Two breathtaking races were witnessed this morning at the U20 World Championships in Tampere (FIN).
10,000m women track walk
In mid-race lap 22:41.39 sees a large group of 10 athletes, Rachelle de Orbeta (PUR), followed by one of the favorites Glenda Morejon (ECU), Meryem Bekmez (TUR) and Ayse Tekdal (TUR).
In the group also Katie Hayward (AUS), Alegna Gonzalez (MEX), Shi Yuxia (CHN) and Nanako Fujii (JPN).
At 6.000m: the two athletes of Turkey try to force the pace (1,000m in 4:33.25) and move to lead with Meryem Bekmez (TUR) in 27:14.64 followed by Glenda Morejon (ECU), Katie Hayward (AUS), Taylor Ewert (USA), Rachelle de Orbeta (PUR), Alegna Gonzalez (MEX) and Nanako Fujii (JPN).
At 7.000m: she lose some meters Ayse Tekdal (TUR) on the subsequent forcing of Meryem Bekmez (TUR) (1.000m in 4:13.75) which also gains meters on the second Glenda Morejon (31:32.16). Follows Alegna Gonzalez (31:33.40), Nanako Fujii (31.33.67) and Katie Hayward (31.35.21)
At 8.000m: Meryem Bekmez (TUR) is always in the lead (1,000m in 4:20.12), but the advantage over Glenda Morejon (ECU) and Alegna Gonzalez (MEX) gets thinner and less than 2". Nanako Fujii is almost 6" behing (35:54.48), Katie Hayward almost 16" behind (36:04.45)
At 9,000m: Glenda Morejon (ECU) (1,000m in 4:18.89 for a total of 40:08.75) and Alegna Gonzalez (MEX) reached Meryem Bekmez and the three seem to be fighting for the three medals.
Two laps from the end goes to lead with a beautiful walk Alegna Gonzalez (MEX) who at the bell she still forces again the pace and wins in 44:13.88 (best performance world championship) (last 1,000 in 4:04.65).
Second place to Meryem Bekmez (TUR) in 44:17.69 at Turkey's new national record
Third place to Glenda Morejon (ECU) in 44:19.40 at the new continental record of South America
Fourth is Nanako Fujii (JPN) in 45:08.68
Fifth is Katie Hayward (AUS) in 45:10.42

Below the updated World list of all results under 46:00.00
10.000m men track walk
The arrival of this race remembers what happened in Osaka (JPN) in the 2007 World Championships between Francisco Fernandez (ESP) and Hatem Ghoula (TUN): race walk also lives on these incredible arrivals.
In the mid-race lap in 20:43.39 he leads a large group composed of Dominic Samson Ndigiti (KEN), followed by Wang Zhaozhao (CHN), Zhang Yao (CHN), Yosé Ortiz (GUA), Declan Tingay and Kyle Swan (AUS), Mikita Kaliada (BLR), David Hurtado (ECU) and Yohannis Algaw (ETH) who had been the surprise at Bydgoszcz.
At 6,000m: forces the pace David Hurtado (ECU) (1,000m in 4:06.54) and moves to 24.50 90 followed by Dominic Samson Ndigiti (KEN) in 24:51.03. Third is Declan Tingay (AUS) in 24:52.35 followed by Zhang Yao (CHN).
At 7,000m: David Hurtado (ECU) (1,000m in 3:53.19) in 28:43.09 Zhang Yao (CHN), José Ortiz (GUA), followed by Wang Zhaozhao (CHN) and Declan Tingay (AUS). Dominic Samson Ndigiti (KEN) stops to get the shoe in place, loses just under 10 meters and returns to the top positions in 28:58.10.
At 8.000m: David Hurtado (ECU) and Zhang Yao (CHN) decide that now to play the race for the victory and Wang Zhaozhao (CHN) in 32:55.68 and Declan Tingay (AUS) in 32:55.93 that precede Dominic Samson Ndigiti (KEN)
At 9,000m: Force the pace Zhang Yao (CHN) (1,000m in 3:53.00 for a total of 36:37.37) and earn 1:28 on David Hurtado (ECU): it seems to be made for gold. Behind José Ortiz (GUA) in 36:44.02. More distant Wang Zhaozhao (CHN) in 36:55.86 and Declan Tingay (AUS) in 36:57.14
But David Hurtado reaches Zhang Yao before the last lap and the cards are shuffled for a while. At 350m Zhang Yao vorces again and earns about ten meters that should guarantee him the victory, but he make the same mistake that Hatem Ghoula committed in Osaka 2007, he begins to celebrate too soon. The athlete of Ecuador insists, almost does not believe in his eyes and reaches the Chinese on the finish line.
This time the photo finish is in favour of the Chinese for 6/1000 of a second.
Victory to Zhang Yao (CHN) in 40:32.06 new personal best
Second place to David Hurtado (TUR) in 40: 32.6 also for him personal best
Third place to José Ortiz (GUA) in 40:45:26 also for him personal best
Fourth place to Declan Tingay (AUS) in 40:49:72 new continental record of Oceania U20
Fifth place to Wang Zhaozhao (CHN) in 41:04.22

Below the updated World list of all results under 42:00.00
| | MARK | COMPETITOR | DOB | NAT | VENUE | DATE |
| | | | | | | |
| 1 | 40:17.82 | Sho SAKAZAKI | 22 FEB 1999 | JPN | Wakayama (JPN) | 21 JAN 2018 |
| 2 | 40:32.06 | Yao ZHANG | 11 JAN 2000 | CHN | Tampere (FIN) | 14 JUL 2018 |
| 2 | 40:32.06 | David HURTADO | 21 APR 1999 | ECU | Tampere (FIN) | 14 JUL 2018 |
| 4 | 40:45.26 | José ORTIZ | 08 MAR 2000 | GUA | Tampere (FIN) | 14 JUL 2018 |
| 5 | 40:49.72 | Declan TINGAY | 06 FEB 1999 | AUS | Tampere (FIN) | 14 JUL 2018 |
| 6 | 40:55.14 | Tatsuhiko NAGAYAMA | 24 DEC 1999 | JPN | Tokyo (JPN) | 06 MAY 2018 |
| 7 | 41:04.22 | Zhaozhao WANG | 01 SEP 1999 | CHN | Tampere (FIN) | 14 JUL 2018 |
| 8 | 41:24.12 | Kyle SWAN | 28 MAR 1999 | AUS | Tampere (FIN) | 14 JUL 2018 |
| 9 | 41:30.52 | Dominic Samson NDIGITI | 02 APR 2000 | KEN | Tampere (FIN) | 14 JUL 2018 |
| 10 | 41:51.76 | Mikita KALIADA | 15 JUL 2000 | BLR | Tampere (FIN) | 14 JUL 2018 |
The Italians in the race and other brief considerations
Riccardo Orsoni finishes sixteenth in 42:53.76 touching his personal best of Modena (June 23, 2018) of 42:51.47, which says a lot about the actual values of the international race walk.
Nicolas Fanelli who seemed to have improved in the technique at Agropoli last June 3, 2018 runs into three red cards (bent knee) and ends the race at 28th place in 45:54.09 after the usual penalty of 60". It would still be 27th far from his personal best of 44:02.21.
In the U20 women's competition the first eight positions were occupied by:
- 2 places from Asia
- 2 places from the NACAC
- 2 places from Europe
- 1 place from South America (Consudatle)
- 1 place from Oceania
- no place for Africa
In the men's U20 race the first eight positions were occupied by:
- 3 places from Asia
- 2 places from Oceania
- 1 place from the NACAC
- 1 place from South America (Consudatle)
- 1 place from Africa
- no place for Europe.
(cover photo by Getty Images, other photos by Giancarlo Colombo for Fidal)
Full results in the section Results or directly download from this link: click here
Photo album: click here
(from IAAF web-site)
10,000m women track walk
The order from the U20 10km at the IAAF World Race Walking Team Championships in Taicang, China in May was repeated on the track as the 10,000m race walk reached a thrilling three-way climax on the fifth morning of competition at the IAAF World U20 Championships Tampere 2018.
Mexico's Alegna Gonzalez stayed away from the lead until the final 600 metres but the 19-year-old timed her effort brilliantly, pulling away from Ecuador's Glenda Morejon and Turkey's Meryem Bekmez to win her second major title of the season in a world U20 leading time of 44:13.88.
On a warm morning in Tampere, Puerto Rico's Rachelle de Orbeta staked out her claim from the gun and led by 11 seconds by the two kilometre checkpoint in 8:54.19. The pack which included all of the medal favourites --and the three eventual medallists-- were content to bide their time and de Orbeta was swallowed up by the pursuers just after the three kilometre mark.
After the halfway point was reached in 22:41.39, Bekmez was the first of the principal contenders to make a show, making an early bid for the title with 11 laps to go. The world U18 silver medallist over 5000m led by four seconds at the seven kilometre mark courtesy of a quick kilometre of 4:13.75 but Gonzalez and Morejon moved up as a pair and were back in title contention after eight kilometres.
Perhaps remembering how quickly Gonzalez finished to beat her in Taicang two months ago, Morejon began to press --but not hard enough-- with five laps remaining as Bekmez and Gonzalez sat comfortably in her slipstream. With one-and-a-half laps remaining, the Mexican moved to the front for the very first time which put paid to Morejon's title chances. Bekmez resisted for longer but a gap began to open up to Gonzalez with 300 metres remaining. Maintaining her technique all the way to the line, Gonzalez --who didn't receive any warnings from the judges-- was rewarded with her second major age-group accolade of the summer, also with a North American U20 record of 44:13.88.
"I'm happy with how the race went. It's been a really good season, exactly what I hoped for. This was a strategical competition and I had a lot of fuel in the tank in the end of the race," said Gonzalez, also expressing a penchant for the warm conditions. "This was perfect weather for me."
The silver and bronze medal positions remained in flux for the last 300 metres but Bekmez spurted again with 120 metres, opening up a comfortable gap on a tiring Morejon, 44:17.69 to 44:19.40. Bekmez set a Turkish U20 record while Morejon was rewarded with a South American U20 record on her 10,000m track debut.
"I only turned 18 in May so I think I have a long path ahead of me. Next my coach wants me to compete in Peru to improve my marks for the Tokyo Olympics in 2020," she said.
Seventeen of the top 20 finishers all set lifetime bests including early leader de Orbeta, seventh in a national U20 record of 45:51.58.
Steven Mills for the IAAF
10,000m men track walk
After covering 25 laps of the track in uncomfortably warm conditions, just six thousandths of a second separated the top two finishers at the end of the men’s 10,000m race walk at the IAAF World U20 Championships Tampere 2018.
Zhang Yao was bidding to become the first man in history to complete a full set of global age-group race walking titles. The Chinese teenager had already won two out of a possible three, having triumphed at the IAAF World U18 Championships Nairobi 2017 and in the U20 10km event at the IAAF World Race Walking Team Championships Taicang 2018.
And for 9,980 metres of today’s 10,000m race walk, he looked well on his way to pick up a third global title. Ecuador’s David Hurtado, though, produced an inspired effort down the final home straight and crossed the line level with Zhang.
A nervous wait followed. Zhang had punched the air with delight as he crossed the line, but the longer it took for the results to become official, the more unsure he became about whether he had taken the gold medal.
After a couple of minutes, it was finally confirmed: Zhang had won the title in 40:32.06. Hurtado was given the same time in second place, but just six thousandths of a second separated them in the photo finish: 40:32.054 to 40:32.060.
The race got underway at a steady pace. Japan’s Sho Sakazaki led during the early stages, taking the field through 1000 metres in 4:03.30 and 2000 metres in 8:17.33.
Kenya’s world U18 bronze medallist Dominic Samson Ndigiti then led for several laps with Sakazaki, Japanese compatriot Tatsuhiko Nagayama, Poland’s Lukasz Niedzialek and David Kuster of France all near the front.
Australia’s Kyle Swan made a brief appearance at the head of the pack, while his teammate Declan Tingay was a few strides back in the middle of the leading group. By 4000 metres, reached in 16:35.20, Zhang and Chinese teammate Wang Zhaozhao were right behind Ndigiti, so too were Guatemala’s Jose Ortiz, Australian duo Swan and Tingay, plus Hurtado.
Little had changed in the positions of the leaders at half way, which Ndigiti passed in 20:43.39. Hurtado made his move soon after, though, and the pace gradually started to pick up.
A 3:52.19 split between 6000 and 7000 metres blew the field apart, leaving just Hurtado, Zhang and Ortiz out in front. Ortiz stuck with the leading pair for another 1000 metres before he started to struggle, but he was relatively safe in third place.
Hurtado and Zhang, meanwhile, continued to play a cat-and-mouse game during the closing stages. Zhang hit the front with three laps left, but the Ecuadorian went back into the lead with 700 metres left.
As the bell sounded for the final lap, Zhang went back into the lead and opened up a four-metre lead on Hurtado. Possibly thinking his lead was bigger than it actually was, Zhang appeared to ease off slightly on the final home straight. Hurtado picked up his cadence and started to close in on the Chinese leader.
The race reached its exciting conclusion with the pair crossing the line in unison before Zhang was later declared the winner.
“I’m quite surprised I won,” said Zhang. “I have worked hard for this for seven years. This title means a lot to me.”
Although slightly disappointed to miss out on the gold medal, Hurtado was proud of his achievement.
“My goal was to win the gold medal but it became difficult for me as I got two yellow cards, so I took it easy up to 8km and then tried as much as I could,” he said. “It was very hot and I felt dehydrated during the race.”
With Ortiz holding on to take bronze with 40:45.06, all three medallists were rewarded with PBs. Tingay was fourth in 40:49.72, breaking the Oceanian U20 record that had previously been held by Olympic bronze medallist Dane Bird-Smith.
Jon Mulkeen for the IAAF
