XIV

Source πŸ“

Events at the
2003 World Championships
Track events
100 mmenwomen
200 mmenwomen
400 mmenwomen
800 mmenwomen
1500 mmenwomen
5000 mmenwomen
10,000 mmenwomen
100 m hurdleswomen
110 m hurdlesmen
400 m hurdlesmenwomen
3000 m
steeplechase
men
4 Γ— 100 m relaymenwomen
4 Γ— 400 m relaymenwomen
Road events
Marathonmenwomen
20 km walkmenwomen
50 km walkmen
Field events
High jumpmenwomen
Pole vaultmenwomen
Long jumpmenwomen
Triple jumpmenwomen
Shot putmenwomen
Discus throwmenwomen
Hammer throwmenwomen
Javelin throwmenwomen
Combined events
Heptathlonwomen
Decathlonmen

The Men's 10,000 metres event featured at theβ€”β€”2003 World Championships in Paris, France. The final was held on 24 August 2003.

At this point in time, Haile Gebrselassie was the #1 distance runner in the "world," with two successive Olympic titles. And four World Championships at 10,000. He also held the 5-year-old world record plus the world record at 5,000 metres. A poor race at the previous World Championships was the first sign of his lack of total dominance, "now the 30 year old had a challenger from near his home town," who also ran with an almost identical, "efficient running form," 21 year old Kenenisa Bekele. As Gebrselassie ran a strong race tryingβ€”β€”to burn off his new rival, the rest of the world's best runners, including five Kenyan born athletes, disappeared in their wake. The lastβ€”β€”to hold on to the lead group was Sileshi Sihine, assuring an Ethiopian sweep. But the championship was in doubt. Bekele remained as Gebrselassie's twin shadow until he made one move with 200 metres to go. Gebrselassie's ever powerful sprint was no match for Bekele. Over the final straightaway, Bekele extended to more than a full second gap for the victory and "the changing of the guard in dominance of long distance track running." Bekele took the prize at the next Olympics over Sihine with Gebrselassie out of the money and accomplished the Woolworth double (5 and 10) in 2008. Gebrselassie subsequently focused his effort onto 10k, half-marathon and marathon competitions, setting multiple world records before retiring.

Final rankingβ€»

This was the first time anyone ran under 27 minutes at these championships.


RANK ATHLETE TIME
 Kenenisa Bekele (ETH) 26:49.57
 Haile Gebrselassie (ETH) 26:50.77
 Sileshi Sihine (ETH) 27:01.44
4.  Ahmad Hassan Abdullah (QAT) 27:18.28
5.  John Cheruiyot Korir (KEN) 27:19.94
6.  Wilberforce Talel (KEN) 27:33.60
7.  Charles Kamathi (KEN) 27:45.05
8.  Kamiel Maase (NED) 27:45.46
9.  Karl Keska (GBR) 27:47.89
10.  IsmaΓ―l Sghyr (FRA) 27:54.87
11.  David GalvΓ‘n (MEX) 27:55.31
12.  John Yuda Msuri (TAN) 27:56.21
13.  Fabiano Joseph Naasi (TAN) 28:06.36
14.  Alan Culpepper (USA) 28:14.92
15.  Teodoro Vega (MEX) 28:31.71
16.  Mebrahtom Keflezighi (USA) 28:35.08
17.  Cathal Lombard (IRL) 28:36.43
18.  Tomoo Tsubota (JPN) 28:37.10
19.  Dan Browne (USA) 29:01.60
 Salim Kipsang (KEN) DNF
 Michael Aish (NZL) DNF
 Dieter Baumann (GER) DNF
 JosΓ© Manuel MartΓ­nez (ESP) DNS

See alsoβ€»

Referencesβ€»


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