Deja vu for Ingebrigtsen as Kerr takes world 1500m gold
Britain's
Josh Kerr produced a stunning sprint to the line to claim gold and beat Jakob
Ingebrigtsen in the men's 1500m at the World Athletics Championships on
Wednesday.
Kerr, who
won Olympic bronze in Tokyo where Ingebrigtsen claimed gold, turned on the
afterburners down the home straight in Budapest to hold off the Norwegian and
win in 3min 29.38sec.
Ingebrigtsen
had to settle for silver, just as he did at the Eugene worlds last year when he
was beaten by another Briton, Jake Wightman, in a similar finish.
Another
Norwegian, Narve Gilje Nordas, claimed bronze in 3:29.68, three hundredths of a
second behind Ingebrigtsen.
"It is
quite an overwhelming experience," Kerr, who hails from the same Edinburgh
club as Wightman, told the BBC.
"I am
so proud of myself, I am so proud of my team and my family.
"I just
threw my whole last 16 years into the sport at that last 200 metres and didn’t
give up until the end."
Ingebrigtsen,
the dominant male performer over 1500m this season, was magnanimous in defeat.
"All
credit to Kerr, he had a good race but I feel a little bit unlucky not being
able to do what I have been doing the whole season, especially as it is the
world championships final," the 22-year-old said.
"It is
what it is, of course I am disappointed. I tried to give 100 percent but it is
not easy when you are not feeling 100 percent.
"I had
been on training camp for three, almost four months, with minimal social life
and contact with the rest of the world but in the warm-up today and in the
semi-final I was a little bit dry in my throat.
"It got
worse last two days and then a little bit better when I woke up this morning.
"I will
definitely run 5000m but I do not know how will it go. You need to race to see
how will it go."
Abel Kipsang
took up the early lead at an unforgiving pace and Ingebrigtsen settled on the
Kenyan's shoulder.
The
Norwegian moved smoothly to the front at the 500m mark and turned the screw
with a kilometre still to run.
He took the
pack through the bell in front but Kerr moved swiftly into second and then kicked
with 200 metres to run.
Ingebrigtsen
kicked back and the pair were neck-and-neck as they entered the home straight.
A raucous
near-capacity crowd at the National Athletics Centre in the Hungarian capital
were on their feet as the pair closed on the finish line.
Ingebrigtsen
had come into the final in fine form, having improved his European record to
3:27.95 in the Oslo Diamond League in June and then to 3:27.14 in Chorzow last
month.
Kerr,
however, proved the stronger finisher when medals were on the line, edging
ahead for gold to leave Ingebrigtsen ruing another race where he missed out on
gold due to a British rival's superior tactical nous.
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