
Stunning Beatrice Chebet may have broken world 5000m record with first sub-14-minute run
The record will be subject to the usual ratification procedure.
The Kenyan, returning to the scene of her world 10,000m record from last year, was tracked for most of the race by Gudaf Tsegay, who held the world record prior to today, and Agnes Jebet Ngetich.
They operated at world record pace from the outset with the first 1000m covered in 2:47.07. The second pacemaker led the field through 2000m in 5:35.37 and dropped out soon after, by which point Chebet, Tsegay and Ngetich had broken away from the rest of the field.
Chebet passed 3000m in 8:22.96, 1.04 seconds inside the pace required for a sub-14-minute run. The pace dropped slightly for the next kilometre as 4000m was reached in 11:14.12, but Chebet had saved something for the closing stages.
She kicked hard with 200 metres to go. Tsegay's challenge began to fade and she was soon passed by Ngetich, but Chebet was away and clear and crossed the line in 13:58.06, taking 2.15 seconds off Tsegay's world record.
Ngetich took second place in 14:01.29, the third-fastest time in history, and Tsegay placed third in 14:04.41.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
6 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Adeleke well off her best at Eugene Diamond League
Rhasidat Adeleke was again well off her best when finishing fourth in the 400m at the Eugene Diamond League in Oregon on Saturday night, the 22-year-old clocking 51.33 seconds to finish well adrift of US superstar Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone (49.43). Fellow Dubliners Sarah Healy and Orla Comerford both produced strong runs at the same meeting, with Healy finishing seventh over 1500m in 3:57.20 and Comerford sprinting to victory in the mixed class para 100m in 12.14. With 10 weeks until the World Championships in Tokyo, Adeleke's form remains well off where it was through the previous two summers and she was unable to replicate the 50.42 she clocked in Oslo last month and the 50.48 she ran in Stockholm. Her Irish record remains the 49.07 she ran to win the European silver medal in Rome last year. Pitched in against some of the world's best, she held her own through the opening half but was visibly lacking her usual fluidity and was unable to land any sort of blow against McLaughlin-Levrone, who coasted to victory with fellow US athletes Aaliyah Butler (49.86) and Isabella Whittaker (50.81) following her home. With swirling winds in Hayward Field, times were mediocre throughout the field, but the size of the gap to the leaders was a reminder for Adeleke of how much distance she will need to make up if she's to contend for her first individual global medal in Tokyo. Healy, meanwhile, produced another strong showing in what's been the season of her career, the 24-year-old clocking 3:57.20 to finish seventh in the 1500m, just outside her PB of 3:57.15 which she set in Paris last month. Kenya's Faith Kipyegon produced another masterclass out front, the three-time Olympic champion breaking her own world record with a superb final lap, clocking 3:48.68. There was another world record in the women's 5000m where Olympic champion Beatrice Chebet of Kenya clocked 13:58.06. Comerford, the Paralympic bronze medallist in the T13 (visually impaired) category, was a dominant winner of the mixed para 100m, clocking 12.14 to come home well clear of US sprinter Brittni Mason (12.40), but she wasn't pleased with her time which was well down on the PB of 11.87 she ran to win at the Oslo Diamond League. 'I came in feeling really good, strong, confident, and it's a real honour to be invited,' she said. 'Unfortunately the performance wasn't really there for me today, I had a really bad stumble out of the blocks but no excuses. We'll go back to the drawing board and make sure that when we're stepping out next time we're looking towards those personal bests, world records. I'm still very honoured and privileged to take the win.' Ireland was also represented in the T54 (wheelchair) 800m, with Shauna Bocquet finishing sixth in 1:55.76. Meanwhile at the National U20 and U23 Championships in Tullamore, Precious Akpe-Moses – the younger sister of former European U20 100m champion Gina Akpe-Moses – was among the stars, winning the U20 100m in 11.64 and setting a championship record of 23.66 over 200m. Sean Doggett (Athenry AC) was the standout performer in a stacked U-20 men's 400m, winning in 47.08, while rising star Nick Griggs made a triumphant return to national championship action, winning the U23 800m in 1:52.46.


Irish Independent
7 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Diamond League round-up: Rhasidat Adeleke fourth again over 400m while Orla Comerford sprints to 100m para win
Fellow Dubliners Sarah Healy and Orla Comerford both produced strong runs at the same meeting, with Healy finishing seventh over 1500m in 3:57.20 and Comerford sprinting to victory in the mixed class para 100m in 12.14. With 10 weeks until the World Championships in Tokyo, Adeleke's form remains well off where it was through the previous two summers and she was unable to replicate the 50.42 she clocked in Oslo last month and the 50.48 she ran in Stockholm. Her Irish record remains the 49.07 she ran to win the European silver medal in Rome last year. Pitched in against some of the world's best, she held her own through the opening half but was visibly lacking her usual fluidity and was unable to land any sort of blow against McLaughlin-Levrone, who coasted to victory with fellow US athletes Aaliyah Butler (49.86) and Isabella Whittaker (50.81) following her home. With swirling winds in Hayward Field, times were mediocre throughout the field, but the size of the gap to the leaders was a reminder for Adeleke of how much distance she will need to make up if she's to contend for her first individual global medal in Tokyo. Healy, meanwhile, produced another strong showing in what's been the season of her career, the 24-year-old clocking 3:57.20 to finish seventh in the 1500m, just outside her PB of 3:57.15 which she set in Paris last month. Kenya's Faith Kipyegon produced another masterclass out front, the three-time Olympic champion breaking her own world record with a superb final lap, clocking 3:48.68. There was another world record in the women's 5000m where Olympic champion Beatrice Chebet of Kenya clocked 13:58.06. Comerford, the Paralympic bronze medallist in the T13 (visually impaired) category, was a dominant winner of the mixed para 100m, clocking 12.14 to come home well clear of US sprinter Brittni Mason (12.40), but she wasn't pleased with her time which was well down on the PB of 11.87 she ran to win at the Oslo Diamond League. 'I came in feeling really good, strong, confident, and it's a real honour to be invited,' she said. 'Unfortunately the performance wasn't really there for me today, I had a really bad stumble out of the blocks but no excuses. We'll go back to the drawing board and make sure that when we're stepping out next time we're looking towards those personal bests, world records. I'm still very honoured and privileged to take the win.' Ireland was also represented in the T54 (wheelchair) 800m, with Shauna Bocquet finishing sixth in 1:55.76. Meanwhile at the National U-20 and U-23 Championships in Tullamore, Precious Akpe-Moses – the younger sister of former European U-20 100m champion Gina Akpe-Moses – was among the stars, winning the U-20 100m in 11.64 and setting a championship record of 23.66 over 200m. Sean Doggett (Athenry AC) was the standout performer in a stacked U-20 men's 400m, winning in 47.08, while rising star Nick Griggs made a triumphant return to national championship action, winning the U-23 800m in 1:52.46.


RTÉ News
7 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Sean McAnuff hungry for chance to represent Ireland at Winter Olympics in Italy
As Liam O'Brien recently pointed out, two into one won't go when it comes to how many short track speed skaters Team Ireland will be able to bring to next February's Winter Olympics in Milano-Cortina. The other half of that equation competing for that single quota spot at the 2026 Games is Canadian-born Sean McAnuff. Unlike his Australian-born counterpart who prefers the 1500m in short track speed skating, McAnuff favours shorter distances like the 500m and 1000m. Even so, only one slot will be available for Ireland in Italy. Either way, the 27-year-old is not getting fixated on what progress O'Brien has been making during the qualification process which is due to ramp up in October and November. "I would say I have more to worry about than just Liam," he says during a late May stop-over at the Sport Ireland Campus. "So in that aspect, I'm not really checking individual results, more just looking at my own progress and seeing how much I can advance in the next five months of training and then it's the Olympic qualifiers. "After last season I saw huge progression, not only in my personal best times, but in my consistent finishes overall. "I ended the season with my best finish of the world champs and that was 26th in the 1000m in Beijing. "So finishing the season with that, I'm looking pretty optimistic about a qualifying spot for the next Olympics." The youngest of four brothers, McAnuff was born and raised in Oakville, a town in suburban Toronto, which is, needless to say, more a winter sport stronghold than what the Sydney-raised O'Brien would have been used to. "That's why it was so easy for me to get started," McAnuff admits. "There was a club in the town we grew up and that's where we started short track. Pretty much you can drive 20 minutes and you might see five or six rinks, depending on what time of year you're at." And the Irish connection? That's rooted in Ulster via his paternal grandparents Rosaline and Albertovich Lancelot McAnuff. "They're both from Antrim. And then my grandpa did civil engineering at Queens (University), and when he graduated in '53, he was looking for a job. And there were a lot of good opportunities in Canada. So him and his wife went over in I think '54 or something on a boat," he says. A visit to Ireland 15 years ago sparked the process which ultimately saw McAnuff represent this nation and to try to grow his chosen sport here. "I came back to visit Ireland with my grandparents. And we did a full tour of the North and the south here and that was 2010. So that's when we were like, 'OK, cool. There's no ice rinks here at all,'" he says. "There's a huge lack of ice skating, so we got in contact with the ISAI, Ice Skating Association of Ireland, and they had some figure skaters. And we were aware of these little pop-up rinks that come around Dublin during the winter, Christmas time, and we heard that people just storm it and they pay a good penny to go skate there. "But we got in contact and we said OK, let's go out. It's Blanchardstown actually, that little pop-up, that was in 2014, the first time my family and I brought a ton of speed skates. "We brought helmets, equipment, we brought the pucks that go in the corners and we said let's introduce the sport to the country. So that was in 2014. Then we came the year after in 2015." The first camps attracted about 10 participants of all ages and "quite a few falls" on the ice. But the "big step" came in 2016 when the International Skating Union granted Ireland membership for speed skating. "This is my 10th season representing Ireland since they got membership and I was living in the Netherlands with my brother in 2017 and for about six weeks straight we came every weekend to host the camps in Blanchardstown, from the Netherlands, where we were living," he adds. 'I think that it proves our determination to actually build this sport in Ireland' The commitment was real for the McAnuff brothers. Every Saturday, one of them would depart the Dutch city of Heerenveen after training at the Thialf training centre to get to Amsterdam's airport; fly to Dublin on the late flight, get picked up by one of the parents volunteering at their camps, stay in one of their homes overnight before running the training sessions on Sunday mornings and then decamping back to the Netherlands once again. Rinse and repeat. "And that was our rest day," McAnuff quips, "So my brother and I would alternate weekends. We train Monday to Saturday and then usually it's rest, but that's not really rest. "We wanted to grow the sport and I say I also wanted to. So we started something and a lot of people would think, 'Oh, you just wanted to skate for an easier country', because I come from Canada. "But no, I think that it proves our determination to actually build this sport in Ireland and get funding for the sport in Ireland and offer it to children and show that this is actually a possibility. Right now, you might have to go abroad and train, but know that there is progress in the sport in Ireland and that was really important to us. So it was worth the sacrifice." Since 2020 though, McAnuff and his Canadian wife Jess have relocated to Budapest where he trains with the Hungarian speed skating team, having forged a connection with them a couple of years earlier at a World Cup event in Salt Lake City when he was by himself without a coach or team-mate and they invited him to train with them. "It was a really high level training team that I got invited to train with and it was cool because I was like the only foreigner on the team. So I was kind of bringing the representation of Ireland to Hungary and just building that relationship and going to fun events with the Irish Embassy there," he says of his new life in Budapest. Along with his wife and through his church, he has also been involved in humanitarian work in western Ukraine. "We even went into Ukraine during the war with generators and toys for orphans at orphanages and stuff like that. So we've been very involved," he says. "Basically, we brought over, tens of thousands of euros of equipment. It could be 50 pairs of boots for people who need it, it could be (for) soldiers, could be anyone; generators for people who don't have electricity, or simply toys for kids. We deliver it to (our pastor's) warehouse in a big van, and then he brings it to the frontlines and to the places that I wouldn't want to go." But the main focus for the next few months will be on trying to be in northern Italy next February, a Winter Olympics destination he has other - less important - reasons to want to spend time in whether he ultimately qualifies or not. Let's sat there's a reason the nickname 'Parme-Sean' exists. "I love Parmesan cheese and I love Italy," McAnuff says. "We do a lot of training camps in the north, like in Livigno and Bormio. They have really good biking there, really painful biking there, up the mountains and going fun on the way down, but yeah, I love Italy. So I love Parmesan cheese so more Parmesan, please. At the restaurant, they're loading it on more. "My wife's step-mom is Italian as well and we went around with her last year to visit her family. Italy's amazing. The food. Quality ingredients, everything. I'm excited to go next year. If I don't qualify, I'm still going."