The Diamond League Final Results 2024
After a season which began in China in April, with 14 meets across three continents either side of the Olympic Games, the Diamond League final took place this weekend in Brussels, with the world’s best track and field athletes competing one final time to see who would become the Diamond League champion in each event.
After an Olympic summer, many medallists from Paris were back competing, most of them in their final track races of the year. Below we’ve got some of the top stories and performances for the year, plus more on what is the Diamond League and the schedule for 2025’s Diamond League.
Here are the top three finishers in all the track events in Brussels, with these winners crowned Diamond League champions for 2024.
DIAMOND LEAGUE FINAL RESULTS 2024
There are nine track and seven field events for both men and women. Here are all the track running results from the final, held in Brussels on 13-14 September.
WOMEN’S 100m
1. Julien Alfred (St Lucia) 10.88
2. Dina Asher-Smith (GB) 10.92
3. Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith (Ivory Coast) 11.05
MEN’S 100m
1. Ackeem Blake (Jamaica) 9.93
2. Christian Coleman (USA) 10.00
3. Fred Kerley (USA) 10.01
WOMEN’S 100m HURDLES
1. Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (Puerto Rice) 12.38
2. Nadine Visser (Netherlands) 12.54
3. Ackera Nugent (Jamaica) 12.55
MEN’S 110m HURDLES
1. Sasha Zhoya (France) 13.16
2. Lorenzo Simonelli (Italy) 13.22
3. Freddie Crittenden (USA) 13.24
WOMEN’S 200m
1. Brittany Brown (USA) 22.20
2. Daryll Neita (GB) 22.45
3. Anavia Battle (USA) 22.61
MEN’S 200m
1. Kenny Bednarek (USA) 19.67
2. Letsile Tebogo (Botswana) 19.80
3. Alexander Ogando (Dominican Republic) 19.97
WOMEN’S 400m
1. Marileidy Paulino (Dominican Republic) 49.45
2. Alexis Holmes (USA) 50.32
3. Rhasidat Adeleke (Ireland) 50.96
MEN’S 400m
1. Charles Dobson (GB) 44.49
2. Kirani James (Grenada) 44.63
3. Muzala Samukonga (Zambia) 44.69
WOMEN’S 400m HURDLES
1. Femke Bol (Netherlands) 52.45
2. Anna Cockrell (USA) 53.71
3. Shiann Salmon (Jamaica) 53.99
MEN’S 400m HURDLES
1. Alison dos Santos (Brazil) 47.93
2. Abderrahman Samba (Qatar) 48.20
3. Rasmus Magi (Estonia) 48.26
WOMEN’S 800m
1. Mary Moraa (Kenya) 1:56.56
2. Georgia Bell (GB) 1:57.50
3. Natoya Goule-Toppin (Jamaica) 1:58.94
MEN’S 800m
1. Emmanuel Wanyonyi (Kenya) 1:42.70
2. Djamel Sedjati (Algeria) 1:42.86
3. Marco Arop (Canada) 1:43.25
WOMEN’S 1500m
1. Faith Kipyegon (Kenya) 3:54.75
2. Diribe Welteji (Ethiopia) 3:55.25
3. Jessica Hull (Australia) 3:56.99
MEN’S 1500m
1. Jakob Ingebrigtsen (Norway) 3:30.37
2. Timothy Cheruiyot (Kenya) 3:30.93
3. Cole Hocker (USA) 3:30.94
WOMEN’S 3000m STEEPLECHASE
1. Faith Cherotich (Kenya) 9:02.3
2. Winfred Yavi (Bahrain) 9:02.87
3. Peruth Chemutai (Uganda) 9:07.60
MEN’S 3000m STEEPLECHASE
1. Amos Serem (Kenya) 8:06.90
2. Soufiane El Bakkali (Morocco) 8:08.60
3. Mohamed Amin Jhinaoui (Tunisia) 8:09.68
WOMEN’S 5000m
1. Beatrice Chebet (Kenya) 14:09.82
2. Medina Eisa (Ethiopia) 14:21.89
3. Fotyen Tesfay (Ethiopia) 14:28.53
MEN’S 5000m
1. Berihu Aregawi (Ethiopia) 12:43.66
2. Hagos Gebrhiwet (Ethiopia) 12:44.25
3. Telahun Bekele (Ethiopia) 12:45.63
THE DIAMOND LEAGUE SEASON 2024 – TOP PERFORMANCES
In 2024, there were four world records broken in Diamond League meets, winning each athlete a $50,000 bonus.
Kenya’s Faith Kipyegon lowered her own 1500m world record to 3:49.04 in the meeting in Paris in July. She is now unbeaten over 1500m for three years, including winning Olympic gold, and her win in Brussels was her fifth Diamond League trophy.
Australia’s Jess Hull ran 5:19.70 to set a new world record in the women’s 2000m.
In a non-Diamond League event held at the Diamond League in Oregon, Beatrice Chebet became the first woman to ever run sub-29 in the women’s 10,000m, with her time of 28:54.14.
In the field events, Ukraine’s Yaroslava Mahuchikh cleared 2.10m in Paris to break the women’s high jump record which has stood since 1987.
Sweden’s Mondo Duplantis won every men’s pole vault competition this year. In the first meet of the year in Xiamen he jumped 6.24m to set a new world record. At the Olympic Games he jumped 6.25m for a new record, and in the Silesia Diamond League he cleared 6.26m for his third world record of the year.
Some of the most exciting moments in this year’s Diamond League featured Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen. In Silesia in August, he lowered the 3000m world record to 7:17.55.
But most will remember the Diamond League battles over 1500m and one mile this year, most featuring Ingebrigtsen, GB’s Josh Kerr, and Cole Hocker and Yared Nuguse from the US. Between them, Kerr won one (Eugune), Nuguse won one (Zurich), Ingebrigtsen one (Brussels), and Hocker won the big one: the Olympic final.
WHAT IS THE DIAMOND LEAGUE?
We’ve covered everything you need to know about the Diamond League here, but it’s essentially the regular season for track and field athletes. There are 15 meets from April to September, taking place in Europe, Asia and North America, with the world’s best athletes invited to compete at nine track and seven field events.
Each Diamond League meeting has a different schedule – so not every track and field event is at each Diamond League – and all the action takes place over three hours, with a two-hour television window for the main events.
For track and field fans, it’s the best chance to see the greatest track and field stars competing and it all culminates with the Diamond League Final where the best in each event are invited to compete one last time – and the winner of that event becomes the Diamond League champion for the season.
WHAT IS THE DIAMOND LEAGUE SCHEDULE FOR 2025?
MEETING | DATE |
Xiamen, China | Saturday 26 April 2025 |
Suzhou/Shanghai, China | Saturday 3 May 2025 |
Doha, Qatar | Friday 16 May 2025 |
Rabat/Marrakech, Morocco | Sunday 25 May 2025 |
Rome, Italy | Friday 6 June 2025 |
Oslo, Norway | Thursday 12 June 2025 |
Stockholm, Sweden | Sunday 15 June 2025 |
Paris, France | Friday 20 June 2025 |
Eugene, USA | Saturday 5 July 2025 |
Monaco, Monaco | Friday 11 July 2025 |
London, England | Saturday 19 July 2025 |
Silesia, Poland | Saturday 9 August 2025 |
Brussels, Belgium | Friday 15 August 2025 |
Lausanne, Switzerland | Thursday 21 August 2025 |
Zürich, Switzerland | Wed-Thu 27-18 August 2025 |
Photo by Matthew Quine for Diamond League
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