Summary

  • Watch live coverage of the Diamond League event in Rabat, Morocco

  • Great Britain's Molly Caudery in action in the Women's pole vault

  • She's followed by fellow compatriots Matt Hudson-Smith in the Men's 400m (19:16 BST) and Max Burgin in the Men's 800m (20:35 BST) events

  • Laura Muir will also be competing in a non Diamond League event - the women's 1500m at 20:12 BST

  1. Diamond League Rabatpublished at 23:09 BST 30 May

    Great Britain's Josh Kerr in actionImage source, Getty Images

    Date Sunday 31 May

    Start 19:00 BST

    Venue Complexe Sportif Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium

    Follow all the action on iPlayer for 30 days by clicking here.

  2. Today's Diamond League eventspublished at 23:09 BST 30 May

    All Times in BST and subject to change

    • 18:45 - Women's pole vault (featuring GB's Molly Caudery, plus Americans Katie Moon & Sandi Morris)
    • 19:04 - Women's 400m hurdles
    • 19:16 - Men's 400m (featuring GB's Matthew Hudson-Smith & USA's Quincy Hall)
    • 19:28 - Women's 800m
    • 19:39 - Women's 100m
    • 19:41 - Men's javelin
    • 19:48 - Men's 200m (featuring Botswana's Letsile Tebogo & USA's Kenny Bednarek)
    • 19:57 - Men's 1500m
    • 20:26 - Women's 200m (featuring Jamaica's Shericka Jackson)
    • 20:35 - Men's 800m (featuring GB's Max Burgin & Kenya's Emmanuel Wanyonyi)
    • 20:46 - Men's 3.000m steeplechase

    Britain's Laura Muir will compete in a non-Diamond League women's 1500m race at 20:12

  3. What to watch out for in 2026 Diamond Leaguepublished at 23:09 BST 30 May

    Media caption,

    'This woman is untouchable' - GB's Hodgkinson breaks women's indoor 800m world record

    Keely Hodgkinson says this year's London Diamond League could be a "battle of the world records" as she seeks to topple athletics' longest-standing mark on home soil.

    The Olympic 800m champion will return to the London Stadium on 18 July for the first time since her British-record run in the lead-up to her crowning moment at the Paris 2024 Games.

    After an injury-disrupted 2025, the 24-year-old smashed the world indoor record in February and has now turned her focus to the 800m world record time of one minute 53.28 seconds set by Czech athlete Jarmila Kratochvilova in July 1983.

    Hodgkinson will also compete at Diamond League meetings in Rome, Stockholm and Eugene - competing over 400m in the latter.

    She will go head-to-head with training partner Georgia Hunter Bell and reigning world 800m champion Lilian Odira at the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene.

    Fellow Briton Josh Kerr has announced he will attempt to break the long-standing men's mile world record at the same meeting.

    The London Athletics Meet will be a key date in the diary of many British stars, with a women's 200m showdown between relay team-mates Hunt, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita among the standout events.

    Before then, Hunt will test herself against Olympic 100m champion Julian Alfred and world 100m and 200m gold medallist Melissa Jefferson-Wooden in Rome.

    After improving the pole vault world record for the 15th time by clearing 6.31 metres in March, the unstoppable Duplantis returns to Stockholm - where he set his first world record on home soil last year - with Paris, London and a city event in Lausanne also among his targets.

    Australia's teenage sensation Gout Gout will take on Olympic champion Tebogo over 200m in his Diamond League debut in Oslo, while Olympic 100m gold and silver medallists Noah Lyles and Kishane Thompson meet in Silesia.

  4. How does the Diamond League work?published at 23:08 BST 30 May

    Athletes compete for points across 32 Diamond League disciplines at the 14 regular series meetings in a bid to qualify for the finals in Brussels in September.

    After the 14th stop in Zurich in August, the top six athletes in field events, top eight in track events from 100m up to 800m, and top 10 in distances from 1500m upwards, will qualify for the finals.

    The two-day finals are a winner-takes-all showdown to be crowned Diamond League champion in each event.

    Diamond League trophy winners on the podium at the end of the meet during the Weltklasse Zürich, Wanda Diamond League Final at Letzigrund Stadium on August 28th, 2025Image source, Getty Images

    All Diamond League events will be shown on the BBC until 2030 after a new multi-year deal was agreed last year.

    The total prize money remains the same as 2025, when it was increased to $9.2m (£6.8m) - including $500,000 (£370,000) at each of the 14 series meetings, and $2.2m (£1.6m) at the Diamond League final.

    However, the prize money structure has been altered to provide higher earnings to the winners of eight selected 'Diamond+' disciplines' at each meet, which offer $20,000 (£14,800) at series meetings and up to $60,000 (£44,400) at the finals.