Every World Championships carries its own drama, but some editions go beyond medals and rivalries. Tokyo 2025 has that air about it.
With the stadium lights soon to flicker on, the conversation is not just about who will win, but whether the limits of human performance, written into the record books, can withstand the assault of today's extraordinary athletes.
Take Armand Mondo Duplantis. At only 25, the Swedish legend has already redefined what it means to pole vault.
He has broken the world record thirteen times, the latest in Budapest when he sailed over 6.29 metres, brushing the bar as though teasing gravity itself.
His vaults now feel less like athletic attempts and more like rehearsed inevitabilities.
Each championship meet becomes an exhibition in raising his own ceiling. Tokyo offers another chance, another night where a centimetre gained may echo through history.
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To watch Duplantis is to feel that 6.30, 6.35, perhaps even higher, is no longer an impossible dream but an appointment waiting to be kept.
If Duplantis' consistency has normalised the extraordinary, then Keely Hodgkinson represents the thrill of the chase.
For 42 years, Jarmila Kratochvilova's 800m world record of 1:53.28 in Munich has towered above the sport like a fortress.
Yet Hodgkinson, still only 23, has been whittling away at the stone. Her comeback run in Poland this summer, a scintillating 1:54.74, was not only the world's fastest time in 2025, it was a statement: the record is vulnerable.
Her personal best, 1:54.61, has already dragged her into a territory once reserved for legends. And in Lausanne, she backed it up with 1:55.69, proving that the clock is her only rival.
For her, Tokyo will not just be about medals but about rewriting a chapter in athletics that has remained unchanged since the Cold War.
Should the pacing be perfect, should the weather lean kind, Hodgkinson may finally breach the fortress door.
Then there is Karsten Warholm, the Norwegian Viking whose 400m hurdles world record of 45.94 from the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 remains one of the most breathtaking races the sport has ever seen.
This season, he reminded everyone of his fire by tearing through Silesia in 46.28, the third-fastest time in history. What makes Warholm dangerous is not only his speed but his rhythm.
When Rai Benjamin or Alison dos Santos line up against him, the rivalry forces Warholm to unlock another gear.
If ever there was a man who could race himself past his own legend, it is Warholm, and the stage is set for a rematch with destiny.
Records, of course, are fickle creatures. They fall only when conditions, competition, and courage align in perfect symmetry.
A headwind can kill a sprinter's dreams. A poorly judged first lap can doom an 800m runner.
A clipped hurdle can leave a champion sprawled on the track. Yet that uncertainty is precisely why the hunt for records grips them so tightly.
They are not guaranteed; they must be wrestled from time, stolen from possibility.
From September 13 to September 21, 2025, Tokyo will be more than just another World Championships.
It is a negotiation with history, a test of whether this generation's brilliance can bend the numbers that have stood, in some cases, for decades.
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Meanwhile, watch the post-match conferences of Otto Addo, Tom Saintfiet and highlights of Ghana vs Mali game