAAF World Athletics ChampionshipsDoha 2019Host cityDohaCountry QatarOrganisersWorld Athletics Qatar Athletics FederationEdition17thNations206Athletes1 772SportAthleticsEvents49 24 men 24 women 1 mixed Dates27 September 6 OctoberOpened byEmir Tamim bin Hamad Al ThaniMain venueKhalifa International StadiumIndividual prize money US 60 000 gold 30 000 silver 20 000 bronze 1 Team prize money US 80 000 relay gold 40 000 silver 20 000 bronze 1 Websiteiaafworldathleticschamps wbr com wbr doha2019 London 2017Eugene 2022 It was the first edition of the competition under its modified name having previously been known as the World Championships in Athletics and the last held before the IAAF assumed its new identity as World Athletics It was also the first time the competition was in the Middle East and also the first time it ended in October Due to the hot climate there were no morning sessions and events were held in the late afternoon onward Long distance road events were scheduled to start around midnight local time 4 For the first time sponsors of national teams were permitted to appear on the kit that the athletes compete in 5 6 Some athletes competing in Doha criticised the lack of spectators the flat atmosphere the heat and the timing of events and also questioned why Doha was awarded the championships at all despite this World Athletics President Sebastian Coe described the 2019 Championships as the best in history in terms of the quality of performances produced by the athletes Three world records were set and six championships records were broken A total of 43 nations reached the medal table and 68 nations had an athlete with a top eight finish Based on the IAAF scoring tables the best male and female performers were men s shot put gold medallist Joe Kovacs and women s long jump gold medalist Malaika Mihambo 7 Contents 1 Organisation 1 1 Host selection 1 2 Venue 1 3 Mascot 2 Entry standards 2 1 Target numbers 3 Event schedule 4 Results 4 1 Men 4 1 1 Track 4 1 2 Field 4 1 3 Combined 4 2 Women 4 2 1 Track 4 2 2 Field 4 2 3 Combined 4 3 Mixed 5 Event summaries 5 1 Sprints 5 2 Middle distance 5 3 Long distance 5 4 Hurdles 5 5 Jumps 5 6 Relays 5 7 Throws 5 8 Walks 5 9 Combined 6 Daily highlights 6 1 Day one to three 6 2 Day four to six 6 3 Day seven to ten 7 Statistics 7 1 Medal table 7 2 Placing table 7 3 Records 7 3 1 Individual 7 3 2 Relay 8 Participants 8 1 Absences 8 2 Testosterone rule 9 Anti doping 10 Media coverage 10 1 International broadcasters 10 2 National broadcasters 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksOrganisation editHost selection edit Three cities entered the bidding process to host the event 8 Assessment of the bids was carried out by the IAAF Evaluation Commission which consisted of three IAAF Council Members IAAF Vice President Sebastian Coe Abby Hoffman and Katsuyuki Tanaka three IAAF Office members Essar Gabriel Nick Davies and Paul Hardy public relations staff from Dentsu Ryo Wakabayashi as well as marketing staff from Athletics Management amp Services Nigel Swinscoe 9 nbsp Hayward Field venue of the Eugene bid which failed to win the 2019 hosting rights but was awarded the 2022 event The next event was to have been held in 2021 but the 2021 Summer Olympics rescheduling as a byproduct of the COVID 19 pandemic forced World Athletics to change the date a year on 30 March 2020 Both Doha and Eugene are hosts of IAAF Diamond League meetings Doha had previously applied for and failed to win the bid for the 2017 World Championships in Athletics and had hosted the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships Sheikh Saoud bin Abdulrahman Al Thani a member of Qatar s ruling family led the Doha bid The bid was part of a movement among the leaders of Qatar to make the country a destination for international sports tourism within the framework of the Qatar National Vision 2030 which included the hosting of global sports events such as the 2014 FINA World Swimming Championships 25 m 2018 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships the 2022 FIFA World Cup and a Doha bid for the 2020 Summer Olympics 10 11 Eugene had hosted the 2014 World Junior Championships in Athletics Barcelona hosted the 2012 World Junior Championships in Athletics and the 2010 European Athletics Championships as well as the annual Miting Internacional d Atletisme Ciutat de Barcelona The final selection of the host city was carried out on 18 November 2014 in Monaco 12 City Country Round 1 Round 2 Doha Qatar 12 15 Eugene United States 9 12 Barcelona Spain 6 Barcelona was eliminated in the first round of voting receiving only six of the 27 votes then Doha prevailed in the final round with fifteen votes to Eugene s twelve The IAAF later awarded Eugene the hosting rights for the next championships which was later moved to 2022 13 14 IAAF President said that the Doha bid would develop the country and its community through sport 15 Jose Maria Odriozola the president of the Royal Spanish Athletics Federation said that the worst bid had won the vote and the only thing they have there is money 16 In 2016 the French newspaper Le Monde claimed the selection of the host would have been paid with US 3 5 million transferred between October and November 2011 according to the US tax administration to Papa Massata Diack the son of Lamine Diack former president of the IAAF In 2019 The Guardian reported documents showing an agreement to pay US 4 5 million to Sporting Age a Singapore based company linked to Papa Massata Diack in order to transfer the value of World Championships ticket sales and sponsorship to Qatari officials 17 In 2019 the French prosecutors charged some protagonists for corruption the head of beIN Sports Yousef Al Obaidly the former president of IAAF Lamine Diack and the head of Paris Saint Germain Nasser Al Khelaifi 18 A French judge opened investigations into Dentsu and Athletics Management amp Services in 2019 on the basis that the companies which had been involved in the host evaluation had played key roles in the diversion of funds to Papa Massata Diack 19 The selection of Doha as the host city was later criticised by numerous athletes present at the championships Marathon fifth placer Volha Mazuronak said organisers were disrespectful to athletes to make them compete in the conditions and 50 km walk world champion Yohann Diniz was unhappy that the road events had not been located in the air conditioned stadium instead Decathlon world record holder Kevin Mayer said organisers had not prioritised athletes in respect of the climate and low spectator attendance 20 In response to low attendances the stadium capacity was reduced to 21 000 for the championships with large banners covering the empty seats yet on the third day less than half these seats were filled despite the organisers giving free tickets to migrant workers and children In response to the issue IAAF Chief Executive Jon Ridgeon worked with the local organisers to take attendance boosting measures Ridgeon suggested that sessions were organised late in the evening for European television audiences which meant working Qataris had gone home before the last event finals had begun around 11 pm local time 21 He also said the IAAF s plan had been for the championships to serve people across the Middle East but the Qatar diplomatic crisis had blocked people from other countries in the region from attending 22 23 Three days before the competition it was reported that 50 000 tickets had been sold for the 10 day event signalling a 90 reduction in sales compared to the 2017 World Championships in Athletics 24 In response local organisers purchased tickets and distributed them for free to ensure sizeable attendances and also ran an initiative to allow spectators to enter the stadium and fill vacant seats left by audience members who left mid session 25 The issue of human rights in Qatar was also raised as over 6 000 migrant labourers some involved in construction and cleaning of the host stadium had lodged complaints over unpaid wages against Qatari companies 26 IAAF President Coe responded that the championships was a way to achieve social change and rise above political structures 27 Venue edit The decision to hold the World Athletics Championships in the Middle East presented organisational challenges due to the hot and humid climate in Doha in September and October In previous years the World Championships had mostly qualifying competitions in morning sessions and finals mostly in afternoon sessions Weather conditions meant that traditional arrangement was not workable and in Doha the schedule was redesigned to have a pre session in the afternoon and a main session in the evening 28 The Khalifa International Stadium used an open air conditioning system to bring the temperature of the stadium to below 25 C 77 F which was a world first for a stadium 29 30 In collaboration with Seiko a starting blocks camera view was broadcast from the Khalifa International Stadium s Block Cams 31 The intimate views from the blocks were the subject of complaint by the German Athletics Association which said its female sprinters had not been consulted on the broadcasting of the images The IAAF agreed to only show Block Cam images of athletes immediately prior to the starting pistol and to delete video data at other times on a daily basis 32 Gina Luckenkemper said the technology was unpleasant as it captured close images of athletes crotches in tight clothing 33 The stadium also features an advanced lighting system which was used in the introductions of some event finals projecting coloured lines on to the lane boundaries and the competing athlete s names moving around the 400 m track 34 New graphical detail of athletes performance was provided in television coverage including top speed of athletes in the track and jumping events angle and release speed in the throws and the distance of each phase of a triple jump 31 Non stadium racewalking and marathon events were set on a looped course around the Doha Corniche a 7 kilometre 4 3 mi waterfront promenade 35 Organisers set the start time around midnight local time for road events to avoid the hottest conditions although the women s marathon still began at a temperature of 32 C 90 F and humidity over 70 36 37 The IAAF and local organisers undertook preparation for the conditions by recruiting medical experts to inform their preparations as well as increasing water and refreshments ice baths and medical support along the route It sent advisory notices to all national federations in the six months before the competition with recommendations for athletes 38 However postponement of the events until after the championships was deemed a last resort The IAAF President Sebastian Coe stated his belief that the humidity was a greater challenge for runners than the temperature itself 30 The Khalifa Stadium hosted the 2019 Asian Athletics Championships in April before the world event 1 For training and warm up purposes an outdoor venue attached to the Khalifa Stadium is available for athletes in running and jumping events while all athletes including throwing events have full training facilities available at the Qatar Sports Club venue near Doha Corniche At the Aspire Zone indoor training facilities are available for running and jumping disciplines while a separate outdoor throws training venue is also available 1 Venues of the 2019 World Athletics Championships nbsp View of the Doha Corniche which was the route for the marathon and racewalking events Mascot edit The event mascot was Falah an anthropomorphic falcon dressed in athletic gear in the maroon colour of the flag of Qatar The mascot was designed by a Filipino expatriate in Doha Theodore Paul Manuel and his design was announced as the winner of the design competition on Qatar s national sports day Twenty one sketches were submitted and a group of young Qataris were invited to vote on their favourite designs Following this the head of the Qatar Olympic Committee Joaan bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and members of the local organising committee narrowed the choices down to a shortlist of three for final voting 39 Entry standards editThe IAAF announced that athletes would qualify by their IAAF World Rankings position wildcard reigning world champion or 2019 IAAF Diamond League champion or by achieving the entry standard 40 41 42 Following criticism that the qualification method was biased the IAAF reverted to their traditional qualifying method 43 44 The qualification period for the 10 000 metres marathon race walks relays and combined events ran from 7 March 2018 to 6 September 2019 For all other events the qualification period runs from 7 September 2018 to 6 September 2019 Wild Card as Reigning World Outdoor Champion Winner of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League Leader as at closing date of the qualification period IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge IAAF Race Walking Challenge IAAF Combined Events Challenge Countries who have no male and or no female athletes who have achieved the Entry Standard or considered as having achieved the entry standard see above or qualified relay team may enter one unqualified male athlete OR one unqualified female athlete in one event of the championships except the road events and field events combined events 10 000 m and 3000 m steeplechase Event Men Number Women Number 100 metres 10 10 48 11 24 48 200 metres 20 40 56 23 02 56 400 metres 45 30 48 51 80 48 800 metres 1 45 80 48 2 00 60 48 1500 metres Mile 3 36 00 3 53 10 45 4 06 50 4 25 20 45 5000 metres 13 22 50 42 15 22 00 42 10 000 metres 27 40 00 27 31 50 00 27 Marathon 2 16 00 100 2 37 00 100 3000 metres steeplechase 8 29 00 45 9 40 00 45 110 100 metres hurdles 13 46 40 12 98 40 400 metres hurdles 49 30 40 56 00 40 High jump 2 30 m 7 ft 6 1 2 in 32 1 94 m 6 ft 4 1 4 in 32 Pole vault 5 71 m 18 ft 8 3 4 in 32 4 56 m 14 ft 11 1 2 in 32 Long jump 8 17 m 26 ft 9 1 2 in 32 6 72 m 22 ft 1 2 in 32 Triple jump 16 95 m 55 ft 7 1 4 in 32 14 20 m 46 ft 7 in 32 Shot put 20 70 m 67 ft 10 3 4 in 32 18 00 m 59 ft 1 2 in 32 Discus throw 65 00 m 213 ft 3 in 32 61 20 m 200 ft 9 1 4 in 32 Hammer throw 76 00 m 249 ft 4 in 32 71 00 m 232 ft 11 1 4 in 32 Javelin throw 83 00 m 272 ft 3 1 2 in 32 61 50 m 201 ft 9 1 4 in 32 Decathlon Heptathlon 8200 24 6300 24 20 kilometres race walk 1 22 30 30 1 33 30 30 50 kilometres race walk 3 59 00 50 4 30 00 30 4 100 metres relay Top 10 2019 IAAF World Relays 6 from Top Lists 16 Top 10 2019 IAAF World Relays 6 from Top Lists 16 4 400 metres relay Top 10 2019 IAAF World Relays 6 from Top Lists 16 Top 10 2019 IAAF World Relays 6 from Top Lists 16 4 400 metres relay mixed Top 12 2019 IAAF World Relays 4 from Top Lists 16 Top 12 2019 IAAF World Relays 4 from Top Lists 16 Target numbers edit At the end of the qualification period the 2019 IAAF World Rankings published on 6 September 2019 were used to invite additional athletes to the World Championships where the target number of athletes had not been achieved for that event through other methods of qualification The maximum of three athletes per country in individual events is not affected by this rule National athletics associations retained the right to confirm or reject athlete selections through this method Where the highest ranked athletes were from a country that had already had three or more entrants for the event or where the national association rejected an entrant the next highest ranked athlete became eligible for entry via world rankings 45 46 Event schedule editSex Event 27Sep 28Sep 29Sep 30Sep 1Oct 2Oct 3Oct 4Oct 5Oct 6Oct Men 100 m P S H F 200 m H S F 400 m H S F 800 m H S F 1500 m H S F 5000 m H F 10 000 m F Marathon F 3000 m steeplechase H F 110 m hurdles H S F 400 m hurdles H S F Decathlon F F High jump Q F Pole vault Q F Long jump Q F Triple jump Q F Shot put Q F Discus throw Q F Hammer throw Q F Javelin throw Q F 20 km walk F 50 km walk F 4 100 m relay H F 4 400 m relay H F Women 100 m H S F 200 m H S F 400 m H S F 800 m H S F 1500 m H S F 5000 m H F 10 000 m F Marathon F 3000 m steeplechase H F 100 m hurdles H S F 400 m hurdles H S F Heptathlon F F High jump Q F Pole vault Q F Long jump Q F Triple jump Q F Shot put Q F Discus throw Q F Hammer throw Q F Javelin throw Q F 20 km walk F 50 km walk F 4 100 m relay H F 4 400 m relay H F Mixed 4 400 m relay H FResults editMen edit Track edit Chronology 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 Event Gold Silver Bronze 100 metresdetails Christian Coleman nbsp United States 9 76 WL Justin Gatlin nbsp United States 9 89 Andre De Grasse nbsp Canada 9 90 PB 200 metresdetails Noah Lyles nbsp United States 19 83 Andre De Grasse nbsp Canada 19 95 Alex Quinonez nbsp Ecuador 19 98 400 metresdetails Steven Gardiner nbsp Bahamas 43 48 NR Anthony Zambrano nbsp Colombia 44 15 AR Fred Kerley nbsp United States 44 17 800 metresdetails Donavan Brazier nbsp United States 1 42 34 CR AR Amel Tuka nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 43 47 SB Ferguson Rotich nbsp Kenya 1 43 82 1500 metresdetails Timothy Cheruiyot nbsp Kenya 3 29 26 Taoufik Makhloufi nbsp Algeria 3 31 38 SB Marcin Lewandowski nbsp Poland 3 31 46 NR 5000 metresdetails Muktar Edris nbsp Ethiopia 12 58 85 SB Selemon Barega nbsp Ethiopia 12 59 70 Mohamed Ahmed nbsp Canada 13 01 11 10 000 metresdetails Joshua Cheptegei nbsp Uganda 26 48 36 WL Yomif Kejelcha nbsp Ethiopia 26 49 34 PB Rhonex Kipruto nbsp Kenya 26 50 32 Marathondetails Lelisa Desisa nbsp Ethiopia 2 10 40 SB Mosinet Geremew nbsp Ethiopia 2 10 44 Amos Kipruto nbsp Kenya 2 10 51 110 metres hurdlesdetails Grant Holloway nbsp United States 13 10 Sergey Shubenkov nbsp Authorised Neutral Athletes 13 15 Pascal Martinot Lagarde nbsp FranceOrlando Ortega nbsp Spain 13 1813 30 47 400 metres hurdlesdetails Karsten Warholm nbsp Norway 47 42 Rai Benjamin nbsp United States 47 66 Abderrahman Samba nbsp Qatar 48 03 3000 metres steeplechasedetails Conseslus Kipruto nbsp Kenya 8 01 35 WL Lamecha Girma nbsp Ethiopia 8 01 36 NR Soufiane El Bakkali nbsp Morocco 8 03 76 SB 20 kilometres walkdetails Toshikazu Yamanishi nbsp Japan 1 26 34 Vasiliy Mizinov nbsp Authorised Neutral Athletes 1 26 49 Perseus Karlstrom nbsp Sweden 1 27 00 50 kilometres walkdetails Yusuke Suzuki nbsp Japan 4 04 20 Joao Vieira nbsp Portugal 4 04 59 Evan Dunfee nbsp Canada 4 05 02 4 100 metres relaydetails nbsp United StatesChristian ColemanJustin GatlinMike RodgersNoah LylesCravon Gillespie 37 10 WL nbsp Great BritainAdam GemiliZharnel HughesRichard KiltyNethaneel Mitchell Blake 37 36 AR nbsp JapanShuhei TadaKirara ShiraishiYoshihide KiryuAbdul Hakim Sani BrownYuki Koike 37 43 AR 4 400 metres relaydetails nbsp United StatesFred KerleyMichael CherryWilbert LondonRai BenjaminTyrell Richard Vernon Norwood Nathan Strother 2 56 69 WL nbsp JamaicaAkeem BloomfieldNathon AllenTerry ThomasDemish GayeJavon Francis 2 57 90 SB nbsp BelgiumJonathan SacoorRobin VanderbemdenDylan BorleeKevin BorleeJulien Watrin 2 58 78 SB WR world record AR area record CR championship record GR games record NR national record OR Olympic record PB personal best SB season best WL world leading in a given season Indicates the athletes only competed in the preliminary heats and received medals Field edit Chronology 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 Event Gold Silver Bronze High jumpdetails Mutaz Essa Barshim nbsp Qatar 2 37 m WL Mikhail Akimenko nbsp Authorised Neutral Athletes 2 35 m PB Ilya Ivanyuk nbsp Authorised Neutral Athletes 2 35 m PB Pole vaultdetails Sam Kendricks nbsp United States 5 97 m Armand Duplantis nbsp Sweden 5 97 m Piotr Lisek nbsp Poland 5 87 m Long jumpdetails Tajay Gayle nbsp Jamaica 8 69 m WL NR Jeff Henderson nbsp United States 8 39 m SB Juan Miguel Echevarria nbsp Cuba 8 34 m Triple jumpdetails Christian Taylor nbsp United States 17 92 m SB Will Claye nbsp United States 17 74 m Hugues Fabrice Zango nbsp Burkina Faso 17 66 m AR Shot putdetails Joe Kovacs nbsp United States 22 91 m CR Ryan Crouser nbsp United States 22 90 m PB Tom Walsh nbsp New Zealand 22 90 m AR Discus throwdetails Daniel Stahl nbsp Sweden 67 59 m Fedrick Dacres nbsp Jamaica 66 94 m Lukas Weisshaidinger nbsp Austria 66 82 m Javelin throwdetails Anderson Peters nbsp Grenada 86 89 m Magnus Kirt nbsp Estonia 86 21 m Johannes Vetter nbsp Germany 85 37 m Hammer throwdetails Pawel Fajdek nbsp Poland 80 50 m Quentin Bigot nbsp France 78 19 m SB Bence Halasz nbsp Hungary Wojciech Nowicki nbsp Poland 78 18 m 77 69 m 48 WR world record AR area record CR championship record GR games record NR national record OR Olympic record PB personal best SB season best WL world leading in a given season Combined edit Chronology 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 Event Gold Silver Bronze Decathlondetails Niklas Kaul nbsp Germany 8691 PB Maicel Uibo nbsp Estonia 8604 PB Damian Warner nbsp Canada 8529 WR world record AR area record CR championship record GR games record NR national record OR Olympic record PB personal best SB season best WL world leading in a given season Women edit Track edit Chronology 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 Event Gold Silver Bronze 100 metresdetails Shelly Ann Fraser Pryce nbsp Jamaica 10 71 WL Dina Asher Smith nbsp Great Britain and Northern Ireland 10 83 NR Marie Josee Ta Lou nbsp Ivory Coast 10 90 200 metresdetails Dina Asher Smith nbsp Great Britain and Northern Ireland 21 88 NR Brittany Brown nbsp United States 22 22 PB Mujinga Kambundji nbsp Switzerland 22 51 400 metresdetails Salwa Eid Naser nbsp Bahrain 48 14 AR WL Shaunae Miller Uibo nbsp Bahamas 48 37 AR Shericka Jackson nbsp Jamaica 49 47 PB 800 metresdetails Halimah Nakaayi nbsp Uganda 1 58 04 NR Raevyn Rogers nbsp United States 1 58 18 SB Ajee Wilson nbsp United States 1 58 84 1500 metresdetails Sifan Hassan nbsp Netherlands 3 51 95 CR AR Faith Kipyegon nbsp Kenya 3 54 22 NR Gudaf Tsegay nbsp Ethiopia 3 54 38 PB 5000 metresdetails Hellen Obiri nbsp Kenya 14 26 72 CR Margaret Kipkemboi nbsp Kenya 14 27 49 PB Konstanze Klosterhalfen nbsp Germany 14 28 43 10 000 metresdetails Sifan Hassan nbsp Netherlands 30 17 62 WL Letesenbet Gidey nbsp Ethiopia 30 21 23 PB Agnes Jebet Tirop nbsp Kenya 30 25 20 PB Marathondetails Ruth Chepngetich nbsp Kenya 2 32 43 Rose Chelimo nbsp Bahrain 2 33 46 Helalia Johannes nbsp Namibia 2 34 15 100 metres hurdlesdetails Nia Ali nbsp United States 12 34 PB Kendra Harrison nbsp United States 12 46 Danielle Williams nbsp Jamaica 12 47 400 metres hurdlesdetails Dalilah Muhammad nbsp United States 52 16 WR Sydney McLaughlin nbsp United States 52 23 PB Rushell Clayton nbsp Jamaica 53 74 PB 3000 metres steeplechasedetails Beatrice Chepkoech nbsp Kenya 8 57 84 CR Emma Coburn nbsp United States 9 02 35 PB Gesa Felicitas Krause nbsp Germany 9 03 30 NR 20 kilometres walkdetails Liu Hong nbsp China 1 32 53 Qieyang Shijie nbsp China 1 33 10 Yang Liujing nbsp China 1 33 17 50 kilometres walkdetails Liang Rui nbsp China 4 23 26 Li Maocuo nbsp China 4 26 40 Eleonora Giorgi nbsp Italy 4 29 13 4 100 metres relaydetails nbsp JamaicaNatalliah WhyteShelly Ann Fraser PryceJonielle SmithShericka JacksonNatasha Morrison 41 44 WL nbsp Great BritainAsha PhilipDina Asher SmithAshleigh NelsonDaryll NeitaImani Lara Lansiquot 41 85 SB nbsp United StatesDezerea BryantTeahna DanielsMorolake AkinosunKiara Parker 42 10 SB 4 400 metres relaydetails nbsp United StatesPhyllis FrancisSydney McLaughlinDalilah MuhammadWadeline JonathasJessica Beard Allyson Felix Kendall Ellis Courtney Okolo 3 18 92 WL nbsp PolandIga Baumgart WitanPatrycja WyciszkiewiczMalgorzata Holub KowalikJustyna Swiety ErseticAnna Kielbasinska 3 21 89 NR nbsp JamaicaAnastasia Le RoyTiffany JamesStephenie Ann McPhersonShericka JacksonRoneisha McGregor 3 22 37 SB WR world record AR area record CR championship record GR games record NR national record OR Olympic record PB personal best SB season best WL world leading in a given season Indicates the athletes only competed in the preliminary heats and received medals Field edit Chronology 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 Event Gold Silver Bronze High jumpdetails Mariya Lasitskene nbsp Authorised Neutral Athletes 2 04 m Yaroslava Mahuchikh nbsp Ukraine 2 04 m WU20R Vashti Cunningham nbsp United States 2 00 m PB Pole vaultdetails Anzhelika Sidorova nbsp Authorised Neutral Athletes 4 95 m WL PB Sandi Morris nbsp United States 4 90 m Katerina Stefanidi nbsp Greece 4 85 m Long jumpdetails Malaika Mihambo nbsp Germany 7 30 m WL PB Maryna Bekh Romanchuk nbsp Ukraine 6 92 m SB Ese Brume nbsp Nigeria 6 91 m Triple jumpdetails Yulimar Rojas nbsp Venezuela 15 37 m Shanieka Ricketts nbsp Jamaica 14 92 m Caterine Ibarguen nbsp Colombia 14 73 m Shot putdetails Gong Lijiao nbsp China 19 55 m Danniel Thomas Dodd nbsp Jamaica 19 47 m Christina Schwanitz nbsp Germany 19 17 m Discus throwdetails Yaime Perez nbsp Cuba 69 17 m Denia Caballero nbsp Cuba 68 44 m Sandra Perkovic nbsp Croatia 66 72 m Hammer throwdetails DeAnna Price nbsp United States 77 54 m Joanna Fiodorow nbsp Poland 76 35 m PB Wang Zheng nbsp China 74 76 m Javelin throwdetails Kelsey Lee Barber nbsp Australia 66 56 m Liu Shiying nbsp China 65 88 m SB Lu Huihui nbsp China 65 49 m WR world record AR area record CR championship record GR games record NR national record OR Olympic record PB personal best SB season best WL world leading in a given season Combined edit Chronology 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 Event Gold Silver Bronze Heptathlondetails Katarina Johnson Thompson nbsp Great Britain and Northern Ireland 6981 WL NR Nafissatou Thiam nbsp Belgium 6677 Verena Preiner nbsp Austria 6560 WR world record AR area record CR championship record GR games record NR national record OR Olympic record PB personal best SB season best WL world leading in a given season Mixed edit Event Gold Silver Bronze 4 400 metres relaydetails nbsp United StatesWilbert LondonAllyson FelixCourtney OkoloMichael CherryTyrell Richard Jessica Beard Jasmine Blocker Obi Igbokwe 3 09 34 WR nbsp JamaicaNathon AllenRoneisha McGregorTiffany JamesJavon FrancisJanieve Russell 3 11 78 NR nbsp BahrainMusa IsahAminat JamalSalwa Eid NaserAbbas Abubakar Abbas 3 11 82 AR Indicates the athletes only competed in the preliminary heats and received medals Event summaries editSprints edit In the men s 100 metres the semi finals were dominated by world leader Christian Coleman from the United States finishing in 9 88 seconds while no other qualifiers broke 10 seconds 49 In the final defending champion American Justin Gatlin got a good start to gain a step on the field except Coleman got a better start gaining that step on Gatlin and extending his lead to a dominating victory in 9 76 seconds a new personal best and world leading time for the season that becomes the 6th best in history just 2 ticks behind Gatlin s best Returning to form Canada s Andre De Grasse closed and nearly caught Gatlin at the line in 9 90 a new wind legal personal best though he has run as fast as 9 69 wind aided 49 50 Middle distance edit Long distance edit The women s marathon began at midnight local time on 28 September with the temperature at 32 C 90 F and 70 per cent humidity 51 By the end of the race 28 of the 68 starters had dropped out including all three Ethiopian runners 52 Five runners in a lead pack stayed together for the first 20 km 12 mi and the pack was down to only four athletes by 35 km 22 mi including Ruth Chepngetich and Edna Kiplagat of Kenya Bahrain s Rose Chelimo and Namibia s Helalia Johannes 51 Chepngetich broke out into a sprint in the final lap to finish at 2 32 43 followed by Chelimo 2 33 46 and Johannes 2 35 15 51 The women s 10 000 metres began the following night with Germany s Alina Reh taking an early lead before falling back and eventually dropping out By the ninth lap a lead pack of three Kenyans and three Ethiopians developed By the half way point the Netherlands Sifan Hassan had latched on to back of the lead pack headed by Kenya s Rosemary Wanjiru and Agnes Tirop Letesenbet Gidey of Ethiopia surged with four laps remaining with Hassan following close behind Hassan took the lead on the final lap and finished in 30 17 33 more than three seconds ahead of Gidey and almost eight seconds ahead of Tirop in third place 53 54 Hurdles edit In the men s 400 m hurdles most of the top ranked athletes reached the final though world number 4 Ludvy Vaillant was eliminated 55 Jumps edit The last place qualifier to the men s long jump final was Jamaica s Tajay Gayle with 7 89 m 25 ft 10 1 2 in 56 In the final on 28 September Gayle jumped a personal best 8 46 m 27 ft 9 in to take the lead in the first round No other jumper would beat that mark World leader Juan Miguel Echevarria from Cuba jumped 8 25 m 27 ft 3 4 in while giving up the entire 20 cm 7 9 in width of the board His jump was bettered by American Jeff Henderson with an 8 28 m 27 ft 1 3 4 in three jumpers later In the third round Echevarria improved to 8 34 m 27 ft 4 1 4 in and Henderson responded again with 8 39 m 27 ft 6 1 4 in which ultimately settled the medal positions In the fourth round Gayle improved his winning jump to 8 69 m 28 ft 6 in 57 58 Relays edit Throws edit In the men s shot put 4 men surpassed the previous Championship Record with 22 53 a distance surpassing any winning mark in any global championship to this time only falling in 4th Joe Kovacs won with 22 91 silver went to Ryan Crouser with 22 90 22 71 and Tom Walsh took bronze with 22 90 22 56 With world record holder and defending champion Anita Wlodarczyk absent from the women s hammer throw due to injury 59 world leader DeAnna Price seized the opportunity on the second throw of the competition with 76 87 m 252 ft 2 in then a best of 77 54 m 254 ft 4 in in the third round no athlete could match her The next thrower into the ring was Wlodarczyk s Polish teammate Joanna Fiodorow who threw her personal best 76 35 m 250 ft 5 in to win the silver medal and drop Zalina Petrivskaya s first throw of the competition to third place after the first three throwers Although Petrivskaya threw 74 33 m 243 ft 10 in in the third round and maintained that position China s Wang Zheng threw the hammer to 74 76 m 245 ft 3 in to grab the bronze medal in the middle of the fifth round 60 61 62 Walks edit The men s 50 kilometres walk started at midnight local time on 29 September Most walkers were wary of starting too fast only the 20K world record holder Japan s Yusuke Suzuki went out fast opening up a gap just a few minutes into the race By 5K he had a 10 second lead over a chase pack and by 20K he had expanded the lead to two minutes Suzuki crossed the halfway point at 2 01 07 and by 35K Suzuki had opened his lead up to 3 34 63 Suzuki first showed signs of cracking stopping at the water station at 44K before getting back on stride At that point he still had two minutes on China s Niu Wenbin an additional minute on Portugal s Joao Vieira with the next chaser Canada s Evan Dunfee another minute back now ahead of China s Luo Yadong Suzuki struggled through the final lap while Vieira and Dunfee were applying the pressure Both passed Niu with Dunfee closing down his gap to Vieira Suzuki got across the finish line first only 39 seconds ahead of Vieira who held off Dunfee by only three seconds 63 In its second appearance since the event s debut in 2017 the women s 50 kilometres walk began simultaneously with the men s A lead quartet of China s Liang Rui and Li Maocuo with Italy s Eleonora Giorgi and Portugal s Ines Henriques crossed the 10K mark together before Giorgi and Henriques dropped back Liang continued to expand her lead with Li following comfortably ahead of Giorgi as the athletes reached 40K mark Liang won the race in 4 23 26 more than three minutes ahead of her teammate Li to become the first Chinese athlete to win the world title at that distance Giorgi finished almost four minutes behind Li to win bronze 64 Combined editDaily highlights editDay one to three edit One final was contested on the first day Kenyan Ruth Chepngetich won the women s marathon in 2 32 43 beating the defending champion Rose Chelimo of Bahrain in the first ever World Championships race to start at midnight 65 Braima Sundar Dabo of Guinea Bissau won plaudits for assisting competitor Jonathan Busby of Aruba to the finish of the men s 5000 m heats A record 17 athletes qualified for the women s pole vault final Cuban Juan Miguel Echevarria s jump of 8 40 m 27 ft 6 1 2 in was the best performance in men s long jump qualifying for ten years Christian Coleman had the first sub 10 run of the championships in the men s 100 metres heats 66 Athletics Weekly noted the lack of spectators on the first day and the difficultly in travelling to the stadium while decathlon World Champion Kevin Mayer was highly critical it s a disaster there is no one in the stands and the heat has not been adapted at all We haven t really prioritised athletes when organising the championships here 67 There were six finals on the second day of competition DeAnna Price became the first American to win the women s hammer throw while Tajay Gayle became Jamaica s first men s long jump world champion surprising the field by adding 37 centimetres to his personal best and improving to tenth on the all time lists 68 Sifan Hassan broke the African dominance of the women s 10 000 metres that stretched back to 1997 by taking gold for the Netherlands 69 70 America s Christian Coleman won the men s 100 metres final in a time of 9 76 seconds The qualifiers for the mixed 4 400 m relay resulted in the first world record of the championships with the American quartet finishing in 3 12 42 minutes Shelly Ann Fraser Pryce ran the fastest time ever recorded in the heats stage of the women s 100 metres with 10 80 seconds 71 On the third day five finals were scheduled Shelly Ann Fraser Pryce won her fourth world title in the women s 100 m recording her second fastest time ever 10 71 to hold off the British record breaking Dina Asher Smith In the Christian Taylor also won a fourth title in the men s triple jump with compatriot Will Claye finishing runner up as he had in 2017 and Hugues Fabrice Zango winning Burkina Faso s first ever World Championships medal in third The mixed 4 400 m relay final brought another world record 3 09 34 and a twelfth gold medal for Allyson Felix taking her ahead of Usain Bolt on the all time medal tally Poland drew interest in the mixed relay for its choice to place men on the two middle legs the opposite of all the other teams Anzhelika Sidorova won her first world title in the women s pole vault final competing as an Authorised Neutral Athlete Liu Hong was the last winner of the day taking her third World Championships gold in the women s 20 km walk where Qieyang Shenjie and Yang Liujing helped make it a medal sweep for the Chinese team 72 Liu Felix and Fraser Pryce all returned victorious to the World Championships after having had children in the previous two years 73 and in her post race interview Fraser Pryce said she hoped to inspire other women to start families and return to elite sport 74 75 Day four to six edit Day four featured six gold medal events In men s discus throw Daniel Stahl won Sweden s first gold medal in the event while runner up Fedrick Dacres won Jamaica s first discus medal and Lukas Weisshaidinger became Austria s first male World Championships medallist Mariya Lasitskene defended her title in the women s high jump winning on countback ahead of Yaroslava Mahuchikh who set a world under 20 record of 2 04 m 6 ft 8 1 4 in Sprint finishes from Muktar Edris and Selemon Barega made it an Ethiopian 1 2 in the men s 5000 metres final where the early leader Jakob Ingebrigtsen collapsed over the line and missed a medal Beatrice Chepkoech was dominant in the women s steeplechase establishing a significant lead on her way to a championships record of 8 57 84 minutes In her first global final Halimah Nakaayi surprised with a Ugandan national record of 1 58 04 minutes to win the women s 800 metres Karsten Warholm kept the men s 400 m hurdles final to the form book by retaining his world title while Abderrahman Samba s bronze medal added the host nation Qatar to the medal table 76 On the fifth day the United States team won three of the four finals Donavan Brazier broke records that had lasted over 30 years in the men s 800 metres final with a championship record and American record of 1 42 34 minutes Silver medallist Amel Tuka gave Bosnia and Herzegovina s best ever performance of the championships Noah Lyles had a clear victory in the men s 200 metres final 77 Sam Kendricks won the men s pole vault on countback in a closely fought final the medallists Kendricks Armand Duplantis and Piotr Lisek celebrated together on the landing mat with a synchronised backflip 78 The fourth gold medallist of the evening was Australia s Kelsey Lee Barber who surprised China s Liu Shiying and Lu Huihui by moving up from fourth to first place with her final throw of the competition In qualifying Amalie Iuel set a Norwegian record as the second fastest qualifier in the women s 400 m hurdles while Abdalelah Haroun of the host nation Qatar exited the men s 400 m in the first round 77 There were three finals on the sixth day Poland s Pawel Fajdek won a record fourth straight title in the men s hammer throw final and officials played a role in the minor medals fourth placer Wojciech Nowicki was also awarded a bronze medal as irregularities with Bence Halasz s bronze medal winning throw was adjudged to have disadvantaged Nowicki 79 while Great Britain was unsuccessful in its appeal over Nick Miller s second round throw which looked to be good enough for a silver medal but was judged a foul 80 In his international debut Grant Holloway won the gold medal in the men s 110 metres hurdles final where defending champion Omar McLeod collapsed after hitting several hurdles McLeod crashed into Orlando Ortega impeding the Spaniard and although the Spanish team s appeal to have the race re run was rejected 81 Ortega was instead awarded an additional bronze medal 82 Dina Asher Smith won the women s 200 metres final by a large margin becoming Britain s first global champion in the women s sprints with a British record time 83 In the first day of combined events thirty points separated the top three in the men s decathlon Damian Warner Pierce LePage and Kevin Mayer while in the women s heptathlon Katarina Johnson Thompson set the fourth best ever day one score for a 96 point lead over defending champion Nafissatou Thiam 79 Day seven to ten edit The four finals of the seventh day centred around the conclusion of the combined events Katarina Johnson Thompson defeated Nafi Thiam in the heptathlon with a British record score of 6981 points which moved her up to sixth on the all time lists The second day of the decathlon brought surprises as world record holder Kevin Mayer dropped out and Germany s Niklas Kaul set a championship decathlon best in the javelin to help him surge from eleventh place to the gold medal making him the youngest winner of the title at age 21 The women s 400 metres final was among the fastest ever with five women under 50 seconds for the first time at the championships 21 year old Salwa Eid Naser of Bahrain seized the lead early on and crossed the line in 48 14 seconds for the third fastest time ever leaving the Olympic champion Shaunae Miller Uibo in second place with 48 37 seconds becoming the sixth fastest athlete ever China s Gong Lijiao defended her women s shot put title reaching the podium for a sixth straight championships while silver medallist Danniel Thomas Dodd made history as Jamaica s first woman to win a global medal in the throws 84 Among the six finals of the eighth day the men s high jump final helped fill out the stadium for the first time as Qatari Mutaz Essa Barshim won a high quality contest for the host nation 85 Barshim Mikhail Akimenko and Ilya Ivanyuk all cleared 2 35 m 7 ft 8 1 2 in before the home athlete topped 2 37 m 7 ft 9 1 4 in to win his country s first gold of the event In the women s 400 metres hurdles final Americans Dalilah Muhammad and Sydney McLaughlin turned the race into a duel which resulted in Olympic champion Muhammad setting a world record of 52 16 seconds to hold off 20 year old McLaughlin who ran the third fastest time ever Ethiopian Lamecha Girma attempted to break Kenya s winning streak in the men s steeplechase final but was edged out on the line by Kenya s defending champion Conseslus Kipruto with one hundredth of a second separating the two Steven Gardiner of the Bahamas had a dominant run to win the men s 400 metres final finishing over half a second ahead of the field and setting a Bahamian record of 43 48 seconds 86 Gardiner s presence was only possible due to a public fund raising campaign for his national team as Hurricane Dorian had devastated the Caribbean nation just one month earlier 87 The women s discus final was a Cuban affair between Yaime Perez and Denia Caballero with Perez ultimately winning the gold with a fifth round effort of 69 17 m 226 ft 11 in The first round of the men s and women s 4 100 metres relay saw athletes run an African record a South American record and three national records 86 Toshikazu Yamanishi took the gold medal in the men s 20 km walk in the overnight session 88 Six finals were scheduled for the ninth day The men s shot put final saw four men surpass the previous championships record Only one centimetre separated medallists Tom Walsh Ryan Crouser and Joe Kovacs with Kovacs getting the win in 22 91 m 75 ft 1 3 4 in the best performance in nearly three decades Yulimar Rojas was dominant in the women s triple jump final taking the gold medal with a mark of 15 37 m 50 ft 5 in the fourth best jump ever Sifan Hassan became the first woman to achieve a 1500 10 000 m double at the championships and her winning time of 3 51 95 minutes was a championship and European record Hassan gave an emotional post race interview defending herself against doping accusations which had arisen due to the four year doping ban of her coach Alberto Salazar in the previous days 89 Hellen Obiri defended her title in the women s 5000 metres final and ran a championship record of 14 26 72 minutes in order to do so The men s 4 100 metres relay final brought a slew of records with the United States winning with a national record time of 37 10 seconds the third fastest ever and Great Britain Japan and Brazil setting continental area records for the next three places 90 Lelisa Desisa and Mosinet Geremew made it a 1 2 for Ethiopia in the late night men s marathon held in easier weather conditions than the women s race 91 On the tenth and final day of the championships seven finals were held Malaika Mihambo of Germany won a clear gold in the women s long jump final by producing the twelfth best ever performance of 7 30 m 23 ft 11 1 4 in In the men s 1500 metres final Kenya s Timothy Cheruiyot set a quick pace and surged at the end to take the gold medal Joshua Cheptegei of Uganda held off Yomif Kejelcha in the men s 10 000 metres final to claim his second world of the year having already topped the 2019 IAAF World Cross Country Championships podium Anderson Peters of Grenada upset a field of more decorated European athletes in the men s javelin throw final as no one bettered his opening throw of 86 89 m 285 ft 3 4 in while silver medallist Magnus Kirt of Estonia injured himself in the effort to beat his rival Nia Ali of the United States surprised in the women s 100 metres hurdles final by winning gold in 12 34 seconds making herself the ninth fastest of all time and pushing the more favoured Danielle Williams and Kendra Harrison into the minor medals The championships was brought to a close with the men s and women s 4 400 metres relay finals The United States won both in world leading times to finish as the medal leader its haul of 29 medals and 14 gold medals was almost three times that of second placed Kenya five golds and eleven medals Jamaica ranked third on the medal table with three golds and twelve medals its final bronze coming from the women s 4 400 metres relay after a successful appeal against an initial disqualification 92 93 Statistics editMedal table edit Host nation Qatar RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal1 nbsp United States14114292 nbsp Kenya524113 nbsp Jamaica354124 nbsp China33395 nbsp Ethiopia2518 nbsp Authorised Neutral Athletes 1 23166 nbsp Great Britain23057 nbsp Germany20468 nbsp Japan20139 nbsp Netherlands2002 nbsp Uganda200211 nbsp Poland123612 nbsp Bahrain1113 nbsp Cuba1113 nbsp Sweden111315 nbsp Bahamas110216 nbsp Qatar 101217 nbsp Australia1001 nbsp Grenada1001 nbsp Norway1001 nbsp Venezuela100121 nbsp Estonia0202 nbsp Ukraine020223 nbsp Canada014524 nbsp Belgium0112 nbsp Colombia0112 nbsp France011227 nbsp Algeria0101 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina0101 nbsp Portugal010130 nbsp Austria002231 nbsp Burkina Faso0011 nbsp Croatia0011 nbsp Ecuador0011 nbsp Greece0011 nbsp Hungary0011 nbsp Italy0011 nbsp Ivory Coast0011 nbsp Morocco0011 nbsp Namibia0011 nbsp New Zealand0011 nbsp Nigeria0011 nbsp Spain0011 nbsp Switzerland0011Totals 43 entries 494951149Source 94 1 IAAF does not include the medals won by athletes competing as Authorised Neutral Athletes in their official medal table 94 Placing table edit The Placing table assigns points to the top eight athletes in the final with eight points to first place seven to second place and so on until one point for eighth place Teams or athletes that do not finish or are disqualified do not receive points 94 Source for the table IAAF 95 Rank Country nbsp nbsp nbsp 4 5 6 7 8 Pts 1 nbsp United States 14 11 4 7 6 4 9 8 310 2 nbsp Kenya 5 2 4 3 3 3 3 2 122 3 nbsp Jamaica 3 5 4 3 1 3 1 2 115 4 nbsp China 3 3 3 2 4 2 1 2 99 5 nbsp Ethiopia 2 5 1 3 1 2 0 1 83 6 nbsp Great Britain and Northern Ireland 2 3 0 5 2 2 3 0 82 7 nbsp Germany 2 0 4 3 1 2 1 2 69 8 nbsp Poland 1 2 3 0 2 1 2 1 56 9 nbsp Canada 0 1 4 0 2 3 2 3 55 10 nbsp Ukraine 0 2 0 2 3 2 1 0 44 11 nbsp Japan 2 0 1 0 0 2 2 1 33 12 nbsp Cuba 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 30 12 nbsp Netherlands 2 0 0 0 0 2 4 0 30 14 nbsp Bahrain 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 28 15 nbsp Belarus 0 0 0 1 2 3 1 1 25 15 nbsp Brazil 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 1 25 15 nbsp France 0 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 25 15 nbsp Sweden 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 25 15 nbsp Uganda 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 25 20 nbsp Colombia 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 22 20 nbsp South Africa 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 22 22 nbsp Belgium 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 20 22 nbsp Norway 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 20 24 nbsp Spain 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 3 19 25 nbsp Estonia 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 17 26 nbsp Bahamas 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 16 26 nbsp Italy 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 3 16 26 nbsp Switzerland 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 16 29 nbsp Australia 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 14 29 nbsp Qatar 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 14 31 nbsp Portugal 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 13 32 nbsp Austria 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 12 32 nbsp Grenada 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 12 32 nbsp Nigeria 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 12 35 nbsp Turkey 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 11 36 nbsp Ivory Coast 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 10 36 nbsp Croatia 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 10 36 nbsp Hungary 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 10 36 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 10 36 nbsp Venezuela 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 10 41 nbsp Morocco 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 9 42 nbsp Algeria 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 8 42 nbsp Czech Republic 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 8 42 nbsp Ecuador 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 8 42 nbsp New Zealand 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 8 42 nbsp Romania 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 8 47 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 48 nbsp Burkina Faso 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 48 nbsp Greece 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 48 nbsp Namibia 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 51 nbsp Cyprus 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 5 51 nbsp Finland 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5 51 nbsp British Virgin Islands 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5 51 nbsp Moldova 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5 55 nbsp Azerbaijan 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 55 nbsp Costa Rica 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 55 nbsp Puerto Rico 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 58 nbsp Barbados 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 58 nbsp Eritrea 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 58 nbsp The Gambia 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 58 nbsp India 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 58 nbsp Ireland 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 63 nbsp Bulgaria 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 63 nbsp Denmark 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 63 nbsp Iran 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 66 nbsp Benin 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 66 nbsp Malaysia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 66 nbsp North Korea 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Records edit At the 2019 World Athletics Championships three world records one world under 20 record six championships records 21 area records and 86 national records in athletics were set 96 Furthermore two championship combined event bests were set and 23 world leading performances WL were achieved at the competition 97 Allyson Felix became the most decorated athlete in World Championships reaching a career total of 13 gold medals through wins in the women s and the mixed 4 400 metres relays 98 Source for the records tables IAAF 97 Individual edit Sex Event Athlete Country Result Record Date Men 100 metres Stern Noel Liffa nbsp Malawi 10 72 NR 27 September 2019 Men 100 metres Dinesh Kumar Dhakal nbsp Bhutan 11 64 NR 27 September 2019 Women 3000 metres steeplechase Anna Emilie Moller nbsp Denmark 9 18 92 NR 27 September 2019 Men 400 metres hurdles Andrea Ercolani Volta nbsp San Marino 52 60 NR 27 September 2019 Women 100 metres Sarswati Chaudhary nbsp Nepal 12 72 NR 28 September 2019 Men 400 metres hurdles Abdelmalik Lahoulou nbsp Algeria 48 39 NR 28 September 2019 Men Long jump Tajay Gayle nbsp Jamaica 8 69 NR Commonwealth 28 September 2019 Men Triple jump Hugues Fabrice Zango nbsp Burkina Faso 17 66 AR 29 September 2019 Women 100 metres Dina Asher Smith nbsp Great Britain and Northern Ireland 10 83 NR 29 September 2019 Men 200 metres Noureddine Hadid nbsp Lebanon 20 84 NR 29 September 2019 Men 200 metres Ahmed Al Yaari nbsp Yemen 22 37 NR 29 September 2019 Women 3000 metres steeplechase Gesa Felicitas Krause nbsp Germany 9 03 30 NR 30 September 2019 Women 3000 metres steeplechase Anna Emilie Moller nbsp Denmark 9 13 46 NR 30 September 2019 Women 3000 metres steeplechase Luiza Gega nbsp Albania 9 19 93 NR 30 September 2019 Men Discus throw Apostolos Parellis nbsp Cyprus 66 32 NR 30 September 2019 Women Javelin throw Annu Rani nbsp India 62 43 NR 30 September 2019 Women 200 meters Aminatou Seyni nbsp Niger 22 58 NR 30 September 2019 Men 800 meters Donavan Brazier nbsp United States 1 42 34 AR 1 October 2019 Men 400 metres Jessy Franco nbsp Gibraltar 47 41 NR 1 October 2019 Men 400 metres Todiasoa Rabearison nbsp Madagascar 46 80 NR 1 October 2019 Women 400 metres hurdles Amalie Iuel nbsp Norway 54 72 NR 1 October 2019 Men 3000 metres steeplechase Avinash Sable nbsp India 8 25 23 NR 1 October 2019 Women 400 metres hurdles Sage Watson nbsp Canada 54 32 NR 2 October 2019 Men 400 metres Anthony Jose Zambrano nbsp Colombia 44 55 NR 2 October 2019 Women 200 metres Dina Asher Smith nbsp Great Britain and Northern Ireland 21 88 NR 2 October 2019 Women 400 metres Salwa Eid Naser nbsp Bahrain 48 14 AR 3 October 2019 Women 400 metres Shaunae Miller Uibo nbsp Bahamas 48 37 AR Commonwealth 3 October 2019 Women Hepthatlon Odile Ahouanwanou nbsp Benin 6210 NR 4 October 2019 Women Hepthatlon Katarina Johnson Thompson nbsp Great Britain and Northern Ireland 6981 NR 4 October 2019 Women 400 metres hurdles Dalilah Muhammad nbsp United States 52 16 WR 4 October 2019 Men 400 metres Steven Gardiner nbsp Bahamas 43 48 NR 4 October 2019 Men 400 metres Anthony Jose Zambrano nbsp Colombia 44 15 AR 4 October 2019 Women 100 metres hurdles 99 Marthe Koala nbsp Burkina Faso 52 16 NR 2 October 2019 Men 3000 metres steeplechase Lamecha Girma nbsp Ethiopia 8 01 36 NR 4 October 2019 Men 3000 metres steeplechase Avinash Sable nbsp India 8 21 37 NR 4 October 2019 Men Shot put Tommy Walsh nbsp New Zealand 22 90 AR Commonwealth 5 October 2019 Women 100 metres hurdles Andrea Carolina Vargas nbsp Costa Rica 12 68 NR 5 October 2019 Women 100 metres hurdles Andrea Carolina Vargas nbsp Costa Rica 12 65 NR 6 October 2019 Women 100 metres hurdles Andrea Carolina Vargas nbsp Costa Rica 12 64 NR 6 October 2019 Men Javelin throw Norbert Rivasz Toth nbsp Hungary 83 42 NR 5 October 2019 Men Javelin throw Arshad Nadeem nbsp Pakistan 81 52 NR 5 October 2019 Women 1500 meters Sifan Hassan nbsp Netherlands 3 51 95 AR 5 October 2019 Women 1500 meters Faith Kipyegon nbsp Kenya 3 54 22 NR 5 October 2019 Women 1500 meters Shelby Houlihan nbsp United States 3 54 99 AR 5 October 2019 Relay edit Sex Event Athlete Country Result Record Date Mixed 4 400 metres relay Tyrell RichardJessica BeardJasmine BlockerObi Igbokwe nbsp United States 3 12 42 WR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Nathon AllenJanieve RussellRoneisha McGregorJavon Francis nbsp Jamaica 3 12 73 NR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Musa IsahAminat JamalSalwa Eid NaserAbbas Abubakar Abbas nbsp Bahrain 3 12 74 AR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Rabah YousifZoey ClarkEmily DiamondMartyn Rooney nbsp Great Britain and Northern Ireland 3 12 80 AR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Austin ColeAiyanna Brigitte StiverneMadeline PricePhilip Osei nbsp Canada 3 16 76 NR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Mame Ibra AnneAmandine BrossierAgnes RaharolahyThomas Jordier nbsp France 3 17 17 NR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Anderson HenriquesTiffani MarinhoGeisa CoutinhoLucas Carvalho nbsp Brazil 3 16 12 AR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Robin VanderbemdenCamille LausImke VervaetDylan Borlee nbsp Belgium 3 16 16 NR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Seika AoyamaKota WakabayashiTomoya TamuraSaki Takashima nbsp Japan 3 17 17 NR 28 September 2019 Mixed 4 400 metres relay Wil LondonAllyson FelixCourtney OkoloMichael Cherry span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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