02 JAN 2017 General News
The first of a two-part look back at the IAAF Diamond League in 2016. Below, some of the highlights of the series' first seven meetings.
The 20-year-old Venezuelan, IAAF World Indoor champion in Ibarguen’s absence two months earlier, set a national record of 14.61m in the second round; the double world champion responded with 14.77m on the next jump.
Rojas improved her record to 14.79m in the third round, but two rounds later her 32-year-old Colombian rival managed 15.04m - the second best legal jump of her career, a 2016 world lead and a meeting record.
That extended Ibarguen’s unbeaten run to 32 following her London 2012 silver medal – although Rojas added a defiant fifth round leap of 14.92 (2.6mps wind).
Dafne Schippers, the Netherlands’ world 200m champion, equalled her second best 100m time of 10.83 but still lost to US 2015 champion Tori Bowie, who equalled her personal best of 10.80 to top the early season world lists.
Ethiopia’s world 5000m champion Almaz Ayana finished just shy of her national record of 8:22.22 in the 3000m, clocking 8:23.11 to go top of the 2016 listings.
US pole vaulter Sandi Morris equalled the IAAF Diamond League record with 4.83m. South Africa’s Caster Semenya set a 2016 world best of 1:58.26 in the women’s 800m.
Local hero Mutaz Essa Barshim was eighth with 2.26m in a high jump won by Erik Kynard of the United States with 2.33m.
Lavillenie failed twice at 5.88m before moving up for one fruitless attempt at 5.93m.
Faith Kipyegon, second to Genzebe Dibaba at the 2015 IAAF World Championships, laid down an Olympic marker by taking 0.16 off her own Kenyan 1500m record with 3:56.82.
The 22-year-old’s effort was a meeting record and topped the 2016 lists. Fellow Kenyan Hyvin Kiyeng, the women’s world 3000m steeplechase champion, also set a 2016 world lead and moved to sixth on the all-time list with 9:07.42.
At the bell, Bahrain’s 19-year-old world junior champion Ruth Jebet held a 10 metre lead before stumbling and falling to allow Kiyeng past. Jebet’s consolation was an Asian record of 9:15.98.
Another middle-distance world lead, and meeting record, came in the men’s 5000m, won by Ethiopia's Muktar Edris in 12:59.96.
Jamaica’s 22-year-old world indoor champion Omar McLeod ran his third 110m hurdles outdoor world lead in as many races in clocking 12.98.
Croatia’s Sandra Perkovic, setting her sights on a fifth Diamond Race title, won the women’s discus with 70.88m, a 2016 world lead and meeting record.
High jumpers encroaching on the track caused half the men’s 800m field to hesitate at the start of their race. Among those impeded was world and Olympic champion David Rudisha, who was fifth in 1:46.24, his slowest time in five years. Fellow Kenyan Ferguson Rotich won in 1:45.68.
The 24-year-old’s time was less than two seconds off her best of 14:14.32, set at the previous year’s meeting in Shanghai, which stood third in the all-time list. “I feel disappointed because I wanted to break the world record,” said Ayana. “However the wind was too disturbing today.”
For the first three kilometres Ayana was on course to challenge the world record of 14:11.15 set in 2008 by fellow Ethiopian Tirunesh Dibaba, but after the elements had taken their toll she had to settle for a meeting and African all-comers’ record.
This historic meeting in Morocco’s capital city – taking the place of New York in the Diamond League roster - also enabled Caster Semenya to strengthen her grip on the women’s 800m event in Olympic year. The 25-year-old South African won in 1:56.64, topping the seasonal listings.
Further African all-comers’ records came in the men’s 3000m steeplechase for Kenya’s Conseslus Kipruto, who ran a 2016 world-leading 8:02.77, the men’s long jump, where South Africa’s Ruswahl Samaai equalled his personal best of 8.38m, and the women’s pole vault, where Ekaterini Stefanidi cleared a meeting record of 4.75m.
Harrison’s US record had only been bettered by Bulgaria’s Yordanka Donkova, whose world record of 12.21 was set in 1988.
Jebet, a naturalised Kenyan running for Bahrain, was pushed to the line by Kenya’s world champion Hyvin Kiyeng, finishing in an Asian record of 8:59.97.
Kiyeng's 9:00.01 placed her third in the all-time rankings. Home runner Emma Coburn was third in a national record of 9:10.76.
World 200m champion Dafne Schippers finished second in 22.11 behind the US former longer jumper Tori Bowie, who recorded 21.99, with Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson third in 22.16.
London 2012 400m winner Kirani James ran 44.22 to finish 0.17 ahead of US rival and Beijing 2008 champion LaShawn Merritt.
Faith Kipyegon won the women’s 1500m in a 2016 world-leading 3:56.41, bettering the Kenyan record she had set in Shanghai.
In the men’s javelin, world silver medallist Ihab Abelrahman of Egypt set a meeting and stadium record of 87.37m with his final throw, equalling the 2016 world lead.
Friday’s opening programme saw Britain’s Mo Farah – in his first race since retaining the world 5000 and 10,000m titles in Beijing - win the 10,000m in his third fastest time, 26:53.71.
There were home victories for London 2012 and triple world champion long jumper Brittney Reese, with 6.92m, and world shot put champion Joe Kovacs, who replaced his own mark of 21.47m at the top of the 2016 rankings with 22.13.
The Ethiopian world champion could not manage a final lap of under 65 seconds she needed to better the 2008 record of 14:11.15 set by compatriot Tirunesh Dibaba.
Kenya’s Commonwealth Games champion and 2013 world silver medallist Mercy Cherono ran a personal best of 14:33.95 and was still adrift by almost the length of the final straight.
Caterine Ibarguen extended her unbeaten run of triple jump victories to 34 after a best of 14.74m moved her beyond Kazakhstan’s Olympic champion Olga Rypakova, who led early on with 14.51m.
South Africa’s world 400m champion Wayde van Niekerk overhauled early leader Isaac Makwala of Botswana to win in 44.19.
South Africa’s former 800m world champion Caster Semenya equalled her 2016 world lead of 1:56.64 in registering her third consecutive Diamond League win.
On a cool evening, Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson produced a season’s best of 10.87 to win the 100m.
Conseslus Kipruto maintained his Diamond Race dominance in the 3000m steeplechase, winning in 8:01.41 after his Kenyan rival Jairus Birech had fallen at the second hurdle while leading on the last lap.
Britain’s Olympic, world, European and Commonwealth long jump champion Greg Rutherford maintained his unbeaten start to the season with a best of 8.31m.
Ibarguen’s best of 14.51m was overhauled in the last round by 14.61m from Kazakhstan’s Olga Rypakova - the last woman to beat her. The Colombian’s final response, 14.53m, fell just short.
Mo Farah produced an expected home victory over 3000m in a British record of 7:32.62, just eclipsing Dave Moorcroft’s 1982 mark of 7:32.79.
Mutaz Essa Barshim, the second best high jumper of all time thanks to his 2.43m effort in 2014, rediscovered something of his old form for the first time in 2016, producing a winning mark of 2.37m that topped the season’s world list.
There were victories for three Kenyans in 2016 world-leading times.
World and Olympic 800m champion David Rudisha won the rarely run 600m event in 1:13.10, an African record, with France’s Pierre-Ambroise Bosse setting a European record of 1:13.21 in second place.
World 1500m champion Asbel Kiprop won in a meeting record of 3:29.33 and Conseslus Kipruto set a meeting record of 8:00.12.
Cuba’s world pole vault champion Yarisley Silva produced the best effort of 2016 so far as she cleared a Diamond League record of 4.84m.
Kenya’s Asbel Kiprop won his fifth Dream Mile in 3:51.48. Norway’s 25-year-old former European champion Henrik Ingebrigtsen was seventh in 3:53.19, one place ahead of his 23-year-old brother Filip, who clocked 3:55.02. In the evening’s pre-programme 1500m, Ingebrigtsen’s 15-year-old brother Jakob finished ninth in a personal best of 3:42.44 that was a European best for his age group.
On a night when the Bislett Stadium honoured Norway’s recently retired 2004 and 2008 Olympic javelin champion Andreas Thorkildsen, Thomas Roehler of Germany won his javelin battle with Kenya’s world champion Julius Yego, improving his 2016 world-leading mark to 89.30m.
Ruth Beitia, Spain’s double European high jump champion, claimed her first Diamond League win of the year with a clearance of 1.90m.
On his Diamond League debut, Poland’s 19-year-old shot putter Konrad Bukowiecki led the competition after his first round effort of 20.77m, following it up with 21.14m, a world junior record.
That inspired world champion Joe Kovacs to throw 21.51m before finishing off with 22.01m - just two centimetres off the 25-year-old meeting record set by Werner Gunthor of Switzerland.
Victory in the 100m hurdles went to the US 2013 world champion Brianna Rollins in 12.56 with Olympic champion Sally Pearson, making up ground after injury, seventh in 13.14.
Olympic pole vault champion and world record holder Renaud Lavillenie lived dangerously with two fouls at his opening height of 5.65m before winning with a best of 5.80m.
Mike Rowbottom for the IAAF
2016 IAAF Diamond League review – part 1
Doha – 6 May
For the second successive year this meeting witnessed an epic triple jump struggle – but this time it was in the women’s event as South American rivals Caterine Ibarguen and Yulimar Rojas challenged each other in the manner of Christian Taylor and Pedro Pablo Pichardo in 2015.The 20-year-old Venezuelan, IAAF World Indoor champion in Ibarguen’s absence two months earlier, set a national record of 14.61m in the second round; the double world champion responded with 14.77m on the next jump.
Rojas improved her record to 14.79m in the third round, but two rounds later her 32-year-old Colombian rival managed 15.04m - the second best legal jump of her career, a 2016 world lead and a meeting record.
That extended Ibarguen’s unbeaten run to 32 following her London 2012 silver medal – although Rojas added a defiant fifth round leap of 14.92 (2.6mps wind).
Dafne Schippers, the Netherlands’ world 200m champion, equalled her second best 100m time of 10.83 but still lost to US 2015 champion Tori Bowie, who equalled her personal best of 10.80 to top the early season world lists.
Ethiopia’s world 5000m champion Almaz Ayana finished just shy of her national record of 8:22.22 in the 3000m, clocking 8:23.11 to go top of the 2016 listings.
US pole vaulter Sandi Morris equalled the IAAF Diamond League record with 4.83m. South Africa’s Caster Semenya set a 2016 world best of 1:58.26 in the women’s 800m.
Local hero Mutaz Essa Barshim was eighth with 2.26m in a high jump won by Erik Kynard of the United States with 2.33m.
Shanghai – 14 May
A shock victory for US pole vaulter Sam Kendricks disrupted Renaud Lavillenie’s quest for an unprecedented seventh straight Diamond Race. The 23-year-old sergeant in the US Army Reserve kept tabs on the French world record holder with a third-time clearance at 5.83m, then cleared 5.88m, also at the third attempt.Lavillenie failed twice at 5.88m before moving up for one fruitless attempt at 5.93m.
Faith Kipyegon, second to Genzebe Dibaba at the 2015 IAAF World Championships, laid down an Olympic marker by taking 0.16 off her own Kenyan 1500m record with 3:56.82.
The 22-year-old’s effort was a meeting record and topped the 2016 lists. Fellow Kenyan Hyvin Kiyeng, the women’s world 3000m steeplechase champion, also set a 2016 world lead and moved to sixth on the all-time list with 9:07.42.
At the bell, Bahrain’s 19-year-old world junior champion Ruth Jebet held a 10 metre lead before stumbling and falling to allow Kiyeng past. Jebet’s consolation was an Asian record of 9:15.98.
Another middle-distance world lead, and meeting record, came in the men’s 5000m, won by Ethiopia's Muktar Edris in 12:59.96.
Jamaica’s 22-year-old world indoor champion Omar McLeod ran his third 110m hurdles outdoor world lead in as many races in clocking 12.98.
Croatia’s Sandra Perkovic, setting her sights on a fifth Diamond Race title, won the women’s discus with 70.88m, a 2016 world lead and meeting record.
High jumpers encroaching on the track caused half the men’s 800m field to hesitate at the start of their race. Among those impeded was world and Olympic champion David Rudisha, who was fifth in 1:46.24, his slowest time in five years. Fellow Kenyan Ferguson Rotich won in 1:45.68.
Rabat - 22 May
Ethiopia’s world 5,000 metre champion Almaz Ayana used Africa’s first IAAF Diamond League meeting to serve notice of her Olympic ambitions as she won in 14:16.31, the fifth fastest time in history.The 24-year-old’s time was less than two seconds off her best of 14:14.32, set at the previous year’s meeting in Shanghai, which stood third in the all-time list. “I feel disappointed because I wanted to break the world record,” said Ayana. “However the wind was too disturbing today.”
For the first three kilometres Ayana was on course to challenge the world record of 14:11.15 set in 2008 by fellow Ethiopian Tirunesh Dibaba, but after the elements had taken their toll she had to settle for a meeting and African all-comers’ record.
This historic meeting in Morocco’s capital city – taking the place of New York in the Diamond League roster - also enabled Caster Semenya to strengthen her grip on the women’s 800m event in Olympic year. The 25-year-old South African won in 1:56.64, topping the seasonal listings.
Further African all-comers’ records came in the men’s 3000m steeplechase for Kenya’s Conseslus Kipruto, who ran a 2016 world-leading 8:02.77, the men’s long jump, where South Africa’s Ruswahl Samaai equalled his personal best of 8.38m, and the women’s pole vault, where Ekaterini Stefanidi cleared a meeting record of 4.75m.
Eugene - 27-28 May
Home athlete Kendra Harrison became the second fastest 100 metre hurdler of all time in 12.24, and 19-year-old Ruth Jebet became only the second female 3000m steeplechaser to better nine minutes, finishing less than a second off the world record of 8:58.81 set in 2008 by Russia’s Gulnara Galkina.Harrison’s US record had only been bettered by Bulgaria’s Yordanka Donkova, whose world record of 12.21 was set in 1988.
Jebet, a naturalised Kenyan running for Bahrain, was pushed to the line by Kenya’s world champion Hyvin Kiyeng, finishing in an Asian record of 8:59.97.
Kiyeng's 9:00.01 placed her third in the all-time rankings. Home runner Emma Coburn was third in a national record of 9:10.76.
World 200m champion Dafne Schippers finished second in 22.11 behind the US former longer jumper Tori Bowie, who recorded 21.99, with Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson third in 22.16.
London 2012 400m winner Kirani James ran 44.22 to finish 0.17 ahead of US rival and Beijing 2008 champion LaShawn Merritt.
Faith Kipyegon won the women’s 1500m in a 2016 world-leading 3:56.41, bettering the Kenyan record she had set in Shanghai.
In the men’s javelin, world silver medallist Ihab Abelrahman of Egypt set a meeting and stadium record of 87.37m with his final throw, equalling the 2016 world lead.
Friday’s opening programme saw Britain’s Mo Farah – in his first race since retaining the world 5000 and 10,000m titles in Beijing - win the 10,000m in his third fastest time, 26:53.71.
There were home victories for London 2012 and triple world champion long jumper Brittney Reese, with 6.92m, and world shot put champion Joe Kovacs, who replaced his own mark of 21.47m at the top of the 2016 rankings with 22.13.
Rome - 2 June
Almaz Ayana missed the world 5000m record by just 1.44 seconds, clocking 14:12.59 after running the final seven laps alone.The Ethiopian world champion could not manage a final lap of under 65 seconds she needed to better the 2008 record of 14:11.15 set by compatriot Tirunesh Dibaba.
Kenya’s Commonwealth Games champion and 2013 world silver medallist Mercy Cherono ran a personal best of 14:33.95 and was still adrift by almost the length of the final straight.
Caterine Ibarguen extended her unbeaten run of triple jump victories to 34 after a best of 14.74m moved her beyond Kazakhstan’s Olympic champion Olga Rypakova, who led early on with 14.51m.
South Africa’s world 400m champion Wayde van Niekerk overhauled early leader Isaac Makwala of Botswana to win in 44.19.
South Africa’s former 800m world champion Caster Semenya equalled her 2016 world lead of 1:56.64 in registering her third consecutive Diamond League win.
On a cool evening, Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson produced a season’s best of 10.87 to win the 100m.
Conseslus Kipruto maintained his Diamond Race dominance in the 3000m steeplechase, winning in 8:01.41 after his Kenyan rival Jairus Birech had fallen at the second hurdle while leading on the last lap.
Britain’s Olympic, world, European and Commonwealth long jump champion Greg Rutherford maintained his unbeaten start to the season with a best of 8.31m.
Birmingham – 5 June
One of the longest and most distinguished unbeaten runs in recent athletics history came to an end as Colombia’s double world triple jump champion Caterine Ibarguen, last defeated in the London 2012 Olympic final, saw her total of successive wins ended at 34.Ibarguen’s best of 14.51m was overhauled in the last round by 14.61m from Kazakhstan’s Olga Rypakova - the last woman to beat her. The Colombian’s final response, 14.53m, fell just short.
Mo Farah produced an expected home victory over 3000m in a British record of 7:32.62, just eclipsing Dave Moorcroft’s 1982 mark of 7:32.79.
Mutaz Essa Barshim, the second best high jumper of all time thanks to his 2.43m effort in 2014, rediscovered something of his old form for the first time in 2016, producing a winning mark of 2.37m that topped the season’s world list.
There were victories for three Kenyans in 2016 world-leading times.
World and Olympic 800m champion David Rudisha won the rarely run 600m event in 1:13.10, an African record, with France’s Pierre-Ambroise Bosse setting a European record of 1:13.21 in second place.
World 1500m champion Asbel Kiprop won in a meeting record of 3:29.33 and Conseslus Kipruto set a meeting record of 8:00.12.
Cuba’s world pole vault champion Yarisley Silva produced the best effort of 2016 so far as she cleared a Diamond League record of 4.84m.
Oslo – 9 June
The Netherlands’ world 200m champion Dafne Schippers finished well clear of her Jamaican rival Elaine Thompson to clock 21.93 - a Diamond League and meeting record which headed the 2016 world lists, with Thompson recording 22.64.Kenya’s Asbel Kiprop won his fifth Dream Mile in 3:51.48. Norway’s 25-year-old former European champion Henrik Ingebrigtsen was seventh in 3:53.19, one place ahead of his 23-year-old brother Filip, who clocked 3:55.02. In the evening’s pre-programme 1500m, Ingebrigtsen’s 15-year-old brother Jakob finished ninth in a personal best of 3:42.44 that was a European best for his age group.
On a night when the Bislett Stadium honoured Norway’s recently retired 2004 and 2008 Olympic javelin champion Andreas Thorkildsen, Thomas Roehler of Germany won his javelin battle with Kenya’s world champion Julius Yego, improving his 2016 world-leading mark to 89.30m.
Ruth Beitia, Spain’s double European high jump champion, claimed her first Diamond League win of the year with a clearance of 1.90m.
On his Diamond League debut, Poland’s 19-year-old shot putter Konrad Bukowiecki led the competition after his first round effort of 20.77m, following it up with 21.14m, a world junior record.
That inspired world champion Joe Kovacs to throw 21.51m before finishing off with 22.01m - just two centimetres off the 25-year-old meeting record set by Werner Gunthor of Switzerland.
Victory in the 100m hurdles went to the US 2013 world champion Brianna Rollins in 12.56 with Olympic champion Sally Pearson, making up ground after injury, seventh in 13.14.
Olympic pole vault champion and world record holder Renaud Lavillenie lived dangerously with two fouls at his opening height of 5.65m before winning with a best of 5.80m.
Mike Rowbottom for the IAAF
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