Raising the bar: Duplantis leads the stars aiming to break world records in Tokyo

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From the pole vaulter in a class of his own to Kipyegon and Warholm, the world championships in Japan offer tantalising chances for new global marksArmand Duplantis is in a class of his own with a 17-foot pole in his hands.The Swede has broken the world record 13 times, including three times this year.His clearance of 6.28m at June’s Diamond League on home soil in Stockholm was particularly special: “This was one of my biggest goals and dreams, to set a world record here at Stadion.It’s magic.

” In Budapest last month, he went to 6.29m.At the 2021 Tokyo Olympics he won gold but failed in his three attempts at a world record.“I really thought I had it,” he said.This time?Final Mon 15 Sep, 12.

10pm BSTThe disappointment of her failed attempt to become the first woman to run a four-minute mile in June was short lived for Faith Kipyegon,The following week, the 31-year-old Kenyan ran 3min 48,68sec in the 1500m in Eugene, Oregon, making it three years on the spin that she has set a new world record at that distance,Whether Kipyegon wins a third successive world title in Tokyo is almost beyond question – all eyes will probably be on the clock as she crosses the line,Final Mon 15 Sep 1.

30pm BSTFrustration ruled again for Kenya’s Beatrice Chepkoech at the 2017 world championships as she followed up her fourth-place finish at the 2016 Olympics with the same position in London.A year later, though, she set the current world record with a time of 8min 44.32sec before winning the world title in 2019.Eighth in that 2017 final in London was Winfred Yavi, then 17, who had recently transferred her allegiance from Kenya to Bahrain.Now 25, Yavi – a private in the Bahrain army – is the reigning world and Olympic champion, has clocked 8min 45.

25sec this year and took four seconds off Chepkoech’s mile record in the steeplechase last month.Ominous.Final Wed 17 Sep, 1.57pm BSTThe Olympic final held in 2021 in Tokyo was an instant classic.Karsten Warholm and the American Rai Benjamin smashed through Warholm’s previous world record, with the Norwegian taking victory in 45.

94sec,Michael Johnson called it “one of the most impressive performances in the history of the sport”,Warholm, who set the third-fastest time in history in Poland last month, and Benjamin, the Paris 2024 champion, are back for more this year, while Brazil’s Alison dos Santos is in contention as well – and, unlike in 2021, there will be a crowd to witness the drama,Final Fri 19 Sep, 1,15pm BSTAside from Haruka Kitaguchi in the javelin, Japan’s best medal hopes for their home championships may come on the streets.

Toshikazu Yamanishi is a two-time world champion over 20km but finished 24th in Budapest two years ago,At the Japanese race walking championships in February, he broke the 2015 world record of his compatriot Yusuke Suzuki by 26 seconds, finishing in 1hr 16min 10sec in Kobe,Repeating that feat in the September heat of Tokyo may be a tall order but do not rule it out,Race Sat 20 Sep, 1,50am BSTDavid Rudisha’s stunning performance in the 800m final at London 2012 is the stuff of legend and his time of 1min 40.

91sec remains the best in history.Yet there is plenty of talk that the generation of today can reach those standards, such is the quality in the field.Last year’s Olympic final was won by Kenya’s Emmanuel Wanyonyi; the then 20-year-old set his personal best of 1:41.11 in Lausanne two weeks later.Canada’s Marco Arop was pipped on the line by Wanyonyi in Paris when the latter ran 1:41.

19, while Algeria’s Djamel Sedjati is also a pretender to Arop’s world title,Some gung-ho tactics in Tokyo could push them all towards Rudisha’s pace,Final Sat 20 Sep, 2,22pm BST
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Raising the bar: Duplantis leads the stars aiming to break world records in Tokyo

From the pole vaulter in a class of his own to Kipyegon and Warholm, the world championships in Japan offer tantalising chances for new global marksArmand Duplantis is in a class of his own with a 17-foot pole in his hands. The Swede has broken the world record 13 times, including three times this year. His clearance of 6.28m at June’s Diamond League on home soil in Stockholm was particularly special: “This was one of my biggest goals and dreams, to set a world record here at Stadion. It’s magic

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’Bigger than a bow’: Women’s Rugby World Cup organisers take aim at online hate

Women’s Rugby World Cup organisers have said there is no room for online hate in the game after Wales back-row Georgia Evans was sent abuse for wearing a bow in her hair.Yvonne Nolan, the competition director of England 2025, also hailed the sport’s community response after Evans released a statement last week saying she had been labelled “childish” for her regular gameday look and told it was not one “of a rugby player”.It sparked fan support during Wales’s loss to Fiji on Saturday with volunteers setting up a ribbon-making station and 1,200 worn by supporters during the final pool game.Nolan pointed towards the formal process the tournament has in place which sees a partnership with the Signify Group using technology to remove abusive comments.“We do have a social media monitoring protection tool and that is action based,” Nolan said

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The Breakdown | England’s juggernaut must be wary of wheels coming off as World Cup stakes rise

It was the basketball great Kobe Bryant who best summed up the precarious status of the dead cert. His multitalented LA Lakers team came into the 2004 NBA finals as clear favourites to beat the less fashionable Detroit Pistons only to lose 4-1 in the series. “Talent doesn’t get it done, you have to be able to execute,” Bryant said. “When you have talent and you execute, that’s when you win.”In other words there is no such thing in sport as an absolute certainty, no matter how good you are

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The Sparks’ Cameron Brink is redefining what it means to be a young WNBA star

It’s the fourth quarter of a tense, close bout in Los Angeles between the hometown Sparks and the Indiana Fever. The game has serious playoff implications for both teams, so every bucket feels fraught, and it’s going down to the wire. Cameron Brink, the 6ft 4in second-year Sparks center with an unmistakable Rapunzel-esque blonde braid has fouled out of the game, but you wouldn’t know it from her enthusiasm on the bench. No one is clapping harder, cheering louder, for her teammates.That’s fundamental to who Brink is, according to everyone I talk to around the team in their final push for the playoffs in recent weeks – the Sparks are in a battle with Seattle Storm for the final spot

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Take the strain: Tug of War World Championships

“Pick up the rope! Take the strain! Steady! Pull!” When the referee barks those commands, eight competitors on each team muster every ounce of strength in their bodies and attempt to haul one another across the crumbling earth. Clutching a rope made of hemp or polypropylene, the first team to tug their opponents four metres from their starting position is the winner. They dig their steel-plated heels into the dirt – but strictly no spikes are allowed – while coaching staff guide and encourage them to victory. In the round-robin stages, each contest lasts two ends and the top four teams reach the semi-finals; the semi-finals and finals are decided over three ends. With varying age and weight categories, competitors range from their teens to their 70s

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Athletics can’t keep kidding itself – it needs a five-pronged plan to save track and field | Sean Ingle

The world’s fastest man is being trash-talked by a YouTuber. “Are you ready man?” asks Darren Watkins, AKA IShowSpeed, on a live stream broadcast around the world. “You know my name’s Speed, right? And you know I am going to win.” Noah Lyles, the Olympic and world 100m champion, smiles at the teenage upstart. Then he bites back