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2024-08-07 03:10:01

Cole Hocker, of the United States, celebrates setting an Olympic record and winning the men’s 1,500-meter final at the Paris Summer Olympics.
Matthias Schrader/AP
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Matthias Schrader/AP
SAINT-DENIS, France — When runners left the blocks for the 1,500-meter Olympic final on Tuesday, star British middle-distance runner Josh Kerr was the clear favorite.
His big rival in the race was Jakob Ingebrigtsen, the superstar from Norway.
But the first to cross the line — with an Olympic-record setting finish of 3:27.65 — was American Cole Hocker. It was one of the biggest upsets so far on the track at Stade de France.
British fans in the crowd groaned as Hocker, a 23-year-old from Indianapolis, slipped ahead of Kerr in the final stretch.
American Yared Nuguse finished third for the bronze. Ingebrigtsen finished in fourth place, out of medal contention.