Ethiopia’s Almaz Ayana smashed the world record by running 29:17.46 to win 10K gold at the Olympic Games.
Vivian Cheruiyot won the silver in 29:32.53, and bronze was grabbed by defending Olympic champion Tirunesh Dibaba, who closed in 29:42.56.
U.S. Olympic Trials champion Molly Huddle renewed American record in the process by finishing in 30:13.17, which broke the previous record by a whopping nine seconds.
The race was highly anticipated for breaking records from the before it even started as the participants are all having outstanding record prior to this.
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Alice Aprot Nawowuna of Kenya established an early lead among with a 3:01 initial 1000m split. The world junior bronze medalist from Kenya took the field through 2000m in 5:55, and was followed by the Ethiopian powerhouse duo of world champion Ayana and defending Olympic champion Dibaba. The early move set a precedent for the blazing-fast pace that led the 10K.
Meanwhile, Nawowuna took the gold for 5k time at 14:46. Huddle followed nine seconds behind in 14:55–just over 10 seconds slower than her American record 5K time of 14:42.
As if the pace wasn’t fast enough, Ayana shot to the front and established an even faster pace just after the 5K mark. With nine laps to go, Ayana found herself with a 20-meter lead on the field, and no challengers in sight. The only woman who attempted to come close was reigning world champion Cheriuyot, who trailed Ayana by a sizable amount.
Ayana powered through 8K in 23:25, which is considerably faster than the world-record pace set by Wang Junxia of China in 1993. On her way to setting the world record of 29:31, Junxia ran 23:59 for 8K.
In just her second track 10K ever, Ayana into the record books with a world record of 29:17.46–15 seconds faster than silver medalist Cheruiyot and 42 seconds faster than Junxia’s long-standing mark.