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2019 World Athletics Championships – Women's 1500 metres

The women's 1500 metres at the 2019 World Athletics Championships was held at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar, from 2 to 5 October 2019.


Women's 1500 metres at the 2019 World Championships
Sifan Hassan at the finish line in the final
Khalifa International Stadium
2 October (heats)3 October (semi-final)5 October (final)
35 from 23 nations
3:51.95
Sifan Hassan 
 Netherlands Faith Kipyegon 
 Kenya Gudaf Tsegay 
 EthiopiaSifan HassanNetherlandsFaith KipyegonKenyaGudaf TsegayEthiopia
Sifan HassanNetherlands
Faith KipyegonKenya
Gudaf TsegayEthiopia

Video on YouTubeOfficial Video

The women's 1500 metres at the 2019 World Athletics Championships was held at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar, from 2 to 5 October 2019.

Like the men, championship level women's 1500s also typically turn into strategic, sit and kick affairs. In 2017, strategic worked for Faith Kipyegon to leave the world record holder Genzebe Dibaba behind. Sifan Hassan was also left behind by that tactic. In 2019, she set the world record in the mile and had already won the 10,000 metres at these championships.

The final started inauspiciously enough, Gabriela DeBues-Stafford eventually found herself in the lead, Hassan dropped to the back of the pack. After 200 metres, Hassan moved out to lane 2 and moved forward around everyone into the lead. Kipyegon and Gudaf Tsegay moved in behind her to watch. Even with the slow start the first lap was 1:03.51. None of the chasing runners looked relaxed, most were working hard to stay up. Laura Muir and Jenny Simpson moved up toward the front. The second lap was 1:02.44. During the third lap, Muir positioned herself for the final lap, getting onto Kipyegon's shoulder coming onto the home stretch, then up to Hassan's just before the bell at 2:52.59. Muir stayed in position through the turn, Kipyegon and Tsegay behind her a gap forming behind. Hassan ran the third lap in 1:01.46, then looked back at Muir and took off sprinting. A big gap formed quickly, Kipyegon going around Muir in chase. Hassan kept looking back like a hunted animal being chased, but the gap continued to grow as did Kipyegon's separation from the next group of four; Muir, Tsegay, Shelby Houlihan with DeBues-Stafford trying to hold on. As Kipyegon saw hope was lost, she began to slow back toward the chasers. Houlihan moved to lane 2 to try to sprint past Tsegay, instead Tsegay pulled away gaining on Kipyegon. Hassan won by close to 15 metres. Kipyegon glided across the line for silver barely ahead of a rapidly closing Tsegay.

Hassan's time of 3:51.95, places her as the #6 runner in history behind Dibaba and two infamous races in China in the 1990s. Well beaten, Kipyegon, Tsegay and Houlihan moved to #11, #13 and #15 on that list respectively. Even sixth place DeBues-Stafford ranks as #21. Hassan set the European record that had been held by Soviet Tatyana Kazankina for 39 years, Houlihan the North American record, Kipyegon the Kenyan record and DeBues-Stafford the Canadian record.

Before the competition records were as follows:

RecordPerf.AthleteNat.DateLocation
World3:50.07Genzebe DibabaETH17 Jul 2015Monaco
Championship3:58.52Tatyana TomashovaRUS31 Aug 2003Paris, France
World leading3:55.30Sifan HassanNED12 Jul 2019Monaco
African3:50.07Genzebe DibabaETH17 Jul 2015Monaco
Asian3:50.46Qu YunxiaCHN11 Sep 1993Beijing, China
NACAC3:56.29Shannon RowburyUSA17 July 2015Monaco
South American4:05.67Letitia VriesdeSUR31 Aug 1991Tokyo, Japan
European3:52.47Tatyana KazankinaRUS31 Aug 1980Zürich, Switzerland
Oceanian4:00.86Linden HallAUS26 May 2018Eugene, United States

The following records were established during the competition:

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
5 OctoberFinalSifan HassanNED3:51.95CR, AR

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+3), is as follows:

DateTimeRound
2 October17:35Heats
3 October23:00Semi-finals
5 October20:55Final

The first six in each heat (Q) and the next six fastest (q) qualified for the semi-finals.

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
11Sifan HassanNetherlands4:03.88Q
21Faith KipyegonKenya4:03.93Q
31Nikki HiltzUnited States4:04.00Q
41Winnie NanyondoUganda4:04.04Q
51Ciara MageeanIreland4:04.18Q
61Sarah McDonaldGreat Britain & N.I.4:04.42Q
71Lemlem HailuEthiopia4:05.61q
81Kristiina MäkiCzech Republic4:06.61q, PB
91Esther GuerreroSpain4:06.99q
103Jenny SimpsonUnited States4:07.27Q
113Gabriela DeBues-StaffordCanada4:07.28Q
123Laura MuirGreat Britain & N.I.4:07.37Q
133Marta PérezSpain4:07.48Q
141Georgia GriffithAustralia4:07.73q
153Claudia BoboceaRomania4:07.76Q
163Malika AkkaouiMorocco4:08.05Q
173Linden HallAustralia4:08.12q
183Daryia BarysevichBelarus4:08.19q
192Rababe ArafiMorocco4:08.32Q
202Winny ChebetKenya4:08.36Q
212Gudaf TsegayEthiopia4:08.39Q
222Shelby HoulihanUnited States4:08.51Q
233Axumawit EmbayeEthiopia4:08.56
242Jessica HullAustralia4:08.71Q
251Sara KuivistoFinland4:08.85PB
263Esther ChebetUganda4:08.89
272Yolanda NgarambeSweden4:09.22Q
283María Pía FernándezUruguay4:09.45NR
292Aisha Praught-LeerJamaica4:09.81
302P. U. ChitraIndia4:11.10PB
312Caterina GranzGermany4:12.36
322Jemma ReekieGreat Britain & N.I.4:12.51
332Maruša MišmašSlovenia4:14.94
342Carla MendesCape Verde4:23.56
353Neide DiasAngola4:28.27

The first 5 in each heat (Q) and the next two fastest (q) qualified for the final.

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
12Jenny SimpsonUnited States4:00.99Q
22Gabriela DeBues-StaffordCanada4:01.04Q
32Laura MuirGreat Britain & N.I.4:01.05Q
42Gudaf TsegayEthiopia4:01.12Q
52Winny ChebetKenya4:01.14Q
62Winnie NanyondoUganda4:01.30q
72Nikki HiltzUnited States4:01.52q, PB
82Jessica HullAustralia4:01.80PB
92Yolanda NgarambeSweden4:03.43PB
102Linden HallAustralia4:06.39
112Marta PérezSpain4:10.45
121Sifan HassanNetherlands4:14.69Q
131Shelby HoulihanUnited States4:14.91Q
141Rababe ArafiMorocco4:14.94Q
151Faith KipyegonKenya4:14.98Q
161Ciara MageeanIreland4:15.49Q
171Sarah McDonaldGreat Britain & N.I.4:15.73
181Lemlem HailuEthiopia4:16.56
191Esther GuerreroSpain4:16.66
202Malika AkkaouiMorocco4:16.83
211Daryia BarysevichBelarus4:17.04
221Georgia GriffithAustralia4:17.15
231Kristiina MäkiCzech Republic4:17.65
241Claudia BoboceaRomania4:18.25

Runners during the final

The final was started on 5 October at 20:55.

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
Sifan HassanNetherlands3:51.95CR, AR
Faith KipyegonKenya3:54.22NR
Gudaf TsegayEthiopia3:54.38PB
4Shelby HoulihanUnited States3:54.99AR
5Laura MuirGreat Britain & N.I.3:55.76SB
6Gabriela DeBues-StaffordCanada3:56.12NR
7Winny ChebetKenya3:58.20PB
8Jenny SimpsonUnited States3:58.42SB
9Rababe ArafiMorocco3:59.93
10Ciara MageeanIreland4:00.15PB
11Winnie NanyondoUganda4:00.63
12Nikki HiltzUnited States4:06.68
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