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Hodgkinson in ‘shape of her life’ with eye on Kratochvilova’s record

By AFP
March 24, 2026
Britains Keely Hodgkinson celebrates after winning the 800m. —AFP
Britain's Keely Hodgkinson celebrates after winning the 800m. —AFP

TORUN, Poland: Keely Hodgkinson’s rivals will be grateful there is not a world outdoor champs or an Olympic Games this season as the Briton boasted of being in “the shape of her life” after wrapping up world indoor 800m gold.

The 24-year-old left the competition for dead in an impressive gun-to-tape performance in Torun, Poland, on Sunday that saw

her win in a blistering 1min 55.30sec.

Her time was not only a championship record but also the second fastest time run over the distance indoors, Hodgkinson herself having set a new world indoor 800m record last month.

All eyes will now turn on Hodgkinson’s plans for the outdoor season which offers up European and Commonwealth titles on home soil and ends with World Athletics’ Ultimate Championships in Budapest in September.

Given her new world indoor record, there is the mouth-watering possibility of a potential tilt at the oldest world record in athletics -- the 1min 53.28sec for the outdoor 800m set by Jarmila Kratochvilova of the then-Czechoslovakia in 1983.

- Golden training partner -

“It feels so, so nice being able to run and win. This is my first world title,” said Hodgkinson, whose victory came fast on the heels of that of training partner Georgia Hunter Bell in the women’s 1,500m.

“I have been in so many finals, I have been a favourite so many times and I had not won so to do that and prove to myself that I can do it, remove the pressure and win the gold, it’s nice,” she said, having accrued 11 international medals but also been denied three times at the world outdoors, winning two silvers and a bronze.

“My word this year has been ‘domination’ - so when I’m in the shape of my life, why leave it to chance? If you want to beat me, you’re going to have to work hard. I never, ever go down without a fight.”

Hodgkinson and Hunter Bell are coached by the husband and wife team of Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows, the latter having won world outdoor bronze (2009) and indoor silver (2010) over 800m.

“Me and Georgia, we work hard and we push each other at every practice -- we are both in the shape of our lives,” Hodgkinson said.