Wanyonyi Bags Maiden Diamond League Crown, Chebet Outdone By Record-Breaking Tsegay
17th September 2023
Chebet had to contend with a second-place finish in the women’s 5000m where Tsegay set a new world record.
- Emmanuel Wanyonyi clocked a new PB, MR and WL in beating World champion Marco Arop.
- Commonwealth Champion Wycliffe Kinyamal could not keep up with the top three as he faded to a ninth-place finish, timing 1:46.33.
- Chebet had to contend with a second-place finish in the women’s 5000m after failing to keep up with Ethiopia’s Gudaf Tsegay who broke the world record set by Faith Kipyegon in June.
Kenya’s
fast rising two-lap specialist Emmanuel Wanyonyi bagged his maiden Diamond
League crown on Sunday night after clocking a new personal best time of 1:42.80
to finish ahead of World Champion Marco Arop from Canada and Algeria’s Djamel
Sedjati.
The
19-year-old Wanyonyi, who had to settle for silver behind Arop in the recently
concluded Budapest World Championship, got the perfect response to losing the
World title as he zoomed past the Canadian in the closing stages of the race.
Having played
second fiddle to Arop who controlled the race from the start, Wanyonyi timed
his kick to perfection as he set a new world lead and meeting record to go with
his personal best, Arop and Sedjati settling for second and third after clocking 1:42.85 and 1:43.06 respectively.
Commonwealth
Champion Wycliffe Kinyamal could not keep up with the top three in the race as he faded to
a ninth-place finish, timing 1:46.33.
Elsewhere,
Kenya’s Beatrice Chebet had to contend with a second-place finish in the women’s
5000m after failing to keep up with Ethiopia’s Gudaf Tsegay who went on to
break the world record set by Faith Kipyegon in June this year in Paris.
The 10000m
World Champion was in a field of her own as she clocked 14:00.21 to take almost
five seconds off the 14:05.20 Kipyegon set barely three months ago.
The win
also saw the Ethiopian deny Chebet a chance of defending her Diamond League
title.
Chebet, the
reigning Commonwealth champion and World bronze medalist over the distance, however
set a new personal best in clocking 14:05.92 ahead of Taye Ejgayehu who finished
third.
Kenya’s Lilian Kasait missed out on the podium with her fourth placed finish.