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Jakob Ingebrigtsen (born 19 September 2000) [3] is a Norwegian middle-and long-distance runner who is the world record holder in the short track 1500 metres, short track mile, 2000 metres and 3000 metres. Ingebrigtsen also holds the world best time over the two mile distance.
From 1912–2025, 27 world records have been ratified by World Athletics outdoors in the event. [1] The current world record holder is Jakob Ingebrigtsen of Norway, with his time of 7:17.55 set in 2024. [2]
CHORZOW, Poland (AP) — Jakob Ingebrigtsen of Norway broke the 28-year world record in the 3,000 meters by more than three seconds in a Diamond League meeting in Poland on Sunday. Ingebrigtsen clocked 7 minutes, 17.55 seconds at the Silesian Stadium in Chorzow. It shattered the previous best mark of 7:20.67 set by Daniel Komen of Kenya in 1996.
Jakob Ingebrigtsen broke the 28-year-old 3,000-meter world record at the Silesia Diamond League, while Mondo Duplantis broke his pole vault record yet again.
Jakob Ingebrigtsen: 16 September 2023 Prefontaine Classic: Eugene, United States [12] 2000 m: 4:43.13 Jakob Ingebrigtsen: 8 September 2023 Memorial Van Damme: Brussels, Belgium [13] 3000 m: 7:23.63 Jakob Ingebrigtsen: 17 September 2023 Prefontaine Classic: Eugene, United States [14] 7:17.55 Jakob Ingebrigtsen: 25 August 2024 Kamila Skolimoswka ...
Jakob Ingebrigtsen ran a time of 3:45.14 for an indoor mile in ... Ingebrigtsen is the first athlete since Australian John Landy in 1954 to set world records for the mile and 1,500m in the same ...
Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen set a world record in the indoor mile Thursday, beating Yared Nuguse's mark set just five days earlier at the Millrose Games. The two-time Olympic champion also set the ...
Sergey Bubka's 1993 pole vault world indoor record of 6.15 m was not considered to be a world record, because it was set before the new rule came into effect. Bubka's world record of 6.14 m, set outdoors in 1994, was surpassed 7 times indoors by two different men since 2000, most recently by Armand Duplantis in 2025 with a 6.27 m mark.