Summary

  • GB's Molly Caudery second in women's pole vault with 4.80m best

  • Daryll Neita third behind Americans Melissa Jefferson-Wooden & Sha'Carri Richardson in women's 100m, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce fourth

  • Charlie Dobson finishes third in men's 400m

  • Laura Muir places fourth in women's 1500m with season's best

  • Penultimate meeting of Diamond League season with Zurich finals next week

  1. Bring on the finalspublished at 20:59 British Summer Time

    And that is all from Brussels!

    The 2025 Diamond League concludes next week, when the finals are held in Zurich on Wednesday and Thursday.

    Live coverage of day one on Wednesday will be on BBC Two from 16:30-18:30 BST, with streams also available on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and app.

    Then, on Thursday, coverage is available 19:00-21:00 on BBC Two, iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and app.

    We'll catch you then.

  2. Postpublished at 20:57 British Summer Time

    Mixed 4x100m relay

    It is the Netherlands who take victory in the final event of the evening in a time of 40.96 seconds.

    Great Britain's Ethan Harbias-Wiltshire, Faith Akinbileje, Jeriel Quainoo and Joy Eze place fourth in 41.82 behind a couple of Belgium teams in a strong finish for the home nation.

  3. Postpublished at 20:54 British Summer Time

    Mixed 4x100m relay

    A youthful British quartet features Ethan Harbias-Wiltshire, Faith Akinbileje, Jeriel Quainoo and Joy Eze in this mixed 4x100m relay.

    Away we go in the final race of the evening!

  4. Postpublished at 20:53 British Summer Time

    Women's pole vault

    Katie Moon has to settle for a season's best of 4.85m and a Diamond League victory in Brussels as she misses her final attempt at 4.90m.

    It brings Moon level with Molly Caudery, second tonight, for the third-best performance this year with just three weeks until the World Championships.

  5. Postpublished at 20:48 British Summer Time

    Katie Moon, having cleared a season's best 4.85m to take victory over Britain's Molly Caudery, has a go at 4.90m but fails on her first couple of attempts.

    Elsewhere, Cuba's Leyanis Perez holds the lead in the closing stages of the women's triple jump.

    The final event on the track is coming up soon, with British involvement in the mixed 4x100m.

    Katie MoonImage source, Getty Images
  6. Patterson wins, Dobson thirdpublished at 20:44 British Summer Time

    Men's 400m

    American Jacory Patterson obliterates the field to win in 44.05 seconds!

    What a performance. One of only three men to go sub-44 this year and he looks like he will be a major contender in Tokyo.

    The fast-finishing Charlie Dobson makes ground up late on but must settle for third in 44.81, behind American Vernon Norwood (44.62).

  7. Dobson aims for another standout winpublished at 20:39 British Summer Time

    Men's 400m

    Charlie DobsonImage source, Getty Images

    Charlie Dobson took a magnificent Diamond League win on home soil in London when he overhauled the leaders - including Britain's Olympic and world silver medallist Matthew Hudson-Smith - in a brilliant finish.

    The European silver medallist ran a personal best 44.14 seconds that day - a time bettered by only six men this year.

    The 25-year-old will test himself against two men who have run sub-44 in American Jacory Patterson and Zambian Muzala Samukonga.

  8. Moon beats Caudery to pole vault winpublished at 20:37 British Summer Time

    Women's pole vault

    Molly Caudery can't find a way over 4.85m - but she'll surely be very pleased with the five clean jumps she produced before then.

    American Katie Moon shows exactly why she's the world champion as she makes it over with her third and final attempt to deny Caudery.

  9. Postpublished at 20:35 British Summer Time

    Women's one mile steeplechase

    Bahrain's Olympic and world 3,000m steeplechase champion Winfred Yavi takes a comfortable victory in the new one mile steeplechase event in four minutes 40.13.

    A 4:40 mile, over barriers. Ridiculous. It did look as though the lactic hit the athletes hard in the closing stages there.

  10. Postpublished at 20:32 British Summer Time

    Women's pole vault

    Both Molly Caudery and Katie Moon have failed on their first attempts at 4.85m.

    One more to come!

  11. Jefferson-Wooden beats quality 100m line-uppublished at 20:30 British Summer Time

    Women's 100m

    In case you missed it earlier, American Melissa Jefferson-Wooden produced another statement performance before the World Championships as she dominated a high-quality women's 100m.

    World champion Sha'Carri Richardson had to settle for a distant second, ahead of Britain's Daryll Neita and Jamaican great Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce.

    Media caption,

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

  12. Postpublished at 20:28 British Summer Time

    We've got the brand new one-mile women's steeplechase up shortly on the track.

    That will be followed by the men's 400m, featuring GB's Charlie Dobson, and a 4x100m mixed relay to complete the action.

    The women's pole vault continues, while there's more field action with the women's triple jump and men's javelin ongoing.

  13. Caudery and Moon battling for victorypublished at 20:24 British Summer Time

    Women's pole vault

    It's shaping up to be a very good night for Molly Caudery.

    She records a fifth first-time clearance of the session as she flies over 4.80m, leaving only the Briton and American world champion Katie Moon in the competition.

    Caudery will have a go at equalling her 2025 best of 4.85m next.

    Molly CauderyImage source, EPA
  14. Laros wins men's 1500mpublished at 20:20 British Summer Time

    Men's 1500m

    Huge finish by Dutchman Niels Laros!

    He comes through brilliantly to win in 3:30.58, edging out Kenyan teenager Phanuel Koech as American Olympic medallist Yared Nuguse takes third.

    Jake Wightman crosses the line in ninth in a time of 3:32.95, one place ahead of Neil Gourley who clocks 3:33.21.

    Niels LarosImage source, Getty Images
  15. Postpublished at 20:18 British Summer Time

    Men's 1500m

    Jake Wightman and Neil Gourley are both towards the back of the pack.

    The pace slows up a bit and Kenya's Abel Kipsang is tripped and is out of contention.

    Teenager Phanuel Koech moves to the front...

  16. Postpublished at 20:16 British Summer Time

    Men's 1500m

    It's another stacked field, and it's a big line-up too with 18 athletes on the start line

    There'll be a fair few elbows coming out in the early stages of this one...

  17. Wightman and Gourley in 1500mpublished at 20:13 British Summer Time

    Men's 1500m

    Jake WightmanImage source, Getty Images

    While Neil Gourley confirmed his place in the British team for Tokyo by winning the 1500m at the UK Championships, Jake Wightman will hope to be selected despite being forced to miss the trials with illness.

    The 2022 world champion is looking to build his case with a strong showing in Brussels tonight, before the British team is confirmed next week.

    American Yared Nuguse is another athlete with plenty on the line. The Olympic bronze medallist failed to qualify at the US trials and must book his place in the Diamond League final to give himself the chance of winning a wildcard for the World Championships.

  18. Ngetich wins as FitzGerald 15thpublished at 20:10 British Summer Time

    Women's 5,000m

    Agnes Jebet Ngetich holds on comfortably to win in 14:24.99, having initially gone out at sub-14 minute pace and attempting to hang on solo for the majority of the race.

    British teenager Innes FitzGerald crosses the line 15th in 14:48.84.

    Agnes Jebet NgetichImage source, Getty Images
  19. Postpublished at 20:07 British Summer Time

    Women's 5,000m

    Agnes Jebet Ngetich's lead has come down to 80 metres - but that is still some lead.

    Innes FitzGerald looks like she's having to dig really deep now at the back of the race as they approach the bell.

  20. Postpublished at 20:05 British Summer Time

    Women's 5,000m

    Agnes Jebet Ngetich's personal best is 14:01.29, less than three seconds slower than Beatrice Chebet's 5,000m world record.

    The Kenyan is beginning to slow with 1,000m to go as she continues to run a race completely on her own and it looks like her hopes of getting that mark have faded.

    Still, she looks like she'll definitely get the win tonight.

    NgetichImage source, Getty Images