Campbell, the Jamaican national champion and record holder at 22.22m, made the final with a mark of 20.83m on his third attempt during qualifying, but again struggled to get going.
However, unlike he did in qualifying, Campbell was unable to recover and failed to register a mark when it mattered most.
The event was won by American defending champion Ryan Crouser, who launched the instrument to a Championship Record 23.51m on his final attempt to stamp his authority on the event. He had earlier registered 22.98m in the second round, which already had the gold medal won.
Italy’s Leonardo Fabbri, with a new personal best 22.34m, snatched silver from the other American Joe Kovacs (21.59m).
You can catch live action of the 2023 World Athletic Championships by downloading the Sportsmax App.
Campbell, who earlier this year became the first Jamaican man to go beyond 22m when he launched the instrument to a national record of 22.22m, took his time to get going in Group A of qualifying, but eventually found his rhythm.
Though he missed the automatic qualifying mark of 21.40m, Campbell’s 20.83m on his third attempt, was good enough to make the final as it ranked him 10th across the two groups.
Prior to achieving the mark which placed him sixth in his group, the 27-year-old Campbell, opened with an underwhelming 19.83m and registered no mark on his second attempt.
Campbell rued a lack of warm up and the wet conditions for his slow start.
"I didn't get through the complete warm up, the rain poured so I didn't get to warm up around the back because there was lightning and all that, so I came out here and tried to force it. the ring was very slippery, so that caused a lot of downhill performance today, but as we progressed the ring got dryer and I could actually feel the grip and that is how the last one came together," the vibrant thrower shared.
While his national record ranked him fourth coming into the championships, Campbell remains grounded where his medal prospects are concerned.
"Honestly, I don't want to start getting into that right now because later on (the final is to come). So, the job is not done yet, for now I am holding it together, I want to get some food in my system, take a nap and then I will be back," he said.
"It is a level playing field...that's the thing about competition, anything can happen on the day. So, I am confident in myself, I believe when it is necessary, I can pull something together just like I did with this last throw. It's something I have been doing consistently all season, so anything is possible," Campbell added.
Brazil’s Darlan Romani headlines the finalist with a big season’s best of 22.37m. The big American pair of two-time World Champion Joe Kovacs (21.59m) and Olympic Champion Ryan Crouser (21.48m) are also in the mix for the final scheduled for later this evening at 1:35pm Jamaica time.
You can catch live action of the 2023 World Athletic Championships by downloading the Sportsmax App.
The 28-year-old began Saturday’s final at the Stade de France with a 20.00m in the first round before producing a brilliant 22.15m in the second round to move into second behind American World record holder and back-to-back Olympic champion Ryan Crouser who was leading with 22.69m.
In rainy conditions, Campbell was in the silver medal position before the sixth round when American Joe Kovacs produced 22.15m to move into second by virtue of his second-best throw, 21.71m, being better than Campbell’s.
The Jamaican had a throw in the sixth round that would’ve seen him reclaim silver had it not been a fourth foul in a row.
In the end, Campbell settled for bronze behind the two Americans. Crouser’s final winning distance was a season’s best 22.90m.
The 29-year-old Thompson-Herah truly captured the public imagination in 2021. The double sprint champion from the 2016 Olympics in Rio, the Jamaican turned in performances the likes of which have not been seen since at least four years before her birth.
Her 2021 season will go down in history as perhaps the greatest of all time. Within the span of just over three weeks, between the end of July and late August, she won two individual gold medals at the Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan.
Her 100m win came in an Olympic record time of 10.61 while her 200m victory four days later yielded a national record of 21.53 seconds. It was also the second-fastest time in history.
Shortly after her double Olympic triumph, which she topped off by winning sprint relay gold with Jamaica, Thompson-Herah lined up at the Prefontaine Classic at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, USA and stamped her class with a run of 10.54 seconds, a new national record, and like her 200m Olympic win, was the fastest time in the world since Florence Griffith-Joyner’s world record in 1988.
Thompson-Herah would go on to take her third Diamond League title, winning the women’s 100m final in Zürich with a time of 10.65 seconds.
Only five women this century have ended a season with the fastest times in both the 100m and 200m. Coming into the season, four of those five were Jamaican. And this season, Thompson-Herah became the first woman ever to repeat that feat following her 2016 success.
Along the way, Thompson-Herah went under the 10.80-second barrier 15 times. Only her compatriot Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, has more. However, Thompson-Herah is the queen of sub-10.70 runs, with four, one more than Flo Jo.
Thompson-Herah, Fraser-Pryce, and Shericka Jackson completed the Tokyo women’s 100m medal podium, and the three Jamaicans have combined for 34 runs under 11 seconds this year.
Crouser set the men’s shot put standard indoors and out this past season.
The 28-year-old American champion won gold at the Tokyo Olympics as well as the Diamond League trophy.