Haroye led a one-two for her country and out sprinted her team-mate Alemitu Hawi in the final stretch to finish barely two seconds outside the championship record, held by their compatriot Genzebe Dibaba who ran 15:08.06 in 2010.
Hawi was rewarded with the silver in 15:10.46, a massive
personal best by 25 seconds. Kenya’s world junior cross-country silver medalist
Agnes Tirop had to settle for the bronze in 15:43.12, coming home a distant
third to repeat her position from two years ago in Barcelona. Stela Chesang ran
a Ugandan national junior record of 15:53.85 to finish fourth.
The Japanese duo of
Fuyuka Kimura and Maki Izumida took the lead from the start, but it was
short-lived stint at the front as they were caught up by five African women
less than four minutes into the race. Haroye and Hawi then upped the pace in
the third kilometer, covered in 2:52.88, the fastest 1000 m in the race, to
build an unsurmountable lead over Tirop. With three laps to go, the only
question was which of the two Ethiopian runners would win, a duel for glory
which was only decided a few meters from the line.
The fastest junior in
the world this year, Haroye ran the third fastest time in the history of the
championships to claim her first global title; her best international performance
before her arrival in Eugene being when she finished one place behind Tirop in
Bydgoszcz.
Source :- http://www.iaaf.org
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