
Timetable released for World Athletics Championships Budapest 23
Reading Time: 3min | Fri. 26.08.22. | 17:40
The 2023 championship will run for nine days instead of a 10 day programme as has been for the past five championships.
The timetable for the 2023 World Athletics Championships Budapest released Friday will feature 14 action-packed stadium sessions set to be held from 19-27 August in the Hungarian capital.
Instead of a 10-day programme, as has been the case for the past five senior global championships, the 2023 World Championships schedule spreads the 49 disciplines across nine days of action. The six road events, meanwhile, are spread across five separate days and will all be held in the morning.
The timetable for the #WorldAthleticsChamps in @wabudapest23 is out!
— World Athletics (@WorldAthletics) August 26, 2022
Instead of a 10-day programme, the schedule spreads the 49 disciplines across nine days of action 👇
All track and field finals will be contested in the evening sessions, with at least four finals scheduled every day, even on the first day. The final two days, meanwhile, have eight medal events each, and both will end with women’s relays.
“Creating the timetable for an outdoor World Championships is a complex balancing act, taking into account the needs of athletes, broadcasters and the host city, as well as our other stakeholders. I’m confident that a return to a nine-day programme and evening-only finals in the stadium will be embraced by our athletes and audience in Budapest, and by those watching around the world,” World Athletics President Sebastian Coe said.
Popular doubles such as the 100m & 200m, 800m & 1500m, 1500m & 5000m, 5000m & 10,000m, 20km & 35km race walk, women’s long jump & triple jump, and women’s 200m & 400m are all possible without athletes having to contest more than one round in any given session.
And, as has been the case at recent major championships, the mixed and single-sex 4x400m finals are held either side of the individual one-lap disciplines to allow athletes to partake in both relays and individual disciplines should they so desire.
The first evening session will end with the mixed 4x400m final, bringing the opening day to an exciting climax with the only event on the programme in which men and women compete together for medals.
The men’s 100m will be in the spotlight on the second day, while the women’s 100m takes centre stage on day three as athletes compete for the honour of being crowned the world’s fastest sprinter.
The women’s 1500m, always a standout event at recent global championships, will be one of four finals held on day four. The men’s 400m hurdles – another crowd-pleaser – will bring the curtain down on the action on day five.
Both 35km race walk finals will be held on the morning of day six. And there will be no rest on the seventh day, as both 200m finals will crown the evening session.
The women’s marathon kick-starts the penultimate day, which will later include the men’s pole vault and both 4x100m finals. The men’s marathon will be held on the morning of the final day and the championships will end with both 4x400m finals.














