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Helsinki 2005 800m reports and previews
[Final report]
[Semifinal reports]
[Heat reports]
[Preview]
Helsinki 800m final report
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Yuriy Borzakovskiy is too late
Rashid Ramzi completes a fantastic double
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It is generally considered to be almost impossible: to complete a double
victory at both 800 and 1500 at a major championship. Great runners such as
Steve Ovett, Sebastian Coe and Steve Cram have attempted it and failed. Rashid
Ramzi, winner of the 1500m, was not intimidated by that piece of history.
The fact that his best time was only a modest 1:44.73 did not bother him.
His three races earlier in the week did not seem any problem either. With
great authority he qualified from his heat and semifinal, and in the final
he had his tactics right, his stamina ready and left all the 800m specialists
in his wake to become World Champion in a new personal record.
The race had started out at a pretty decent pace. It was Ali who took the early
lead, reaching 200 in a fast 24.96, followed by the Kenyans and Saïd-Guerni,
with Baala, Ramzi and Borzakovskiy all at the back. The pace faltered a little
towards 400, which was reached after 52.48. Borzakovskiy had moved forward
already, then Ali moved out a little and Bungei slipped past on the inside and
took the lead. But Ali had blocked Borzakovskiy's path and as he lost momentum
Baala moved past on the outside causing the young Russian to drop even further
back. After 500 Bungei was leading ahead of Saïd-Guerni and Yiampoy, with
Ali fading, but both Ramzi and Borzakovskiy found themselves in very poor
positions, with everyone except Reed way ahead of them.
But the race had many turns and twists left yet. Ramzi accelerated and at 600
managed to sneak past the tiring Baala and Ali on the inside. Borzakovskiy
waited just a few seconds, then tried to do the same, but that turned out to be
an awful mistake, because Baala was just about to move inside, totally blocking
the passage, and as Borzakovskiy moved outside again he got boxed by Gary Reed.
Into the final straight Bungei was still leading, Saïd-Guerni at his shoulder,
Yiampoy and Ramzi were right behind them and Borzakovskiy, having finally managed
to get past Baala and Ali, was still a long way down. Saïd-Guerni weakened,
and Yiampoy on the inside and Ramzi on the outside sprinted past him. Then
Bungei's legs gave in as well, but Ramzi never looked back and dashed to the
finish. From behind Borzakovskiy put in a desperate sprint. He first went past
Saïd-Guerni, then past Bungei, then caught Yiampoy just before the
line as well, but despite delivering what was surely the fastest final 100m
of the field he came too late to catch Rashid Ramzi, the new World Champion.
After the race Ramzi declared that he had known that the medals are always
decided on the last 80 meters. So he had to save some energy for that and
had to make sure he was in a good position. If anything that sounds like one
of the best tactical plans one could come up with for any middle distance.
And so Rashid Ramzi is a most unlikely champion. Sure, he had won a silver medal
at the World Indoor Championship. He had also improved his PB earlier this year.
But he was a 1500m specialist, he had to run three tough races as preparation.
That should have drained his energy. Winning at the 1500 should have taken away
any motivation to take up three more rounds of 800m running. And besides, he was
up against the Olympic Champion, whose personal best was well over two seconds
faster than his. None of these mattered. Once Borzakovskiy got his tactics wrong
Ramzi took full advantage, scoring the first 800/1500 double at a World
Championship ever recorded. The Russian smiled ruefully when he received his
silver medal - two years ago he went too early and came second, this year he
went a bit too late and again got second. So far the World Championships
haven't brought him any luck. William Yiampoy, on the other hand, was beaming.
Four years ago he was fourth, now he has a major medal to show for his efforts.
As for the other runners, Bungei has had yet another major disappointment.
Coming into the final straight he was leading, but at major championships he
always seems to just miss those final ten seconds of energy that would bring
him victory. Djabir Saïd-Guerni came fifth, and there was not a lot more
he could have done. Mehdi Baala got at least a bit of satisfaction from these
championships, having blown his chances at 1500. Belal Mansoor Ali and
Gary Reed both reached their first major final and will have gained a lot
of experience. Especially young Ali looks likely to remain on the highest level
for some time to come.
Result:
1. Rashid Ramzi BRN 1:44.24
2. Yuriy Borzakovskiy RUS 1:44.51
3. William Yiampoy KEN 1:44.55
4. Wilfred Bungei KEN 1:44.98
5. Djabir Saïd-Guerni ALG 1:45.31
6. Mehdi Baala FRA 1:45.32
7. Belal Mansoor Ali BRN 1:45.55
8. Gary Reed CAN 1:46.20
Helsinki 800m semifinal reports
If the heats looked somewhat unbalanced, the draw for the semis looked
even more so: semifinal one looked strong enough to be a final, whereas both
other semis seemed a lot less crowded with favorites. From each race only the
first two would qualify for the final, along with the two fastest losers.
- Semifinal 1
An incredibly strong semifinal. With Borzakovskiy, Saïd-Guerni and Ramzi
it contained three World or Olympic champions. But with Yiampoy, Robinson and
Laalou present as well this looked like a horrible draw for anyone in here.
It was Robinson who intended to turn this heat into the fastest one, and he
sped away from the start, reaching 200 in a furious 24.70, with Saïd-Guerni
and Barrios following and the entire field being spread out already. Halfway
was reached in 51.18. Borzakovsky had already moved near the leaders at that
point with Ramzi and Laalou bringing up the rear. Just before they went into the
last curve it was Yiampoy who made a swift move and took the lead. Borzakovskiy
followed, Ramzi reacted quickly, Saïd-Guerni hung on and Laalou managed to
stay in touch, but Robinson and Barrios were spent and dropped behind.
Borzakovskiy eventually went past Yiampoy, as did Ramzi, who even notched up
the fastest time of his career. Yiampoy hung on to third and qualified as a fast
loser, Laalou's late efforts came too late to get past Saïd-Guerni. As it
turned out the Algerian lives to fight another day: his time was just fast
enough to be able to defend his title in the final.
Result:
1. Yuriy Borzakovskiy 1:44.26 Q
2. Rashid Ramzi 1:44.30 Q
3. William Yiampoy 1:44.51 q
4. Djabir Saïd-Guerni 1:44.80 q
5. Amine Laalou 1:45.05
6. Mohammed Al-Azimi 1:48.02
7. Eugenio Barrios 1:48.76
8. Khadevis Robinson 1:49.13
- Semifinal 2
Mulaudzi looked the obvious favorite here, with Baala, Reina and Ali as his
main rivals. Reina and Mulaudzi went into the lead, but allowed Ali to sneak
past them on the inside. Still, the pace was not too fast, and as Baala moved
closer as well at the bell there were four runners, side by side, crossing
the line after 53.42: not too fast, and only two were going to qualify from
this heat. Mulaudzi oddly dropped behind a bit, and when Reina and Baala
accelerated he found himself with a lot to do. Around the bend the field was
well spread, with Baala leading, then Reina, working hard, Ali and Mulaudzi.
Baala looked comfortable and eased into the finish, Ali sprinted past a dying
Reina, but Mulaudzi found himself too far down on the two leaders to reach
them and finished third. As his time was too slow we had the first real shock
of the tournament: Mulaudzi, a main favorite, had gone out in the semis.
Result:
1. Belal Mansoor Ali 1:45.35 Q
2. Mehdi Baala 1:45.40 Q
3. Mbulaeni Mulaudzi 1:45.73
4. Pawel Czapiewski 1:46.33
5. Dmitriy Bogdanov 1:46.83
6. Antonio Reina 1:46.89
7. Berhanu Alemu 1:47.66
8. Mohammed Al-Salhi 1:47.97
- Semifinal 3
From this semi one could expect Bungei and Saad Kamel to qualify, with Reed and
Chehibi surely challenging. It was Krummenacker who took them out, but towards
the end of the first lap Bungei and Kamel took over as they reached 400 in
51.94: fast, but not quite as fast as the first semifinal. Bungei stretched
them out, Kamel had to allow a small gap and all the others appeared to be
struggling, but around the bend Reed moved closer and challenged Kamel. The
young Canadian was by far the stronger and even went past Bungei in a new
Canadian record as both of them qualified miles ahead of the rest. Kamel tried
very hard to qualify on time, but in vain as he ended up as the third fastest
loser, just a frustrating 0.10 seconds short of qualification. Further down the
field Moradi set a new Iranian record improving his PB by well over a second.
Result:
1. Gary Reed 1:44.33 Q
2. Wilfred Bungei 1:44.41 Q
3. Youssef Saad Kamel 1:44.90
4. René Herms 1:45.21
5. Mouhssin Chehibi 1:45.82
6. Sadjad Moradi 1:45.88
7. James McIlroy 1:45.91
8. David Krummenacker 1:46.76
So two main favorites (Mulaudzi and Kamel) went out. Instead the 800 final
has two 1500m specialists (Ramzi and Baala), perhaps fitting in a season where
the 800m specialists can't really make the headlines. And there is a young
former Kenyan: Belal Mansoor Ali looked very impressive. Bungei, Yiampoy and
Borzakovskiy were always obvious contenders, Reed is improving rapidly this
season and finally Saïd-Guerni has made it yet again - his fourth major final.
Who will win on Sunday? Borzakovskiy seems almost unbeatable, he looks
totally confident and his tactics of even pace running are hard to beat.
But Ramzi looks indefatigable as well: the final will be his sixth middle distance
race in nine days - and still he looks very strong!
If the race is not too fast that would play right into the hands of Ramzi and
Borzakovskiy, since both have a very sharp finish. And the pace looks unlikely
to be very fast, unless one of the Kenyans decides to take the race on - perhaps
their best chances are to run as a team, with Yiampoy trying to run the finish out
of most others hoping that Bungei can strike. Reed, Baala and Ali all have good
speed as well though, and are unlikely to be shaken off easily. The runner least
likely to win might be Saïd-Guerni - and that's roughly the same position he
was in two years ago in Paris - and that day he left with the gold...
Helsinki 800m heat reports
A total of 51 entries meant that there were six heats, with 8 or 9 runners in
each heat. To qualify automatically for the semifinals athletes had to finish
in the top three. Six more would qualify on time. So it would make sense for
a number of athletes to ensure a fairly fast heat, as more athletes would be
likely to qualify from that heat.
- Heat 1
One of the tougher heats, with Mulaudzi, Herms, Ismail and dos Santos in there,
and also Rashid Ramzi - but would the newly crowned 1500m World Champion really
start? It turned out he did (whereas Ismail was a non-starter). As expected Osmar
dos Santos took the lead, with Herms and McIlroy following. At the bell the pace
was still pretty good: 51.72. Alemu and Ramzi then decided to move from the back
to the front, and passed Mulaudzi, who was badly boxed and had nowhere to go.
At 600 dos Santos, weakening, was being passed by Herms and McIlroy, with Ramzi
approaching quickly and Mulaudzi, still in last position, only just beginning to
move forward again. Around the bend Ramzi moved to the front and Mulaudzi, apparently
not panicking despite his poor position in the race, swiftly and smoothly moved
into fourth place. On the final straight Ramzi and McIlroy qualified comfortably,
Mulaudzi managed to sprint past Herms, and Alemu came fifth. Herms and Alemu would
eventually qualify as fastest losers, but dos Santos was unlucky - for all his
trouble he ended up being the fastest non-qualifier.
After the race Mulaudzi stated that "my strategy was very bad, because I wanted
to move out of the box but it was too late, and I had to put in a lot of work
in the final 100 to make sure I would get into the semis".
Result:
1. Rashid Ramzi 1:46.17 Q
2. James McIlroy 1:46.44 Q
3. Mbulaeni Mulaudzi 1:46.85 Q
4. René Herms 1:47.07 q
5. Berhanu Alemu 1:47.37 q
6. Osmar dos Santos 1:47.74
7. Jae-Hoon Lee 1:47.90
- Heat 2
Bungei and Robinson looked the favorites here, and Mehdi Baala might well want
to make up for a failed 1500m campaign earlier this week. But Czapiewski and
Bogdanov (European Indoor Champion in March) were surely in with a chance as well.
Robinson took the lead ahead of Baala and Bungei, with Czapiewski way down as
usual. They reached 400 in 52.95, moderately fast. The positions remained mostly
unchanged for a long time, although it was notable how Al-Azimi managed to stay
very close to the leaders. On the final straight Robinson was weakening a bit,
Baala and also Bungei moved past, but the three of them finished almost next to
each other, probably well aware that they were safe. Behind them Bogdanov and
Czapiewski made late efforts but couldn't reach the leaders. They were lucky
enough to be in the fastest heat though, and even Al-Azimi, despite looking
very disappointed finishing only sixth, would make it to the semis.
Baala after the race commented that he really hadn't prepared for the 800, and the
early elimination at the 1500 had come as a shock, but he was trying to turn the
entire situation into positive energy, to see if something could happen at the 800.
Result:
1. Mehdi Baala 1:46.57 Q
2. Wilfred Bungei 1:46.71 Q
3. Khadevis Robinson 1:46.74 Q
4. Dmitriy Bogdanov 1:46.88 q
5. Pawel Czapiewski 1:46.93 q
6. Mohammed Al-Azimi 1:47.05 q
- Heat 3
This looked like a really tough heat, with Olympic Champion Borzakovskiy,
reigning World Champion Saïd-Guerni and the fast Kenyan Yiampoy, but
also Mwera and Milkevics as serious contenders. Right after the start though
Mwera ran on the inside of his lane and was later disqualified. Peçanha and
Saïd-Guerni took the lead, but it was without any conviction and when they
reached halfway in 57.06 it was clear that only three would qualify from this heat.
Yiampoy moved to the front, Saïd-Guerni followed and Borzakovskiy stayed close
behind. The three of them stayed ahead of everybody else, looking around to see
if anyone could possibly come near (Milkevics came closest but was never a real threat)
and finished safely side by side. Amazingly they ran the second lap a full four
seconds faster than the first one. All three of them will feel they had a very
easy first round.
Result:
1. Yuriy Borzakovskiy 1:50.14 Q
2. William Yiampoy 1:50.14 Q
3. Djabir Saïd-Guerni 1:50.16 Q
4. Dmitrijs Milkevics 1:50.25
5. Jason Stewart 1:50.44
6. Fabiano Peçanha 1:50.89
- Heat 4
Potentially this was a more evenly balanced heat, with Saad Kamel, Chehibi,
Krummenacker and Yego as main candidates for the top three. Yego found himself
reluctantly in the lead, looking around him for support, and with 54.46 after
400 this looked like another slowish heat. Krummenacker, Okken and Saad Kamel
were following, Chehibi was in last position as usual. Saad Kamel took the
initiative, and as Okken, Krummenacker and Yego followed a big gap opened up
between those four and the others. When Yego was weakening at 600 it looked like
the first three were safe, but Chehibi came sprinting from the back and managed
to get past a tiring Okken, who eventually finished behind Yego as well. That
didn't do the young Kenyan much good though: his time was much too slow for
qualification.
Result:
1. Youssef Saad Kamel 1:47.65 Q
2. David Krummenacker 1:47.82 Q
3. Mouhssin Chehibi 1:48.17 Q
4. Alfred Kirwa Yego 1:48.72
5. Arnoud Okken 1:48.95
- Heat 5
Although none of them ever reached a major final yet on paper this heat should see
Reina, Reed and Laalou qualifying as they were fastest so far this season - but what
could former World Champion André Bucher do? Sherridan Kirk and Reina set a
decent pace, 53.34 for the first 400, with Reed and Bucher close behind and Laalou
in last position. On the back straight Reina went in front, Reed went after him,
Laalou advanced quickly and Kirk was unable to sustain the pace. In the final straight
Reina, Reed and Laalou moved way ahead of the rest, easing into the finish. Bucher
was unable to challenge them, and his time too slow to get into the next round.
Result:
1. Antonio Reina 1:47.14 Q
2. Gary Reed 1:47.23 Q
3. Amine Laalou 1:47.62 Q
4. André Bucher 1:47.97
- Heat 6
The easiest heat, surely. None of these athletes ever broke 1:45 before this season,
although Hicks, Al Salhi and Belal Mansoor Ali (formerly John Yego from Kenya) all
managed it once this year. There are apparently quite a few doubts about Ali's real age,
but there is little doubt about his talent. He took the lead and reached the bell
after 53.13. He sustained a tough pace and kept Sultan and Barrios at bay. As they
approached the finish Moradi appeared out of nowhere and snatched second place.
Al Salhi also put in a late run and finished third, just ahead of Barrios, who
eventually qualified as the sixth and last fastest loser. Sultan faded badly
but was also disqualified for leaving his lane too early. Kevin Hicks disappointed
badly and finished a distant last.
Result:
1. Belal Mansoor Ali 1:47.16 Q
2. Sadjad Moradi 1:47.18 Q
3. Mohammed Al-Salhi 1:47.27 Q
4. Eugenio Barrios 1:47.53 q
So all the real favorites qualified with relative ease. The list of qualified
runners offers a remarkable picture, with two 1500m specialists (Ramzi and Baala)
in the top three. The most striking performance surely came from Rashid Ramzi -
convincingly winning his heat less than 24 hours after his 1500m win. The three
winners from heat three saved a lot of energy, which might help in the semis tomorrow.
The most notable casualties were the inexperienced Kenyan Alfred Kirwa Yego and former
World Champion André Bucher, who has been struggling for quite some time now.
Helsinki 800m preview
The 800 meter has been a surprisingly subdued affair so far this season. Not a single
athlete has yet broken 1:44 and we are well into August. That hasn't happened since
1985, and of course in that year there weren't any major championships.
Some of the well known champions are out of shape, injured or simply beyond their
peak: Wilson Kipketer is on the brink of retirement, and will not run.
Nils Schumann has missed yet another season due to injury.
André Bucher (2001 World Champion) or Djabir Saïd-Guerni
(2003 World Champion) finished well behind the winners so far this year.
Hezekièl Sepeng apparently is involved in a doping affair. Bram Som is
injured. Joseph Mutua failed to make it past the Kenyan trials.
It is an amazing list of great runners that are out or look unlikely to make the rostrum
in Helsinki. And although several young runners have been running
personal best times none of them seem ready for a real sensational breakthrough.
So we may still expect established runners in the final. If any of them can hit
their peak at the right moment the gold appears to be ready and waiting.
There appear to be three major candidates for the medals. They are
- Mbulaeni Mulaudzi (RSA)
Easily the most consistent runner so far in 2005. A winner in Oslo and Helsinki the past
few weeks, holder of the season's best time, and of course he took Olympic silver
last year. A very probable title contender.
- Yuriy Borzakovskiy (RUS)
The reigning Olympic Champion. So far this season his performances were modest, but
in Oslo he was only narrowly beaten. If he can find his true form right on time he
will be hard to beat.
- Wilfred Bungei (KEN)
After an excellent 2nd place at the 2001 WC he looked destined for major titles, but so
far they haven't arrived. Last year his front running in the Olympic final didn't yield
the medal he was looking for. He appears to have concentrated really hard on the Kenyan
Trials and these Championships, so he must be in with a real chance.
But for a final we need eight athletes, and any of those making it must have at least
a medal chance. Here are the most likely candidates for the remaining places:
- Youssef Saad Kamel (BRN)
Rose to fame quickly last season, but so far this year it's far from really exciting.
Can he win the title that his father managed to take twice?
- Amine Laalou (MAR)
He had an excellent season last year, but this year his running has been
very inconsistent.
- Djabir Saïd-Guerni (ALG)
In 2003 he was out of shape - and yet he won. So he is the reigning champion, and it
may give him extra inspiration.
- André Bucher (SUI)
The 2001 World Champion came close to 1:45 in Oslo, for the first time in nearly two years.
His tactical acumen could see him through to the final although a medal looks unlikely.
- William Yiampoy (KEN)
One of the more experienced Kenyans, who already finished 4th in Edmonton four years ago.
- Alfred Yego (KEN)
A young and totally unknown Kenyan, but in Oslo he ran really well. Young Kenyans
often lack experience, resulting in running the heats way too fast and going out the
following day in the semis. Can he avoid falling into that trap?
- Antonio Reina (ESP)
His talent hasn't yet blossomed as expected, and time is beginning to run out if
he is to make it to the real top. A place in the final would definitely boost his confidence.
- Gary Reed (CAN)
In Oslo he set a new national record. That surely is a sign of a good preparation,
so a first major final looks a real possibility
- Khadevis Robinson (USA)
Has run a string of good races, including winning the US trials. Could provide a major upset.
Usually a few outsiders make the 800 final. Among them Rene Herms (GER), who may
even have a fair chance of getting there. Mehdi Baala (FRA) and Rashid Ramzi
(BRN) will both give priority to the 1500m, but they have been entered for the 800 and in
case of failure at the 1500 they may choose to run the 800 as well. Mohammed Al-Salhi
(KSA) set a strong new national record a few weeks ago , but whether he can get past the
semis is another matter. Mansoor Bilal Ali (BRN) is officially only 16 years old,
and with a youth WR he has no lack of talent. Mohcine Chehibi (MAR) was last year's
surprise number four in Athens, although he is another one whose results this season have been
a bit disappointing so far. Also in the Olympic final was the tall Ismail Ahmed Ismail (SUD).
David Krummenacker (USA) will need a return to form. Kevin Hicks (USA) is
a young talent and the third participant from the US. Osmar dos Santos (BRA) is often
clever enough to front-run his heats and semis and make the final as one of the fastest losers.
Finally Samwel Mwera (TAN) could be on the verge of breaking through.
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Prediction before the start of the World Championships:
1. Mbulaeni Mulaudzi
2. Yuriy Borzakovskiy
3. Wilfred Bungei
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