Summary

  • Mo Farah wins final track race to clinch 5,000m Diamond League title

  • World champion Muktar Edris falls at finish and comes third

  • 16 series champions decided at Zurich Diamond League meeting

  • CJ Ujah beats Justin Gatlin to win 100m Diamond League trophy

  • Miller-Uibo beats Thompson, Ta Lou & Schippers in 200m

  • Sally Pearson wins 100m hurdles

  • Isaac Makwala wins 400m final

  • GB women second in 4x100m

  1. Postpublished at 20:15 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Men's 5000m

    They have just gone through the first 400m in around 60 seconds.

    Would you still be alongside the great man?

    Watch below as poor unsuspecting members of the public attempt to match Farah's 5000m pace on a treadmill.

  2. Watch the World Championship 5,000m finalpublished at 20:14 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    This is the defeat that Mo Farah is attempting to avenge.

    Muktar Edris of Ethiopia, who beat Farah in the London 5,00m final and celebrated with his own Mobot, is here.

    Paul Chelimo of the USA, world championship bronze medallist, is also present.

    Media caption,

    GB's Farah ends career with world silver in 5,000m

  3. Ujah winspublished at 20:09 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Men's 100m

    The biggest win of his career and a whopping great payday for Great Britain's CJ Ujah who leans to pip Ben Youssef Meite to win in a season's best of 9.97.

    You can't say he doesn't deserve it either. That is his fifth win of the season on the Diamond League circuit.

    American Ronnie Baker was third and Olympic champ Justin Gatlin was only fourth in 10.04 - perhaps some fatigue after beating Bolt?

    Adam Gemili was down in eighth in 10.13.

  4. Next uppublished at 20:09 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Men's 100m final

    World champion Justin Gatlin is in lane three and gets a far healthier reception than he did in victory in London as he is announced to the crowd.

    Also in the field is Jamaica's Asafa Powell with CJ Ujah and Adam Gemili representing Britain.

    Usain Bolt was last spotted in a nightclub in Mykonos.

  5. Barshim winspublished at 20:06 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Men's high jump

    World champion Mutaz Essa Barshim takes the high jump title with a leap of 2.36m.

    Syria's Majd Eddin Ghazal was second with Bohdan Bondarenko of Ukraine third.

    Britain's Robbie Grabarz was fourth after failing at 2.28m.

  6. Semenya winspublished at 20:00 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Women's 800m

    She just makes it look so easy.

    Caster Semenya puts her foot down with 250m to go and neither Sifan Hassan or Francine Niyonsaba could stay with her.

    A winning time of 1:55.84, which is about three quarters of a second off her winning time in London.

  7. Next uppublished at 19:59 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Women's 800m

    Media caption,

    Gold for Semenya in the 800m final

    Next up, world and Olympic champion Caster Semenya in her specialist subject.

    It will take a spectacular run to upset the odds and deny the South African the big novelty cheque.

    If anyone has got it in them it might be Francine Niyonsaba of Burundi who has two wins on the Diamond League circuit this season.

  8. Coe presses the fleshpublished at 19:56 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Merlene Ottey is 57. She competed in the 2012 European Championships for Slovenia.

  9. McMaster winspublished at 19:51 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Men's 400m hurdles

    Kyron McMaster looked the class of the field powering clear after Norway's Karsten Warholm faltered at the eighth barrier to take victory in 48.07.

    It was a new national record for Warholm regardless in 48.22 seconds. Kerron Clement was fourth with Jack Green sixth.

  10. Next uppublished at 19:48 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Men's 400m hurdles

    Media caption,

    Norway's Warholm wins gold in the 400m hurdles

    Norway's Karsten Warholm was one of the surpise stars of London 2017 as he unseated American Olympic champion Kerron Clement in dramatic style.

    Watch out for British Virgin Island's Kyron McMaster though who is the fastest man in the world this year, but failed to make the final in London after he was too eager out of the blocks in a heat.

    Britain's Jack Green is out in lane eight.

  11. Jebet winspublished at 19:44 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Women's 3000m steeplechase

    JebetImage source, Reuters

    The second fastest-time in history!

    Extraordinary running from Ruth Jebet of Qatar who powers clear of Beatrice Chepkoech to come within two and half seconds of her own world record.

    Where was that sort of surge in London where she finished fifth?

    World champion Emma Coburn was down in fourth.

  12. Farah goes at 20:14 BSTpublished at 19:35 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Mo FarahImage source, Getty Images

    So, why is Mo Farah ending his track career in Zurich rather than letting things lie after a domestic farewell at the Birmingham Diamond League meeting on Sunday?

    The sentimentalists might say it is where he broke the 13-minute barrier in the men’s 5,000m as the first British athlete in 2010, and he was crowned double European champion four years later.

    Realists might follow the money.

    Tonight, 16 Diamond League champions will be crowned. Unlike in previous years, there is no maths based on points collected over the season. This year, your efforts at previous meetings only earn you a pass into a straight shoot-out final.

    According to LetsRun,, external first place in any of tonight's finals comes with a hefty £39,000 prize money - five times the amount usually on offer.

  13. Fourth for Grabarzpublished at 19:34 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

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  14. Next uppublished at 19:34 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Women's 3000m steeplechase

    The new world champion is not from East Africa, but the United States.

    Emma Coburn will attempt to follow up her success in London with the Diamond League crown.

    Kenya’s Beatrice Chepkoech, who came fourth despite forgetting to go over one of the water jumps and having to circle back in London,may be the main threat.

    However a return to form for world-record holder Ruth Jebet or world leader Celiphine Chespol could throw those predictions out the window.

  15. Miller-Uibo winspublished at 19:24 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Women's 200m

    Shaunae Miller-Uibo came from way, way down in the final 50m, marching down Dafne Schippers, Marie-Josee Ta Lou and Elaine Thompson to win in a new Bahamas national record of 21.88.

    A small bit of consolation for Miller-Uibo who dramatically saw 400m gold go down the gurgler after she tripped in London.

  16. Next uppublished at 19:23 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Women's 200m

    An almighty scrap coming up in the women's 200m, where Jamaica's Elaine Thompson who took both the 100m and 200m crown in Rio, comes up against Dafne Schippers, who won her second world title in London.

    These two don't really get along.

    Watch out for Marie-Josee Ta Lou of the Ivory Coast, who picked up silver medals at both the sprint distances in London.

  17. Farah tries out the high jumppublished at 19:19 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    A definite end-of-term vibe to Mo Farah in Zurich this week. World high jump champion Mutaz Essa Barshim posted a video of Farah having a bash at his event.

    Put it this way, he doesn't seem likely to switch those marathon plans anytime soon.

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  18. Cheruiyot winspublished at 19:18 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Men's 1500m

    Timothy CheruiyotImage source, Reuters

    Timothy Cheruiyot takes revenge for his defeat in London, powering clear with 150m to go and staying out there despite the best efforts of Silas Kiplagat in second and Elijah Manangoi.

    The winning time was 3:33.93. Britain's Jake Wightman was down in seventh in 3:35.25 - a little over a second off his season's best.

  19. Next up...published at 19:15 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    Men's 1500m final

    Kenya's Elijah Motonei Manangoi is the new world champion and also the fastest man in the world this year, on the back of a 3:28.80 in Monaco.

    Compatriot Timothy Cheruiyot is expected to be his main challenge.

    Britain's Jake Wightman - who won the Diamond League meeting in Oslo - earlier this season is also in the mix.

  20. Wet in the Weltklassepublished at 19:10 British Summer Time 24 August 2017

    It has been whacking it down in Switzerland...

    Never mind spikes, this was wellies weather earlier in the day.

    It has dried off now, but the clouds still loom ominously overhead.

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