Seb Coe: ‘Wavelight’ pacing technology good for sport

Ethiopia's Letsenbet Gidey follows the lights on her way to breaking the 5,000m world record in Valencia on October 7, 2020.


Photo credit: Pool | Global Sports Communication

What you need to know:

  • World Athletics President supports the use of new methods
  • Ugandan Joshua Cheptegei (men's 10,000m) and Ethiopia's Letesenbet Gidey (women's 5,000m) blew two longstanding records apart in Valencia.

    Both athletes had a team of metronomic pacemakers around them who utilised Wavelight technology - a trackside visual time guidance system which lights up to indicate the world record pace.

Gdynia, Poland

World Athletics President Sebastian Coe says he embraced new track technology that features pacemaking lights, a system used to great effect in two stunning world records last week.

Ugandan Joshua Cheptegei (men's 10,000m) and Ethiopia's Letesenbet Gidey (women's 5,000m) blew two longstanding records apart in Valencia.

Both athletes had a team of metronomic pacemakers around them who utilised Wavelight technology - a trackside visual time guidance system which lights up to indicate the world record pace.

"You have to innovate, there's no question about that," Coe said in Gdynia, Poland, Friday ahead of the world half-marathon races, responding to a question by Nation Sport.

While acknowledging there was a balance to be struck, Coe argued that technological advances were paramount in attracting new audiences.

"You need to create a connection and the key connection is understanding," said the two-time Olympic 1,500m gold medal winner for Britain, who set 12 world records in his career.

"I think it's really important that we use innovation so that we further and foster understanding.

"Pace lights I have no problem with. Our one-day meetings are about entertainment and I think Wavelight that allows people in the stadium, people on television, to understand a little bit more about the incredible talent, the incredible speeds our competitors are running at actually lends to the type of understanding I want."

Coe also argued that pacemakers had been around for decades, notably citing Roger Bannister's first sub-four-minute mile as a "pace-made event".

Today's races see Cheptegei again going for gold after an exceptional couple of years, although the half-marathon is the athlete's longest distance to date.
The Ugandan claimed the world cross-country title in Denmark and world 10,000m track gold in Doha last year.

Cheptegei opened the coronavirus-hit 2020 season with a world record in the 5km road race, in Monaco, in February.

He then sliced 1.99 seconds off Bekele's world 5,000m record, clocking a stunning 12:35.36, also in Monaco, in August, before lopping six seconds off Bekele's 10,000m world record when he timed 26:11.00 in Valencia last week.

The Wavelight technology was developed by a Dutch company and calibrated by Cheptegei’s management, Global Sports Communication, also based in the Netherlands.

Additional reporting by Elias Makori