Kenya’s Beatrice Chebet won the gold medal in the women’s Olympic 5,000-metres as she sprinted home to claim the title after a textbook performance on Monday.
Kipyegon was initially ruled to have obstructed Ethiopia’s Tsegay during raceThomson Reuters
· Posted: Aug 05, 2024 3:50 PM EDT | Last Updated: August 5
Kenya’s Beatrice Chebet celebrates after winning the Olympic women’s 5000m final at Stade de France in Saint-Denis, north of Paris, on Monday. (Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images)Kenya’s Beatrice Chebet won the gold medal in the women’s Olympic 5,000-metres as she sprinted home to claim the title after a textbook performance on Monday.
Chebet produced a thrilling finish to win the first medal for her country at the Paris Olympics and smiled wide as she crossed the line after an exhausting performance.
Although Kipyegon crossed the line in second, she was later disqualified, before eventually being reinstated to the silver medal.
It’s official 👏
Legendary women’s 5000m podium ⬇️
🥇 Beatrice Chebet 🇰🇪
🥈 Faith Kipyegon 🇰🇪
🥉 Sifan Hassan 🇳🇱 #Paris2024 #Olympics pic.twitter.com/miotkAOIDS
—@WorldAthleticsThe runner-up at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene and bronze medallist in Budapest last year, Chebet took the early lead and hung in with Kipyegon through much of the race.
She kept her cool as Kipyegon collided at the start of the penultimate lap with Ethiopian world record holder Gudaf Tsegay, who grimaced but continued, and accelerated from there.
Kenya’s Faith Kipyegon, right, had finished second with a time of 14:29.60, but was later disqualified for obstructing Gudaf Tsegay of Ethiopia during the race. (Jewel Samad/AFP via Getty Images)Tokyo 2020 champion Hassan was in fifth place heading into the final 400m and dug deep to try to hang onto her Olympic crown but could not match the Kenyans’ speed around the final turn.
Kipyegon’s joy momentarily dissolved after her name disappeared from the results list, later marking her as disqualified, before further review put her back onto the podium.