Athletics at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Men's 1500 metres
Men's 1500 metres at the Games of the XXXIII Olympiad | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Stade de France, Paris, France[1] | ||||||||||||
Dates |
| ||||||||||||
Winning time | 3:27.65 OR | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
The men's 1500 metres at the 2024 Summer Olympics was held in four rounds at the Stade de France in Paris, France, between 2 and 6 August 2024. This was the 30th time that the men's 1500 metres was contested at the Summer Olympics. A total of 45 athletes were able to qualify for the event by entry standard or ranking.
Summary
[edit]Given the rivalry between Norway's Olympic 1500-metre champion, and World 5000-metre champion, Jakob Ingebrigtsen and Great Britain's World 1500-metre champion, and World indoor 3000-metre champion, Josh Kerr, the men's 1500 metres at the 2024 Summer Olympics had been billed as a "Race for the Ages" by World Athletics President, middle-distance great, and double Olympic champion over the 'metric mile', Sebastian Coe.[2]
Ingebrigtsen had won the Olympic title three years earlier and his confidence and high expectations had affected his race strategy in recent years. After comfortably winning every race he entered, at the 2022 World Championships, Ingebrigtsen was in the lead of the 1500 metres, expecting to continue to the finish. However, Great Britain's Jake Wightman, who had tracked every move but never put his face in the wind, sprinted around him in the last 200 metres to take the World gold. Ingebrigtsen then entered his secondary event, the 5000 meters, with a chip on his shoulder, where his speed from the shorter distance overwhelmed the distance oriented runners.
Again at the 2023 World Championships, as Ingebrigtsen was in the lead, expecting to continue to the finish and regain his title, Kerr, a clubmate of Wightman since their childhoods, repeated almost exactly the Wightman tactic, tracking Ingebrigtsen while sheltering from the front, before attacking at 200 metres to go and sprinting around to take the gold.
Again Ingebrigtsen entered the 5000 meters with a point to prove, and again he won.
Ingebrigtsen came to a major championship again, the Olympic Games, as the world leader, his 3:26.73 came close to Hicham El Guerrouj's 26 year old world record of 3:26.00. Behind him the reigning World Champion, Kerr who had won the one major race between them that year, the Bowerman Mile; the returning Olympic silver medalist Timothy Cheruiyot, Brian Komen, Yared Nuguse, Cole Hocker, Neil Gourley and World Championship bronze medalist Narve Gilje Nordås.[3] Wightman was injured before the British trials, and had indeed carried injuries since 2022, having been unable to defend his title in 2023. All of the others, however, were in Paris, and qualified safely through the rounds to the final avoiding the repechage.
From the gun, Ingebrigtsen ran around the outside to take the lead as they entered the first turn. This move was immediately shadowed by Cheruiyot, Kerr, Komen, Nuguse, Hocker and Hobbs Kessler largely in a row. This was not to be a slow, strategic race that usually plagues championship finals, 54.9 for the first 400 was one of the fastest in history. On the second lap, Ingebrigtsen kept pushing splitting 1:51.5 opening up a gap stringing out suitors in same order, it had become clear Ingebrigtsen meant to run the race hard and take the sprint legs away from his would-be opponents, as he had done many times on the Diamond League circuit. Although the field was strung out by the infernal pace of the Norwegian, Cheruiyot resolutely tailed the Norwegian, and the other runners were able to take single file shelter behind the two leaders. As a result the line of runners stretched, but did not break.
The clock read 2:33.5 at the bell as the pace did not ease, and at this point Kerr, having sheltered behind the Kenyan while Ingebrigtsen had taken all of the wind, began moving up on the turn. Hocker moved around Nuguse and the Kenyans to get in position for his own ferocious final kick to be effective. As they entered the final turn Hocker started to apply his speed getting close behind. Kerr moved onto Ingebrigtsen's shoulder so Ingebrigtsen instinctively drifted out to make Kerr run farther. Hocker was headed for a hole along the rail but Ingebrigtsen moved back closing the door, leaving Hocker in a box, having to slow to look for an opening. As they entered the home stretch, the expected duel between Kerr and Ingebrigtsen appeared to come to fruition, with the Scotsman once again looking marginally the stronger.
Kerr began to pass Ingebrigtsen, who drifted away from the rail again to ease Kerr off the shortest distance line to the finish, but in doing so, he again opened the inside lane door for the wild card, Hocker, who seeing his chance reappear, sped through with a brutal finishing kick. Ingebrigtsen was by now fading badly from his early exertions, as it became a race of the 'kickers' over the last 50 metres between the American and Kerr, but Hocker now had far more momentum, passing 20 meters before the finish to take gold. As Kerr's kick faded in the last few metres Nuguse, who had missed most of the front-of-race action, kept coming, almost nipping past the disappointed Kerr on the line for silver, the two being separated by only one hundredth of a second, but being rewarded with the Olympic bronze.[4]
Ingebrigtsen, undone by his focus on Kerr and a forlorn attempt to run the legs out of his opponents without the help of the pacemakers who facilitated the tactic on the circuit (while the same opponents were able to use Cheruiyot to pace themselves) faded out of the medals altogether in fourth.
With Hocker's gold and Nuguse's bronze, the 2024 1500 meter final was the first time in 112 years that two Americans made it on the Olympic podium in the event. Another American, Hobbs Kessler, made it into and competed well in the final, finishing 5th in a new personal best. The result edged the United States just ahead of Great Britain on the all-time medal table for the event.
Ingebrigtsen went on to win the 5000 metres four days later.
Background
[edit]The men's 1500 metres has been present on the Olympic athletics programme since the inaugural edition in 1896.
Record | Athlete (nation) | Time (s) | Location | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
World record | Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR) | 3:26.00[5] | Rome, Italy | 14 July 1998 |
Olympic record | Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR) | 3:28.32 | Tokyo, Japan | 7 August 2021 |
World leading | 3:26.73[6] | Fontvieille, Monaco | 12 July 2024 |
Area record | Athlete (nation) | Time (s) |
---|---|---|
Africa (records) | Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR) | 3:26.00 WR |
Asia (records) | Rashid Ramzi (BHR) | 3:29.14 |
Europe (records) | Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR) | 3:26.73 |
North, Central America and Caribbean (records) | Yared Nuguse (USA) | 3:29.02 |
Oceania (records) | Oliver Hoare (AUS) | 3:29.41 |
South America (records) | Hudson de Souza (BRA) | 3:33.25 |
Qualification
[edit]For the men's 1500 metres event, the qualification period was between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024.[8] 45 athletes were able to qualify for the event, with a maximum of three athletes per nation, by running the entry standard of 3:33.50 seconds or faster or by their World Athletics Ranking for this event.[8]
Results
[edit]Heats
[edit]The heats were held on 2 August, starting at 11:05 (UTC+2) in the morning.[1] The first 6 in each heat (Q) advanced to the semi-final, while all others (Re) advanced to the repechage round (except DNS, DNF, DQ).
Heat 1
[edit]Rank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Josh Kerr | Great Britain | 3:35.83 | Q, SB |
2 | Brian Komen | Kenya | 3:36.31 | Q |
3 | Narve Gilje Nordås | Norway | 3:36.41 | Q |
4 | Anass Essayi | Morocco | 3:36.44 | Q |
5 | Yared Nuguse | United States | 3:36.56 | Q |
6 | Robert Farken | Germany | 3:36.62 | Q |
7 | Jochem Vermeulen | Belgium | 3:36.66 | |
8 | Samuel Pihlström | Sweden | 3:36.80 | |
9 | Cathal Doyle | Ireland | 3:37.82 | |
10 | Mario García | Spain | 3:37.90 | |
11 | Filip Rak | Poland | 3:38.12 | |
12 | Ryan Mphahlele | South Africa | 3:38.48 | |
13 | Oliver Hoare | Australia | 3:39.11 | |
14 | Abdisa Fayisa | Ethiopia | 3:39.67 | |
15 | Ossama Meslek | Italy | 3:39.96 |
Heat 2
[edit]Rank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ermias Girma | Ethiopia | 3:35.21 | Q |
2 | Cole Hocker | United States | 3:35.27 | Q |
3 | Pietro Arese | Italy | 3:35.30 | Q |
4 | Niels Laros | Netherlands | 3:35.38 | Q, SB |
5 | Timothy Cheruiyot | Kenya | 3:35.39 | Q |
6 | Isaac Nader | Portugal | 3:35.44 | Q |
7 | Marius Probst | Germany | 3:35.65 | |
8 | Luke McCann | Ireland | 3:35.73 | |
9 | Adel Mechaal | Spain | 3:35.81 | |
10 | George Mills | Great Britain | 3:35.99 | |
11 | Stewart Mcsweyn | Australia | 3:36.55 | |
12 | Ruben Verheyden | Belgium | 3:36.62 | |
13 | Tshepo Tshite | South Africa | 3:36.87 | |
14 | Charles Philibert-Thiboutot | Canada | 3:36.92 | |
15 | Maël Gouyette | France | 3:37.87 |
Heat 3
[edit]Rank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Stefan Nillessen | Netherlands | 3:36.77 | Q |
2 | Hobbs Kessler | United States | 3:36.87 | Q |
3 | Jakob Ingebrigtsen | Norway | 3:37.04 | Q |
4 | Reynold Kipkorir Cheruiyot | Kenya | 3:37.12 | Q |
5 | Neil Gourley | Great Britain | 3:37.18 | Q |
6 | Samuel Tefera | Ethiopia | 3:37.34 | Q |
7 | Ignacio Fontes | Spain | 3:37.50 | |
8 | Adam Spencer | Australia | 3:37.68 | |
9 | Azeddine Habz | France | 3:37.95 | |
10 | Kieran Lumb | Canada | 3:38.11 | |
11 | Raphael Pallitsch | Austria | 3:38.20 | |
12 | Maciej Wyderka | Poland | 3:38.79 | |
13 | Sam Tanner | New Zealand | 3:39.87 | |
14 | Federico Riva | Italy | 3:41.78 | |
15 | Andrew Coscoran | Ireland | 3:42.07 |
Repechage round
[edit]The repechage round was held on 3 August, and started at 19:05 (UTC+2) in the evening.[1] The first 3 in each Repechage heat (Q) advanced to the semi-final, while all others were eliminated.
Heat 1
[edit]Rank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Cathal Doyle | Ireland | 3:34.92 | Q |
2 | Azeddine Habz | France | 3:35.10 | Q |
3 | Ossama Meslek | Italy | 3:35.32 | Q |
4 | Tshepo Tshite | South Africa | 3:35.35 | |
5 | Kieran Lumb | Canada | 3:35.76 | |
6 | Jochem Vermeulen | Belgium | 3:36.14 | |
7 | Luke McCann | Ireland | 3:36.50 | |
8 | Marius Probst | Germany | 3:36.54 | |
9 | Maciej Wyderka | Poland | 3:36.79 | |
10 | Abdisa Fayisa | Ethiopia | 3:36.82 | |
11 | Mario García | Spain | 3:37.01 | |
12 | Stewart Mcsweyn | Australia | 3:37.49 | |
13 | Raphael Pallitsch | Austria | 3:39.32 |
Heat 2
[edit]Rank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Federico Riva | Italy | 3:32.84 | Q, PB |
2 | Charles Philibert-Thiboutot | Canada | 3:33.53 | Q, SB |
3 | George Mills | Great Britain | 3:33.56 | Q |
4 | Samuel Pihlström | Sweden | 3:33.58 | PB |
5 | Oliver Hoare | Australia | 3:34.00 | |
6 | Adam Spencer | Australia | 3:34.45 | SB |
7 | Filip Rak | Poland | 3:34.53 | |
8 | Ignacio Fontes | Spain | 3:35.04 | |
9 | Maël Gouyette | France | 3:35.42 | |
10 | Ruben Verheyden | Belgium | 3:36.06 | |
11 | Ryan Mphahlele | South Africa | 3:36.64 | |
12 | Andrew Coscoran | Ireland | 3:39.45 | |
13 | Sam Tanner | New Zealand | 3:40.71 | |
14 | Adel Mechaal | Spain | 3:42.79 |
Semi-finals
[edit]The semi-finals were held on 4 August, and started at 21:15 (UTC+2) in the evening.[1] The first 6 in each heat (Q) advanced to the final.
Heat 1
[edit]Rank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Yared Nuguse | United States | 3:31.72 | Q |
2 | Hobbs Kessler | United States | 3:31.97 | Q |
3 | Neil Gourley | Great Britain | 3:32.11 | Q |
4 | Niels Laros | Netherlands | 3:32.22 | Q |
5 | Timothy Cheruiyot | Kenya | 3:32.30 | Q |
6 | Narve Gilje Nordås | Norway | 3:32.34 | Q |
7 | Anass Essayi | Morocco | 3:32.49 | PB |
8 | Ossama Meslek | Italy | 3:32.77 | PB |
9 | Samuel Tefera | Ethiopia | 3:33.02 | |
10 | Cathal Doyle | Ireland | 3:33.15 | PB |
11 | Charles Philibert-Thiboutot | Canada | 3:33.29 | |
12 | Azeddine Habz | France | 3:34.35 |
Heat 2
[edit]Rank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jakob Ingebrigtsen | Norway | 3:32.38 | Q |
2 | Josh Kerr | Great Britain | 3:32.46 | Q |
3 | Cole Hocker | United States | 3:32.54 | Q |
4 | Brian Komen | Kenya | 3:32.57 | Q |
5 | Stefan Nillessen | Netherlands | 3:32.73 | Q, PB |
6 | Pietro Arese | Italy | 3:33.03 | Q |
7 | Robert Farken | Germany | 3:33.35 | |
8 | Isaac Nader | Portugal | 3:34.75 | |
9 | Federico Riva | Italy | 3:35.26 | |
10 | Reynold Kipkorir Cheruiyot | Kenya | 3:35.32 | |
11 | George Mills | Great Britain | 3:37.12 | |
12 | Ermias Girma | Ethiopia | 3:40.27 |
Final
[edit]The final was held on 6 August at 20:50 (UTC+2) in the evening.[1]
The race, as expected, was led by the defending Olympic champion and Olympic record holder Jakob Ingebrigtsen nearly wire-to-wire. However in the final 100 metres, Josh Kerr began to move quickly on the outside. As Kerr attempted to pass, Ingebrigtsen drifted slightly from the rail to force Kerr to run wide, allowing Cole Hocker of the United States, known for his finishing kick, to pass on the inside.[16] Kerr appeared to be in position to pull away and win down the home stretch, but Hocker, having run less distance out of the turn, caught him with about 10 metres remaining to win.[17]
Yared Nuguse took third, nearly catching Kerr, with Ingebrigtsen shockingly having finished out of a medal position.
Rank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cole Hocker | United States | 3:27.65 | OR, AR | |
Josh Kerr | Great Britain | 3:27.79 | NR | |
Yared Nuguse | United States | 3:27.80 | PB | |
4 | Jakob Ingebrigtsen | Norway | 3:28.24 | |
5 | Hobbs Kessler | United States | 3:29.45 | PB |
6 | Niels Laros | Netherlands | 3:29.54 | NR, AU20R |
7 | Narve Gilje Nordås | Norway | 3:30.46 | SB |
8 | Pietro Arese | Italy | 3:30.74 | NR |
9 | Stefan Nillessen | Netherlands | 3:30.75 | PB |
10 | Neil Gourley | Great Britain | 3:30.88 | |
11 | Timothy Cheruiyot | Kenya | 3:31.35 | |
12 | Brian Komen | Kenya | 3:35.59 |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "Paris 2024 - Olympic Schedule - Athletics", Olympics.com. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
- ^ "'A race for the ages' | Seb Coe revels in Jakob Ingebrigtsen v Josh Kerr in 1500m". Sky Sports. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ "1500 Metres - men - senior - all - 2024".
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Final race analysis" (PDF). Olympics. 6 August 2024. Retrieved 6 August 2024.
- ^ "All time Top lists – Senior – 1500 Metres men", World Athletics, 29 June 2024. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
- ^ "Season Top Lists – Senior 2024 – 1500 Metres men", World Athletics, 2024. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
- ^ "Records – 1500 Metres men". World Athletics. 3 July 2024. Retrieved 3 July 2024.
- ^ a b Sean McAlister, "How to qualify for athletics at Paris 2024. The Olympics qualification system explained", Olympics.com, 20 December 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Round 1 - Heat 1/3 results" (PDF). Olympics. 2 August 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Round 1 - Heat 2/3 results" (PDF). Olympics. 2 August 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Round 1 - Heat 3/3 results" (PDF). Olympics. 2 August 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Repechage - Heat 1/2 results" (PDF). Olympics. 3 August 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Repechage - Heat 2/2 results" (PDF). Olympics. 3 August 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Semi-Final 1/2 results" (PDF). Olympics. 4 August 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Semi-Final 2/2 results" (PDF). Olympics. 4 August 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ "Cole Hocker stuns Kerr and Ingebrigtsen to win shock Olympic 1500m gold". Guardian. 6 August 2024. Retrieved 7 August 2024.
- ^ Poole, Harry (6 August 2024). "GB's Kerr takes 1500m silver as Hocker claims shock gold". BBC Sport. Retrieved 7 August 2024.
- ^ "Men's 1500m - Final results" (PDF). Olympics. 6 August 2024. Retrieved 6 August 2024.