Olympics-Athletics-Ingebrigtsen avoids the mayhem to make 5,000m final


Paris 2024 Olympics - Athletics - Men's 5000m Round 1 - Stade de France, Saint-Denis, France - August 07, 2024. Jakob Ingebrigtsen of Norway in action during heat 2. REUTERS/Sarah Meyssonnier

PARIS (Reuters) - A little over 14 hours after being run out of the medals in the 1,500 metres final, Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen was back on the Olympic track on Wednesday in the heats of the 5,000m, where he looked strong as the fastest qualifier.

The defending champion over 1,500m finished fourth in a race won by long-shot American Cole Hocker and, understandably, did the minimum necessary on Wednesday to advance to Saturday’s final.

After going out hard from the start on Tuesday night, he sat comfortably at the back of a 20-man field before easing to the front two laps out and leading it home in 13 minutes 51.59.

The Norwegian bounced back from defeat in the last two world championship 1,500m finals to win the 5,000 and would obviously love to make that a hat-trick.

Ingebrigtsen has been outspoken in his criticism of Briton Josh Kerr, who took silver in the 1,500, but was magnanimous in defeat, writing on his Instagram page: "Well, I guess he (Kerr) did show up after all. Cole Hocker, (bronze medallist) Yared Nuguse and Josh Kerr outsmarted me. They were 'the best guys' when it really mattered. And I want to congratulate them all on a great performance."

There was great support from the crowd as home favourites Hugo Hay and Jimmy Gressier made the early running in a slow and eventually chaotic first heat.

The pedestrian pace meant that the entire 21-man field was together heading into the final lap, with the inevitable clashes, leading to four men falling in the final straight mayhem.

Narve Gilje Nordas, who finished seventh, in the 1,500m final, kept clear of it by hitting the front and led it home in a "fast-walk" 14:08.16, ensuring there will be two Norwegians in the final.

He even had time to fist-bump second-placed finisher Hagos Gebrhiwet of Ethiopia, who became the second-fastest man ever over the distance earlier this year, before they crossed the line.

Grant Fisher, still on a high from his bronze in the 10,000, will look to extend the United States' impressive middle and long-distance showing in Paris after also progressing.

Canada’s Tokyo silver medallist Mohammed Ahmed did not make it after falling earlier in the first heat, but the four who went down at the end of it - Dominic Lokinyomo Lobalu, George Mills, Mike Foppen and Thierry Ndikumwenayo - were all added to the final lineup after appeals.

(Reporting by Mitch Phillips, editing by Toby Davis)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Athletics

Athletics-Chepngetich eyes new world record at London Marathon
Athletics-Hassan excited over London Marathon return
Athletics-Obiri seeks Boston Marathon 'three-peat', Lemma to defend men's title
UK Athletics charged over 2017 death of Paralympic athlete
A blow for Zaidatul, but MAF assure sprinter her national mark isn’t gone with the wind
Athletics-Kenya's Chebet caps stellar 2024 with women's 5km world record
Noraseela: MAF need to work out plan to revitalise athletics in the country
Athletics-Katir banned for four years after falsifying documents in whereabouts failure probe
Athletics-World Athletics' social media analysis leads to AI protection for 25 athletes
Athletics-Coe welcomes Grand Slam Track, cautions over Gout expectations

Others Also Read