2019 World Athletics Championships – Women's 10,000 metres explained

Event:Women's 10,000 metres
Competition:2019 World Championships
Venue:Khalifa International Stadium
Dates:28 September 2019
Competitors:22
Nations:11
Win Value:30:17.62
Gold:Sifan Hassan
Goldnoc:NED
Silver:Letesenbet Gidey
Silvernoc:ETH
Bronze:Agnes Jebet Tirop
Bronzenoc:KEN
Prev:2017
Next:2022

The women's 10,000 metres at the World Athletics Championships was held at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar, on 28 September 2019.[1]

Summary

At the beginning, none of the favorites wanted to lead the race, so leading duties fell on Alina Reh to keep the pace honest, 9:29.69 for the 3000 metres. A lap later, #3 Kenyan Rosemary Wanjiru accelerated. The field strung out. Her teammates Hellen Obiri and Agnes Tirop followed. If it was a sacrificial tactic, the Ethiopian team took the bait. Letesenbet Gidey, Netsanet Gudeta and Senbere Teferi came forward in chase of the breakaway. The only other athlete to join the lead group was Sifan Hassan, who took a little more than a lap to bridge the gap from the back of the pack. The Kenyan team shared the leading duties, pushing the pace down to 15:32:70. Gudeta couldn't keep up with the fast pace, eventually dropping out. The Kenyan efforts kept driving the train until 4 laps to go when World leader Gidey quickly accelerated to the lead. The Kenyans struggled to keep up, again late to bridge the gap, Hassan went around the Kenyan team to catch Gidey just before the bell. Running around lapped runners, Hassan extended the gap to win by 3.5 seconds in 30:17.62. Tirop held on for bronze.[2]

Hassan was running only her second 10,000 ever; her first being her qualifying run at Stanford. Her only other experience at the distance was a 34:28 road 10K from 2012. The first 5 were the fastest 5 times of the season. Excepting Teferi, it was personal bests for the first 8 and 11 total in the race. 42 year old Sinead Diver's personal best turned out to be the W40 Masters World Record.

After setting the world record in the Mile, the 1500 was the primary target for Hassan. A week later, she completed the double a week later. Hassan had previously attempted doubles at the Olympics and previous two World Championships, even picking up a bronze medal in the 5000 in 2017. With a lack of success at 800 metres and the 5000 scheduled on same nights as the 1500, the odd 10,000/1500 double has never previously been accomplished at this level. Only Paavo Nurmi has gold medals in both events and his were in different Olympiads.

Records

Before the competition, the records were as follows:[3]

Record Athlete Date Location
World29:17.45Almaz Ayana Ethiopia12 Aug 2016Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
World Championships30:04.18Berhane Adere Ethiopia23 Aug 2003Paris, France
World leading30:37.89Letesenbet Gidey Ethiopia17 Jul 2019Hengelo, Netherlands
African29:17.45Almaz Ayana EthiopiaRio de Janeiro, Brazil
Asian29:31.78Junxia Wang8 Sep 1993Beijing, China
North, Central American and Caribbean30:13.17Molly Huddle United States12 Aug 2016Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
South American31:47.76Carmem de Oliveira Brazil21 Aug 1993Stuttgart, Germany
European30:01.09Paula Radcliffe United Kingdom6 Aug 2002Munich, Germany
Oceanian30:35.54Kim Smith New Zealand4 May 2008Palo Alto, United States

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+3), was as follows:[4]

Results

Final

The final was started at 21:10.[5]

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
30:17.62
30:21.23
30:25.20
4 30:35.75
5 30:35.82
6 30:44.23
7 31:05.40
8 31:05.71
9 31:07.24
10 31:12.56
11 31:12.99
12 31:13.21
13 31:18.89
14 31:25.49 MWR
15 31:44.79
16 32:15.20
17 32:31.19
18 32:41.93
19 32:53.46
20 33:28.18

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Start list.
  2. Web site: Report: women's 10,000m - IAAF World Athletics Championships Doha 2019 | REPORT | World Athletics. www.worldathletics.org.
  3. Web site: 10,000 Metres Women − Records . www.iaaf.org . 27 September 2019.
  4. Web site: Women's 10,000 Metres − Timetable . 27 September 2019 . IAAF.
  5. Web site: Final results.