Faith Kipyegon to Race 3000m in Silesia – Is the World Record in Sight?
World 1500m record-holder Faith Kipyegon will race the 3000 meters at the Silesia Kamila Skolimowska Memorial on August 16, setting up what could be one of the most anticipated moments of the 2025 track season.
The Kenyan star has been rewriting the history books. Over the past year, she set new world records in the 1500m (3:48.68) and 5000m (14:05.20), and ran the fastest women’s mile ever in an unofficial exhibition event in Paris. Now she’s turning her attention to the 3000m—an event she hasn’t run seriously in over a decade.
A Decade Later, a Return to 3000m
Kipyegon’s personal best of 8:23.55 was set in 2014 when she was just 20. Since then, she’s become a global icon—earning three Olympic gold medals, multiple world records, and establishing herself as the most dominant female middle-distance runner of her generation.
Now, with a combination of endurance from her 5000m training and unmatched speed honed in the 1500m, Kipyegon is poised to take a serious shot at history.
The Record She Might Be Chasing
The current women’s 3000m world record:
• 8:06.11 – Wang Junxia (China), set on September 13, 1993 in Beijing.
That mark has stood for more than 30 years—but it remains controversial. In 2015, a letter reportedly written by Wang Junxia in 1995 surfaced, in which she and nine teammates alleged they were forced to take “large doses of illegal drugs over the years” as part of a state-sponsored doping program under the direction of their coach, Ma Junren.
Wang wrote that the women “tried to refuse the drugs,” but that Ma would allegedly inject them himself if necessary. The letter was sent to Chinese journalist Zhao Yu but remained unpublished until decades later. Ma has consistently denied any doping allegations, and Wang’s world record still stands officially—despite renewed scrutiny.
In response, the IAAF (now World Athletics) opened an investigation at the time, but as of today, the record has not been invalidated.
Why Silesia Matters
If Faith Kipyegon runs in the 8:10–8:15 range, it would mark one of the cleanest and most credible performances in the history of the event. Should she go even faster, it could position her to break or at least redefine the context of the 3000m record.
Few athletes in history have had the range, poise, and championship pedigree that Kipyegon carries. With the eyes of the world on Silesia this August, she may once again elevate the sport.
Is a new world record possible? We’ll find out soon.
If she does it, Faith Kipyegon won’t just rewrite another line in the record books—she’ll help reclaim one of the most contested chapters in women’s distance running.
posted Saturday July 12th
by Boris Baron