Summary

  • Click 'watch & listen tab' for iPlayer coverage of the Stockholm Diamond League after Britain's Keely Hodgkinson suffers shock defeat by Switzerland's Audrey Werro

  • Olympic champion Hodgkinson runs 1:54.33 British record but Werro clocks 1:53.98 - the third fastest time ever - to win

  • World record holder Armand Duplantis beaten by Australia's Kurtis Marschall in men's pole vault after failing to clear 6.05m

  • World champion Melissa Jefferson-Wooden wins 100m in 10.84 seconds, with GB's Amy Hunt setting 10.97 personal best

  • Full results

  1. Hodgkinson beaten despite PBpublished at 18:02 BST

    Women's 800m

    Media caption,

    Werro causes shock in Stockholm as she's beats Hodgkinson

    Keely Hodgkinson suffers a shock defeat as Switzerland's Audrey Werro powers past her in the final 200m to clinch an impressive victory in one minute 53.98 seconds.

    That's the third fastest women's 800m in history - and the fastest ever in the Diamond League.

    Hodgkinson, who has stated her desire to break the world record this year, comes home in a new personal best of 1:54.33 in her first outdoor 800m of the season.

    The Briton might have been feeling the effects of Thursday night's 400m run in Rome but she still beat her own British record.

    Full credit to 22-year-old Werro who stayed strong in the closing stages to add success in Stockholm to her victory in Rabat last month.

  2. Duplantis suffers rare defeatpublished at 17:54 BST

    Men's pole vault

    Media caption,

    'He will be livid' - Duplantis beaten Infront of home crowd

    Armand Duplantis set a world record here last year but suffers a rare defeat after failing to clear 6.05m and finishes in second place with a height of 5.80m.

    Australian Kurtis Marschall takes the victory - his first in the Diamond League - with a clearance of 5.90m.

    Armand DuplantisImage source, Getty Images
  3. PB for Huntpublished at 17:42 BST

    Women's 100m

    Britain's world 200m silver medallist Amy Hunt sets a new 100m personal best and her first ever sub-11 time with a run of 10.97 seconds.

    She finished second behind American world champion Melissa Jefferson-Wooden, who ran 10.84.

    Media caption,

    Milestone moment for Hunt

  4. Postpublished at 17:40 BST

    Media caption,

    Duplantis' shock triple fail

  5. British stars in actionpublished at 15:33 BST

    • 16:04 - men's 400m (Charlie Dobson, Matthew Hudson-Smith)
    • 16:36 - men's 800m (Ben Pattison, Jake Wightman)
    • 16:45 - women's 100m (Dina Asher-Smith, Amy Hunt)
    • 16:52 - men's discus (Lawrence Okoye)
    • 17:30 - men's 200m (Jeremiah Azu)
    • 17:41 - women's 800m (Keely Hodgkinson, Jemma Reekie)
    • 17:51 - men's 1500m (Ben Claridge, Jake Hayward)

    * British athletes in brackets

  6. How fast will Hodgkinson go?published at 15:33 BST

    Women's 800m (17:41 BST)

    Keely Hodgkinson will run her first outdoor 800m of the season live on BBC Two at 17:41 BST.

    Britain's Olympic 800m champion started her outdoor season by running a personal best time of 51.14 seconds to finish seventh in the 400m at the Rome Diamond League on Thursday.

    Hodgkinson, who smashed the world indoor 800m record in February, is aiming to beat Jarmila Kratochvilova's 43-year-old outdoor world record this season.

    Sunday's race will give a good indication how close Hodgkinson is to Kratochvilova's record time of one minute 53.28 seconds.

    The 24-year-old will race Diamond League champion Audrey Werro, who impressed with a time of 1:56.56 to win in Rabat last weekend.

    The Briton's personal best is 1:54.61 set in London in the build-up to her triumph at the 2024 Olympics in Paris.

  7. Will Duplantis set another world record?published at 15:33 BST

    Men's pole vault from 15:14 BST

    Home favourite Armand Duplantis returns to Stockholm where he cleared 6.28m last year to break his own men's pole vault world record.

    Duplantis broke the world record four times in 2025 and in March this year pushed the record up to 6.31m at the Mondo Classic - an indoor pole vault-only event in Uppsala, Sweden named after him.

    The 26-year-old Olympic and world champion started his outdoor season with a winning height of 6.12m in Shanghai last month.