2018 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's 1500 metres

The men's 1500 metres at the 2018 IAAF World Indoor Championships took place on 3 and 4 March 2018.[1][2]

Men's 1500 metres
at the 2018 IAAF World Indoor Championships
VenueArena Birmingham
Dates3–4 March
Competitors24 from 20 nations
Winning time3:58.19
Medalists
    Ethiopia
    Poland
    Morocco
Video on YouTube
Official Video

Summary

Two disqualifications and three national records highlighted the heats.

In the final, 2012 champion, Abdelaati Iguider jumped out to an early lead, with the American pair of Ben Blankenship and Craig Engels immediately behind him. The entire field jogged through the first 400 at warm up pace, 1:15.84. Blankenship found himself in the lead, looking around as if, "where is everybody?" At 600 metres, in 1:52.48, finally 18 year old Samuel Tefera came forward, the pace quickened slightly. He was joined by teammate Aman Wote and the pace began to get quicker, though still not 30 per lap pace. 800 metres in 2:23.68. Iguider came back to Tefera's shoulder, both speeding up to run a 28.49 lap, 1000 metres in 2:52.16. Blankenship held on to their back, Wote boxing him in on the outside. A 27.38 lap for 1200 in 3:19.54. Jake Wightman ran out in lane 3 to run around the crowd into third place as Iguider squeezed into the lead on the inside. With 300 metres to go, Marcin Lewandowski, known more as an 800 metres runner, was at the back of the pack, but he too moved to the outside and started sprinting past the field, reaching Wightman at the bell. Wightman held Lewandowski to the outside of the penultimate turn but on the backstretch, he passed and set off after Tefera and Iguider. A 25.38 lap, 3:44.84 would have won the race most years, but they still had 100 metres to go. It came down to a final 50 metre sprint on the home stretch. Tefera passed Iguider and ran away to victory, with Lewandowski in full sprint behind him. A desperate Iguider began leaning five metres before the finish, but he couldn't hold off Lewandowski speeding past for silver. For Iguider, it was his second bronze medal in this event, to go along with the complete set of medals he had already collected between 2010 and 2014.

The winning time of 3:58.19 would be a slow mile time in this era. Tefera had run significantly faster, setting the World Junior Record in the event at 3:36.05, just 36 days earlier. That was his first experience on an indoor track.[3]

Results

Heats

The heats were started on 3 March at 11:10.[4]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
11Abdelaati Iguider Morocco3:40.13Q
21Aman Wote Ethiopia3:40.20Q
31Ben Blankenship United States3:40.23q
41Marcin Lewandowski Poland3:40.78q
51Chris O'Hare Great Britain3:42.46q
62Samuel Tefera Ethiopia3:44.00Q
72Vincent Kibet Kenya3:44.26Q
82Ryan Gregson Australia3:44.44
92Marc Alcalá Spain3:45.49
102Jakub Holuša Czech Republic3:45.84
112Kalle Berglund Sweden3:46.61
123Jake Wightman Great Britain3:47.23Q
133Craig Engels United States3:47.55Q
143Brahim Kaazouzi Morocco3:47.65
152Musa Hajdari Kosovo3:47.68NR
162Harvey Dixon Gibraltar3:49.89NR
171Dario Ivanovski Macedonia3:51.83PB
181Dey Tuach Dey South Sudan3:56.10NR
193Mikhail Soloshenko Kyrgyzstan4:05.52
1Mohamed Ismail Mohamed SomaliaDNF
3Benjamín Enzema Equatorial GuineaDQ
3Oddom Sat CambodiaDQ
3Ayanleh Souleiman DjiboutiDNS
3Sadik Mikhou BahrainDNS

Final

The finish of the race

The final was started on March 4 at 16:12.[5]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
Samuel Tefera Ethiopia3:58.19
Marcin Lewandowski Poland3:58.39
Abdelaati Iguider Morocco3:58.43
4Aman Wote Ethiopia3:58.64
5Ben Blankenship United States3:58.89
6Jake Wightman Great Britain3:58.91
7Craig Engels United States3:58.92
8Chris O'Hare Great Britain4:00.65
9Vincent Kibet Kenya4:02.32

References

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