Devin Charlton of the Bahamas produced the second world record. World Athletics Indoor Championships Glasgow 24 She lowered her 60 meter hurdle mark to 7.65 and won her first world title.
Mondo Duplantis successfully defended his pole vault title despite some wobbles with a 6.05m clearance, making a decent attempt to extend his world record to 6.24m on two of his three attempts. Therefore, there may have been a third world record.
Femke Boll led the Netherlands to gold in the women's 4x400m, following on from her 400m world record the night before.
Another individual 400m champion, Alexander Doom, who led Belgium to gold in the men's 4x400m and achieved the same double, is the world 100m and 200m champion who ran the third race for the United States. took the spotlight away from Noah Lyles.
In the women's 800m, a new star emerged in the form of Ethiopia's Tsige Duguma, who advanced by defeating her country's favorite Gemma Leakey in the closing stages.
Meanwhile, New Zealand added to the high jump title won in the morning session by compatriot Hamish Kerr, including himself as Geordie Beamish moved from fifth to first with 20 meters remaining in the men's 1500m final. Shocking everyone, they were celebrating their two gold medals.
This puts New Zealand in third place behind the United States in the final medal standings, with six gold medals, followed by Belgium with three.
After qualifying just seventh in the morning heat with a time of 7.93 seconds, Charlton, who spoke of the need to “fix my start”, made a spectacular run in the 60m hurdles final, fending off the Frenchman who had beaten him. He was not under any serious threat as he finished the race with a 100m lead. Chilena Samba-Mayela won this title in Belgrade two years ago.
Samba-Mayela won the silver medal in 7.74 seconds, and Poland's Pia Szkrzyszowska was elated to win the bronze medal in 7.79 seconds.
Duplantis worked relatively hard to win at the same arena where he had set the second of his five world records four years ago with a clearing of 6.18 meters. American Sam Kendricks is in great form after two years in the wilderness, with the defending champion teetering on the verge of being sent off after two failures at 5.85m, but cleared on his third attempt and on his second attempt. I got 5.95 meters.
Kendricks, who had cleared the first round up to 5.90m, was unable to advance any further and won the silver medal, while Greece's Emmanouil Karalis took bronze with a time of 5.85m.
In the men's 4x400m, Lyles took over the lead from Matthew Bowling and posted a respectable split of 45.68 before handing the lead to final leg runner Christopher Bailey.
However, Bailey was unable to thwart a late challenge from Belgian individual 400m champion Doom. Doom did the same thing he did the day before when he successfully defended his title against Karsten Warholm in 3:02.54.
In Glasgow, the U.S. won Lyles' second silver medal with a time of 3:02.60, while the Netherlands took bronze with a national record time of 3:04.25.
Bol lived up to expectations as the Dutch home anchor in the women's 4x400m final, but after Bol collapsed near the end of the 2016 World Championship mixed 4x400m final, the American who led the U.S. to victory He finished under heavy pressure from runner Alexis Holmes. Budapest.
The athlete, who had set a personal world record for the third consecutive year by finishing in 3 minutes 25.07 seconds the night before, had no such setbacks this time, as the United States won the silver medal in 3 minutes 25.34 seconds, ahead of Jesse Knight. Britain, anchored by the United Kingdom, won. , and took third place with a national record time of 3:26.36.
The women's 800m final brought another medal to the host nation, but it wasn't quite what Leakey, who finished fourth at the Tokyo Olympics, had envisioned.
A race with a dawdling field proved too slow for Leakey's purposes and she looked for a break at the end, but the finish of Ethiopian middle-distance runner Chige Duguma, who took the lead at the end and took the win. I couldn't match the speed. 2:01.90 with a difference of almost 1 second.
Bryce Hoppel fluttered like a butterfly through a tumultuous and eventful men's 800m final, then stung like a bee to win the gold medal and beat struggling Belgian Elliot Crestin to the world's top mark of 1 minute 44 seconds. He won the gold medal with a score of 92.
Crestan was involved in a collision with defending champion Mariano Garcia of Spain before taking the lead, but Sweden's Andreas Kramer caught him at the silver medal line in 1:45.27, dropping him to third place. Crestan clocked a time of 1:45.32.
Switzerland's Simon Ehammer's efforts to win the European indoor heptathlon title in Istanbul last year ended with him failing to record the long jump distance, despite winning bronze in the world long jump the year before. Glasgow.
In the end, he did enough in the final 1000 meters to win his first world title by 11 points.
Ehammer reached the final event with a 140-point lead over Ken Mullins of the Bahamas, who was thought to have a difficult 1000m run.
The danger to him was Norway's Sander Skotheim, and the latter did everything he could to win in a personal best time of 2:33.23, four seconds ahead. Ehammer made good on his final catch-up, setting a personal best of 2:46.03, but collapsed from exhaustion on the track near the already prone figure of his rival.
While waiting for the final judging, Skotheim crawled up to his Swiss rival. And the moment it was confirmed that he was the gold medalist with a world-leading domestic record of 6,418 points, it was the man in the red vest who immediately raised his arms in the air.
The Norwegian won the silver medal with a national record score of 6,407 points, ahead of Estonia's Johannes Elm, who won the bronze medal with a personal best of 6,340 points.
Mullins blew out his cheeks when he realized he missed out on a medal with a total of 6,242 medals.
The women's long jump title was a major breakthrough for Tara Davis-Woodhall of the United States, as she won her first world title, matching the world outdoor silver medal she won last summer with a fourth-round best of 7.07 meters.
She also completed a jump three times farther than her compatriot Monáe Nichols, who won the silver medal with a jump of 6.75 meters and the bronze medalist Fatima Diame of Spain with a jump of 6.78 meters. I succeeded.
In the final event of the championships, in the women's 1500 meters, Ethiopia's Freweini Heil ran a time of 4:01.46, followed by Nikki Hiltz, who ran a personal best of 4:02.32, and Emily, who took bronze with a time of 4:02.69. The championship was taken from the American pair of McKay. Great Britain's Georgia Bell placed fourth in 4:03.47, also setting a new personal best.
Mike Rowbottom of World Athletics