Summary

  • Live BBC Two coverage as some of the biggest superstars in world athletics descend on the Swedish capital.

  1. Diamond League calendar 2025published at 17:34 British Summer Time 14 June

    26 April - Xiamen, China

    03 May - Keqiao, China

    16 May - Doha, Qatar

    25 May - Rabat, Morocco

    06 June - Rome, Italy

    12 June - Oslo, Norway

    15 June - Stockholm, Sweden

    20 June - Paris, France

    05 July - Eugene, USA

    11 July - Monaco

    19 July - London, England

    16 August - Silesia, Poland

    20 August - Lausanne, Switzerland

    22 August - Brussels, Belgium

    27-28 August - Zurich, Switzerland

  2. Asher-Smith third as Olympic champion Alfred wins in Oslopublished at 17:34 British Summer Time 14 June

    Media caption,

    Asher-Smith third as Olympic champion Alfred wins in Oslo

    Watch as Great Britain's Dina Asher-Smith finishes third in the women's 100m at the Diamond League in Oslo as Olympic champion Julian Alfred takes victory.

  3. Hodgkinson's 2025 return delayed by injury setbackpublished at 17:33 British Summer Time 14 June

    Keely HodgkinsonImage source, Getty Images

    Olympic 800m champion Keely Hodgkinson has pulled out of Sunday's Stockholm Diamond League event after suffering a setback in her recovery from a hamstring injury.

    The 23-year-old was ruled out of the Keely Klassic - a new athletics event she founded - in February after tearing her hamstring.

    She had been due to return on Sunday in Sweden for her first competitive outing of 2025.

    The race would have seen Hodgkinson come up against Olympic rivals Tsige Duguma of Ethopia and Mary Moraa of Kenya, who won silver and bronze in Paris respectively.

    Click here to read more about this story.

  4. How does the Diamond League work?published at 17:29 British Summer Time 14 June

    Athletes will compete for points at the 14 regular series meetings which started in April and run through to August.

    Points are awarded on a scale from eight for first place to one for eighth place.

    After the 14th meeting in Brussels, the top six ranked athletes in the field events, the top eight in track events from 100m up to 800m, and the top 10 in the distances from 1500m upwards qualify for the final.

    The two-day finals are a winner-takes-all competition to be crowned Diamond League champion in each event.

  5. Who's competing in Stockholm and when?published at 17:29 British Summer Time 14 June

    BBC iPlayer

    • 16:17 BST - men's pole vault featuring world record holder Armand Duplantis
    • 17:04 BST - women's 400m hurdles featuring world champion Femke Bol
    • 17:20 BST - women's 3,000m featuring Britons Innes Fitzgerald, Katie Snowden and Hannah Nuttall
    • 17:23 BST - women's long jump featuring Olympic champion Tara Davis-Woodhall and world champion Ivana Spanovic
    • 17:48 BST - men's 800m featuring Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi
    • 17:55 BST - men's discus featuring Britain's Lawrence Okoye
    • 18:00 BST - women's 400m featuring Britain's world indoor champion Amber Anning and Ireland's Rhasidat Adeleke
    • 18:09 BST - men's 5,000m featuring Olympic 1500m champion Cole Hocker
    • 18:31 BST - women's 800m featuring Britons Georgia Hunter-Bell and Jemma Reekie, and world champion Mary Moraa
    • 18:42 BST - women's 100m featuring Britons Daryll Neita and Dina Asher-Smith, and Olympic champion Julien Alfred
    • 18:52 BST - men's 400m hurdles featuring Britain's Alastair Chalmers, world record holder Karsten Warholm and Olympic champion Rai Benjamin
  6. Hunter-Bell among GB stars at Stockholm Diamond Leaguepublished at 17:28 British Summer Time 14 June

    BBC Sport

    Georgia Hunter-BellImage source, Getty Images

    Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson's return from injury has been delayed but several other British stars are set to compete at the Stockholm Diamond League on Sunday.

    Hodgkinson, 23, was preparing to compete for the first time since winning her first global 800m title at Paris 2024 but she has suffered a setback in her recovery from the hamstring injury she sustained in February.

    In her absence, Olympic 1500m bronze medallist Georgia Hunter-Bell and Jemma Reekie contest the women's 800m against Kenya's world champion Mary Moraa.

    Sprinters Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita come up against Olympic champion Julien Alfred in the 100m, while world indoor champion Amber Anning and Ireland's Rhasidat Adeleke race over 400m in the Swedish capital.

    Innes Fitzgerald, Katie Snowden and Hannah Nuttall are in 3,000m action, with hurdler Alastair Chalmers and discus thrower Lawrence Okoye also competing.

    Sweden's pole vault world record holder Armand Duplantis, Femke Bol and Karsten Warholm are among those also competing as athletes continue to build towards September's World Championships in Tokyo.