Georgia Hunter Bell led Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson to a British medal double in the world 800m final – but their bid for a stunning one-two was spoiled by Kenya’s Lilian Odira in Tokyo.
Hunter Bell continued her fairytale return to the sport she had quit for five years by edging training partner Hodgkinson to second, 0.28 seconds behind Odira who claimed gold in a championship record one minute 54.62 seconds.
While Hodgkinson, 23, had set her sights on a first world title following successive silvers before her triumph at Paris 2024, bronze represented a remarkable achievement at the end of a season devastated by injury setbacks.
Hunter Bell upgraded her Olympic bronze medal in a personal best time of 1:54.90 – a mere one hundredth of a second ahead of training partner and good friend Hodgkinson.
Hodgkinson and Hunter Bell had both spoken before the final about their ambitions to become the first British athletes to achieve a one-two at a World Championships since Christine Ohuruogu and Nicola Sanders in Japan 18 years ago.
Both coached by husband-and-wife partnership Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows, the pair trained together, roomed together at the British team’s holding camp, and have performed drills together in the corridors of the team hotel to escape the Tokyo heat.
But on Sunday they became gold medal rivals and would end up locked together – almost inseparable – as they threw themselves across the line.
Ultimately, it was Hunter Bell – having had a full season to build towards this moment – who was able to summon the final effort required for silver after Odira had made her way past in the closing stages to achieve her first global medal of any colour.
Hodgkinson told BBC Sport: “I’m happy for the both of us, we both got a medal. It’s my third 1:54 [since returning to action] and to be consistent like that, especially after the year I’ve had, it’s not what I came here for but I can’t be too disappointed.”
Hunter Bell said: “I’m so happy, the fastest time I’ve ever run. I knew it would be fast from seeing the girls in the field but I was just like ‘don’t get dropped, try to hang on to get the kick in the end’.”