Athletics News

Chepngetich goes No.2 all-time in Chicago Marathon

Chepngetich goes No.2 all-time in Chicago Marathon

Kenyan survives sizzling early pace to clock 2:14:18 as Emily Sisson breaks US record and Benson Kipruto wins the men’s title

When it comes to pacing a marathon, Ruth Chepngetich broke every rule in the book at the Bank of America Chicago Marathon on Sunday (Oct 9). Setting off at a staggering 2:08 pace as she flew through 5km in 15:11, the 28-year-old Kenyan inevitably slowed dramatically in the latter stages. Yet she still clocked 2:14:18 – the second fastest time in history as she missed Brigid Kosgei’s world record by a mere 18 seconds.

After she won the world title in horrendously hot and humid conditions in Doha in 2019, we knew Chepngetich was tough. But in Chicago she used kamikaze tactics which have never remotely been seen before in a women’s marathon as she sped through 10km in 30:40 and halfway in 65:44.

Her second half of the race was almost three minutes slower than her first at 68:34. Question is, what could the diminutive distance runner have achieved with more sensible splits?

Behind, Emily Sisson was delivering just that, with negative splits, as she smashed Keira D’Amato’s US record of 2:19:12 – set in Houston in January – with 2:18:29.

The 30-year-old’s first half was a measured 69:26 and her second in 69:03 as she ran her own race several minutes behind the flying Chepngetich to finish runner-up to the Kenyan.

Emily Sisson (Getty)

Chepngetich has a history of going out hard. In Chicago last year she went through halfway in 67:34 and closed in a painful 74:57 but still won by nearly two minutes in 2:22:31. Her pace this year was on another level, though, as she reeled off unprecedented kilometre splits of 15:11,  15:29,  15:39,  15:51, 15:53, 15:58, 16:24 and 16:37 before grimly hanging on during the final 2km.

Behind Chepngetich and Sisson, Vivian Kiplagat of Kenya was third in 2:20:52, Ruti Aga of Ethiopia fourth in 2:21:41, Waganesh Mekasha of Ethiopia fifth in 2:23:41 and Susanna Sullivan of the United States sixth in 2:25:14.

On the all-time rankings, Paula Radcliffe now moves down to No.3 with her 2:15:25 from London in 2003.

Ruth Chepngetich (Getty)

Britain’s Sarah Inglis ran a solid race in ninth in 2:29:37 – just beating her PB of 2:29:41 which was set in 2020. Earlier this year Inglis finished seventh and ninth in the 5000m and 10,000m for Scotland at the Commonwealth Games.

The men’s race did not quite have the drama of the women’s race but Benson Kipruto proved an emphatic winner in 2:04:24…

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