Poging GOUD - Vrij
THIS IS KIPCHOGE'S WORLD
Runner's World US
|Issue 03, 2023
PAST MARATHON LEGENDS SHOWED US WHAT WAS POSSIBLE. ELIUD KIPCHOGE MADE US BELIEVE IN THE IMPOSSIBLE.

EVERYTHING IS IMPOSSIBLE until somebody does it.
Think about how many very recently unthinkable things we encountered today alone: the electric car you saw this morning, the tablet I'm tapping this out on, Flamin' Hot Cool Ranch Doritos. They didn't exist, they couldn't exist, until they did.
Sometimes breakthroughs are the result of advanced technology. Sometimes they come from the exact right team of people with the exact right mix of skills. But sometimes the thing that brings it all together and makes it work is nothing more than pure will. Discipline. A defiant smile and a single step forward. And then, if this is a marathon we're talking about, several thousand more steps forward.
For decades, physiologists said a sub-two-hour marathon was impossible. Then, in 2019, Eliud Kipchoge broke the very recently unthinkable two-hour-marathon barrier, completing the INEOS 1:59 Challenge in Vienna, Austria, in 1:59:40. I'd call it a quantum leap if I didn't suspect that physicists had already started calling quantum leaps "Kipchoges."
He carried us into a new world. It is, in fact, Kipchoge's World, and we're just running in it. Much more slowly.
"Sub-two-hours? It doesn't seem real," says marathon legend Bill Rodgers. "I remember when the physiologists said a human being can't run [a marathon in] under two hours and two minutes."
A little more than a decade ago, "people started to wonder whether we would see a sub-two happen, and I said it would happen in our lifetime," says Meb Keflezighi, 2004 Olympic silver medalist in the marathon. "I just didn't imagine it would be this soon."
Dit verhaal komt uit de Issue 03, 2023-editie van Runner's World US.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Runner's World US

Runner's World US
BEHIND BARS, RUNNING WAS FREEDOM
Alsu Kurmasheva was jailed in a Russian prison on false charges. Separated from her family with no end in sight, she turned to the one thing that kept her hope alive.
27 mins
Summer 2025

Runner's World US
DARE TO TRY
WHAT WILL IT TAKE FOR KENYAN SUPERSTAR FAITH KIPYEGON TO BREAK A 4-MINUTE MILE?
10 mins
Summer 2025

Runner's World US
RUNNER'S 2025 SHOE AWARDS
Our annual Shoe Awards looks a little different this year.
5 mins
Summer 2025

Runner's World US
THE BEST WORKOUT TO GET COMFORTABLE WITH THE UNCOMFORTABLE
STANDING ON THE starting line of the 2021 New York City Marathon, I had a goal I kept mostly to myself: break four hours. I had sort of trained for it, following a mix of plans I thought would get me there.
4 mins
Summer 2025

Runner's World US
IT'S A VIBE!
WHAT IF YOU RAN YOUR NEXT RACE PURELY FOR FUN? THESE RW+ MEMBERS TRADED PRs FOR PIXIE DUST AT THE MOST MAGICAL PLACE ON EARTH.
8 mins
Summer 2025

Runner's World US
RUNNING SNACKS ARE PRICEY-SO I FOUND CHEAPER OPTIONS THAT ARE JUST AS GOOD
SINCE STARTING MY first marathon training last summer, I've been making sure I eat enough, especially before runs.
3 mins
Summer 2025

Runner's World US
CAN RUNNING KEEP DIABETES AT BAY?
AT THE END of 2022, I sat down with myself to reflect on the changes I wanted to implement and set the priority to embark on a fitness journey in the new year.
4 mins
Summer 2025

Runner's World US
THE SECRET BEHIND SUPERSHOE SPEED
ONE WEEK BEFORE the 2018 New York City Marathon, Olympian Jared Ward received a package from Saucony, his shoe sponsor. Inside were three early prototypes of what eventually became Saucony's first super shoe, the Endorphin Pro 1.
17 mins
Spring 2025

Runner's World US
YES, YOU CAN WALK DURING A RACE
WHEN I STARTED racing, I thought I had to run every step of every race.
2 mins
Spring 2025

Runner's World US
HEART BREAK HILL
TARZAN BROWN AND THE TRUTH ABOUT BOSTON'S INFAMOUS
12 mins
Spring 2025
Translate
Change font size