2015 World Championships in Athletics – Men's 5000 metres

The men's 5000 metres at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Beijing National Stadium on 26 and 29 August.[1][2]

Men's 5000 metres
at the 2015 World Championships
VenueBeijing National Stadium
Dates26 August (heats)
29 August (final)
Competitors40 from 24 nations
Winning time13:50.38
Medalists
gold medal    Great Britain
silver medal    Kenya
bronze medal    Ethiopia
← 2013
2017 →

Summary

It was difficult to predict the results. Down at number 21 was the double Olympic Champion, defending champion attempting to repeat his double from two years earlier, Mo Farah, undoubtedly the favorite. At number 3 was returning silver medalist Hagos Gebrhiwet coming from the fastest race of the year in Rome, won by his Ethiopian teammate, World Junior Champion Yomif Kejelcha. Returning bronze medalist Isiah Koech was down at number 13. 2014 Diamond League Champion and Commonwealth Games Champion Caleb Mwangangi Ndiku was nowhere to be seen in the top 50 in the world, not having to qualify in the Kenyan trials.

In the finals, it was a slow pace at the beginning. Absurdly, the organizers placed a water station in lane 9, instead of lane 3 where it was located during the 10,000. At 1200 metres, with the pace dawdling, Farah alone chose to take advantage of the water stop, having to run all the way across the track in both directions, but still maintaining contact with the back of the field. At the front of the pack, by default, was a British uniform, but not Farah, it was Tom Farrell with eyes wandering to the TV monitors. You could sense the entire field was wanting to use a rear view mirror. What is Farah doing back there?

After five and a half laps, Farah casually jogged to the outside past the entire field to behind Farrell. Suddenly the scramble was on, people rushing for position. Imane Merga rushed to the front and took a 2-meter lead. Farah marked that and let Merga lead until four and a half laps to go still at an agonizingly slow pace, then Farah decided to take the lead and move just slightly faster. All of the other favorites jockeyed around but none of them seemed to make an attempt to pass him.

Having watched Farah launch his kick from 500 meters out in the 10,000 metres earlier in this meet, Ndiku tried to go one better and started to run for home with more than 800 to go, Farah running to stay in contact, Gebrhiwet, Galen Rupp, Ben True and Kejelcha in tow. For the next lap the field stretched out. Farah made a brief burst tor try to take the lead just before one lap to go, but Ndiku wouldn't let him by. One by one all the other suitors fell off the back, the last Gebrhiwet, finally fading on the backstretch, but Farah crept closer. Around the final turn, Kejelcha passed Gebrhiwet, while Farah moved into position to launch a final kick.[3]With a perfectly executed final sprint, Farah passed Ndiku with 70 metres to go, Ndiku had nothing in the tank to respond with.[4]Behind them Gebrhiwet executed a similar pass against his teammate Kejelcha to take the bronze.[5]

Ndiku ran the next to the last lap in 56.3 (Farah slightly slower), Farah completed the last 800 metres in 1:49.0 Despite the assortment of national affiliations listed, the entire pack, the top 13 finishers came from just four countries, three of them neighboring countries of East Africa; Somalia 1-12, Kenya 2-8-9-10-11, Ethiopia 3-4-13 and USA 5-6-7.

Records

Prior to the competition, the records were as follows:[6]

World record  Kenenisa Bekele (ETH)12:37.35Hengelo, Netherlands31 May 2004
Championship record  Eliud Kipchoge (KEN)12:52.79Saint-Denis, France31 August 2003
World Leading  Yomif Kejelcha (ETH)12:58.39Rome, Italy4 June 2015
African Record  Kenenisa Bekele (ETH)12:37.35Hengelo, Netherlands31 May 2004
Asian Record  Albert Kibichii Rop (BHR)12:51.96Fontvieille, Monaco19 July 2013
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Bernard Lagat (USA)12:53.60Fontvieille, Monaco22 July 2011
South American Record  Marilson dos Santos (BRA)13:19.43Kassel, Germany8 June 2006
European Record  Mohammed Mourhit (BEL)12:49.71Brussels, Belgium25 August 2000
Oceanian record  Craig Mottram (AUS)12:55.76London, Great Britain30 July 2004

Qualification standards

Entry standards[7]
13:23.00

Schedule

DateTimeRound
26 August 201509:35Heats
29 August 201519:30Final

All times are local times (UTC+8)

Results

Heats

Qualification: First 5 in each heat (Q) and the next 5 fastest (q) advanced to the final.[8]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
12Yomif Kejelcha  Ethiopia (ETH)13:19.38Q
22Mo Farah  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)13:19.44Q
32Mohammed Ahmed  Canada (CAN)13:19.58Q, SB
42Caleb Mwangangi Ndiku  Kenya (KEN)13:19.58Q, SB
52Albert Kibichii Rop  Bahrain (BHR)13:19.61Q
62Ryan Hill  United States (USA)13:19.67q
72Richard Ringer  Germany (GER)13:19.84q
82Galen Rupp  United States (USA)13:20.78q
92Ali Kaya  Turkey (TUR)13:21.46q
102Isiah Koech  Kenya (KEN)13:23.51q
112Aron Kifle  Eritrea (ERI)13:25.85
122Phillip Kipyeko  Uganda (UGA)13:26.20
132Ilias Fifa  Spain (ESP)13:28.29
142Hayle Ibrahimov  Azerbaijan (AZE)13:28.77
152Collis Birmingham  Australia (AUS)13:34.58
161Hagos Gebrhiwet  Ethiopia (ETH)13:45.00Q
171Ben True  United States (USA)13:45.09Q
181Edwin Soi  Kenya (KEN)13:45.28Q
191Tom Farrell  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)13:45.29Q
201Imane Merga  Ethiopia (ETH)13:45.41Q
211Abrar Osman  Eritrea (ERI)13:45.55
221Suguru Osako  Japan (JPN)13:45.82
231Emmanuel Kipsang  Kenya (KEN)13:46.43
241Cameron Levins  Canada (CAN)13:48.72
251Brett Robinson  Australia (AUS)13:49.63
262Jesús España  Spain (ESP)13:51.47
271Alemayehu Bezabeh  Spain (ESP)13:54.13
281Dennis Licht  Netherlands (NED)13:57.61
291Othmane El Goumri  Morocco (MAR)13:58.06
301Sindre Buraas  Norway (NOR)13:59.07
311Kemoy Campbell  Jamaica (JAM)14:00.55
322Kota Murayama  Japan (JPN)14:07.11
331Aweke Ayalew  Bahrain (BHR)14:07.18
342Duo Bujie  China (CHN)14:07.35
351Félicien Muhitira  Rwanda (RWA)14:11.12PB
361Víctor Aravena  Chile (CHI)14:29.34
371Stuart Banda  Malawi (MAW)14:49.31PB
382Suleiman Abdille Borai  Somalia (SOM)15:26.65PB
392Abdullah Al-Qwabani  Yemen (YEM)16:02.55PB
2Younés Essalhi  Morocco (MAR)DNF
1Bashir Abdi  Belgium (BEL)DNS

Final

The final was started at 19:30[9]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
Mo Farah  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)13:50.38
Caleb Mwangangi Ndiku  Kenya (KEN)13:51.75
Hagos Gebrhiwet  Ethiopia (ETH)13:51.86
4Yomif Kejelcha  Ethiopia (ETH)13:52.43
5Galen Rupp  United States (USA)13:53.90
6Ben True  United States (USA)13:54.07
7Ryan Hill  United States (USA)13:55.10
8Isiah Koech  Kenya (KEN)13:55.98
9Ali Kaya  Turkey (TUR)13:56.51
10Edwin Soi  Kenya (KEN)13:59.02
11Albert Kibichii Rop  Bahrain (BHR)14:00.12
12Mohammed Ahmed  Canada (CAN)14:00.38
13Imane Merga  Ethiopia (ETH)14:01.60
14Richard Ringer  Germany (GER)14:03.72
15Tom Farrell  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)14:08.87

References