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Tokyo 2025 day 8 preview: Wanyonyi eyes gold, Kipyegon, Chebet face off

Sports · Dennis Masinde · September 20, 2025
Tokyo 2025 day 8 preview: Wanyonyi eyes gold, Kipyegon, Chebet face off
Kenya's Emmanuel Wanyonyi will be red hot favourite for 800 metre Gold PHOTO/World Athletics
In Summary

If ever there were a case in which two people deserve Gold it is Kipyegon and Chebet, but one of the two great athletes will end the day supreme in what should be a dramatic race at a fully sold out national stadium in Tokyo Japan.

Day eight of the 2025 Tokyo World Athletics Championships promises to be one for the ages as a massive battle looms in the women's 5000 metre final, pitting the excellent duo of Faith Kipyegon and Beatrice Chebet against each other.

If ever there were a case in which two people deserve Gold, it is this one, but one of the two great athletes will end the day supreme in what should be a dramatic race at a fully sold-out national stadium in Tokyo, Japan.

Kenya will also have valid interests in the 800 metre gold medal, with Emmanuel Wanyonyi, the Olympic champion, the hot favourite to collect top spot.

Below is a roundup of what to expect on day 8 of the World Championships.

Clash of the heptathlon greats

The three-way showdown between defending champion Katarina Johnson-Thompson, Olympic champion Nafi Thiam and world leader Anna Hall has so far lived up to expectations in the women’s heptathlon.

Hall goes into the second day with a comfortable lead, but Thiam has some strong events to come. And Johnson-Thompson won’t want to give up her title without a fight.

Two-lap showdown

The men's 800m has witnessed unprecedented depth in recent years, but Saturday’s final will be more about medals and places than fast times.

Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi and defending champion Marco Arop both advanced, but Spain’s Mohamed Attaoui and Ireland’s Cian McPhillips both looked good in the semifinals.

Kipyegon and Chebet chase second golds

Teammates and close friends Faith Kipyegon and Beatrice Chebet have already won the 1500m and 10,000m titles, respectively, at these championships. Both toe the line for the women's 5000m final on Saturday, seeking another gold medal.

But it won’t be just a two-woman race. Gudaf Tsegay, winner of this title in 2022, will provide stiff opposition, as will Italy’s double Olympic medallist Nadia Battocletti.

New champion crowned in women’s javelin

World and Olympic champion Haruka Kitaguchi, having struggled with injury in recent months, missed the cut from qualifying and won’t feature in the women's javelin final. But it means a new global champion will be crowned.

Adriana Vilagos threw farthest in qualifying with 66.06m.

Australia’s Mackenzie Little, European champion Victoria Hudson and 2023 world silver medallist Flor Denis Ruiz Hurtado all made it through to what looks set to be a wide-open final.

Strong medal chances for hosts in 20km race walk

Japan may have waved goodbye to the chance of a medal in the women’s javelin, but they’ll start Saturday with strong prospects of a podium finish in both the men’s and women’s 20km race walks.

World record-holder and two-time world champion Toshikazu Yamanishi leads the men’s field. Maria Perez, winner of the 35km at the start of the championships, is targeting another double in the women’s 20km and will be up against Italy’s Antonella Palmisano and Japan’s Nanako Fujii.

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