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Home Track & Field

Top 5 Moments of Track & Field in 2025!

Deji Ogeyingboby Deji Ogeyingbo
January 23, 2026
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Tokyo 2025, Day 3 (September 15, 2025), World Record! Quote of the  Day, Results of the Day, Stats of the Day

Mondo Duplantis sets WR 14 with 6.30m clearance, photo by World Athletics /Tokyo WCH 2025

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Top 5 moments of Track and Field in 2025

After a slew of performances that made headlines in 2025, these are the few that leave lasting memories in the minds of sports enthusiasts.

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RunblogRun ranks its top 5 moments of 2025.

5. Collen Kebinatshipi pips USA and South Africa to the world 4x400m title in Tokyo

This race stands tall because it felt bigger than medals or times. First, the context alone makes it unforgettable. Botswana lined up against a United States team that had dominated this event for over a decade, in conditions that usually favor experience and depth. Rain pouring, track slick, history leaning heavily one way. Those are not the moments where new champions are supposed to be born.

The drama itself was box office. When Rai Benjamin hit the home straight with daylight between himself and the field, every script had already been written. Silver for Botswana, another gold for the Stars and Stripes. Except that track doesn’t always respect scripts. Collen Kebinatshipi, threading the needle down the middle, entered another gear as the finish was brutally close. Two thousandths of a second separates silver from bronze, shared times, athletes collapsing across the line. It forced everyone watching to hold their breath and look twice.

Then there’s what it meant. For Botswana, this was the release of years of near misses, Olympic Silver, youthful heartbreaks, and unfinished business. Seeing Letsile Tebogo celebrate a global relay gold after his own Olympic scars in the 100m and 200m  gave the moment emotional weight.

The absolute closeness of the Men’s 4x400m, Tokyo WCH 2025, photo by World Athletics

4. World Championships men’s marathon ends in a photo finish (Tokyo): Simbu vs Petros

This marathon finish stands among the very best moments of 2025 because it reminded everyone why distance running still stops the world. The purity of the duel was one for the ages. After more than two hours of grinding effort through Tokyo’s heat and rhythm, the race boiled down to instinct, courage, and one final decision. When Amanal Petros surged clear, logic said it was over. Marathons are not supposed to end with a kick. Yet Alphonce Felix Simbu refused to accept the obvious.

At the end of the day, it was a difference of 0.03 seconds after 42.195 kilometers run that it came down to. It felt almost poetic. It was the closest men’s marathon finish in World Championships history, a result so tight it demanded patience and disbelief before confirmation. Few races ever reward viewers with that level of tension.

Simbu delivered Tanzania its first-ever world championship gold. Petros, moments from Germany’s first global running title, felt the agony and honor of being part of history, even in defeat. There is the visual memory to it, too. The turn into the Japan National Stadium, the crowd rising, Petros glancing sideways, Simbu finding one last gear that should not exist. That image will live on long after the clock is forgotten.

The race itself captured the soul of 2025 track and field. For one breathtaking moment, the marathon became theater, and Simbu became immortal.

The battle for gold in Tokyo Marathon, Alphonse Simbu, TAN, takes gold, Amanal Petros, GER, takes silver, photo by World Athletics

3. Beatrice Chebet becomes the first woman under 14:00 for 5000m (13:58.06) at Eugene DL)

This was one of those nights where the sport quietly crossed a line we had been circling for years.

Breaking 14 minutes in the 5000m was a psychological wall, whispered about in locker rooms and debated by fans, the kind of barrier people believed might someday fall but never felt imminent. When Beatrice Chebet surged down the Prefontaine Classic backstretch and the clock refused to slow her, belief turned into certainty.

What makes this moment stand tall is the boldness of it. Chebet ran straight through history, taking more than two seconds off a world record held by one of the greats. There was no late wobble, no survival mode. It was controlled and fearless from the Kenyan.

A month earlier, Rome had teased the impossible and slipped away. This was redemption in real time, proof that near misses do not define ceilings. They sharpen them. Then there is the bigger picture. Third world record in a year. Olympic double gold already secured. Road and track conquered. Chebet is not

The record felt like a signal to the future. Women’s distance running is no longer asking what is possible, but answering loudly. On that cool night in Eugene, the 14-minute barrier disappeared, and the sport stepped into a new era.

Beatrice Chebet runs WR of 13:58.06, July 5, 2025, photo by Brian Eder, for RunBlogRun.

2. Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone wins World Championships 400m gold in 47.78 (Tokyo)

This race will be remembered because it rewrote what greatness can look like in real time. Sydney McLaughlin Levrone walked into a championship event defined by specialists and left with a performance that blurred the boundaries of the event itself. Running against two of the most proven one-lap racers of this generation, she delivered one of the fastest 400m ever run.

What makes this moment soar is the audacity of the decision. Switching from the hurdles, where she is already legendary, to the flat at a world championships is not a casual move. It is a risk few would take and even fewer could survive. McLaughlin Levrone did more than survive. She dominated. The quality of the field elevated everything. Marileidy Paulino ran a national record. Salwa Eid Naser delivered her fastest time of the year. On most nights, either performance wins gold. This night, they were racing history.

Then there is the number on the clock. 47.78s. Second fastest of all time. Only the fourth woman ever under 48. Every finalist under 50. It felt like the event itself evolved in one race. Becoming the first athlete to win world titles in both the 400m and the 400m hurdles is a statement about range, courage, and vision. In 2025, no moment captured the spirit of possibility in track and field quite like this one.

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone takes Tokyo! photo by Brian Eder for RunBlogRun

1. Mondo Duplantis breaks the pole vault world record at home (Stockholm) -6.28m

Some moments feel inevitable. This one felt personal.

Mondo Duplantis has made a habit of bending the limits of the pole vault, but clearing 6.28m in Stockholm carried a different kind of electricity. The Swede added another world record to an already absurd résumé.

What elevates the moment is the setting. World records happen often for Duplantis, but never before in front of his own people. The roar that followed his clearance was not the polite appreciation of a Diamond League crowd. Years of expectation, pride, and anticipation collapsing into one perfect flight.

There is also the boldness of the choice. With the competition effectively won, Duplantis skipped safer heights and pushed the bar straight into uncharted territory. That confidence, waiting for the breeze to settle before one final run, turned tension into theater.

Then came the image that lasts. Shirt off. Fists pumping. A champion overwhelmed not by the jump, but by what it meant. Even for someone rewriting records with alarming regularity, this one mattered.

It symbolized where the sport stood in 2025. It was that day that pole vaulting touched perfection, and everyone watching knew they had witnessed something timeless.

Tokyo WCH 2025

Author

  • Deji Ogeyingbo

    Deji Ogeyingbo is one of Nigeria’s leading Track and Field Journalists as he has worked in various capacities as a writer, content creator, and reporter for radio and TV stations in the country and Africa. Deji has covered varying degrees of Sporting competitions within and outside Nigeria which includes, African Championships and World Junior Championships. Also, he founded one of Nigeria’s leading Sports PR and Branding company in Nikau Sports in 2020, a company that aims to change the narrative of how athletes are perceived in Nigeria while looking to grow their image to the highest possible level.

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What Kenya Needs To Do To Grow the Sport

Deji Ogeyingbo

Deji Ogeyingbo

Deji Ogeyingbo is one of Nigeria’s leading Track and Field Journalists as he has worked in various capacities as a writer, content creator, and reporter for radio and TV stations in the country and Africa. Deji has covered varying degrees of Sporting competitions within and outside Nigeria which includes, African Championships and World Junior Championships. Also, he founded one of Nigeria’s leading Sports PR and Branding company in Nikau Sports in 2020, a company that aims to change the narrative of how athletes are perceived in Nigeria while looking to grow their image to the highest possible level.

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