2019 World Athletics Championships – Men's 800 metres

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The men's 800 metres at the 2019 World Athletics Championships was held at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha from 28 September to 1 October 2019.[1]

Dates28 September (heats)
29 September (semi-finals)
1 October (final)
Competitors45 from 28 nations
Winningtime1:42.34 CR
Quick facts Men's 800 metres at the 2019 World Championships, Venue ...
Men's 800 metres
at the 2019 World Championships
The last metres.
VenueKhalifa International Stadium
Dates28 September (heats)
29 September (semi-finals)
1 October (final)
Competitors45 from 28 nations
Winning time1:42.34 CR
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 
 2017
2022 
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The winning margin was 1.13 seconds which as of 2024 remains the only time the men's 800 metres has been won by more than a second at these championships.

Summary

After the semi-finals, it was no surprise when front runner Wesley Vázquez went to the front of the final. Donavan Brazier and Marco Arop took the front of the line to follow his fast pace, going 23.51 for the first 200 metres. Down the first home stretch the rest of the field back off the fast pace, but Brazier stuck right behind Vázquez through a 48.96 first lap. The real surprise was noted kicker Amel Tuka was at the front of the chase pack, separating through the penultimate turn in chase of the leaders. When they hit the backstretch, Brazier went around Vázquez, who was showing the signs of the strain. By 600 metres in 1:15.16, Brazier had two metres on Vázquez, who had two metres on Tuka. Through the final turn, Brazier held the same gap on Tuka, but Vázquez faded. Ferguson Rotich was the next contender, three metres back, the rest of the chasers another six metres behind him. Down the stretch, Brazier was straining, pumping his arms, but Tuka's famed kick was not making up any ground. 40 metres out, Rotich passed Vázquez, but from far off the pace, Bryce Hoppel was gaining fast. Brazier crossed the line and raised his arms in celebration. Tuka held off Rotich who beat the fast moving Hoppel.

Brazier's winning time of 1:42.34 was the championship record, North American Continental record and moved him to =#9 on the all-time list.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

World record  David Rudisha (KEN) 1:40.91 London, Great Britain 9 August 2012
Championship record  Billy Konchellah (KEN) 1:43.06 Rome, Italy 1 September 1987
World Leading  Nijel Amos (BOT) 1:41.89 Monaco 12 July 2019
African Record  David Rudisha (KEN) 1:40.91 London, Great Britain 9 August 2012
Asian Record  Yusuf Saad Kamel (BHR) 1:42.79 Monaco 29 July 2008
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Johnny Gray (USA) 1:42.60 Koblenz, West Germany 28 August 1985
South American Record  Joaquim Cruz (BRA) 1:41.77 Cologne, West Germany 26 August 1984
European Record  Wilson Kipketer (DEN) 1:41.11 Cologne, Germany 24 August 1997
Oceanian record  Joseph Deng (AUS) 1:44.21 Monaco 20 July 2018

The following records were set at the competition:

More information Record, Perf. ...
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Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 1:45.80.[3]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+3), was as follows:[4]

More information Date, Time ...
Date Time Round
28 September17:15Heats
29 September21:55Semi-finals
1 October22:10Final
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Results

Heats

The first 3 in each heat ( Q ) and the next six fastest ( q ) qualified for the semifinals. The overall results were as follows:[5]

More information Rank, Heat ...
RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
15Emmanuel Korir Kenya1:45.16Q
25Mostafa Smaili Morocco1:45.27Q
35Wesley Vázquez Puerto Rico1:45.47Q
46Elliot Giles Great Britain & N.I.1:45.53Q
56Clayton Murphy United States1:45.62Q
66Amel Tuka Bosnia and Herzegovina1:45.62Q
76Álvaro de Arriba Spain1:45.67q
75Yassine Hethat Algeria1:45.67q
93Brandon McBride Canada1:45.96Q
104Ferguson Cheruiyot Rotich Kenya1:45.98Q
114Bryce Hoppel United States1:46.01Q
121Donavan Brazier United States1:46.04Q
132Ngeno Kipngetich Kenya1:46.07Q
144Abdessalem Ayouni Tunisia1:46.09Q
153Abubaker Haydar Abdalla Qatar1:46.11Q
161Marco Arop Canada1:46.12Q
172Adrián Ben Spain1:46.12Q
183Pierre-Ambroise Bosse France1:46.14Q
185Kyle Langford Great Britain & N.I.1:46.14q
204Oussama Nabil Morocco1:46.17q
214Adam Kszczot Poland1:46.20q
222Jamie Webb Great Britain & N.I.1:46.23Q
232Brannon Kidder United States1:46.29q
242Jamal Hairane Qatar1:46.40
254Mohamed Belbachir Algeria1:46.52
261Tshepo Tshite South Africa1:46.54Q
273Mouad Zahafi Morocco1:46.56
281Andreas Kramer Sweden1:46.74
296Andrés Arroyo Puerto Rico1:46.75
301Lucirio Antonio Garrido Venezuela1:46.89
313Peter Bol Australia1:46.92
324Mark English Ireland1:47.25
332Marc Reuther Germany1:47.31
346Edose Ibadin Nigeria1:47.91
356Musa Hajdari Kosovo1:47.98
365Quamel Prince Guyana1:48.41
373Pol Moya Andorra1:48.52
381Mariano García Spain1:49.08
391Luke Mathews Australia1:50.16
405Mohammed Al-Suleimani Oman1:50.91PB
415Benjamín Enzema Equatorial Guinea1:51.69SB
423Ryan Sánchez Puerto Rico1:54.46
431Zaw Min Min Myanmar1:56.85SB
443Roberto Belo Amaral Soares Timor-Leste2:02.43
6Samer Al-Johar JordanDQ163.5
2Nijel Amos BotswanaDNS
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Semi-finals

The first two in each heat (Q) and the next two fastest (q) qualified for the final.[6]

Final

The final was started on 1 October at 22:14.[7]

More information Rank, Lane ...
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References

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