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Previews14 Aug 2023


WCH Budapest 23 preview: 400m hurdles

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Karsten Warholm and Femke Bol (© Getty Images)

Men's 400m hurdles

Timetable | world rankings | 2023 world list | world all-time list | how it works

Olympic champion and world record-holder Karsten Warholm laid down a huge marker of his ambition to regain the 400m hurdles title at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23 when he set a Diamond League record of 46.51 in Monaco on 21 July.

The 27-year-old Norwegian said before his race that his experience at last year’s World Championships in Oregon, where he finished seventh after recovering from a hamstring injury incurred in his opening meeting of the season, has been a strong motivating factor this year.

"It was really nice to do this again – that 0.01 off the Diamond League record and also the track record," Warholm said after a performance that also bettered his own top world mark for 2023.

"This is a nice timing as the World Championships is just around the corner. Since I was injured last year, I enjoyed the racing more."

In his wake was the Brazilian who took over the world title he had won in 2017 and 2019, Alison dos Santos, who clocked a season’s best of 47.66.

Dos Santos, who finished third in the Tokyo Olympic final, has had to recover from a serious injury early this year in the form of a torn meniscus in his right knee which required surgery. At the time it appeared his season was over before it had started, but he returned to top class action at the Silesia Diamond League meeting on 16 July, where he finished third in the 400m in 44.73. And in his first race over the hurdles in Monaco the 23-year-old from Sao Paulo did enough to stir his World Championships ambitions.

"That was the perfect opportunity for me to come back to run,” he said. "Now I will get ready for Budapest, to be able to win my world title again."

Alison dos Santos wins the 400m hurdles at the World Athletics Championships Oregon22

Alison dos Santos wins the 400m hurdles at the World Athletics Championships Oregon22 (© Getty Images)

But Warholm and Dos Santos are not the only ones with world gold in their sights as Rai Benjamin is equally determined to make a breakthrough in Budapest.

The 26-year-old US athlete took silver behind Warholm at the Doha 2019 World Championships, and bettered the Norwegian’s world record of 46.70 in the Tokyo Olympic final where he clocked 46.17 and took another silver as Warholm reached deeper to set the current world record of 45.94.

Last year, with Warholm still a way off full fitness following a hamstring strain after clearing the first hurdle of his first race of 2022 at the Rabat Diamond League meeting, Benjamin must have thought his chance had come to make a golden impression on his home track in Eugene, Oregon – but Dos Santos won with a South American record of 46.29, with the home runner clocking 46.89.

How close can the Brazilian get to his best form in the time available? At the moment his is only fifth fastest in this season’s list, with two other runners above him – Kyron McMaster of the British Virgin Islands, the double Commonwealth champion and fourth-placed finisher in Tokyo who has clocked 47.26, and CJ Allen of the United States, who has set a personal best of 47.58.

Others likely to make their mark include France’s Ludvy Vaillant, who has run a personal best of 47.85 this season, as has Jamaica’s Roshawn Clarke, and 31-year-old Rasmus Magi of Estonia, European silver medallist in 2014 who has run 48.04 this season.

Look out too for Italy’s 24-year-old 2018 world U20 champion Alessandro Sibilio, a Tokyo Olympic Games finalist.

 

Women's 400m hurdles

Timetable | world rankings | 2023 world list | world all-time list | how it works

By contrast, the women’s 400m hurdles would appear to offer one key question – how much faster can Femke Bol go?

Following Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone’s decision not to defend the world title she won in her home setting of Oregon last year, when she left her Dutch rival halfway down the finishing straight as she improved her world record to a staggering 50.68, Bol’s pathway has been clear.

The Tokyo Olympic bronze medallist prepared for the 400m hurdles in spectacular fashion during the indoor season as she worked on her speed over 400m flat. To such effect that on 19 February she broke the longest standing athletics track record in the book as she clocked 49.26 to win the Dutch indoor title, eclipsing the mark of 49.59 set in 1982.

The high point of her season so far occurred in front of a sell-out 50,000 crowd at the London Stadium on 23 July as she ran a European and Diamond League record of 51.45.

"I've been wanting to run a 51 ever since Tokyo," said the 23-year-old. "I had a feeling I could do it but I still can't believe I've done it."

Her time was one hundredth of a second faster than McLaughlin-Levrone ran to win the Tokyo Olympic title in a race where Bol finished third behind the defending champion Dalilah Muhammad.

It was only four hundredths of a second slower than the world record McLaughlin-Levrone set at last year’s US trials in Oregon.

But it was the best part of a second slower than the current world mark of 50.68 run by her rival at last year’s World Athletics Championships. Such is the measure of the challenge for this amiable Dutch athlete.

While McLaughlin-Levrone will be absent from the event – and indeed the championships because of a late knee issue – her predecessor as world and Olympic champion, Muhammad, will be present, albeit that the 33-year-old’s season’s best of 53.53 only has her at fifth place in this season’s world list.

Dalilah Muhammad en route to the world record in the 400m hurdles at the IAAF World Championships Doha 2019

Dalilah Muhammad at the World Championships Doha 2019 (© Getty Images)

Muhammad’s US colleague Shamier Little, whose 2021 personal best of 52.39 has her at fifth place in the all-time list, will also be a medal contender, as will the Jamaican trio of Andrenette Knight, who has clocked 53.26 this season; Janieve Russell, with a 2023 best of 53.65; and Rushell Clayton, who has clocked 53.79.

Look out too for Britain’s Jessie Knight, who has run a personal best of 54.09 this season, and Viktoriya Tkachuk of Ukraine, who has a best of 53.76.

Mike Rowbottom for World Athletics