NOS Sports•
With thirteen gold, nine silver, and eleven bronze medals, the U.S. track and field team was superior at the first world championships in the United States. Behind the homeland, Ethiopia, Jamaica and Kenya had to make do with ten medals in the medal standings.
On the final day in Eugene, Nigeria’s Toby Amosan (25) jumped world records in the 100-meter hurdles (12.12) and Sweden’s pole vaulter Armand Duplantis (6.21 metres), but the Americans added three gold medals. Really impressive medal harvest.
The most beautiful was the only 20-year-old girl Athing Mu, who became the first American to win a World Cup gold medal at this distance after a fierce battle with Britain’s Keely Hodgkinson. Mo also stunned last year in Tokyo with the Olympic title in the 800 metres. The difference between gold and silver was minimal: 1.56.30 to 1.56.38. The arrangement was in the end the same as last year’s Tokyo.
Kevin Mayer won the world decathlon title for the second time. In Eugene, the 30-year-old Frenchman climbed from sixth to number one on day two of this edition. Mayer came fourth on Sunday in discus (49.44 m), won the pole vault (5.40 m) and javelin (70.31 m) and was 10th in the 1500 m with 4.41.44 enough for gold with 8,816 points.
Mayer for the second time world decathlon champion
Mayer also took the title in 2017. Two years later, he gave up after seven parts. At the Olympics, the world record holder came second twice, in 2016 behind Ashton Eaton and last year behind Damien Warner. The latter advanced in Eugene after four parts, but withdrew in the 400m due to a hamstring injury.
Ingebrigtsen succeeded at an altitude of 5000 meters
Jacob Ingbrigtsen took revenge in the 5000m for missing out on the gold medal earlier in the tournament. The Norwegian was the favorite in the 1500m, but won the silver medal “only” at that distance. In the 5000m, he drove the last three laps and kept everyone behind in the final race. The winning time was 13.09.24.
The 21-year-old became European champion in 2018 in both the 1500 and 5000 metres. At the 2019 World Championships, he finished fourth in the 1500m and fifth in the 5000m. At the Olympic Games in Tokyo last year, he was a success at the world level. He ran for gold in 1500 metres.
In Eugene, he held the top four in the games and the top three in the 2019 World Cup behind him. Kenyan Jacob Krupp was the best among the rest with a time of 0.74 seconds on Sunday.
Mihambo also appears at the World Championships in Eugene as the best long jumper in the world
Malaika Mihambo has extended her world title in the long jump. The 28-year-old German, who was also the best at last year’s Olympics, won 7.12 metres.
Mihambo started with two wrong jumps, then reached 6.98 meters and then jumped to 7.09 meters. Already sure of the title, she finished 7.12 meters. Nigeria’s Issey Brom, who finished third at the 2019 World Cup and at the Games, was the only one who also crossed seven metres: 7.02 metres.