In Vienna, the Kenyan achieved a
milestone once believed to be nova unattainable. But his time, 1:59:40, will
not be recognized as a world record.nova
nova
nova
nova1024w,https://static01.nyt.com/images/2019/10/12/world/12marathon-sub/12marathon-sub-superJumbo.jpg?quality=90&auto=webp 2048w" style="cursor: pointer;" />
By
In
becoming the first person to cover nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
novathe marathon distance in less than
two hours, Kipchoge, 34, achieved a sports milestone granted almost
mythical status in the running world, breaking through a temporal
barrier that many would have deemed untouchable only a few years ago.
Kipchoge,
an eight-time major marathon nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
novawinner and three-time Olympic medalist,
pounded his chest twice as he crossed the finish line in Vienna’s leafy
Prater Park, where the majority of the run had unfolded on a long
straightaway of recently paved road, with roundabouts on either end.
Cheered
on by a thick crowd of spectators, he was nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
novalifted into the air by
members of his team, including the 41 professional runners who had acted
as pacesetters during the run.
For Kipchoge, the feat merely burnished his credentials as the world’s greatest marathoner.
“Together, when we run, we can make this world a beautiful world,” Kipchoge said after finishing.
For all its
magnitude, the accomplishment will be regarded largely as a symbolic
one. The eye-popping time, which was 10 seconds quicker than the 1:59:50
time Kipchoge and his team had nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
nova
novaset out to achieve, will not be
officially recognized as a world record because it was not run under
open marathon conditions and because it featured a dense rotation of
professional pacesetters.
What the
event lacked in officially sanctioned gravitas, though, it seemed
determined to make up for with theater and grandiose proclamations.
The run, organized by the petrochemical company INEOS, featured a cycle of hype and commercial buildup more reminiscent of a heavyweight prizefight than a road race.