New Delhi 2025: Golden hat-trick for Debrunner, Sabatini bounces back in style
The Swiss legend led from start to finish to beat defending world champion Zhou Zhaoqian; Italy’s Ambra Sabatini shrugs off Paris 2024 misfortune with women’s 100m T63 gold medal; Fourth straight titles for Brazil’s Jerusa Geber and Hungary’s Luca Ekler and USA’s Jaydin Blackwell and Oleksandr Yarovyi of Ukraine set new world records on day five of IndianOil New Delhi 2025 World Para Athletics Championships 01 Oct 2025
Switzerland’s Catherine Debrunner won her third gold medal at the IndianOil New Delhi 2025 World Para Athletics Championships on Wednesday as she clinched the women’s 1500m T54 title in a new championship record.
The 30-year-old world record-holder, who had won the 800m T53 and 5000m T54, made it a New Delhi hat-trick as she led Wednesday’s final from start to finish.
Crossing the line in 3:16.81, Debrunner beat defending world champion Zhou Zhaoqian in second place by six tenths of a second as Great Britain’s Melanie Woods won bronze.
“The Chinese seemed to be trying to box me in,” Debrunner said, referring to Zhou and teammate Tian Yajuan in fourth place.
“They talked a lot with each other, but it was a lot of fun."
New Delhi 2025: Here are the medallists from day five
It was the ninth world title for Debrunner, from the village of Mettendorf, near Switzerland’s northern border with Germany.
After claiming her first Paralympic title at Tokyo 2020, Debrunner became a full-time Para athlete, winning five gold medals and a silver at Paris 2024. The medal haul has continued into these World Championships, where she will look for more glory in Thursday's 100m and Friday’s 400m T53.
The 100m is the only distance where Debrunner misses a gold medal, having claimed silvers in the event at the Paris 2023 World Championships as well at last year’s Paralympic Games.
“I'm still missing the world title in the 100m. Maybe I can win it tomorrow,” Debrunner said.
🧘♂️ An other day at #NewDelhi2025#ParaAthletics pic.twitter.com/gOAhSGgM0r
— Para Athletics (@ParaAthletics) October 1, 2025
Sabatini sprints to T63 gold
Italy’s Ambra Sabatini won the women’s 100m T63 gold medal, making up for an unfortunate fate that cost her a medal at Paris 2024. In the final last year, Sabatini was heading towards a second Paralympic gold medal when she stumbled and collided with her teammate Monica Contrafatto, just before the finish line.
On Wednesday, the T63 world record-holder produced an impressive comeback as she finished in 14.39, beating Indonesia’s world champion Karisma Evi Tiarani in second place by 0.26 of a second.
Ndidikama Okoh of Great Britain took the bronze, one hundredth of a second from the silver medal time.
“I’m very happy, I needed this race to go well because I need my confidence back,” said Sabatini, who had won the event at the 2023 World Championships.
Having started her New Delhi campaign with a disappointing no mark result in the women’s long jump T63 on Tuesday, the 23-year-old said she could leave India with confidence as she shifts focus towards the next Paralympic Games.
“Now I can say I’ve come back and we’re in the start of a process to Los Angeles 2028.”
Fourth straight for Gaber
Brazil’s Jerusa Geber won her fourth consecutive world title in the women’s 100m T11. The Paralympic gold medallist and world record holder, who runs with guide Gabriel Aparecido dos Santos Garcia, produced a new championship record of 11.81 in the final, beating China’s silver medallist Liu Yiming by four hundredths of a second as Alba Garcia Falagan of Spain clinched the bronze.
Breaking a championship record that her compatriot Terezinha Guilhermina set in 2011, the winner was one hundredth of a second outside of her own world record from last year’s Paralympic Games.
“It was very close to the world record,” Geber said.
“But we never know when the record will come as it is such a fast race. What we can control is to be well-prepared and give our best.”
Equalling Guilhermina as the Brazilian athlete with most World Championship medals – 12 in total – Geber said she is still hungry for more.
“The first goal was the fourth title,” the 43-year-old said.
“Now let’s go for the next, that is to win one more medal and leave the World Championships as the most successful Brazilian in history.”
Brazil still on top of the standings, closely followed by China and Poland 📊#ParaAthletics #NewDelhi2025 pic.twitter.com/E7Kp0bjaT2
— Para Athletics (@ParaAthletics) October 1, 2025
Luca impresses too
Hungary’s Luca Ekler also claimed a four consecutive world title as she won the women’s long jump T38 final with a new T38 world record of 5.91.
Angie Nicoll Mejia Morales of Colombia took the silver with 5.42, her teammate Karen Tatiana Palomeque Moreno grabbing the bronze with 5.25.
“It was an amazing day,” Ekler said.
“I broke my world record twice and I’m reaching for the stars. I really want to jump six metres, it will be a new personal best, new world record and this is my dream. This is why I work every day and I’m happy that I took a step forward.”
World Record-holder and Paralympic champion Fleur Jong of the Netherlands made no mistake to beat a star-studded field of runners in the women’s 100m T64 final and win a third consecutive gold medal in the event.
The smiling 29-year-old, who will go for gold in Thursday’s long jump T64, crushed the opposition in the last half of the race, coming from behind to finish in 12.29. Her teammate Marlene van Gansewinkel made it a Dutch one-two for the second World Championships in a row as Marissa Papaconstantinou of Canada settled for the bronze.
— Para Athletics (@ParaAthletics) October 1, 2025
Cockroft's second gold
Great Britain’s Hannah Cockroft made it two gold medals in two events at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium as she added a women’s 100m T34 title to her 400m T34 gold medal from Sunday.
Thailand’s Chaiwat Rattana has matched Cockroft in the men’s T34 events, where he won Wednesday’s close 100m final by a margin of four hundredths of a second.
In an even closer battle for the silver medal, Rheed McCracken of Australia was three thousandths of a second ahead of Mohamad Othman from the United Arab Emirates, who had to settle for bronze.
World record-holder Wen Xiaoyan made a season’s best as she won the women’s 100m T37 final in 12.93, 0.34 of a second ahead of silver medallist Taylor Swanson from the United States.
Japan also had a successful day five at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, producing a clean podium sweep in the men’s 400m T52 final, with Sato Tomoki winning ahead of Ueyonabaru Hirokazu and Ito Tomoya.
It is Japan’s third gold at these championships, having finished on the podium 21 times at last year’s home World Championships in Kobe but failing to make it to the top spot.
Blackwell, Yarovyi set world records
USA’s Jaydin Blackwell set a new world record en route to winning the men’s 400m T38 final – the 21-year-old’s second world title in New Delhi – while Oleksandr Yarovyi of Ukraine broke the world record in the men’s shot put F20 final with a throw of 17.73.
Para athletes representing Colombia, Iran, Latvia, Spain and Uzbekistan also won World Championships gold medals on Wednesday as Neutral Para Athletes Vladimir Sviridov, Anna Kulinich-Sorokina and Aleksandr Kostin triumphed in the men’s shot put F36, women’s 400m T12 and men’s 5000m T13 respectively.
Brazil retained their lead in the overall medal table on a total of 30 medals including eight golds, with China, adding two titles to their tally on Wednesday, in second place on a total of seven gold medals. Poland were third on 12 medals including six golds.