Men's 10,000 metres
at the 2023 World Championships
VenueNational Athletics Centre
Dates20 August
Competitors25 from 18 nations
Winning time27:51.42
Medalists
gold medal    Uganda
silver medal    Kenya
bronze medal    Ethiopia

The men's 10,000 metres at the 2023 World Athletics Championships was held at the National Athletics Centre Budapest on 20 August 2023[1]

Summary

At the start of this race, Joel Ayeko started off fast with a 62 second lap to take the lead. The rest of the field had no interest in running that fast this early. After that burst, Ayeko backed off to a more sensible 71 second pace. The peloton let Ayeko have his time on television for the first 3200 metres before Benard Kibet pulled him in. Ayeko kept the point position for another 800 metres before Kibet decided it was time to swallow him up, dropping the pace to 66 seconds. After at little more than a lap, Ayeko dropped out. Kibet and Berihu Aregawi kept the pace going. On the 16th lap, Olympic Champion Selemon Barega came from the back of the lead group to show his teammate Aregawi how fast he wanted the pace. Aregawi obliged and held the point. As the laps counted down, defending champion Joshua Cheptegei was watching from Aregawi's shoulder, Mohammed Ahmed pinned on the rail, with all three Kenyans and Barega watching on the back. With a lap and a half to go, Barega floated up to join his teammate but that just brought Cheptegei to the front to take the bell first. The pack strung out, with only the two Ethiopians and Daniel Ebenyo able to stay in contact, Ahmed struggling to stay in tow. With 200 to go, Aregawi showed his weakness and looked back, Ebenyo went around him. Barega stuck to Cheptegei all the way through the final turn, Cheptegei covering his last 400 metres in 52.77 and still hadn't broken Barega. Cheptegei looked back then pushed one more time, finally Barega couldn't keep up, Cheptegei separated for a clear 8 metre victory. Defeated, Barega continued on to the finish line, but Ebenyo didn't stop racing. Barega let up 5 metres before the finish line only to have Ebenyo cruise by on the inside for silver.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

Record Athlete & Nat. Perf. Location Date
World record  Joshua Cheptegei (UGA) 26:11.00 Valencia, Spain 7 October 2020
Championship record  Kenenisa Bekele (ETH) 26:46.31 Berlin, Germany 17 August 2009
World Leading  Berihu Aregawi (ETH) 26:50.66 Nerja, Spain 23 June 2023
African Record  Joshua Cheptegei (UGA) 26:11.00 Valencia, Spain 7 October 2020
Asian Record  Ahmad Hassan Abdullah (QAT) 26:38.76 Brussels, Belgium 5 September 2003
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Grant Fisher (USA) 26:33.84 San Juan Capistrano, United States 6 March 2022
South American Record  Marilson Gomes dos Santos (BRA) 27:28.12 Neerpelt, Belgium 2 June 2007
European Record  Mo Farah (GBR) 26:46.57 Eugene, United States 3 June 2011
Oceanian record  Jack Rayner (AUS) 27:15.35 San Juan Capistrano, United States 6 March 2022

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 27:10.00.[3]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (CEST), was as follows:[4]

Date Time Round
20 August18:25Final

Results

Final

The final was started at 18:26.[5]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Joshua Cheptegei Uganda (UGA)27:51.42SB
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Daniel Ebenyo Kenya (KEN)27:52.60
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Selemon Barega Ethiopia (ETH)27:52.72
4Berihu Aregawi Ethiopia (ETH)27:55.71
5Benard Kibet Kenya (KEN)27:56.27
6Mohammed Ahmed Canada (CAN)27:56.43SB
7Rodrigue Kwizera Burundi (BDI)28:00.29SB
8Nicholas Kimeli Kenya (KEN)28:03.38
9Yann Schrub France (FRA)28:07.42SB
10Birhanu Balew Bahrain (BHR)28:08.03SB
11Woody Kincaid United States (USA)28:08.71
12Yemaneberhan Crippa Italy (ITA)28:16.40
13Isaac Kimeli Belgium (BEL)28:20.77SB
14Adriaan Wildschutt South Africa (RSA)28:21.40
15Ren Tazawa Japan (JPN)28:25.85
16Sean McGorty United States (USA)28:27.54
17Santiago Catrofe Uruguay (URU)28:28.49NR
18Zerei Kbrom Mezngi Norway (NOR)28:30.76
19Merhawi Mebrahtu Eritrea (ERI)28:50.62
20Joe Klecker United States (USA)29:03.41
21Nils Voigt Germany (GER)29:06.79
22Rogers Kibet Uganda (UGA)29:10.07
Joel Ayeko Uganda (UGA)DNF
Carlos Díaz Chile (CHI)
Yismaw Dillu Ethiopia (ETH)

References

  1. "WCH Budapest 23 preview: 10,000m". worldathletics.org. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  2. "10,000 Metres Women − Records". World Athletics. Retrieved 18 August 2022.
  3. "Qualifying systems approved for World Athletics Championships Budapest23" (PDF). World Athletics. August 19, 2022. Retrieved August 19, 2022.
  4. "Men 10000 Metres -TIMETABLE". Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  5. "Final results" (PDF).
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