Josh Kerr, of Great Britain, reacts after winning the men's 1500-meter final during the World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Hungary, Aug 23, 2023. (PHOTO / AP)
BUDAPEST - Briton Josh Kerr pulled off one of the shocks of the World Championships when he beat Olympic champion and hot favorite Jakob Ingebrigtsen in an absolute carbon copy of last year's final to take 1,500m gold on Wednesday.
A favorite in 2022, Norway's Ingebrigtsen was outkicked by Britain's Jake Wightman to miss out on gold, and Kerr, the Tokyo Olympic bronze medallist behind Ingebrigtsen, made his move at about the same spot with 200 meters to go.
Kerr dug deep to stay in front and won in 3:29.38 with Ingebrigtsen, whose 3:27.14 run in Poland five weeks ago made him the fourth-fastest man in history, taking silver in 3:29.65.
Fast-finishing Norwegian Narve Gilje Nordas secured the bronze in 3:29.68.
As I came round the bend I thought I have to give everything I have. I just made sure I was there with 200m to go, then in the last 30 I thought 'I want this so badly, I don't care how much pain I'm in I'm going to do everything to get to the finish line first'.
Josh Kerr, Men's 1,500m world champion
"It's been a long time coming. It's quite an overwhelming experience. I'm so proud of myself," said Kerr, who ran the race in sunglasses.
"I didn't feel like I ran the best race either. I just threw my whole 16 years of this sport in that last 200m and didn't give up until the end.
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Kerr said he had planned meticulously for this race.
"We threw everything we had at this in terms of nutrition, sleep, training, race reviews, everything," he said. "We left no stone unturned and if it wasn't a gold medal today, that was the best we could have done. I planned like a champion."
Kerr had a good view of Wightman's tactics in Eugene as he chased him home to finish fifth and he produced an almost uncanny replica of his Edinburgh club mate on Wednesday.
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"As I came round the bend I thought I have to give everything I have. I just made sure I was there with 200m to go," he said. "Then in the last 30 I thought 'I want this so badly, I don't care how much pain I'm in I'm going to do everything to get to the finish line first'."
Ingebrigtsen said he was not physically in great shape as he was unable to respond to Kerr moving onto his shoulder.
"All credit to Josh, he had a good race, but I feel a little bit unlucky not being able to do what I have been doing the whole season," he said.
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"I was a little bit dry in my throat, it got worse last two days. I don't feel my body was quite 100 percent.
"I won't blame it on anything, but last year I was by far the best, but did a worse race. Today I wasn't the best. I'm disappointed, but not when others do things right and are as prepared as they are. I don't feel like I could have done much differently."
Last year Ingebrigtsen recovered from the setback in his favourite event to win the 5,000m gold and he confirmed that he will defend his title on Sunday, the last night of the championships.
