Some of the biggest stars in the sport shone bright at the Kamila Skolimowska Memorial in Silesia, with the likes of Jakob Ingebrigtsen, Yulimar Rojas and Mutaz Barshim breaking meeting records with world-leading marks at the Wanda Diamond League meeting on Sunday (16).
While many winners – like Mondo Duplantis, or 400m winners Wayde van Niekerk and Natalia Kaczmarek – triumphed with comfortable margins, there were several close finishes throughout the afternoon. Some of them resulted in meeting records being broken; other victories – like those in both 100m races – provided a much-needed confident boost for the winners ahead of the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23.
One month on from his record-breaking run on home soil in Oslo, world and Olympic champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen took another chunk off his European 1500m record and climbed up several places on the world all-time list, winning here in 3:27.14.
The Norwegian latched on to the pacemakers for the first three laps, passing through 400m in 55.8 and 800m in 1:51.6. Stewart McSweyn, the final pacemaker, stepped aside with 300m metres to go, then Ingebrigtsen forged on ahead, creating more distance between himself and the rest of the field.
He maintained his form to the end, crossing the line in 3:27.14 to take 0.81 off his previous best, moving to fourth on the world all-time list. Just 1.14 seconds now stands between Ingebrigtsen and the world record.
Kenya’s Abel Kipsang was second in a PB of 3:29.11 and his compatriot Reynold Kipkorir Cheruiyot was third in 3:30.30. Andrew Coscoran broke his own Irish record to finish fourth in 3:30.42.
World and Olympic champion Yulimar Rojas pulled out a world-leading 15.18m in the final round of the triple jump, having been under pressure throughout the first five rounds.
The Venezuelan jumped 14.80m in round two, but Cuba’s Leyanis Perez-Hernandez was close behind (14.67m). Ukraine’s Maryna Bekh-Romanchuk then jumped 14.70m in the fifth round, to which Rojas responded with 14.86m. But the world record-holder ended her series with a meeting record leap to underline that she is still the favourite heading into next month’s World Championships.
Mutaz Barshim was another world and Olympic champion to enjoy a confidence-boosting win in Silesia. The Qatari high jumper hadn’t competed since his 2.24m third-place finish in Doha at the start of May, but in Silesia he looked back to his best as he cleared every height on his first try up to and including 2.32m.
Fellow Olympic champion Gianmarco Tamberi also got over that bar, albeit with a few misses along the way, but the big surprise came from Germany’s Tobias Potye, who was the first to get over 2.34m.
Tamberi soon joined him in clearing that height, but Barshim registered two failures. With one jump remaining, Barshim moved the bar to 2.36m and got over it on his first attempt to regain the lead with a meeting record, while his two opponents missed.
The meeting record was also broken – and shared – in the women’s high jump. Ukraine’s Iryna Gerashchenko won on countback from Australia’s Nicola Olyslagers and Ukraine’s Yuliia Levchenko, all three of them clearing 1.98m.
The other world-leading mark of the day, meanwhile, came in the women’s javelin, courtesy of Haruka Kitaguchi.
The world bronze medallist took an early lead with 64.12m, but Australia’s Mackenzie Little jumped into pole position with a fourth-round throw of 64.50m. Kitaguchi responded in the next round with a meeting record of 65.82m, but she wasn’t done.
With her final throw of the contest, Kitaguchi sent her spear soaring out to a Japanese record of 67.04m, adding more than a metre to the meeting record.