Stuttgart, Germany - The fourth edition of the IAAF World
Athletics Final takes place in Stuttgart, Germany, on
Saturday 9 and Sunday 10 September. -------
The entry list of the IAAF World Athletics Final (WAF) is
decided according to the World Athletics Tour (WAT)
Standings. The top 7 athletes with the greatest number of
points from their five best results (4 for throws) will qualify
for each event of the WAF. For races of 1500m and over, 11
athletes will be qualified.
Mbulaeni Mulaudzi wins 800m in Helsinki
(Hasse Sjogren) After the last qualifying meeting, the IAAF
Golden League meeting in Berlin (Sunday 3 September),
the process began to contact all the athletes concerned to
ascertain that they are fit and willing to compete. Not until
those answers are received, wild card entries are decided,
and the usual technical meeting is held on the day before
the World Athletics Final, can the final start list be made
available. Consequently, our previews are as accurate as
possible before that time.
Click here for the final World Athletics Tour Standings 2006
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MEN -
Kenya's Janeth Jepkosgei - 800m gold - Melbourne 2006
(Getty Images)800m
Since finishing a close second at the World Indoor
Championships, Mbulaeni Mulaudzi has lost just once in
seven contests, and made up for his sixth place finish at the
African championships in fine style with four successive
high calibre wins: in Zurich, Monaco, Rieti and Berlin. In
Rieti, he produced the world's fastest time, a sizzling
1:43.09 and in his last outing in Berlin, was the
overwhelming winner. Momentum is definitely on the
25-year-old South African's side.
Wilfred Bungei, the 2003 and 2005 winner, cruised to wins
in seven of eight races after winning the World Indoor title,
but has lost his last three. Third in Zurich and a distance
sixth in Monaco, he bounced back in Rieti with a season's
best 1:43.31, finishing second to Mulaudzi.
Alex Kipchirchir of Kenya drives home to win the Dream Mile
- Oslo
(Getty Images)24-year-old Moroccan Amine Laalou has
pieced together a solid season, capped by his 1:43.25
victory at Rome's Golden Gala, a national record. He's
dipped under 1:44 twice since, most recently in Rieti where
he was sixth (1:43.84) in the year's deepest race.
Others in the mix include Kenyan William Yiampoy, most
recently second at both Monaco and Berlin and Stockholm
winner Youssef Saad Kamel (1:43.61).
1500m
Five different winners emerged from this year's six Golden
League contests, illustrating that little was accomplished in
the battle to succeed Hicham El Guerrouj as the event's
preeminent force. The only athlete to win a pair of the big
races, Zurich and Berlin winner Augustine Choge, is still
widely considered stronger in the 5000. But the 19-year-old
Commonwealth champion over the longer distance will
most likely contest only the 1500m in Stuttgart and will be
considered a serious threat.
Alex Kipchirchir has probably been the most consistent. The
winner of Oslo's Dream Mile (3:50.32), he took the African
title in early August, won in Monaco, and finished second in
Paris (3:31.36, SB), Zurich and Brussels.
Daniel Kipchirchir Komen the world leader after his career
best 3:29.02 win in Rome, is the only runner to dip under
3:31 more than once this season, and with a runner-up
finish in Lausanne and a third place showing in Oslo and
Zurich, is also among the favourites.
French star Mehdi Baala followed up his successful
European title defence with an impressive victory in
Brussels, and looks to be a factor. World Indoor champion
Ivan Heshko, the winner in the Paris leg of the Golden
League, was disappointed with his runner-up finish to
Baala in Gothenburg. It should be noted, however, that
Heshko has won the previous two editions of the WAF, last
year with a meet record over a very strong field.
3000/5000m
About the safest prediction one could make about this
weekend's competition is that the winners of the 3000 and
5000 metre contests will hail from either Kenya or Ethiopia.
Of the 22 men who occupy the top 11 positions at each
event in the current World Athletics Tour standings, all but
three are from the two east African countries.
Kenenisa Bekele, who won six of his eight races this year,
has spent most of his summer being chased, a pursuit that
will continue this weekend in Stuttgart. If his recent outings
are any indication, the Golden League Jackpot winner will
be difficult to beat.
A solid favourite at either distance - or perhaps both? - is
Isaac Songok, the 22-year-old Kenyan whose convincing
win in the Oslo 5000 ended Bekele's six-for-six Golden
League ambitions early. In each of his three 5000 races he
ran faster than 13 minutes, topped by his 12:48.66
runner-up finish in Zurich. He's won two of his three outings
over 3000 in 7:28.72 and 7:28.98, the season's two fastest
times.
Bekele's younger brother Tariku, is this year's third fastest
in the 3000 (7:29.11) and has twice dipped under 13
minutes in the 5000, most recently finishing a strong
second to his brother in Berlin. Still only 19, the World Junior
champion is already primed to move from out of his
brother's shadow.
Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge leads the standings in both events,
but has collected just one win this summer, in the London
3000, and will be looking to end his season on an up note.
The best bet to spoil the Kenyan and Ethiopian party will be
Ugandan Boniface Kiprop. In his last race, he cruised to a
26:41.95 performance in the Brussels 10,000, indicating
he'll arrive in Stuttgart in solid form.
3000m Steeplechase
With World record holder Saif Saaeed Shaheen choosing to
sit this weekend out to rest for his upcoming double at the
World Cup, the Steeplechase will focus primarily on
competitors from Shaheen's native Kenya.
Behind the Qatari, Olympic bronze medallist Paul Kipsiele
Koech has been among the season's most consistent. With
strong wins in Rome (7:59.94) and Stockholm (8:00.29) the
24-year-old looks to be the man to beat. With consistent
top-three finishes in virtually all of his races, Richard
Matelong (8:07.50) could be a threat, while Bob Tahri of
France, the European championships bronze medallist, will
lead the challenge for his continent.
WOMEN -
800m
From March, when she won the Commonwealth title, to a
few weeks ago when she won in Rieti, African champion
Janeth Jepkosgei has been the most consistent two-lapper
in the world, and will be among the strong favourites in
Stuttgart. She lowered her own Kenyan record twice over the
summer, first in Gateshead (1:57:22) in June and again in
Lausanne (1:56.66) in July, the latter the fastest
performance in the world. She's faltered just twice this
season, first in Zurich last month when she finished fourth
behind Russian Olga Kotlyarova, Moroccan Hasna
Benhassi, and Cuba's World champion Zulia Calatayud,
and again in Brussels, where she crossed the line second
behind Benhassi.
Benhassi, the Olympic silver medallist, seems to be
building momentum on her way to Stuttgart, hoping to
regain the WAF title she won in 2004 after finishing second
last year.
Calatayud hasn't duplicated the 2005 campaign that led to
her World title in Helsinki last year, but she has run under
1:57, and won her most recent outing in Padova last week.
Looking to end their break out seasons on a high note are
Jamaican Kenia Sinclair, the World indoor and
Commonwealth silver medallist, and Briton Rebecca Lyne,
the European championships bronze medallist, who has
been remarkably consistent in virtually all of her outings this
year.
1500m
Russians have dominated the metric mile this year, and
with the trio of Tatyana Tomashova, Yelena Soboleva and
Yuliya Chizhenko expected to toe the line in Stuttgart, that
dominance could continue this weekend.
With a pair of successive World titles under her belt,
Tomashova underscored her big meet talent with an
impressive 3:56.91 personal best to nab the European title.
Chizhenko, the world leader after her career best 3:55.68 in
Paris, was outkicked by Tomashova in Gothenburg
(3:57.61), but bounced back with a victory in Monaco and
another fast performance in Rieti, where she clocked
3:57.29 to finish second behind Maryam Yusuf Jamal.
Soboleva, the World indoor record holder, has run under
four minutes three times this summer, but faded to fourth in
her two most recent outings.
Jamal, on the other hand, may be peaking perfectly. Last
year she preceded her World Athletics Final victory with a
national record 3:56.79 Bahraini national record in Rieti.
This year, her tune up for the WAF was another visit to the
Italian city, where she lowered her won record to 3:56.18,
the year's second fastest clocking.
3000/5000m
As with the men's events, the women's distance
programme in Stuttgart will be a parade of Ethiopian and
Kenyan talent; but this year, it's been the Ethiopian
contingent that's reigned supreme.
The summer highlight has been the ongoing rivalry between
Ethiopians Tirunesh Dibaba, the World champion at 5000
and 10,000 metres, and Meseret Defar, the Olympic
champion and World record holder at 5000 metres. Dibaba
won three of their five meetings this summer, but the last, in
Berlin last Sunday, was the costliest. When Defar outkicked
her friend and rival with an astounding 56.4 final lap, she
took from Dibaba a $125,000 share of the Golden League
Jackpot. Prior to this year's African Championships, the last
time Defar outkicked Dibaba was at last year's World
Athletics Final, where the Olympic champion took the
3000/5000 double. Will she double again?
In the 3000, the primary challengers are from Ethiopia:
Gelete Burka Bati (8:25.92); Ejegayehu Dibaba (8:35.94)
and Berhane Adere (8:33.17).
In the 5000, Kenyans have a slight edge of depth, with Edith
Masai (14:33.84), Priscah Jepleting (14:35.30) and Olympic
silver medallist Isabella Ochichi (14:46.99) leading the
charge. The top European is Briton Jo Pavey, who finished
third in Brussels in 14:39.96.
3000m Steeplechase
With no dominant figure emerging from the few races
offered on the international circuit this summer, the
Steeplechase appears on paper as wildly unpredictable.
World champion Dorcus Inzikuru of Uganda and European
champion Alesia Turava of Belarus have competed little
over the summer, while Poland's Wioletta Janowska, has
pieced together perhaps the most consistent season.
The world leader since her brisk 9:17.15 national record in
Athens in early July, the 29-year-old was third at the
European Championships, and in her most recent outing,
topped a strong field with her 9:22.48 victory in Rieti late last
month. The runner-up last year, Janowska is poised to
move up a step this weekend.
Russians Tatyana Petrova (9:22.96) and Lyubov Ivanova
(9:23.61) have run well, as have Australia's Commonwealth
silver and bronze medallists Melissa Rollison and Donna
MacFarlane (9:25.05). But Turava, with her 9:20.16
Gothenburg follow-up to win handily in Monaco, may have
the edge.---Bob Ramsak for the IAAF