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World Athletics Championships Results 2022 - Day 10 Highlights
Highlights from Day 10 at the World Athletics Championships. Daily Highlights From the 2022 World Athletics Championships. Day-by-day highlights and results from Eugene, Oregon. The 2022 World Athletics Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, marked the first time the international track event has taken place on U.S. soil. From July 15 to July 24, the best track and field athletes from across the globe competed for medals and set records during a thrilling ten days in Eugene. Here are the day-by-day highlights and results from the 2022 World Athletics Championships. → You love watching the biggest races. So do we we! Join Runner's World+ to keep up with the latest race coverage! Athing Mu continues her reign. In an epic battle against Great Britain's Keely Hodgkinson, Athing Mu continued her years-long winning streak to become the first American woman to win a world title in the 800 meters. Mu ran a comfortable 57.16 for the first 400 meters, then took the lead from Ethiopia's Diribe Welteji, Hodgkinson covered the move. And while Mu's victories often look effortless, Hodgkinson challenged the Olympic gold medalist, passing Mu for a nearly imperceptible moment on the inside at around the 700-meter mark. Mu, the effort visible on her face, didn't let Hodgkinson—the Olympic silver medalist—get away with it. She squeezed back, blocking Hodgkinson from advancing again and winning in a world-leading 1:56.30. Hodgkinson took silver in a season's-best 1:56.38. Mary Moraa of Kenya won bronze in a personal-best 1:56.71. Olympic bronze medalist Raevyn Rogers took sixth in 1:58.26, and Ajeé Wilson faded to eight, finishing in 2:00.19. The home team wins gold in both 4 x 400 relays. Team USA closed out the first-ever world championships on home soil with a bang, with both the men and women winning the 4 x 400-meter relay in dominant fashion. The American men—Elija Godwin, Michael Norman, Bryce Deadmon, and Champion Allison—took the lead early and never let up. Norman, who just won the 400-meter championship, ran the second and fastest leg in 43.64. All the men's handoffs were smooth, and their finishing time was a world-leading 2:56.17—more than two seconds faster than Jamaica, who took silver in 2:58.58. Bronze went to Belgium. The women's race started out closer, with Talitha Diggs finishing the first leg just tenths of a second ahead of Jamaica's Victoria Ohuruogu and Great Britain's Nicole Yeargin. But once Abby Steiner—who stepped up to take the second leg after Dalilah Muhammad sustained an injury—received the baton, the Americans' lead extended. A strong third leg from Britton Wilson and a jaw-dropping 47.91 in the anchor leg from Sydney McLaughlin powered the women to a world-leading 3:17.79, the fastest time run on U.S. soil. Jamaica took silver in 3:20.74, and Great Britain claimed bronze in 3:22.64. The wins lift the United States to a record-setting 33 medals, more than the 31 claimed by East Germany in 1987. Mondo, once again, rises above the rest. If there was one athlete viewed as a lock to win gold at this meet, it was Sweden's Mondo Duplantis, already the world record holder and Olympic champion in the pole vault. Duplantis did not disappoint, and after securing his gold medal, comfortably cleared 6.21 meters on his second attempt to set a world record, exceeding his previous outdoor best of 6.16, set just last month, and the world record of 6.20 he set indoors in March. Team USA's Olympic silver medalist Chris Nilsen cleared 5.94 meters on the first try for silver, and the Philippines' Ernest John Obiena cleared the same height on his second attempt for bronze. Jakob Ingebrigtsen bounces back to win the men's 5,000 meters. Hydration tables are more common in mass marathons than world championship finals. But on a hot night in Eugene, Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen grabbed a cup with about five and a half laps to go in the men's 5,000 meters—then went on to win gold, in 13:09.24. Joshua Cheptegei of Uganda, who won gold in the 10,000 meters a week ago, took the race out relatively quickly, covering the first 1,000 meters in 2:36.59. The Kenyan duo of Jacob Krop and Nicholas Kipkorir moved to the lead with about nine laps to go, then slowed the pace. Ingebrigtsen, who was a surprise second to Jake Wightman in the 1500 meters earlier in the week, moved into the lead just past the 4,000-meter mark. About 10 men jostled for position into the bell lap. But Ingebrigtsen continued pushing and finished with a commanding lead—silver medalist Krop crossed the line in 13:09.98, and Uganda's Oscar Chelimo was third in a season's-best 13:10.20. American Grant Fisher was in medal position until the final turn, when he stumbled and fell back after appearing to hit the rail. A few days after finishing fourth in the 10,000 meters, he wound up sixth in 13:11.65.

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