Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Kipchoge shatters marathon world record in Berlin

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BERLIN: Kenya’s Olympic champion Eliud Kipchoge broke the marathon world record with a blistering run in Berlin on Sunday, slicing 78 seconds off the previous best to land the one major crown that had eluded him.

The 33-year-old, widely seen as the greatest marathon runner of the modern era, ran an official time of two hours, one minute and 39 seconds on a sunny day along the flat inner-city course, smashing Dennis Kimetto’s previous record that had stood since 2014.

Fellow Kenyan Gladys Cherono won the women’s race with a course record and best time of the year of 2:18:11, leaving Ethiopians Ruti Aga and pre-race favourite Tirunesh Dibaba in second and third place, respective­ly.

Kipchoge’s run was the biggest improvemen­t on the marathon mark since Australian Derek Clayton took almost two and a half minutes off the record in 1967. “They say you can miss it twice but not a third time. So I want to thank everyone who has helped me,” said a beaming Kipchoge, a former world champion over 5,000 metres and marathon gold medallist at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016. He had won in Berlin in 2015 and 2017.

“Running a sub two hours two minutes was simply amazing and I believe I can still go below that with such good conditions.”

Kipchoge started off at a sizzling pace, quickly shaking off his biggest rival, Wilson Kipsang, and with virtually no wind, it was clear Kipchoge’s only opponent would be the clock. His three pacemakers were pushed to the limit to keep the tempo high as Kipchoge dipped well below record time at the halfway mark.

Yet even after the last pacemaker peeled off after 25 kilometres, Kipchoge showed no sign of slowing as thousands of Berliners lining the streets egged him on.

Berlin has now been the stage for the last six men’s world records over the distance.

“It was hard running alone, but I was confident. I ran my own race, I trusted my trainers, my programme and my coach. That’s what pushed me in the last kilometres,” Kipchoge said, adding that he could have gone even faster had the pacemakers stayed with him up to the 30-km mark.

› Running a subtwo hourtwomin­ute was simply amazing and I believe I can still go below that with such good conditions.

ELIUD KIPCHOGE, Kenyan runner

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