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McLaughlin-Levrone runs fastest women’s 400m in 40 years to claim world gold

  • US runner takes title in 47.78 sec at World Championship

  • Botswana’s Busang Collen Kebinatshipi wins men’s 400m

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone ran the fastest women’s 400 metres in 40 years to claim world championship gold in 47.78sec on Thursday and complete her transition from the one-lap hurdles in emphatic style. The American stormed through the Tokyo rain to add a first global gold in the flat 400m to the two Olympic and one world titles she won over the hurdles.

Not since the Iron Curtain cast a shadow over Europe, and sport was seen as war by other means across the Eastern bloc, has a woman run a 400m as fast as McLaughlin-Levrone did on this wet and wild Tokyo night.

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© Photograph: Dylan Martinez/Reuters

© Photograph: Dylan Martinez/Reuters

© Photograph: Dylan Martinez/Reuters

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Jake Wightman’s ‘perfect fairytale’ denied on the line by Isaac Nader surge

  • Silver medal for Briton in Tokyo as injury thwarts Kerr

  • Just 0.02sec separates first from second in 1500m final

When Jake Wightman sat on the bus to the 1500m heats at the World Athletics Championships on Sunday, he told himself that if he failed to make it through he was done. He was 31. His body was breaking down so often that he felt he had post‑traumatic stress disorder. And he feared his best days were behind him. Yet, just three days later, what had seemed like a final hurrah became a glorious resurrection.

What a fighter. What an athlete. What a 1500m final. Most expected this to be a shootout between Britain’s defending champion, Josh Kerr, and the young Dutch star Niels Laros. Instead the script was flipped on its head and ripped into pieces. Twice.

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© Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

© Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

© Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

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McLaughlin-Levrone throws down gauntlet to Kipyegon in race to be greatest

  • American is targeting the 40-year 400m world record

  • Kipyegon is first woman to win four 1500m world titles

First Tokyo witnessed the spectacular. Then came a divine act of Faith.

In the women’s 400m, Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone ran one of the fastest times in history, easing down, to raise the question of whether one of the oldest – and most controversial – track and field records might fall this week.

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© Photograph: Yuichi Yamazaki/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Yuichi Yamazaki/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Yuichi Yamazaki/AFP/Getty Images

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Oblique Seville backs current sprint crop to get down to 9.6sec but says Bolt will always be best

  • World champion says ‘only matter of time’ to run 9.6sec

  • Seville dismisses effect of Noah Lyles’s mind games

On Sunday night, Oblique Seville became the first Jamaican to win the men’s 100m world title since Usain Bolt. But it turns out the 24-year-old’s mind is just as quick as his blistering leg speed.

In an interview to celebrate his victory, Seville was asked if he were to design a sprinter what would he look like. The questioner expected a long answer. Perhaps Justin Gatlin’s start, Michael Johnson’s mentality, and Bolt’s leg speed. But one word came back from Seville’s mouth almost instantaneously. “Usain.”

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© Photograph: Andrej Isaković/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Andrej Isaković/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Andrej Isaković/AFP/Getty Images

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