The must-watch events at the World Championships

British 800m runners Georgia Hunter Bell, Keely Hodgkinson and Jemma Reekie Image source, Getty Images
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Great Britain won 10 athletics medals at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games

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The World Athletics Championships get under way in Tokyo on Saturday, beginning nine days of captivating drama featuring the world's biggest track and field stars.

There are 147 medals to be awarded across 49 events in an action-packed schedule in the Japanese capital, with a total prize pot of $8.5m (£6.3m) on offer.

Here are some of the events you definitely do not want to miss.

Women's 800m

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'Back with a bang!' - Hodgkinson sets world lead time to win 800m

Thursday, 18 September 11:55 BST - heats; Friday, 19 September 12:45 BST - semi-finals; Sunday, 21 September 11:35 BST - final

Despite being forced to wait 12 months to compete for the first time as Olympic champion because of injury, Great Britain's Keely Hodgkinson will line up in Tokyo as the gold medal favourite.

The 23-year-old made her return just four weeks before the World Championships, after two torn hamstrings, but clocked the fastest time of 2025 in her comeback and backed that up with another win at last month's Lausanne Diamond League.

Olympic 1500m bronze medallist Georgia Hunter Bell has decided to focus her full attention on the 800m, joining training partner Hodgkinson and fellow Briton Jemma Reekie in the battle for the podium.

Among the athletes hoping to deny them will be Kenya's reigning champion Mary Moraa, Ethiopia's Olympic silver medallist Tsige Duguma and Swiss athlete Audrey Werro.

Men's 100m

Noah Lyles wins the men's 100m final at the Paris 2024 OlympicsImage source, Getty Images
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Noah Lyles won Olympic 100m gold by five-thousandths of a second from Jamaica's Kishane Thompson in a dramatic photo finish at the Stade de France

Saturday, 13 September 12:35 BST - heats; Sunday, 14 September 12:43 BST - semi-finals and 14:20 - final

American Noah Lyles seeks a third consecutive global 100m title after following up world glory in Budapest with a dramatic Olympic gold at Paris 2024.

The 28-year-old edged out Jamaica's Kishane Thompson in the fastest race in history last summer but his season's best of 9.90 seconds ranks just 11th in the world this year.

Thompson arrives as 2025's fastest man in 9.75, while fellow Jamaican Oblique Seville beat Lyles comprehensively in August.

There will also be attention on Australian teenager Gout Gout, who has been likened to sprint icon Usain Bolt.

Zharnel Hughes, the 2023 bronze medallist and with a best time this year of 9.91, leads British interest as he targets a second global medal.

Women's 100m

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GB's Neita finishes third in 100m as USA's Jefferson-Wooden wins race

Saturday, 13 September 10:55 BST - heats; Sunday, 14 September 12:20 BST - semi-finals and 14:13 BST - final

St Lucia's Olympic 100m champion Julien Alfred will target a sprint double in the absence of injured American 200m gold medallist Gabby Thomas - the only athlete able to deny her that achievement last summer.

American Sha'Carri Richardson will aim to retain her world title after taking Olympic silver, but it is Paris 2024 bronze medallist Melissa Jefferson-Wooden who has been the standout performer this season.

Not only has Jefferson-Wooden run an unmatched 10.65 seconds, but she also boasts five of the six fastest times this year - with her fourth-fastest tied with Alfred's best of 10.75 secs.

Great Britain's former world 200m champion Dina Asher-Smith, Daryl Neita and Amy Hunt will each hope to be in the medal mix, as will Jamaican legend Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce at her final major championship.

Men's 1500m

American Cole Hocker stuns Josh Kerr in a sprint finish for Olympic goldImage source, Getty Images
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Cole Hocker edged Josh Kerr in a sprint for Olympic gold at Paris 2024

Sunday, 14 September 01:35 BST - heats; Monday, 15 September 13:30 BST - semi-finals; Wednesday, 17 September 14:20 BST - final

Josh Kerr and Jakob Ingebrigtsen meet for their latest duel, this time fully alert to the threats around them.

Defending champion Kerr emulated British team-mate Jake Wightman in beating Ingebrigtsen to world gold two years ago.

But American Cole Hocker delivered a surprise twist to the latest showdown between the two fierce rivals as he pipped Kerr to gold in an Olympic record time.

One of the most enthralling events of recent years appears wide open, with Ingebrigtsen's season disrupted by injury and Olympic bronze medallist Yared Nuguse failing to qualify.

Women's heptathlon

Katarina Johnson-Thompson and Nafi Thiam laugh together after the Olympic 800mImage source, Getty Images
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Katarina Johnson-Thompson won her first Olympic medal at Paris 2024

Friday, 19 September 09:33 BST - 100m hurdles; 10:20 BST - high jump; 12:30 BST - shot put; 13:38 BST - 200m; Saturday, 20 September 03:30 BST - long jump; 11:00 BST - javelin; 13:11 BST - 800m

Great Britain's Katerina Johnson-Thompson and Belgian Nafi Thiam go head-to-head as both seek to become three-time world champions in Tokyo.

The pair have split the past four world golds between them, with Johnson-Thompson triumphing as Thiam missed the 2023 championships through injury.

Thiam became a three-time Olympic champion last year, edging Johnson-Thompson to take gold by just 36 points in a dramatic concluding 800m in Paris.

After ending her wait for an Olympic medal, Johnson-Thompson will hope to again go toe-to-toe with Thiam at the stadium where she suffered injury heartbreak at the Games four years ago.

Men's 400m

Matthew Hudson-Smith crosses the line behind Quincy Hall at the Paris 2024 GamesImage source, Getty Images
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Matthew Hudson-Smith missed out on Olympic 400m gold by four-hundredths of a second in Paris

Sunday, 14 September 10:35 BST - heats; Tuesday, 16 September 13:35 BST - semi-finals; Thursday, 18 September 14:10 BST - final

Will Tokyo be the scene of Matthew Hudson-Smith's crowning moment?

The British 30-year-old has gone agonisingly close to gold at the past two global championships, missing out to American Quincy Hall by four-hundredths of a second at the Olympics after finishing within 0.09secs of the world title 12 months earlier.

His European record time of 43.44 seconds at Paris 2024 made him the fifth-quickest 400m runner in history, but three men have gone faster than his season's best of 44.10 - including American Diamond League champion Jacory Patterson.

British team-mate Charlie Dobson will target the podium after stunning Hudson-Smith at July's London Diamond League, taking victory in a personal best 44.14.

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