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USA, GB and NI, Germany the top three in the second heat of the women’s 4x100m.
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Updated at 12.58 BST
Up next, Heat 2 in the women’s 4x100m. More fun and games await. The top three qualify automatically but you already knew that, being an athletics expert just like me.
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Updated at 12.58 BST
“I want to put my hand up and say sorry to the boys,” Eugene Amo-Dadzie of GB and NI tells the BBC, after the botched changeover in the heat of the men’s 4x100m that cost them a place in the final. “We were looking good, feeling good, and definitely had an opportunity to do something here.
“Sport can be cruel like that sometimes. My main disappointment is not being able to do my job … Obviously in the team aspect it has a knock-on effect. If you mess up in an individual that’s on you, you mess up in a relay situation, it impacts the team. I’m apologising to the coaches and my boys here …
“I can put my hand up and say, you know what? I didn’t do my job well enough today. It’s really frustrating. Particularly because I was here for the relay and I was feeling really good …
“I’m going to shoulder that. It’s tough, it hurts. I don’t really know how to feel right now. Those are my thoughts.”
Seriously impressive honesty from Amo-Dadzie.
Eugene Amo-Dadzie reacts after failing to take the baton from Jona Efoloko. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PAShare
Updated at 12.52 BST
Whoops. Great Britain & NI fail to finish their heat after another howler on a changeover.
Ghana 37.79sec
Netherlands 37.95sec
Japan 38.07sec
Australia 38.21sec
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GB & NI are up now in heat two of the men’s 4x100m.
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Canada, USA, Germany the top three in Heat 1 of the men’s 4x100m.
Jamaica are out having messed up a changeover!
Canada 37.85sec
USA 37.98sec
Germany 38.12sec
France 38.34sec
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Updated at 12.31 BST
Right, it’s business time now. Heat 1 of the men’s 4x100m.
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Updated at 12.26 BST
“I’ll be totally honest,” Greg Rutherford says on the BBC, of the British women’s last place in their 4x400m heat.
“I’m all for building everybody up and giving them a fair chance … That’s not good enough. We have to put that into perspective … a lot of money is put into that programme … you can’t be coming last in your heat at a world championships … genuinely, I don’t think it’s good enough.”
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Updated at 12.22 BST
Australia and Brazil are disqualified from the men’s 4x400m for illegal changeovers.
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Heat 2 of the women’s 4x400m: USA, Belgium, Netherlands is the top three with France also through to the final in fourth place.
USA 3min 22.53sec
Belgium 3min 23.96sec
Netherlands 3min 24.03sec
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Updated at 12.19 BST
“Huge disappointment,” Victoria Ohuruogu tells the BBC after the Great Britain team finish last in their women’s 4x400m heat. “We gave everything we had. I don’t want to make excuses but it’s been a long championships … overall it’s been a good championships for GB.”
It wasn’t to be for Great Britain’s Victoria Ohuruogu, Nicole Yeargin and Yemi Mary John. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PAShare
Updated at 12.14 BST
Women’s heptathlon – javelin results, top five.
O’Connor (Ire) 53.06m (PB)
Sprengel (Ger) 51.66m (PB)
Oosterwegel (Ned) 50.19m
Hall (USA) 48.13m
Lazraq-Khlass (Fra) 47.97
Kate O’Connor of Ireland excellend in the javelin. Photograph: Alex Plavevski/EPAShare
Time for Heat 1 in the Women’s 4x400m.
ShareSean Ingle
I was chatting to the Irish contingent in the press box here and suggested we could be about to witness the greatest day in Irish track and field history, if O’Connor and McPhillips win medals. But that is not the case.
At the 1932 Olympics, Pat O’Callaghan in the men’s hammer throw, and Bob Tisdall in the men’s 400m hurdles both won gold on the same day.
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The calculation (courtesy of the BBC) is that Johnson-Thompson needs to beat Ireland’s O’Connor by six seconds in the 800m to win a medal.
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“I brought it home strong,” says Charles Dobson after the men’s qualification for the 4x400m final. “Happy with that. We have such good depth in the team.”
Great success! Photograph: Petr David Josek/APShare
It’s a time of 2min 57.68sec for Botswana to win Heat 2 of the men’s 4×400. Belgium second, Australia third. GB finish a strong fourth, one hundredth of a second slower, which will be enough to qualify.
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Updated at 11.55 BST
Here come Great Britain in Heat 2 of the men’s 4x400m.
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“KJT” places 15th in the javelin, throwing 41.91m with her third attempt. As it stands she is fourth overall.
Katarina Johnson-Thompson could not get close to her javelin personal best. Photograph: Matthias Schräder/APShare
Updated at 11.45 BST
South Africa, Qatar, Netherlands is the top three in Heat 1 of the men’s 4x400m.
USA are out! Demarius Smith and Bryce Deadmon appeared to muck up their changeover in a big way, and they could not recover.
A bad day at the office for Demarius Smith and Bryce Deadmon. Photograph: Edgar Su/ReutersShare
Updated at 11.48 BST
The javelin in the women’s heptathlon is ongoing, and I’ll have an update soon.
Team USA nearly drop the baton in the men’s 4×400!
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Here’s the men’s 4×400 relay (Heat 1).
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“Having succeeded, unlike Bob and Terry, in avoiding the score, I watched back the heptathlon on the iPlayer yesterday, which also allows skipping the studio punditry and those interviews on VT wherein athletes tell us they’ll be happy to medal with a PB,” emails Gary Naylor.
“Seeing a multi-disciplinary event play out in real time is such a privilege. You get to know the personalities, you see the competition and the camaraderie between them and you appreciate just how hard it is to go from high jump to shot-put with barely time to change shoes. It’s a shame it so often gets lost between track races.”
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Updated at 11.34 BST
A statement from British Athletics, via the magic of social media:
“Unfortunately Abi Pawlett has withdrawn from the heptathlon as she is still suffering the after-effects of yesterday’s fall in the hurdles. We wish Abi a speedy recovery.”
Britain’s Abigail Pawlett competing in the long jump. Photograph: Aleksandra Szmigiel/ReutersShare
The high jump in the men’s decathlon has also begun.
Meanwhile the athletes for the upcoming relays are pictured getting off the transfer buses from the much-maligned warm-up area.
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Updated at 11.28 BST
Via Reuters, some quotes from Nafi Thiam of Belgium, who withdrew from the women’s heptathlon before this session.
“I’ve struggled with this heptathlon from the start. I tried to fight it and persevere, but it clearly didn’t work,” Thiam told Het Nieuwsblad. “I started this morning thinking I would fight until the end and not leave empty-handed because I’ve worked hard this year …
“I knew I could do something good here and fight for my place in the standings but that didn’t happen. So I’m disappointed, yes. This championship is a real black cloud.”
She had accused the Belgian athletics body of excluding her from their pre-championships camp in a row over image rights. The federation denied that. Thiam was asked whether the row had impacted her performances in Tokyo.
“It’s hard to quantify that,” she said. “Regardless of the reasons why I feel the way I do, the reality remains that I feel the way I do. So that doesn’t make a difference.”
Nafi Thiam of Belgium had a disagreement with the national federation over image right. Photograph: Marcel ter Bals/MTB-Photo/ShutterstockShare
Kate O’Connor of Ireland threw a PB of 53.06m at her first attempt in the javelin. Her second throw was over 50m too. Incredible performance.
Ireland’s Kate O’Connor. Photograph: Dylan Martinez/ReutersShare
It’s a throw of 40.51m for Johnson-Thompson at the second attempt.
She threw 45.49m at the Olympics last year. She will need a big performance in the closing 800m to get a medal.
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Updated at 11.20 BST
Johnson-Thompson’s first effort places her fifth at the moment. Here comes No 2.
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Hall, O’Connor, Brooks is the top three in the javelin in the women’s heptathlon right now.
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Johnson-Thompson has thrown 38.82m with her first of three attempts in the javelin. She’s been pushed out of the medal positions for now.
Kate O’Connor of Ireland has mustered a phenomenal personal best of 53.06m.
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Updated at 11.12 BST
Amy Hunt has a chat with the BBC after collecting her 200m medal.
“I think I went to sleep at 5.30am. The sun was up. It was a long night in anti-doping as well, so it wasn’t entirely all glamourous. There wasn’t many celebrations going on. It still definitely hasn’t sunk in. But this [the medal] is helping a lot.
“I said, if these girls are letting me come ninth in the 100m, something pretty special is coming in the 200. The way I was finishing the races, I was obviously coming through … A lot of the lessons the 100 taught me paid dividends in the 200.
“My coach loves numbers. It’s maths, physics, science … we’re using all the data we can, all the technology we can, to keep track of everything. We have all the numbers down. He knows what I’m about to run. He did predict I was going to do a 22.00 the other day, so to him it wasn’t a surprise. It gives me so much confidence … I knew if I could be with them off the turn, then it’s game over.
“Coming in as a really hot junior, making a big noise, making a big splash … it was then nice to take a back seat almost [studying for her degree and having injuries] and have that pressure taken off me … I was able to make a senior debut without the kind of weight and expectation that I probably might have had. It also taught me a lot, it taught me my strength.
“It’s taught me that I am stronger than I could possibly imagine and the team I have around me are world-beaters as well.”
(L-R) Great Britain’s Amy Hunt, USA’s Melissa Jefferson-Wooden with gold, and Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson with bronze for the women’s 200m. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PAShare
Updated at 11.14 BST
The defending champion Katarina Johnson-Thompson is third with two heptathlon events remaining.
The 2024 Olympic silver medallist has 4874pts before the javelin throw and 800m on Saturday in a field led by American pair Anna Hall, on 5041 points, and Taliyah Brooks, with 4930.
Johnson-Thompson has a 50-point lead over fourth-placed Kate O’Connor of Ireland after the morning session’s long jump, where the Englishwoman was third-best with a 6.42m effort behind Brooks and Great Britain’s Jade O’Dowda.
Brooks reached a personal-best 6.79m, 30cm more than O’Dowda, who currently sits sixth after the Netherlands’ Sofie Dokter. Abigail Pawlett, Great Britain’s third entrant, is 15th.
According to reports in Belgium Nafi Thiam, who beat Johnson-Thompson to Olympic gold in Paris last summer, has withdrawn. She was placed eighth.
Anna Hall leads the women’s heptathlon before the javelin and 800m. Photograph: Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters
Thiam’s pre-championship build-up was marred by a row with her federation.
She told Belgian newspaper DH Les Sports+: “It was difficult from the beginning. I tried to fight, to go through these difficulties, but clearly it does not follow. I have trouble explaining it myself. Clearly my body is not happy. I don’t want to do anything stupid, because I think that now, finishing would be for the principle.”
Great Britain secured their second medal of the 2025 championships on Friday, when Amy Hunt stormed to 200m silver, adding to Jake Wightman’s second-place finish in the men’s 1500m final.
They could win medals in up to three events on the penultimate evening of the World Championships.
Hannah Nuttall will start the women’s 5000m final at 1.29pm UK time before Max Burgin goes for men’s 800m gold in his final, scheduled for 2.22pm. (PA Media)
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Updated at 10.57 BST
Hats off to the digital content team for producing such a clear and user friendly timetable on the official website, by the way.
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Katarina Johnson-Thompson of Great Britain will be up shortly for the javelin throw in the Women’s Heptathlon (from 11am)
The GB men will compete in Heat 2 of the men’s 4×400 relay at 11.46am, then the women will take the stage in Heat 1, scheduled for 12pm.
At 12.25pm it’s the men’s 4×100 (Heat 1) for GB, then it’s Heat 2 for the women’s team at 12.54pm.
The Women’s 800m Heptathlon is scheduled for 1.11pm, with Johnson-Thompson aiming for a medal, and the Women’s 5000m is locked in for 1.29pm UK time, with Hannah Nuttall on the start line.
Then the 23-year-old Halifax-born Max Burgin will go for glory in the men’s 800m: which is booked in for 2.22pm UK time. Cian McPhillips of Ireland qualified quickest for that race, so plenty to get excited about.
Britain’s Katarina Johnson-Thompson is aiming for a medal in the women’s heptathlon. Photograph: Dylan Martinez/ReutersShare
Updated at 10.50 BST
World Athletics has underscored its commitment to the “athlete experience” after some competitors at the world championships in Tokyo – including Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson – criticised warm-up logistics.
Yoyogi Park, where the main warm-up facility is located, is a two-and-half-kilometre drive from Japan National Stadium, a bus journey the PA news agency understands takes about 15 minutes.
The final call for competitors to board the bus is reportedly scheduled for 50 minutes to an hour before the start of each event. Athletes can also use an indoor straight at the stadium, including on days when they have more than one race in a session.
A World Athletics statement read: “The athlete experience is of utmost importance for World Athletics and the Local Organising Committee at these World Athletics Championships, and we have put a lot of consideration into their preparations within the constraints of locations and venues.
“This type of configuration is not unique – as we have seen from previous Olympic Games and other major athletics championships.
“For Tokyo 25, we ensured that team leaders were fully briefed at a site visit in March in order for teams to have ample time to prepare – and the rules regarding warm up, call room, and transport apply to every team and every athlete without exception.
“The brilliant performances we have seen so far from the athletes speak for themselves.”
Britain’s Keely Hodgkinson (right) has questioned the warm-up arrangements in Tokyo. Photograph: Sarah Meyssonnier/Reuters
On Friday, after qualifying for Sunday’s 800m final, Hodgkinson said: “I think the whole warm-up situation, you’re warming up for almost two hours. It can be quite draining, so maybe we will have to look at doing something better come Sunday.
“Other than that I’m happy to be in my fifth world final in a row. That’s an achievement in itself. I’m really happy to do that and be in the picture for another medal, hopefully.”
Only athletes are allowed to board the bus for the stadium, turning it into a kind of call room on wheels. Last Saturday, speaking after their 1500m heats, American middle-distance runner Nikki Hiltz told Citius Mag: “It’s a solid 10-minute bus ride of just sitting. It’s just weird. It’s definitely not usual, but we’re all in the same boat.”
The Jamaica coach Stephen Francis was more critical. In an interview with Jamaica’s TVJ on Saturday, Francis described what he felt were a number of logistical issues, including the “distance from the stadium to the warm-up track”.
He added: “Those areas of a meet are not befitting the top meet of the year for World Athletics.”
According to the website of the manufacturer Mondo, the warm-up track for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics (located next to the stadium) was dismantled and reinstalled at Aichi University in 2022. (PA Media)
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Updated at 10.34 BST
The official schedule informs us that Day 8 (Evening Session) starts in 40mins.
So we’ve got time to recap Hunt’s sensational silver from yesterday.
Read Sean Ingle’s report here:
ShareSean Ingle
Amy Hunt is just collecting her silver medal. She is looking a little tired, which is not surprising given she got to bed at 5am this morning, and will not be running in the heats of the women’s 4x100m relay later today.
Britain’s Amy Hunt collects her 200m silver medal. Photograph: Eloisa Lopez/ReutersShare
Thiam withdraws from heptathlon
Nafi Thiam – one of the defending champion Katarina Johnson-Thompson’s key rivals – withdrew on Saturday withdrew from the heptathlon on Saturday after an underwhelming long jump left Belgium’s triple Olympic champion with little chance of a medal.
The 31-year-old, who won world titles in 2017 and 2022, failed to get over the six-metre mark with her two legal jumps on Saturday morning to stand in eighth place in the overall standings, 377 points behind the competition-leader Anna Hall.
Thiam, who last lost in competition at the 2019 worlds, had been withdrawn by her coach before the javelin and 800m in the evening session. “I’ve struggled with this heptathlon from the start. I tried to fight it and persevere, but it clearly didn’t work,” a tearful Thiam told Het Nieuwsblad after Saturday morning’s session. “I started this morning thinking I would fight until the end and not leave empty-handed because I’ve worked hard this year … “I knew I could do something good here and fight for my place in the standings but that didn’t happen. So I’m disappointed, yes. This championship is a real black cloud.“
Thiam competed sparingly in 2025 and had a disrupted run up to the championships after a row with her national federation. She accused the Belgian athletics body of excluding her from their pre-championships camp in a row over image rights. The federation denied the allegation. Thiam was asked whether the row had impacted her performances in Tokyo.
“It’s hard to quantify that,” she told the newspaper. “Regardless of the reasons why I feel the way I do, the reality remains that I feel the way I do. So that doesn’t make a difference.” (Reuters)
Nafi Thiam of Belgium during the high jump. Photograph: Marcel ter Bals/MTB-Photo/ShutterstockShare
Updated at 10.16 BST
Preamble
Hello and welcome to the penultimate day of action in Tokyo. Breaking news in the heptathlon: Belgium’s title contender Nafi Thiam has pulled out after underperforming in the long jump.
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Updated at 10.04 BST