![]() But when he reeled off 26.2 consecutive miles at a 4:34 pace, he did something unprecedented. After all, other athletes have won Olympic medals and set world records. “My number one achievement is running under two hours,” he told me recently, referring to the day in Vienna in 2019 when he broke the mythical marathon barrier. In September, after he won the Berlin Marathon in 2:01:09, slicing 30 seconds off his own world record, The New York Times and Runner’s World both published articles on his water-bottle guy. ![]() If anything, Kipchoge’s dominance has created the opposite problem for the running commentariat: What more can be said about someone who seems to win every race, in an event where that kind of consistency isn’t supposed to be possible? Fortunately, Kipchoge’s outsize aura means that every detail of his existence has the potential to become supercharged with significance. In most other sports, the question of who deserves to be called the GOAT is reliable fodder for bar-side bickering. ![]() In the decade since Eliud Kipchoge made his debut at the 2013 Hamburg Marathon, the now 38-year-old Kenyan has demolished the grading curve for marathon mastery. The first human to run 26.2 miles in under two hours. ![]() The numbers speak for themselves: 15 victories in 17 starts. ![]()
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