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Coamo, Puerto Rico – March 1, 2026.
Under the warm Caribbean skies, Peter Njeru once again proved that consistency is the true measure of greatness. The Kenyan distance star delivered a composed and commanding performance to successfully defend his crown at the prestigious Medio Maratón San Blas, securing back-to-back victories and reinforcing his growing legacy on Puerto Rican soil.
Njeru arrived in Coamo as the reigning champion after winning the 2025 edition of the race in 1:03:08 — the fastest performance recorded at San Blas in more than a decade. That breakthrough victory not only elevated his profile internationally but also established him as the man to beat in 2026.
From the early kilometers of this year’s contest, the pace was uncompromising. A competitive lead pack pushed assertively across the undulating 21.1-kilometer course, testing endurance and resolve. Njeru, however, remained tactically disciplined, conserving energy while closely monitoring every move.
As the race entered its decisive phase, he gradually applied pressure. What began as a subtle increase in tempo evolved into a definitive breakaway. With smooth acceleration and unwavering focus, he separated himself from his challengers and powered toward the finish line unchallenged.
He crossed the line in 1:03:15, sealing his second consecutive San Blas crown with authority.
Ecuador’s Luis Miguel Masabanda mounted a determined effort to secure second place in 1:03:49, demonstrating resilience in the closing stretch. Fellow Kenyan Reuben Keiro claimed third in 1:04:18 after a measured and disciplined run.
Ethiopia’s Ali Abdilmana finished fourth in 1:04:41, while Kenya’s Sosten Kipchirchir rounded out the top five in 1:04:57, ensuring that the competition at the front remained intense until the final kilometers.
Top 5 Results – 2026 Medio Maratón San Blas
1. Peter Njeru (Kenya) – 1:03:15
2. Luis Miguel Masabanda (Ecuador) – 1:03:49
3. Reuben Keiro (Kenya) – 1:04:18
4. Ali Abdilmana (Ethiopia) – 1:04:41
5. Sosten Kipchirchir (Kenya) – 1:04:57
Defending a title at an event as internationally competitive and historically rich as the Medio Maratón San Blas demands more than physical strength. It requires mental discipline, race intelligence, and the courage to strike at the decisive moment. By conquering the course for the second year in succession, Njeru reaffirmed his status as one of the most dependable performers on the global road racing circuit.
As jubilant crowds celebrated another thrilling chapter of San Blas history, one truth stood clear: Peter Njeru did not merely return to Coamo — he returned to reign.
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Join San Blas Half Marathon It is a pleasure to invite you to the annual edition of the world’s most famous half marathon, Medio Maratón San Blas, here in our beloved city of Coamo. It has been 54 years that the people of Coamo have ?proudly received thousands of visitors, especially the international and national athletes who grace this event....
more...Under the radiant morning skies of Coamo, where history and endurance intertwine on the storied roads of the Medio Maratón San Blas, one of Puerto Rico’s most revered distance running icons reminded the island — and the sport — that greatness does not fade with age. It simply evolves.
Among the thousands who gathered for the annual 21-kilometer test was Radamés Vega, a name etched deeply into Puerto Rico’s distance-running legacy. During the 1970s, Vega stood as one of the nation’s premier marathoners, carrying Boricua pride across demanding courses at a time when international exposure for Caribbean athletes required both resilience and relentless self-belief.
Now 76 years old, Vega returned not as a headline-seeking competitor, but as a living embodiment of the sport’s enduring spirit. Yet when he crossed the finish line in Coamo this morning, his performance commanded attention all the same. Clocking an impressive 1:48:14 over the 21K distance, Vega delivered a time that many younger runners would proudly claim — a testament to discipline maintained across decades.
The San Blas course is not forgiving. Its rolling terrain, tropical humidity, and electric atmosphere demand respect from even the most seasoned elites. For Vega, however, these roads are woven into memory. They represent eras of transformation in Puerto Rican athletics, years when distance running was fueled by passion more than sponsorship, and when ambition often traveled farther than resources.
His stride today may carry the wisdom of age, but it still reflects the rhythm of a competitor shaped in the crucible of elite marathoning. Each kilometer he covered served as a bridge between generations — linking the pioneers of Puerto Rico’s distance tradition to the rising talents who now chase their own dreams on the same asphalt.
What makes Vega’s performance remarkable is not simply the stopwatch reading. It is the continuity. It is the quiet declaration that commitment to the sport extends beyond podiums and headlines. At 76, to complete a demanding half marathon in under two hours — and in 1:48:14 no less — speaks to a lifetime devoted to preparation, resilience, and respect for the craft of distance running.
In Coamo this morning, the applause was more than polite admiration. It was recognition. Recognition of a career that helped shape Puerto Rico’s marathon narrative in the 1970s, and recognition of a present-day effort that proves the competitive fire still burns.
Radamés Vega did not merely finish the San Blas. He honored it. And in doing so, he reminded everyone watching that legends are not defined solely by what they once achieved, but by the courage to keep running long after the spotlight shifts.
On the roads of Coamo, time moved forward — yet for a moment, it also stood still.
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The road to Copenhagen has officially begun, and it was paved with grit, precision, and championship composure at the USATF Half Marathon Championships.
On a fiercely competitive day that tested both patience and pace judgment, Wesley Kiptoo surged to gold in a commanding 1:01:15, stamping his authority on the national stage and confirming his place among America’s most formidable distance runners. His victory was not merely about time—it was about control. From the early miles through the decisive closing stretch, Kiptoo demonstrated tactical maturity, waiting for the perfect moment to assert dominance before powering away with unmistakable confidence.
Close behind, Hillary Bor delivered a courageous performance to secure silver in 1:01:30. Known primarily for his prowess over barriers on the track, Bor once again proved that his endurance extends far beyond the steeplechase. His transition to the roads continues to gain momentum, and his performance here signals a seamless blend of speed and stamina that will serve him well on the global stage.
Completing the podium was Ahmed Muhumed, who crossed the line in 1:01:51 to claim bronze. Muhumed’s race was a testament to resilience. Maintaining composure through shifting race dynamics, he held firm in the closing miles to secure the final automatic qualifying spot. His measured effort reflected both discipline and growing international ambition.
Together, the trio now turns its focus to the World Athletics Road Running Championships in Copenhagen, where they will represent the United States against the world’s finest road specialists. The Danish capital awaits, promising a championship atmosphere steeped in tradition and intensity. For Kiptoo, Bor, and Muhumed, this is more than a selection—it is an opportunity to measure themselves against global excellence.
Their performances at the national championships were not accidental peaks but calculated statements of readiness. Each athlete displayed a unique racing identity: Kiptoo’s commanding surge, Bor’s relentless strength, and Muhumed’s composed determination. Collectively, they form a balanced and dangerous squad capable of making a profound impact on the international stage.
As Copenhagen draws nearer, anticipation builds. The half marathon is often described as a race of controlled aggression—fast enough to demand courage, long enough to punish impatience. If their championship performances are any indication, the United States will arrive not just with participants, but with contenders ready to shape the narrative.
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Under the crisp morning skies of Japan, American distance runner Casey Klinger delivered a performance that signaled both progress and promise at the 2026 Tokyo Marathon. Finishing 24th overall in 2:08:43, Klinger emerged as the top American on the day — a result that underlined his growing presence on the global marathon stage.
What made the performance particularly striking was not just his placement, but the magnitude of his improvement. In only his second marathon appearance, Klinger carved more than seven minutes off the personal best he set during his debut in Chicago in late 2025. For an athlete still navigating the early chapters of his marathon career, such a leap speaks volumes about discipline, adaptation, and belief.
Tokyo’s fast and highly competitive course has long been a proving ground for the world’s elite. Against a field stacked with seasoned international contenders, Klinger ran with composure and resilience, holding his rhythm through the decisive stages of the race. His 2:08:43 finish reflects not only enhanced endurance but a refined race strategy — measured early pacing followed by strength when it mattered most.
To shed over seven minutes between marathon starts is no small feat. The marathon is a distance that rewards patience and punishes haste. Progress often comes in marginal gains, earned over months of calculated training. Klinger's breakthrough in Tokyo suggests a runner who has learned quickly, adjusted intelligently, and executed bravely.
Being the top American finisher in a World Marathon Major carries its own weight. It places Klinger firmly in conversations about the next wave of American marathoners seeking to challenge the global hierarchy. While the marathon landscape remains fiercely competitive, performances like this hint at deeper potential still waiting to be unlocked.
Tokyo 2026 may well be remembered as the race where Casey Klinger transitioned from promising newcomer to serious contender. For now, the numbers tell a compelling story: 2:08:43, 24th place, top American — and a personal best improved by more than seven minutes. In the long arc of a marathon career, that is not just progress. It is momentum.
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The Tokyo Marathon is a world-renowned annual marathon held in Tokyo, Japan. As one of the prestigious Abbott World Marathon Majors, it attracts elite and amateur runners from around the globe. The race holds World Athletics Platinum Label status, recognizing its high competitive standards, top-tier organization, and international appeal. Sponsored by Tokyo Metro, the Tokyo Marathon has grown into one...
more...The streets of Tokyo delivered drama of the highest order as the 2026 Tokyo Marathon men’s race unfolded into one of the most electrifying finishes in recent memory. Under clear skies and roaring crowds, Ethiopia’s Tadesse Takele etched his name deeper into history, defending his crown in breathtaking fashion and clinching victory in 2:03:37.
In a finish so tight it demanded a second glance, Kenya’s Geoffrey Toroitich crossed the line in the exact same time — 2:03:37 — pushing Takele to the absolute limit in a pulsating sprint down the final straight. Just a heartbeat behind them, fellow Kenyan Alexander Mutiso surged home in 2:03:38, turning the closing meters into a masterpiece of courage and endurance.
For Takele, this was not just another victory. It was confirmation of dominance — a second Tokyo title earned through patience, tactical intelligence, and a devastating finishing kick when it mattered most. He held his nerve as the leading pack thinned after 35 kilometers, responding to every surge before unleashing his final acceleration in the shadow of the finish gantry.
Behind the podium trio, Kenya’s ever-reliable Daniel Mateiko demonstrated remarkable consistency to claim fourth place in 2:03:44, keeping the pace honest throughout the decisive middle stages. Ethiopia’s Muktar Edris rounded out the top five in 2:04:07, adding depth to an already stacked elite field.
The race, part of the prestigious Abbott World Marathon Majors, once again showcased why Tokyo remains one of the fastest and most competitive marathon stages in the world. From the early controlled rhythm to the blistering final kilometers, it was a contest defined by precision pacing, strategic restraint, and fearless finishing speed.
Further down the standings, strong performances came from Italy’s Iliass Aouani (2:04:26), Ethiopia’s Olympic champion Selemon Barega (2:05:00), and Japan’s national icon Suguru Osako, who delighted the home crowd with a 2:05:59 effort.
Top 10 Finishers – Tokyo Marathon 2026 (Men)
1. Tadesse Takele (ETH) – 2:03:37
2. Geoffrey Toroitich (KEN) – 2:03:37
3. Alexander Mutiso (KEN) – 2:03:38
4. Daniel Mateiko (KEN) – 2:03:44
5. Muktar Edris (ETH) – 2:04:07
6. Iliass Aouani (ITA) – 2:04:26
7. Selemon Barega (ETH) – 2:05:00
8. Seifu Tura (ETH) – 2:05:02
9. Vincent Kipkemoi Ngetich (KEN) – 2:05:21
10. Shifera Tamru (ETH) – 2:05:56
But the story of the day belonged to Takele. In a race measured in seconds and decided in strides, he proved once more that championship composure is as vital as raw speed. Tokyo witnessed not just a marathon — but a duel worthy of the sport’s grandest stage.
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The Tokyo Marathon is a world-renowned annual marathon held in Tokyo, Japan. As one of the prestigious Abbott World Marathon Majors, it attracts elite and amateur runners from around the globe. The race holds World Athletics Platinum Label status, recognizing its high competitive standards, top-tier organization, and international appeal. Sponsored by Tokyo Metro, the Tokyo Marathon has grown into one...
more...The streets of Tokyo witnessed a masterclass in endurance and tactical brilliance as the women’s elite race at the Tokyo Marathon 2026 delivered one of the most compelling chapters in the event’s history. At the heart of it all was Kenya’s marathon queen, Brigid Kosgei, who stormed to victory in a breathtaking 2:14:29, smashing the course record and reaffirming her status among the greatest marathoners of her generation.
From the early kilometres, the pace signaled serious intent. The lead group moved with composure through Tokyo’s iconic avenues, but as the race stretched beyond the 30km mark, it became clear that Kosgei was running with something extraordinary in reserve. With controlled aggression and trademark efficiency, she gradually broke away, her stride smooth and decisive.
By the final stretch, the outcome was no longer in doubt. Kosgei powered through the closing kilometres to cross the line alone, arms raised in triumph, the clock confirming a new course record — a performance of authority, experience, and pure class.
Behind her, Ethiopia’s Bertukan Welde delivered a career-defining run. Clocking 2:16:36, she secured second place with a personal best, demonstrating remarkable composure in one of the deepest fields assembled this season. Her breakthrough performance signals a powerful emergence on the global marathon stage.
The battle for the final podium spot produced the day’s most dramatic moment. Ethiopia’s Hawi Feysa and compatriot Sutume Asefa Kebede were inseparable in the closing metres. In a thrilling sprint to the line, both were credited with 2:17:39, but Feysa edged ahead by the narrowest of margins to claim third, sealing an unforgettable duel that electrified the finish area.
The 2026 edition once again highlighted Tokyo’s reputation as one of the premier stages in global road racing, blending fast conditions with elite depth and tactical racing of the highest order.
Top 10 Women – Official Results
1. Brigid Kosgei (KEN) – 2:14:29 (CR)
2. Bertukan Welde (ETH) – 2:16:36 (PB)
3. Hawi Feysa (ETH) – 2:17:39
4. Sutume Asefa Kebede (ETH) – 2:17:39
5. Megertu Alemu (ETH) – 2:18:50
6. Viola Cheptoo (KEN) – 2:19:05
7. Mestawut Fikir (ETH) – 2:20:00
8. Aberu Ayana (ETH) – 2:20:30
9. Pascalia Jepkogei (KEN) – 2:21:39
10. Ai Hosoda (JPN) – 2:23:39
Beyond the podium, the depth of the field reflected the continued rise of women’s marathon running across continents — from Africa to Asia, Europe to Oceania and the Americas. Every athlete in the top ranks contributed to a race defined by courage, precision, and competitive spirit.
Tokyo once again proved that when the world’s finest gather on its roads, history is never far away. And in 2026, it belonged to Brigid Kosgei — a champion rewriting records with every decisive stride.
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The Tokyo Marathon is a world-renowned annual marathon held in Tokyo, Japan. As one of the prestigious Abbott World Marathon Majors, it attracts elite and amateur runners from around the globe. The race holds World Athletics Platinum Label status, recognizing its high competitive standards, top-tier organization, and international appeal. Sponsored by Tokyo Metro, the Tokyo Marathon has grown into one...
more...Italy’s master of precision has rewritten his own script once more.
At the Campionati Italiani Indoor di Atletica Leggera in Ancona, Francesco Fortunato delivered another performance of rare composure and control, stopping the clock at 17:54.48 in the 5000m race walk (short track). With that effort, he shaved more than a second off his previous global mark of 17:55.65—also achieved at this very meet—once again pushing the boundaries of what is possible in the discipline.
By breaking 18 minutes with his earlier mark of 17:55.65, Francesco Fortunato did more than set a world record—he dismantled a barrier that had stood firm for nearly three decades. The previous global standard of 18:07.08, untouched since 1995, had long seemed beyond reach, a time preserved in the record books as a symbol of endurance and technical mastery. Yet in Ancona, Fortunato rewrote that chapter with fearless precision, becoming the first athlete in history to walk 5000 metres indoors in under 18 minutes. It was not simply a faster performance; it was a defining moment that shifted the limits of the event itself.
Competing on the indoor circuit, where rhythm, concentration and technical efficiency are magnified on the tighter turns, Fortunato demonstrated why he remains one of the most consistent figures in modern race walking. From the opening laps, his cadence was smooth and assertive. There was no sign of strain, only the quiet authority of an athlete fully in command of his craft.
His earlier record had already set a high standard, but returning to the same venue and raising it further speaks volumes about his preparation and mental resilience. Ancona has become a familiar stage for Fortunato’s brilliance—a place where timing, technique and confidence converge.
The 5000m race walk on short track demands relentless discipline. Every stride must meet strict technical criteria while maintaining speed over 12 and a half laps. One lapse in form can undo months of preparation. Yet Fortunato walked with remarkable fluency, sustaining pace and form to the final lap before sealing another historic time.
The mark now awaits the customary ratification procedures, but the performance itself leaves little doubt. Fortunato has not only defended his global standing—he has strengthened it. In an event defined by margins measured in fractions of a second, he has once again proven that excellence is not accidental; it is carefully built, patiently refined and courageously repeated.
In Ancona, under the bright indoor lights, Francesco Fortunato did what champions do best: he returned to the scene of his triumph and made it even greater.
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She is back where memories were made and history was written.
When the women’s elite field gathers in Tokyo for the Tokyo Marathon on Sunday, March 1, 2026, much of the attention will naturally settle on Rosemary Wanjiru — an athlete whose journey on these streets has already been remarkable.
Tokyo is more than just another stop on the marathon circuit for Wanjiru. In 2023, she produced a commanding performance to claim the title, controlling the race with confidence and finishing with authority. It was a breakthrough moment that elevated her standing among the world’s elite.
She returned to the same course and delivered even greater evidence of her progress, clocking a personal best of 2:16:14 — a time that underscored her ability to blend strength with precision pacing. On Tokyo’s fast layout, Wanjiru has consistently shown composure, patience in the early stages, and decisive strength when the race reaches its critical moments.
Her victory at the Berlin Marathon in 2025 added another dimension to her profile. Berlin, widely respected for its speed and depth of competition, demanded both tactical awareness and sustained aggression. Wanjiru met that challenge with maturity, reinforcing her reputation as one of the most reliable performers on the global stage.
Yet this year’s return comes within a broader competitive context. Defending champion Sutume Asefa Kebede will seek to protect her crown, while former world record holder Brigid Kosgei brings invaluable experience to the contest. The presence of such accomplished rivals ensures that Tokyo 2026 will be shaped by collective excellence rather than individual expectation.
For Wanjiru, the objective is clear but measured: execute her race plan, respond to the rhythm of the field, and compete with the calm authority that has defined her recent seasons. The elite Men's and Women’s race in Tokyo will set off at 9:10 AM local time (JST). For fans following from across the world, this corresponds to earlier or later local times.
Local Time
Tokyo, Japan (JST)
9:10 AM
Sunday, Mar 1
Nairobi, Kenya (EAT)
3:10 AM
Sunday, Mar 1
As dawn breaks over Tokyo, Wanjiru will line up among the world’s best, representing Kenya’s depth in marathon running. While she is a leading contender, the race promises to be highly competitive, with multiple athletes capable of challenging for podium positions.
Tokyo 2026 is a global stage where strategy, endurance, and resilience define the winners. Rosemary Wanjiru’s return adds star power, but the race is open — and every competitor has a chance to make history.
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On February 28, 1996, in the quiet Norwegian town of Ulsteinvik, a champion was born. Over the years, Karsten Warholm has transformed himself into one of the most dominant and electrifying athletes of his generation — an Olympic champion, multiple-time world champion, European king, and the world record holder in the 400 meters hurdles.
Warholm’s journey did not begin with hurdles alone. As a teenager, he displayed remarkable versatility in the combined events. In 2013, he became World Junior Champion in the octathlon in Donetsk, showcasing an unusual blend of speed, strength, and technical precision. The following year, he competed in the decathlon at the World Junior Championships in Eugene, finishing tenth against the best young athletes in the world. By 2015, he had already claimed double silver at the European Junior Championships in Eskilstuna — in both the 400 meters and the decathlon — a clear sign that he possessed rare, multidimensional talent.
His early senior years hinted at something greater. He reached the semifinals of the 400m hurdles at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, gaining valuable experience on the biggest stage. But it was in 2017 that the world truly took notice. At the World Championships in London, the young Norwegian stunned the field by winning gold in the 400m hurdles. Fearless from the gun and relentless between the barriers, he introduced a bold, attacking style that would become his trademark.
From that breakthrough moment, his rise accelerated. He secured European gold in Berlin in 2018 and claimed the European indoor 400m title in Glasgow in 2019, equaling the long-standing European indoor record of 45.05. Later that same year, he added another global crown at the World Championships in Doha, firmly establishing himself as the dominant force in his event.
Then came August 3, 2021 — a date forever etched in athletics history. At the Olympic Games in Tokyo, Warholm produced one of the greatest performances the sport has ever witnessed. In a race of breathtaking intensity, he surged to Olympic gold and shattered the world record in the 400m hurdles with an astonishing 45.94 seconds. It was not just a victory; it was a redefinition of human possibility over barriers.
Champions are measured by how they respond to setbacks, and Warholm proved his resilience. After finishing seventh at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene, he returned stronger, reclaiming world gold in Budapest in 2023 with a commanding 46.89. In 2024, he added Olympic silver in Paris, European gold in Rome, and World Indoor silver in Glasgow, reinforcing his consistency at the highest level.
Beyond the hurdles, his athletic profile remains extraordinary. He has run 10.47 for 100 meters, 21.09 for 200 meters, and 44.87 for 400 meters. He holds the Norwegian record in the 300 meters at 32.49 and has cleared 2.05 meters in the high jump and leapt 7.66 meters in the long jump. Indoors, he has clocked 20.91 for 200 meters, equaled the European 400m record of 45.05, and set a world best of 34.26 in the 300m hurdles. Few specialists in modern athletics combine such speed, power, and technical mastery.
From a small coastal town to the pinnacle of global sport, Karsten Warholm has carried Norwegian athletics into a new era. His career is defined not only by medals and records but by courage, intensity, and an uncompromising will to push beyond limits. As he celebrates another year, one truth stands firm — the Viking of the 400m hurdles is not simply competing against rivals; he is racing against history itself, and more often than not, he wins.
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Los Angeles, California — August 5, 1984.
The California sun pressed heavily against the city streets, the temperature rising past 80 degrees as thousands of spectators lined the course. In the distance, a lone figure in a white painter’s cap ran with fearless intent, far ahead of the world’s best.
That woman was Joan Benoit — and she was not even supposed to be there.
Just three months earlier, her knee had collapsed in training. Doctors delivered a harsh verdict: immediate surgery, followed by months of recovery. Yet the U.S. Olympic Trials were only 17 days away. For most athletes, that diagnosis would have ended the dream.
But 1984 was no ordinary Olympic year. It marked the first time women were officially allowed to compete in the marathon at the 1984 Summer Olympics. For decades, women had been barred from long-distance racing under claims that their bodies were too fragile, that endurance would harm their health, even that it would threaten their ability to bear children. The resistance had been so entrenched that the Boston Marathon only officially opened its doors to women in 1972.
This was not just a race; it was a long-overdue correction.
Benoit understood the gravity of the moment. There would only ever be one first women’s Olympic marathon. If she missed it, that page of history would turn without her name written on it.
She chose surgery. Seventeen days later, still healing, she stood at the Trials start line — and won.
On August 5, 1984, the Olympic marathon began on the streets of Los Angeles, California, winding through the city beneath relentless summer heat. And before the race even reached mile three, Benoit did something astonishing.
She surged.
Breaking away from the pack with bold conviction, she committed herself to more than 23 miles alone. Commentators questioned the move. Behind her were giants of the sport — Grete Waitz and Rosa Mota — champions with unmatched credentials. Surely, they would reel her back in.
But mile after mile, the gap held.
She ran with a composure that defied both heat and doubt. The chase pack never closed the distance. Instead, Benoit extended her lead, stride by determined stride, as if carrying the weight of generations who had been denied this very opportunity.
At mile 23, she approached the iconic Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Still alone. Still leading. As she entered the stadium, more than 70,000 spectators rose to their feet, their roar echoing through the historic arena.
She crossed the finish line in 2:24:52, winning by over 400 meters.
The woman who had undergone knee surgery just weeks before the Trials had conquered the world’s finest on the sport’s biggest stage — in the very first women’s Olympic marathon ever held.
But her victory meant more than gold. It ended a debate that never deserved to exist. It proved that endurance does not belong to one gender, and that courage, when paired with conviction, can dismantle decades of disbelief.
Today, the women’s marathon stands as one of the most prestigious events in global athletics. Records have fallen, legends have risen, and young girls everywhere line up believing they belong.
It all traces back to Los Angeles, California — to August 5, 1984 — to a woman in a white cap who ran alone from mile three and refused to let history move forward without her
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Ethiopian middle-distance runner Diribe Welteji has been handed a two-year ban after the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) partially upheld an appeal filed by World Athletics.
The ruling confirms that Welteji committed an Anti-Doping Rule Violation after failing to provide a sample during an out-of-competition test conducted on 25 February 2025.
In its decision, CAS stated that the violation was not intentional. However, the panel determined that the athlete was negligent and did not present sufficient justification for failing to comply with the testing requirements. Under global anti-doping regulations, athletes are strictly responsible for cooperating with testing procedures at all times.
As a result of the ruling, Welteji will serve a two-year period of ineligibility from 8 July 2025 through 30 June 2027, with credit given for the provisional suspension already served. In addition, all competitive results recorded from 25 February 2025 onward have been disqualified.
The decision marks a significant pause in the career of one of Ethiopia’s leading middle-distance talents, who has been a regular presence on the international circuit in recent seasons.
Welteji will be eligible to return to competition on 30 June 2027. Until then, the sanction stands under the framework of World Athletics’ anti-doping code, reinforcing the sport’s commitment to maintaining integrity and equal standards for all competitors.
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At only 12 years old, Oliver Stauning Joranger from Norway has produced a performance that feels almost beyond belief. Stopping the clock at 36 minutes and 4 seconds for 10 kilometers, at a remarkable average pace of 3:36 per kilometre, the young talent has delivered something truly special.
To understand how impressive that is, you have to look at the rhythm. Running 3:36 per kilometre is a pace that challenges many experienced adult runners. Yet this young athlete maintained it across the full 10K distance — a race that demands endurance, patience, and strong mental focus. This was not just speed. It was control, maturity, and composure.
The 10K is unforgiving. Start too fast and you pay the price later. Start too slow and you miss the opportunity. For a 12-year-old to judge that balance so well speaks volumes about both his natural ability and the discipline behind his preparation. Talent may be the spark, but dedication is the fire.
Norway has become a respected name in global distance running, and performances like this show that the next generation is already rising. While it is still early in his journey, this run sends a powerful message — potential has no age limit.
At the same time, moments like this should be celebrated wisely. Youth athletics is about steady growth, enjoyment, and long-term development. The beauty of this achievement lies not only in the time itself, but in what it represents for the future.
A 12-year-old running 36:04 for 10K is not ordinary. It is incredible. It is stunning. It is inspiring.
Oliver Stauning Joranger has proven one simple truth: age is just a number.
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For more than four decades, one number has hovered over women’s middle-distance running like a mountain peak few dare to climb: 1:53.28.
Set in 1983 by Jarmila Kratochvílová in Munich, it remains the oldest world record still standing in women’s track and field. Generations have come and gone. Champions have risen, medals have been won, but the clock has stubbornly refused to yield.
Now, the question feels sharper than ever: is that 43-year-old record finally under serious threat?
Just a week after rewriting history indoors, Keely Hodgkinson has shifted her focus to the ultimate prize — the outdoor 800m world record. Her recent indoor world record was not just a victory; it was a statement. A declaration that the margins are closing and that the impossible may simply be waiting for the right moment.
For years, Hodgkinson has hovered tantalisingly close to the barrier. The 1:54s have become familiar territory — controlled, composed, almost routine for an athlete who has built her career on remarkable consistency at the highest level. Olympic and world medals have confirmed her place among the elite, but the stopwatch keeps whispering that there is still more.
“We’ve been saying for years now,” she admitted, “and I think I’ve just been tipping on those 1:54s and at some point a 1:53 is going to come.”
That belief no longer sounds hopeful. It sounds calculated.
Hodgkinson is careful to protect what she already owns. She has made it clear that medals — earned through championship battles and tactical brilliance — mean more than a time on a scoreboard. Yet even she recognises the magnitude of what breaking 1:53.28 would represent.
“Now I do really believe that we can break it,” she said. “I think the outdoor 800m record would be like ‘cemented GOAT.’ I do really believe it’s possible.”
That phrase — cemented GOAT — captures the scale of the challenge. This is not simply about running fast. It is about redefining the boundaries of women’s middle-distance running. It is about erasing a mark that has survived eras, technologies, and entire generations of talent.
What makes this moment different is momentum. Hodgkinson is no longer chasing from a distance; she is knocking on the door. Her strength through 600 metres, her composure under pressure, and her devastating final drive suggest an athlete entering her prime with unfinished business.
Records do not fall because they are old. They fall because someone arrives who is fearless enough to believe the clock can be beaten.
For 43 years, 1:53.28 has stood untouched — a relic of another era. But with Hodgkinson’s confidence rising and her form sharper than ever, the barrier feels less mythical and more mathematical.
Is 1:53.28 finally under threat?
For the first time in decades, the answer does not feel like nostalgia.
It feels like anticipation.
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The women’s race at the 2026 Tokyo Marathon to be staged on 1st March in Tokyo, Japan is shaping up to be one of the deepest and most compelling contests in recent marathon history, blending reigning champions, global major winners, national icons, and seasoned veterans into a single high-stakes showdown. At the center of the narrative stands Ethiopia’s formidable title defender Sutume Asefa Kebede, who returns to Tokyo chasing a third consecutive victory after dominating the previous two editions and establishing herself as the course record holder.
Kebede’s authority in Tokyo has been built on tactical intelligence and relentless pace control, but her path to another triumph will be far from straightforward. Among the most dangerous challengers is compatriot Hawi Feysa, who finished third in Tokyo last year before ascending to global prominence with victory at the 2025 Chicago Marathon. Her breakthrough confirmed what many suspected — that she possesses the finishing speed and endurance to win on any major stage.
Another major threat comes from Kenya’s Rosemary Wanjiru, the 2025 Berlin Marathon champion, whose consistency at the highest level continues to make her one of the most dependable performers in elite women’s marathoning. With proven championship composure and a powerful late-race surge, Wanjiru enters Tokyo as a genuine title contender capable of disrupting Ethiopian dominance.
The depth extends even further with a wave of major champions from the past two seasons. Ethiopia’s Megertu Alemu, winner in Valencia in 2024, arrives with one of the fastest personal bests in the field, while Bertukan Welde brings confidence from her victory in Prague in 2025. Adding to the Ethiopian strength is Mestawut Fikir, who captured the Paris Marathon crown in 2024, and Waganesh Mekasha, winner of Osaka the same year — further proof of the nation’s extraordinary marathon pipeline.
Yet perhaps the most recognizable name in the field remains Kenya’s Brigid Kosgei, the former world record holder whose 2:14:04 still ranks among the fastest performances ever recorded by a woman. Kosgei’s experience, championship pedigree, and proven ability to handle aggressive pacing make her presence alone a psychological factor for the entire field.
Japan’s hopes will largely rest on Ai Hosoda, currently the nation’s seventh-fastest woman in history. Hosoda produced a career-best 2:20:31 in Berlin in 2024 and recently announced that Tokyo will serve as her farewell race. The emotional weight of competing at home in her final marathon could provide an added dimension of motivation, especially after she secured qualification for the 2028 Olympic Trials with a strong performance in Sydney last year.
Beyond the headline names, the international depth remains impressive. Canada’s Malindi Elmore brings championship experience and resilience, while American veteran Sara Hall continues to defy expectations deep into her career. China fields a strong contingent led by Yuyu Xia, joined by Poland’s Aleksandra Brzezińska and Australia’s Vanessa Wilson, all capable of influencing the race dynamics if conditions or tactics shift.
What makes Tokyo particularly fascinating is the blend of proven speed and competitive hunger. Several athletes own personal bests under 2:18, creating the possibility of a historically fast race if pacing conditions align. But Tokyo is rarely predictable. Weather, pack strategy, and the psychological battle after 35 kilometers often determine the final outcome more than raw times on paper.
As the world turns its attention to Japan’s capital, one question dominates: can Kebede secure a historic three-peat, or will a new champion emerge from one of the strongest women’s marathon fields assembled this season?
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The Tokyo Marathon is a world-renowned annual marathon held in Tokyo, Japan. As one of the prestigious Abbott World Marathon Majors, it attracts elite and amateur runners from around the globe. The race holds World Athletics Platinum Label status, recognizing its high competitive standards, top-tier organization, and international appeal. Sponsored by Tokyo Metro, the Tokyo Marathon has grown into one...
more...British marathon running is rediscovering its confidence — and Emile Cairess believes that belief may be the most powerful performance enhancer of all.
At 28, Cairess has quietly positioned himself at the forefront of a new generation of British male distance runners who are no longer content with national relevance alone. Their ambitions are global, their standards higher, and their performances increasingly competitive against the East African dominance that has long defined the marathon.
Cairess’ trajectory over the past two seasons explains why expectations are growing. His third-place finish at the 2024 London Marathon announced him as a serious contender, but it was his fourth-place performance at the Paris 2024 Olympics marathon that truly confirmed his class — the joint-best Olympic result by a British man in 40 years.
Now his focus turns toward a historic target: the long-standing British marathon record of 2:05:11 set by four-time Olympic champion Mo Farah in 2018. The mark has endured for years, but Cairess senses the psychological barrier around it beginning to weaken.
According to him, progress in elite sport often begins with proof. Once one or two athletes demonstrate what is possible, perceptions shift — and limits move.
That shift is already visible across Britain’s marathon scene.
Olympic triathlon champion Alex Yee produced a remarkable 2:06:38 in Valencia in December 2024 to become the second-fastest British marathon runner in history, briefly moving ahead of Cairess. In a detail that reflects the supportive spirit within this emerging generation, Cairess himself played a pacing role during that race.
Behind them, Mahamed Mahamed and Philip Sesemann have both recorded performances within two minutes of Farah’s national record in recent seasons, while Patrick Dever added fresh excitement with an outstanding fourth-place finish on his marathon debut in New York.
For Cairess, this collective progress is not coincidence — it is momentum.
When athletes see their peers succeeding, belief grows. Training standards rise. Confidence deepens. What once felt exceptional begins to feel attainable. He describes it as a snowball effect: success multiplying through shared inspiration.
That momentum will converge on Sunday, 27 April 2025, at the TCS London Marathon, where Cairess will line up alongside Mahamed, Sesemann, and Dever. With Yee returning his primary focus to triathlon, Cairess carries the responsibility of leading the British charge — not only against the clock, but against the world’s best Kenyan and Ethiopian athletes.
Yet his mindset remains outward-looking. National records matter, but global competitiveness matters more. His ambition is not simply to become Britain’s fastest — it is to compete fearlessly at the very highest level of marathon running.
The sense of renewal extends to the women’s field as well. Eilish McColgan returns to London after an impressive marathon debut last year, where she set a Scottish record and demonstrated her potential over the distance. She joins a race featuring five of the ten fastest British women in history, highlighting the depth currently developing across British endurance running.
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The London Marathon was first run on March 29, 1981 and has been held in the spring of every year since 2010. It is sponsored by Virgin Money and was founded by the former Olympic champion and journalist Chris Brasher and Welsh athlete John Disley. It is organized by Hugh Brasher (son of Chris) as Race Director and Nick Bitel...
more...This Sunday, the global distance running spotlight shifts to Japan as the Tokyo Marathon returns on March 1, 2026, promising far more than a test of endurance. It is a stage where ambition meets opportunity—where athletes chase not only victory but life-changing prize money, historic performances, and a place among the sport’s elite. As one of the prestigious races in the Abbott World Marathon Majors, the event guarantees a world-class field and an atmosphere charged with expectation across the streets of Tokyo.
At the heart of the competition lies a prize structure designed to reward excellence at every level of the podium. Both men and women compete for identical rewards, reinforcing the sport’s continued commitment to equality at the highest level. Winners will claim $80,000, while second and third places earn $30,000 and $15,000 respectively. Even those finishing inside the top ten walk away with financial recognition, underlining the depth and competitiveness required to succeed on this stage.
Here’s the full elite prize breakdown for the top 10 finishers at the Tokyo Marathon (men & women — equal pay):
1st Place — $80,000
2nd Place — $30,000
3rd Place — $15,000
4th Place — $7,000
5th Place — $5,000
6th Place — $4,000
7th Place — $3,000
8th Place — $2,000
9th Place — $1,000
10th Place — $500
Yet the true drama may unfold beyond the base prize purse. Tokyo’s incentive bonuses elevate the race into one of the most financially compelling marathons on the calendar. A staggering $200,000 awaits any athlete who can break a world record while winning the race—an achievement that would instantly redefine the day’s narrative. The course record carries an additional $20,000 reward, while Japan’s fastest national performer could secure a ¥5,000,000 bonus, adding powerful domestic motivation to an already electrifying contest.
Such incentives transform the marathon from a tactical race into a high-stakes pursuit of greatness. Athletes must balance patience and aggression, knowing that history—and extraordinary financial reward—may favor those willing to push the limits of human performance. For spectators, this combination of speed, strategy, and consequence creates one of the most compelling viewing experiences in distance running.
Beyond the numbers, however, the Tokyo Marathon remains a celebration of resilience and possibility. Elite professionals share the same roads as thousands of amateur runners, each pursuing personal milestones through the vibrant heart of one of the world’s great cities. It is this blend of human stories—personal triumphs alongside global excellence—that gives the race its enduring emotional power.
On March 1, the world will not simply watch a marathon. It will witness ambition in motion, where seconds can shape careers, records can rewrite history, and one unforgettable performance can echo far beyond the finish line.
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The Tokyo Marathon is a world-renowned annual marathon held in Tokyo, Japan. As one of the prestigious Abbott World Marathon Majors, it attracts elite and amateur runners from around the globe. The race holds World Athletics Platinum Label status, recognizing its high competitive standards, top-tier organization, and international appeal. Sponsored by Tokyo Metro, the Tokyo Marathon has grown into one...
more...In elite running, breakthrough moments rarely happen in isolation. For 16-year-old middle-distance prodigy Sam Ruthe, a record-breaking 2025–2026 season has been powered by a support system that starts at home. Behind his historic performances stands a multi-generational family of champions whose shared passion for the sport has shaped one of the most promising careers in New Zealand athletics.
A Household of Champions
The Ruthe name is synonymous with success on the track. Sam grew up in an environment where active movement was a way of life, guided by parents and grandparents who reached the pinnacle of the sport.
Sam Ruthe’s 2025–2026 Statistical Breakthroughs
Sam’s recent "Golden Run" has seen him shatter records previously held by legends like Sir John Walker and Jakob Ingebrigtsen. By February 2026, he achieved the "U20 Grand Slam," holding every New Zealand U20 record from the 800m to the 5000m.
|
Event |
Time |
Note |
Date |
|
800m |
1:45.86 |
NZ U20 Record |
Jan 2026 |
|
1500m |
3:33.25 |
World U18 Indoor Best |
Jan 2026 |
|
One Mile |
3:48.88 |
NZ Absolute Record (Indoor) |
Jan 2026 |
|
3000m |
7:43.16 |
NZ U20 Record |
Feb 2026 |
|
5000m |
13:40.48 |
NZ U20 Record (Debut) |
Dec 2025 |
Looking Ahead: The Road to Glasgow and LA '28
Sam’s record-breaking mile in Boston—clocking 3:48.88—has officially placed him in contention for the upcoming Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. While he remains a junior athlete, his father Ben and coach Craig Kirkwood are focused on providing him with international experience as a stepping stone toward the
2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
With his career still developing, one thing is clear: Sam's journey has never been a solo effort. Behind the times and the medals stands a family that set the foundation, including a sister who is hot on his heels.
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Few athletes in track and field have risen as quickly—or as convincingly—as Britain’s Keely Hodgkinson. Still in her early twenties, she has already won Olympic gold, broken records, and established herself as the woman to beat in one of the sport’s most demanding events.
The 800 meters has always required a rare mix of speed, strength, and racing instinct. Hodgkinson seems to have all three.
Early Life and Family Support
Keely Nicole Hodgkinson was born on March 3, 2002, in the north of England and grew up in Atherton, Greater Manchester. Sport was part of her life from the beginning. Her parents were active and supportive, encouraging her to explore athletics at a young age.
She joined a local athletics club as a child and quickly showed unusual talent. By her mid-teens she was already competing at the national level and winning junior titles.
Her family has remained a steady presence throughout her rise. Hodgkinson often speaks about the importance of that support system during the years when her career accelerated from promising junior to global star.
A Teenager on the Olympic Stage
Hodgkinson first captured worldwide attention at the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021. At just 19 years old she ran fearlessly in the women’s 800 meters final, finishing second and winning the silver medal.
Her time of 1:55.88 set a new British record and made her one of the youngest athletes ever to medal in the event.
The performance signaled that a new force had arrived in middle-distance running.
Olympic Champion
Three years later she returned to the Olympic stage in Paris 2024 and took the next step.
Running with confidence and control, Hodgkinson won the Olympic gold medal in the 800 meters, becoming one of Britain’s great modern champions and the first British woman in decades to claim the title.
It was a moment that confirmed her place among the elite of global athletics.
Breaking the Indoor World Record
In February 2026 Hodgkinson delivered another historic performance.
At the World Indoor Tour meeting in Liévin, France, she ran 1:54.87, breaking the long-standing indoor 800-meter world record.
The performance was widely viewed as one of the greatest indoor middle-distance runs ever.
What made it even more remarkable was how controlled it looked. Hodgkinson ran aggressively but smoothly, maintaining form all the way through the final straight.
The Coach Behind the Champion
A key figure in Hodgkinson’s success has been her coach, former British international Jenny Meadows, herself a world-class 800-meter runner.
Their partnership has helped shape Hodgkinson’s development both physically and mentally. Meadows understands the tactical demands of the event and has helped guide Hodgkinson through the pressures that come with being one of the world’s top athletes.
Together they have built a training approach focused on speed, endurance, and smart racing.
Life Away From the Track
Despite her rapid rise, Hodgkinson has remained grounded. She still spends much of her time in the Manchester area, close to family and longtime friends.
Away from competition she enjoys music, fashion, and spending time with those closest to her. Like many athletes of her generation, she connects with fans through social media but keeps her private life relatively low-key.
Teammates and competitors often describe her as relaxed and approachable off the track—but fiercely competitive once the race begins.
One of the Faces of Modern Athletics
In recent years Hodgkinson has become one of the most recognizable figures in track and field. Her performances have drawn large audiences and renewed attention to the women’s 800 meters.
She represents a new generation of athletes who combine elite performance with personality and confidence.
For young runners watching around the world, she has quickly become a role model.
The Future
At an age when many middle-distance runners are still learning their event, Hodgkinson already owns Olympic gold, global medals, and one of the fastest times ever run.
The outdoor world record—long considered untouchable—now seems within reach.
If her progress continues, the coming years could see her move from superstar to legend.
For now, Keely Hodgkinson remains exactly what the sport needs: a fearless racer who makes every 800 meters must-watch.
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The running world has lost one of its most influential voices. Olympian, author, and lifelong running advocate Jeff Galloway has died at the age of 80 following complications from a stroke.
For more than five decades, Galloway inspired runners of all ages and abilities to lace up their shoes and head out the door. His message was simple but powerful: running is for everyone.
From Olympic Athlete to Running Pioneer
Born July 12, 1945, in Raleigh, North Carolina, Galloway rose to prominence during the great running boom of the late 1960s and early 1970s. A talented distance runner, he earned a spot on the U.S. Olympic team in the 10,000 meters at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich.
While his own racing career was notable, Galloway’s greatest contribution to the sport came afterward.
He understood something that would shape the future of running—that millions of people wanted to run but needed encouragement, guidance, and a realistic path to get started.
The Method That Opened the Sport to Millions
Galloway became widely known for developing the Run Walk Run method, a training strategy that encouraged runners to take short, planned walking breaks during their runs.
At the time, the concept challenged traditional thinking. Many believed walking during a run meant failure. Galloway saw it differently.
By alternating running and walking, runners could go longer, recover faster, and reduce injury risk. The method helped countless beginners complete races they once thought impossible and helped experienced runners stay consistent.
Over time, the strategy spread around the world. In many running communities it earned its own nickname: “Jeffing.”
A Teacher and Ambassador for the Sport
Beyond races and training plans, Galloway became one of the most recognizable teachers in running. Through books, clinics, and coaching programs he helped guide generations of runners toward their first 5K, half marathon, or marathon.
He had a rare ability to make the sport feel welcoming rather than intimidating.
Many runners credit him with helping them start—or continue—their running journey.
Part of Running’s Greatest Era of Growth
Galloway was part of the generation that helped shape modern distance running. During the early years of the running boom, voices like his helped bring the sport out of the shadows and into everyday life.
The idea that anyone could become a runner helped transform road racing from a niche activity into a global movement.
Few people contributed more to that shift than Jeff Galloway.
A Lasting Legacy
Even in his later years, Galloway remained deeply connected to the sport, continuing to coach, speak, and encourage runners to stay active.
Today, countless runners crossing finish lines—from small community races to major marathons—are part of the legacy he helped build.
Jeff Galloway was 80 years old. His influence on running will continue for generations.
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At an age when most runners are simply hoping to stay active, France’s Mohammed El Yamani delivered one of the most remarkable performances in masters marathon history.
Competing on February 22, 2026, at the Zurich Sevilla Marathon in Seville, Spain, the 61-year-old clocked 2:28:28, shattering the men’s 60–64 age-group world record. The previous mark of 2:30:02 was set in 2020 by Irish Olympian Tommy Hughes.
El Yamani’s run did not just slip under the old record—it took a full 1 minute and 34 secondsoff a time many believed would stand for years. In a field filled with elite international runners, he finished 145th overall, an extraordinary placement considering both his age and the circumstances leading into the race.
What makes the performance even more remarkable is the road he took to reach the starting line.
According to El Yamani, the race marked his first marathon in three years. During that time he battled a series of serious setbacks, including gluteal tendonitis, two vertebral fractures, and significant back problems that kept him away from running for nearly two full years.
Yet the dream never disappeared.
In a message he shared afterward, El Yamani reflected on the difficult journey back:
“Three years without a marathon, three years without a race number, two years without running due to injury. I doubted myself at times, I was depressed at times, but I never gave up on my dream. Some said I was old, others that I was finished, but I say I have the experience of years lived, the strength of my conviction in my dreams, and the drive and will to improve.”
Before the long injury break, El Yamani had run 2:31:21 at the 2023 Tokyo Marathon, showing strong form even then. But few could have predicted that his return would produce a world record.
The performance also highlights something the running community continues to witness: athletes are pushing the boundaries of what is possible at every age. Masters runners today are training smarter, recovering better, and in some cases producing times that would have been competitive in open races not long ago.
A 2:28 marathon at age 61 is not just impressive for a masters runner—it impressive for any runner.
And for Mohammed El Yamani, it stands as proof that persistence, patience, and belief can sometimes bring an athlete back even stronger than before.
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This urban, flat, fast and beautiful brand new race course will drive athletes through the most beautiful monuments of the city. Zurich Maraton de Sevilla brings the unique opportunity to brake the Best personal result over the mythical distance to all the athletes, professional or age groupers, in one of the most perfect international marathon circuits. This fast marathon takes...
more...A new chapter in European marathon running was unveiled on February 25, 2026, when organizers introduced the European Marathon Classics, a series linking eight of the continent’s most established races into one long-term challenge for runners.
The announcement was made in Vienna at the historic Schönbrunn Palace, bringing together race directors and organizers from across Europe. The concept is simple: one distance, eight cities, and a shared journey through some of Europe’s most celebrated marathon courses.
The new series connects races that already have strong identities of their own. By linking them together, organizers hope to inspire runners to explore different countries, cultures, and running traditions while pursuing a personal challenge.
To earn the title European Marathon Classics Finisher, runners must complete five of the eight marathons, each in a different city. There is no time limit, allowing participants to build their journey over several seasons.
The eight races in the series form a calendar stretching from early spring to autumn:
2026 European Marathon Classics Schedule
March 22 – Rome Marathon (Italy)
April 19 – Vienna City Marathon (Austria)
April 26 – London Marathon (United Kingdom)
April 26 – Madrid Marathon (Spain)
May 10 – Copenhagen Marathon (Denmark)
September 27 – Warsaw Marathon (Poland)
October 10 – Lisbon Marathon (Portugal)
October 25 – Frankfurt Marathon (Germany)
Runners who complete five races will receive a commemorative medal designed to reflect the journey. The medal includes magnetic elements that allow athletes to add a marker for each marathon they finish.
One unusual feature of the project is that past results will count. Organizers say runners will be able to register historical performances from earlier editions of the races, recognizing the long traditions behind these events.
London Marathon Event Director Hugh Brasher said the idea is meant to highlight what connects runners across the continent.
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There are athletes who win races, and then there are rare souls whose movement feels almost like poetry — effortless yet powerful, gentle yet unstoppable. On a warm August evening in Brussels in 2001, under the honey-gold glow of stadium lights, a slender Ethiopian teenager floated across the track with a quiet certainty that something extraordinary was unfolding.
The crowd watched, curious at first, then captivated. When the clock stopped at 7:30.67 for 3000 metres at the Memorial Van Damme, applause filled the air. It was announced as a world junior record, but what lingered was not just the number — it was the feeling. The feeling of witnessing hunger wrapped in grace, ambition wrapped in innocence.
The teenager was Kenenisa Bekele, and even then, you could sense he was not chasing applause. He was chasing possibility.
For three and a half years, that junior record stood as a quiet monument to ambition before Augustine Choge eventually lowered it. Records, after all, are built to fall. Yet the resonance of Bekele’s performance lingered — the unmistakable arrival of a force that would soon redefine distance running.
Even before Brussels, his ascent had begun to take shape in unexpected corners of Europe. In the small Dutch town that hosts the Montferland Run, he collected victories in 2000 and 2001 with an almost casual authority. Fifteen kilometres through winter air and narrow streets looked less like competition and more like controlled expression. But nothing about Bekele was ever routine. Beneath the calm exterior was a furnace of ambition.
Then came the terrain where legends are forged — mud, grass, cold wind, and pain — the IAAF World Cross Country Championships. Between 2002 and 2006, Bekele achieved something so extraordinary it borders on myth: he won both the short course and long course titles every single year for five consecutive seasons. No athlete before or since has replicated such dominance. The physiological toll alone should have made it impossible — the explosive intensity of the short race followed by the grinding endurance of the long. Yet he returned each year stronger, hungrier, untouchable.
When the short course was discontinued after 2006, he stepped away briefly, then returned in 2008 to claim the long-course crown once more, almost ceremonially, as though closing a chapter he himself had authored. By then his cross-country medal collection had reached staggering proportions — nineteen in total, including eleven senior individual golds. Statistics struggled to contain the scale of his supremacy.
But numbers alone never explained the aura.
On the track, Bekele possessed an almost predatory intelligence. He would sit quietly in the pack, conserving energy with deceptive ease. Then, with laps remaining, something would ignite. At the 2003 Bislett Games in Oslo, he tracked down the Kenyan leader with chilling precision before unleashing a decisive kick to win in 12:52.26. It was not merely speed — it was timing, instinct, and psychological dominance. Rivals knew the surge was coming. They simply could not stop it.
And hovering over his rise was a rivalry that felt almost epic in scale: Bekele against Haile Gebrselassie. The reigning emperor of distance running and the fearless successor. Early encounters favored the veteran, who reminded the young challenger of the existing hierarchy. But by 2003, the balance began to shift. Bekele edged Gebrselassie over 10,000 metres in Hengelo, then continued to outperform him across major championships.
At the 2004 Athens Olympics, Bekele captured 10,000-metre gold while Gebrselassie faded to fifth. Four years later, at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, history repeated itself. The apprentice had become the standard. Even on the roads, including the Great North Run, Bekele would later finish ahead. Their rivalry was not merely competitive — it symbolised the passing of an era.
The year 2004 crystallised his dominance. Within nine astonishing days, Bekele broke the indoor 5000-metre world record, then the outdoor 5000, and finally the 10,000-metre world record — as if impatience with history itself drove him. He swept cross-country titles again, led Ethiopia to team victories, and left Athens with Olympic gold and silver. Distance running had a new gravitational centre, and it was him.
Yet life does not always move in harmony with triumph.
On January 4, 2005, a deeply personal loss entered his world during what should have been an ordinary training morning. Alem Techale — the 1500-metre World Youth Champion of 2003 — was running alongside Bekele in Ararat, a forested, hilly area on the outskirts of Addis Ababa. The two were sharing the familiar rhythm of training when she suddenly collapsed. Bekele immediately carried her to his car and rushed toward the hospital, hoping urgency might change the outcome. But on the way, she passed away. What remained was a silence that no explanation could fully fill — only memories of shared miles, shared dreams, and a companionship that had once felt limitless.
For a time, the noise of competition softened around him. But step by step, he continued — not because pain disappears, but because the human heart has a quiet way of learning to carry both love and loss together.
Because in the end, Kenenisa Bekele’s story is not simply about speed, medals, or records etched into history books. It is about the tenderness hidden inside strength. It is about a young boy who ran with wonder in his spirit, a champion who experienced both luminous joy and quiet sorrow, and a man who kept moving forward with grace. His journey reminds us that greatness is not only measured by how fast someone runs, but by how gently someone keeps going — through seasons of celebration, through moments of silence, through life itself — one faithful stride at a time.
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Track and field fans should circle their calendars. The 51st edition of the Prefontaine Classic will take place on Saturday, July 4, 2026, at the legendary Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon — and it will feature one of the sport’s brightest stars. Olympic champion and indoor world record holder Keely Hodgkinson is set to headline the women’s Mutola 800m, returning to a venue that has repeatedly played a defining role in her career.
Eugene has become one of Hodgkinson’s most successful stages, a place where her rise from prodigy to global superstar has unfolded in front of packed grandstands. She first claimed victory at the Prefontaine Classic in 2022 with a composed 1:57.72 performance, announcing herself as a force capable of controlling world-class races.
She returned in 2023 and elevated her dominance, running 1:55.19 to secure the Diamond League Trophy — proof that she was no longer chasing the world’s best but redefining the standard.
In 2024, she once again conquered Hayward Field with a 1:55.78 victory before carrying that momentum into the Olympic season, where she captured gold in Paris — the crowning achievement of a career that had long promised greatness.
Her most recent milestone may be the most significant yet. On February 19, Hodgkinson delivered an extraordinary 1:54.87 indoors to set a new world record, reinforcing her position at the very summit of women’s middle-distance running and hinting that even faster performances could be approaching outdoors.
This year’s Mutola 800m — named in honor of Olympic legend Maria Mutola — will feature formidable opposition. Fellow Briton Georgia Hunter Bell brings tactical aggression and rising confidence, while reigning world champion Lilian Odira arrives with the authority of an athlete proven on the sport’s biggest stage.
Together, the trio creates a race rich in narrative — record-breaking speed, championship pedigree, and emerging rivalry converging on one of athletics’ most historic tracks.
For Hodgkinson, Eugene represents more than competition. It is a stage where defining moments seem to occur with remarkable consistency. Every visit has produced either victory, a title, or a performance that elevated her career to a new level.
Now, with world-record momentum behind her and Olympic gold already secured, she returns once more to a stadium that has repeatedly witnessed her brilliance. If history is any guide, the Prefontaine Classic may again become the setting where greatness accelerates — and where the world’s fastest woman reminds the world exactly why she sits at the top of the 800-meter throne.
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The Pre Classic, part of the Diamond League series of international meets featuring Olympic-level athletes, is scheduled to be held at the new Hayward Field in Eugene. The Prefontaine Classicis the longest-running outdoor invitational track & field meet in America and is part of the elite Wanda Diamond League of meets held worldwide annually. The Pre Classic’s results score has...
more...The men’s race at the Tokyo Marathon 2026 to be held on Sunday 1st March in the streets of Tokyo, Japan is shaping up to be one of the deepest and most unpredictable contests the event has witnessed in recent years. A compelling mix of returning stars, major champions, national record holders, and ambitious debutants ensures that the battle through Japan’s capital will be anything but routine. At the center of the narrative stands defending champion Tadese Takele, whose breakthrough victory last year transformed him from a promising talent into a proven major winner. Yet, defending a title in a field of this magnitude may prove even more difficult than winning it the first time.
Several familiar rivals return with unfinished business. Among them is third-place finisher Vincent Kipkemoi Ngetich, alongside Geoffrey Toroitich, Suldan Hassan, and Japan’s own Tsubasa Ichiyama, all of whom cracked the top ten a year ago. Their familiarity with the course and conditions adds another tactical dimension to the race, particularly if the pace turns aggressive early.
On paper, however, the fastest credentials belong to Timothy Kiplagat and Alexander Mutiso. Kiplagat, runner-up in Tokyo in 2024, owns a personal best of 2:02:55 and has already demonstrated his ability to handle the unique rhythm of this course. Mutiso arrives with the confidence of a major champion after conquering London in 2024, and his 2:03:11 lifetime best positions him squarely among the favorites. When athletes of such caliber collide, races often shift from tactical chess matches to brutal tests of endurance.
The field’s strength deepens further with global champions. Milkesa Mengesha, winner in Berlin in 2024, brings proven major-winning pedigree, while Chalu Deso returns as a former Tokyo champion eager to reclaim dominance. Olympic and world track star turned marathon force Selemon Barega adds intrigue as well, his 2:05:15 personal best hinting at untapped marathon potential that could surface dramatically on race day.
Japan’s elite contingent may be the most compelling storyline of all. National record holder Suguru Osako leads a formidable home squad that includes former record holder Kengo Suzuki, debut national record setter Ryota Kondo, and Ichiyama. Collectively, they account for four of the nine fastest Japanese marathon performances in history, reflecting the country’s remarkable progression in long-distance running. With the roar of home crowds behind them, the possibility of a historic domestic performance cannot be dismissed.
International depth extends far beyond the headline names. Canadian record holder Cam Levins adds North American firepower, while European challenges come from French record holder Morhad Amdouni and Italy’s world championship bronze medalist Iliass Aouani. Central Asia and East Asia are represented by Uzbekistan’s national record holder Shokhrukh Davlatov and China’s leading contender Peiyou Feng, while Ireland’s national record holder Fearghal Curtin adds further competitive depth.
The debut list introduces another layer of unpredictability. Japan-based Kenyan runners Richard Kimunyan and Vincent Yegon will test themselves over the classic distance for the first time, joined by promising collegiate standouts Shinsaku Kudo and Teruki Shimada. Debuts at this level often produce surprises, especially when emerging athletes seize the opportunity to challenge established hierarchies.
With elite entries clustered between 2:02 and 2:05 personal bests—including names like Dawit Wolde and Daniel Mateiko—the margin between victory and obscurity could be measured in seconds. Tokyo has a history of fast times and dramatic finishes, and 2026 promises another chapter worthy of the World Marathon Majors stage.
In a sport where preparation meets uncertainty, this race will ultimately reward not just speed, but courage—the willingness to surge when legs are heavy, to gamble when logic says wait, and to endure when the city’s long avenues seem endless. When the leaders turn toward the finish line, only one athlete will claim the crown, but the journey there may redefine the global marathon landscape.
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The Tokyo Marathon is a world-renowned annual marathon held in Tokyo, Japan. As one of the prestigious Abbott World Marathon Majors, it attracts elite and amateur runners from around the globe. The race holds World Athletics Platinum Label status, recognizing its high competitive standards, top-tier organization, and international appeal. Sponsored by Tokyo Metro, the Tokyo Marathon has grown into one...
more...There are fast miles… and then there are legendary miles — the kind where oxygen competes with carbonation, and athletic brilliance collides with controlled chaos. In 2025, Canada’s beer-mile king, Corey Bellemore, once again rewrote the record books, storming to an astonishing 4:27.10 at the Beer Mile World Classic in Lisbon — the fastest performance of his career, achieved while consuming four full beers along the way.
Yes, four beers. No shortcuts. No mercy.
For the uninitiated, the beer mile is not merely a novelty — it is a bizarrely demanding hybrid of elite running physiology and stomach-stretching courage. The rules are simple but unforgiving: before each of the four laps, the athlete must down a 355 ml beer (minimum 5% alcohol). Spill it? Penalty. Throw up? Penalty. Hesitate? The stopwatch does not care. Bellemore averaged roughly seven seconds per beer, before unleashing laps hovering around 60 seconds each — a combination that sounds medically questionable but athletically extraordinary.
What makes the feat even more impressive is that Bellemore is not some party trick specialist. He is a legitimate endurance machine — a sub-four-minute miler with the aerobic engine of a Half Ironman competitor. In other words, he possesses the rare ability to sprint while his stomach debates filing a formal complaint.
His relationship with the beer mile borders on mythological. He first seized the world record back in 2016 and has spent nearly a decade lowering his own benchmark, like a scientist refining a volatile experiment. In 2018, he actually ran an even faster 4:24, only for it to be disqualified because the bottle contained excessive foam — proof that in this sport, even bubbles can break hearts.
Then came 2023, when Bellemore casually ran 4:30 wearing only one shoe, because apparently symmetry is optional when you are built differently from the rest of humanity.
There is also the delicious subplot involving Olympic champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen. Bellemore jokingly hinted that he might retire — but only after Ingebrigtsen beats him. Considering the Norwegian star once clocked 5:22 at his own bachelor party, the throne remains firmly Canadian for now. The challenge has been issued, the gauntlet thrown, and somewhere in the future a showdown may yet brew.
Beyond the humor and spectacle lies something genuinely remarkable: the beer mile demands precision under absurd conditions. Athletes must control breathing, manage carbonation pressure, maintain coordination, and still produce near-elite track speed. It is part physiology experiment, part circus act, and part celebration of human weirdness.
And Bellemore? He remains its undisputed maestro — the only man capable of turning hops and barley into horsepower.
Because running a mile in 4:27 is impressive.
Running it with four beers sloshing in your stomach?
That is pure athletic comedy… performed at world-class speed. Chug beer and run!
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At just 23 years old, Hibiki Yoshida announced himself to the marathon world with a performance that was equal parts audacity and endurance, launching a blistering debut at the Osaka Marathon that nearly defied logic. From the opening kilometers, Yoshida refused caution. He surged ahead of the pacemakers before 8km, committing to a punishing rhythm that projected a sensational finish deep into the 2:03 territory—an extraordinary gamble for a first attempt over 42.195 kilometers.
For the first half, his stride carried the confidence of youth and the composure of a seasoned racer. He passed halfway in 1:02:39, running with a cushion and the kind of relaxed efficiency that suggested something historic might unfold. Magnetic therapeutic tape stretched across his face—a small but telling detail—helped him maintain looseness through 25km, where many marathons truly begin. Up to that point, Yoshida looked not only competitive, but dangerous.
Yet the marathon is an unforgiving examiner. Around 25km, the first signs of strain appeared. By 30km, the early aggression began to extract its price. Complicating matters further, his personal drinks bottle had been misplaced at the start, forcing him to improvise hydration from paper cups until he finally recovered his bottle later in the race. The cumulative toll—pace, dehydration, and physiological stress—began tightening his muscles and clouding his awareness.
From 35km onward, the race transformed into survival. His rival Hirabayashi moved past him near 37km, while Yoshida fought waves of fatigue severe enough that he later admitted he remembered little of those closing kilometers. With roughly 3km remaining, the thought of abandoning the race briefly crossed his mind. What carried him forward instead was something less tangible but equally powerful: the roar of spectators and the silent encouragement of fellow runners overtaking him on the road.
He staggered home in 2:09:33—far from the dazzling projections of the early pace, yet profoundly impressive given the circumstances. The time also underscored his enormous potential. At 30km (1:28:07), he had come within seconds of the revered Japanese benchmark set by Takayuki Matsumiya two decades earlier, evidence that his aggressive approach was not reckless fantasy but rooted in genuine ability.
Race Splits
5K — 14:50
10K — 29:33
15K — 44:10
20K — 58:42
Half — 1:02:39
25K — 1:13:16
30K — 1:28:07
35K — 1:43:20
40K — 2:02:49
Finish — 2:09:33
Afterward, Yoshida spoke with remarkable humility and clarity. He acknowledged the suffering, the confusion, even the momentary temptation to quit—but also the joy. To him, the experience was not a failure of pacing but a lesson in possibility. Once recovered, he vowed, he would return stronger and wiser.
This was more than a debut. It was a declaration of intent.
In Osaka, Hibiki Yoshida did not merely run his first marathon—he revealed the outline of a future contender. Courage often arrives before mastery, and on this day, courage was unmistakable. The clock read 2:09:33, but the deeper story was written in resilience: a young athlete pushed to the edge, dehydrated yet unbroken, already imagining the next starting line.
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Former Boston Marathon champion Yuki Kawauchi showed encouraging progress in his comeback at the Osaka Marathon on February 22, 2026.
Kawauchi clocked 2:14:30, marking his first sub-2:15 performance in two years as he continues returning from injury.
The Japanese fan favorite shared afterward that the result represents an important step forward.
“I’m finally on the road to recovery now,” he wrote.
Known worldwide as the “Citizen Runner,” Kawauchi built his reputation on racing frequently and fearlessly. His career reached global attention in 2018, when he captured a stunning victory at the Boston Marathon in brutal weather conditions.
Now 38, Kawauchi believes he can still return to a much higher level. He has run more sub 2:20 marathons than anyone in the world. This makes number 128.
“This year I will once again break 2:10,” he said after the race. “It took a long time, but I will definitely do it.”
While the Osaka result was not about winning, it showed the former Boston champion is moving closer to the form that made him one of the most admired runners in the sport.
For fans around the world, seeing Kawauchi back under 2:15 is a promising sign that his remarkable racing story is still being written.
He also recently announced, "I will be the pacemaker for sub 2:50 in this year's Tokyo Marathon. Runners aiming for sub 2:50 in this year's Tokyo Marathon, let's run together in Tokyo."
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The men’s 1500 meters at the 2026 Orlen Copernicus Cup in Toruń, Poland produced one of the most dramatic finishes of the indoor season—only for the result to change minutes later.
South Africa’s Tshepiso Masalela crossed the line first in 3:32.55, appearing to claim a major victory at the World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold meeting held on February 16, 2026.
But the celebration was short-lived.
Officials reviewed the race and disqualified Masalela for unsportsmanlike conduct after he gestured aggressively toward Morocco’s Azeddine Habz during the final sprint down the homestretch.
With the disqualification enforced, Habz was awarded the victory in 3:32.56, just one hundredth of a second behind Masalela at the finish.
Officials ruled that the gun gesture violated Rule TR 7.1 (improper conduct) under World Athletics’ competition regulations. The rule addresses behaviour considered unsportsmanlike or inappropriate during competition.
The incident unfolded in the final meters of a fiercely contested race. As the athletes drove toward the line, Masalela appeared to turn and gesture toward Habz while still sprinting. Officials ruled the action violated competition rules governing athlete conduct.
The decision immediately changed the outcome of one of the fastest indoor 1500-meter races of the season.
The Orlen Copernicus Cup is one of the premier meets on the World Athletics Indoor Tour, often serving as a key tune-up ahead of championship racing. The fast indoor track in Toruń has produced numerous world-class performances over the years, and this race looked destined to be remembered purely for its speed before the post-race ruling shifted the spotlight.
For Habz, the victory stands as an important result in a season building toward the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Toruń next month.
For Masalela, it was a painful lesson in how quickly a victory can disappear—even after crossing the finish line first.
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The record books do not often bend to the will of one athlete — especially not one still in his mid-teens. Yet at just 16 years old, Sam Ruthe has accomplished something extraordinary, rewriting every New Zealand Under-20 record from 800 metres through to 5000 metres in a sweep that signals both precocious brilliance and rare competitive maturity.
What makes this achievement truly staggering is not merely the collection of records, but the age at which it has been done. Most athletes are only beginning to discover their strengths at sixteen. Ruthe, by contrast, is already redefining national standards across a spectrum of distances that demand completely different physiological and tactical qualities — from raw speed to sustained endurance.
His national U20 marks now stand as follows:
800 metres: 1:45.86
1000 metres: 2:17.82
1500 metres: 3:33.25
Mile: 3:48.88
3000 metres: 7:43.16
5000 metres: 13:40.48
Together, these performances form more than a statistical collection; they represent a statement. Ruthe is not simply winning races — he is reshaping expectations. Each record has felt like another jewel being added to a crown that continues to grow brighter with every outing.
Such versatility at such a young age often hints at even greater potential ahead. The ability to excel from two laps of the track to twelve and a half suggests deep aerobic foundations combined with elite speed — a combination that frequently underpins future senior success on the world stage.
In an era where global middle-distance running is evolving rapidly, Ruthe’s emergence arrives at a compelling moment. His achievements do not merely place him among the best young athletes in New Zealand; they position him among the most exciting teenage prospects internationally.
Records can be broken. Expectations can be surpassed. But rewriting an entire national age-group range at sixteen years old sends a different message altogether — one that echoes far beyond the finish line. A new star is rising, and the future of New Zealand distance running suddenly looks dazzlingly bright.
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American distance running reached another milestone as Parker Wolfe delivered a breakthrough performance, clocking 12:59.09 for 5,000 meters indoors at the BU Battle for Boston. The performance not only marked the first time Wolfe has dipped under the 13-minute barrier, but also elevated him to seventh on the U.S. all-time indoor rankings, making him just the eighth American in history to achieve the feat.
Racing at the fast track inside Boston University, Wolfe approached the race with controlled aggression. He benefited from early pacing support from training partner Abdi Nur through roughly two miles, positioning himself perfectly for a decisive solo finish. Once the pacemaking duties ended, Wolfe maintained his rhythm alone against the clock, demonstrating both physical strength and tactical maturity.
Despite a small field with only a handful of finishers, the quality of Wolfe’s run was undeniable. He surged away from the competition over the closing laps, ultimately winning by a commanding margin of 28 seconds. More importantly, his time confirmed his progression into the elite tier of American distance runners, signaling that his development continues to accelerate.
Crossing under 13 minutes is widely regarded as a defining benchmark in the 5,000 meters, separating national-class athletes from those capable of competing on the global stage. For Wolfe, this achievement represents not only a personal best but also a statement of intent as he targets future championships and faster times outdoors.
With momentum now firmly on his side, Wolfe’s historic run in Boston may prove to be the turning point of his career — the moment where promise transformed into proven excellence. If this trajectory continues, the American distance scene could soon witness even bigger performances from a runner who has just begun to reveal his true potential.
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The Osaka Marathon, held February 22, 2026, in Osaka, Japan, produced one of the most significant American marathon performances of the year. While the race featured a deep international field and fast times at the front, the biggest story for U.S. distance running came from former BYU athlete Ethan Shuley.
Shuley ran 2:07:14, a performance that now ranks as the seventh-fastest marathon ever by an American on a record-eligible course
Just two years ago, Shuley’s personal best stood at 2:20:53, making his rise particularly striking. During the 2025 season he began to show major progress, running 2:18:13 for fifth place at the Nagano Marathon in April before finishing second at the Kobe Marathon in November with 2:11:30. In Osaka he took another massive step forward, slicing more than four minutes off that mark.
Shuley’s path to elite running is far from traditional. The American is currently based in Shinjuku, Tokyo, where he studies film while continuing to train and compete. He shares much of his training and life in Japan on his YouTube channel, offering a rare look into the life of a developing international marathoner.
His coaching situation is equally unconventional. Shuley works remotely—sometimes even communicating through Instagram—with coach Isaac Wood.
The Osaka Marathon has built a reputation as one of Asia’s premier road races, known for producing fast times and attracting strong international competition. The 2026 edition continued that tradition, with elite runners battling through cool conditions on a course that winds through the heart of the city.
While international athletes claimed the overall titles, Shuley’s performance stood out as one of the most important American results of the year and immediately placed him among the country’s top marathoners.
Fastest American Marathons
(Record-Eligible Courses) Because the Boston Marathon is a point-to-point course with significant net downhill, performances there are not eligible for records. The following marks were run on courses that meet international record standards.
1. Conner Mantz – 2:04:43 (Chicago 2025)
2. Khalid Khannouchi – 2:05:38 (London 2002)
3. Zouhair Talbi – 2:05:45 (Houston 2026)
4. Galen Rupp – 2:06:07 (Prague 2018)
5. Ryan Hall – 2:06:17 (London 2008)
6. Biya Simbassa – 2:06:53 (Valencia 2024)
7. Ethan Shuley – 2:07:14 (Osaka 2026)
Breaking into this list is no small achievement. It places Shuley alongside some of the most accomplished runners in U.S. marathon history.
For now, Osaka may be remembered as the race where a new American contender officially arrived. If Shuley’s trajectory continues, this performance could be only the beginning.
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In 2022 the Lake Biwa Mainichi Marathon and Osaka Marathon were held together. For 2023 the name of the marathon will be Osaka and both men and women can run the race. The original male-only competition was first held in 1946 and, having taken place every year since then, it is Japan's oldest annual marathon race. The early editions of...
more...The 2026 edition of the Napoli City Half Marathon unfolded as a celebration of elite endurance, tactical brilliance, and record-breaking ambition, with the streets of Naples providing a dramatic stage for unforgettable performances. At the center of the spectacle was Italy’s leading distance star, Yemaneberhan Crippa, who delivered the race of his life to secure victory in a remarkable 59:01.
Executed with composure and authority, the performance shattered the Italian national record, improved his previous personal best of 59:26, and also erased the course record, marking one of the most significant achievements of his career. The time propelled him into second place on the European all-time rankings list, positioning him directly behind Sweden’s Andreas Almgren, whose continental mark stands at 58:41. Beyond statistics, the run confirmed Crippa’s arrival among the absolute elite of global road running.
The race developed with controlled patience through the early kilometers before a decisive increase in pace began to stretch the lead group. Once the surge came, only the strongest contenders could respond. Crippa’s relaxed mechanics, efficient cadence, and relentless forward momentum carried him clear as the closing stages approached, and the finish beneath the one-hour barrier confirmed both his dominance and his progression to a new level of performance. Strong Kenyan challengers ensured the tempo remained honest throughout, while another Italian athlete’s presence in the top five added further excitement for the home crowd.
Men — Top 5
1. Yemaneberhan Crippa (Italy) — 59:01
2. Andrea Kiptoo (Kenya) — 59:27
3. Owen Korir Kapkama (Kenya) — 59:42
4. Pietro Riva (Italy) — 1:00:32
5. Kwemoi Kirui (Kenya) — 1:01:29
The women’s contest added its own compelling dimension to the event, unfolding as a measured tactical battle before decisive moves emerged in the latter stages. Lucy Nthenya Ndambuki demonstrated impressive strength and composure to claim victory in 1:08:48, timing her effort perfectly and maintaining control as fatigue began to impact the field. Behind her, the fight for podium places remained fiercely contested, with athletes pushing deep into their reserves over the final kilometers. The outcome once again highlighted Kenya’s enduring influence in global distance running while also showcasing the international depth assembled on the start line.
Women — Top 5
1. Lucy Nthenya Ndambuki (Kenya) — 1:08:48
2. Nelly Jeptoo (Kenya) — 1:09:26
3. Susanna Saapunki (Finland) — 1:10:35
4. Regina Cheptoo (Kenya) — 1:11:25
5. Cepova Michaela (Czech Republic) — 1:13:32
As spectators lined the Mediterranean route, the atmosphere captured the very essence of road racing — courage, suffering, precision, and triumph unfolding in real time. With a historic men’s performance that reshaped the European rankings and a fiercely contested women’s race, this year’s Napoli City Half Marathon delivered a powerful reminder that the boundaries of human endurance continue to move forward.
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The Napoli City Half Marathon is the most growing running event in Italy. The race, certified by IAAF / AIMS/ European Athletics, is held inoptimal conditions with an average temperature of 10 ° C. From thewaterfront to the Castel dell'Ovo, the Teatro San Carlo to the Piazzadel Plebiscito, the course will lead you through the most fascinatingareas of the city,...
more...On Sunday, February 22, 2026, under radiant Mediterranean skies in Castelló, Spain, the energy was electric as Europe’s finest lined up for the prestigious 10K Facsa Castelló. Known for its lightning-fast layout and flawless organization, the event once again proved why it is regarded as one of the quickest 10K circuits in the world. What unfolded was more than a race — it was a defining chapter in European distance running.
France’s Yann Schrub delivered a performance of rare brilliance, storming to 26:43 to become the fastest European man ever over 10 kilometers on the roads. In doing so, he erased the previous continental record of 26:45 set earlier this year by Sweden’s Andreas Almgren in Valencia. The significance of Schrub’s run extends beyond the two-second improvement — he demolished the long-standing psychological barrier of 27 minutes, redefining what European athletes can now believe is possible.
Composed in the early stages and relentlessly precise over the closing kilometers, Schrub executed his race with tactical maturity and fearless ambition. His record crowns a remarkable spell of form, coming just weeks after his national indoor 3000m record of 7:29.38 in Metz. Two national records in rapid succession, followed by a European record on the roads, confirm that the Frenchman is operating at an exceptional level.
The women’s race brought equal drama and historic significance.
Great Britain’s Megan Keith surged to 30:07, slicing one second off the previous European record of 30:08 set last month by compatriot Eilish McColgan in Valencia. Keith finished fourth overall in a fiercely competitive field, her record forged through bold pacing and uncompromising intensity, while McColgan placed sixth in 30:35 — highlighting the extraordinary depth within British women’s distance running.
Keith’s run was not just about the stopwatch — it was a statement of courage, precision, and ambition, finished in fourth place overall against a field brimming with world-class talent. With every stride, she demonstrated that the ceiling in women’s distance running is no longer fixed, that European women are stepping onto a stage where every second is a declaration, and every finish line is a new possibility. Her performance, daring and decisive, ensured that Castelló would be remembered not only as the stage of record-breaking speed for men but as a triumphant milestone for women who continue to redefine the sport.
As the final finishers crossed the line and the Mediterranean breeze drifted through Castelló’s streets, it became clear that February 22, 2026 would stand as a landmark date. Records were not merely broken — they were elevated to new dimensions. Sub-27 is no longer a European aspiration; it is a standard. Thirty minutes is no longer a ceiling; it is a battleground. At the 10K Facsa Castelló, Europe did not just chase history — it outran it.
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The 10K FACSA Castelló is one of Spain’s fastest and most prestigious road races, drawing elite and amateur runners from around the world. Held in Castellón de la Plana, this race has grown exponentially, earning a reputation for its flat, high-speed course and exceptional organization. It holds a World Athletics Road Race Label, placing it among the top road races...
more...The 2026 Daegu Marathon unfolded as a breathtaking exhibition of elite endurance, delivering a race day defined by split-second margins, fierce rivalries, and moments that blended tactical precision with raw resilience. From a razor-close men’s finish to a courageous comeback in the women’s race, Daegu once again affirmed its reputation as a stage for marathon excellence.
In the men’s race, Tanzania’s Gabriel Gerald Geay delivered when it mattered most, powering through the decisive stages to secure victory in 2:08:09 after 42 kilometers of disciplined pacing and tactical control. Ethiopia’s Chimdesa Debele Gudeta matched the winning time of 2:08:09 to claim second place in a fiercely contested duel that stretched all the way to the line. Close behind, Tanzania’s Josephat Gisemo completed the podium in 2:08:17, ensuring two Tanzanians stood among the top three. Eritrea’s Samsom Amare Hailemikael (2:08:40) and Ethiopia’s Gerba Beata Dibaba (2:10:04) rounded out a high-caliber top five, underscoring the international depth assembled in Daegu.
The women’s race delivered a storyline that will resonate far beyond the finishing clock. Kenya’s Lilian Kasait Rengeruk produced one of the most stirring performances of the 2026 marathon season in her debut over the classic distance. Approaching the stadium in command, she suffered a heavy fall in the closing meters — a moment that could have erased her advantage. Instead, she rose instantly, gathered herself with remarkable composure, and surged across the line in 2:19:33, breaking the coveted 2:20 barrier and sealing a dramatic triumph. Ethiopia’s Meseret Belete secured second in 2:19:52 after a relentless chase, while Kenya’s Evaline Chirchir claimed third in 2:20:49, giving Kenya two podium finishes. Ethiopia’s Khufu Tahir Dadiso (2:28:21) and Obseni Getachi Adillo (2:28:26) completed the top five.
Top 5 Men
Gabriel Gerald Geay (Tanzania) – 2:08:09
Chimdesa Debele Gudeta (Ethiopia) – 2:08:09
Josephat Gisemo (Tanzania) – 2:08:17
Samsom Amare Hailemikael (Eritrea) – 2:08:40
Gerba Beata Dibaba (Ethiopia) – 2:10:04
Top 5 Women
Lilian Kasait Rengeruk (Kenya) – 2:19:33
Meseret Belete (Ethiopia) – 2:19:52
Evaline Chirchir (Kenya) – 2:20:49
Khufu Tahir Dadiso (Ethiopia) – 2:28:21
Obseni Getachi Adillo (Ethiopia) – 2:28:26
As the echoes of celebration settled over Daegu, the 2026 edition stood out as a marathon defined not only by speed but by resolve. From a tightly contested men’s battle to a fearless recovery in the women’s race, the event once again illustrated that greatness in the marathon is forged in decisive moments — when composure, courage, and conviction converge at the finish line.
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Daegu International Marathon brings together varied groups of people with passion for running. With a sincere hope to host a meaningful event for everyone, Daegu International Marathon will amplify the love of running for all and promote a healthy life through running. On behalf of 2.6 million Daegu citizens, we welcome all of you and hope your race in Daegu...
more...On February 20, 2026, American ultrarunner Ashley Paulson delivered one of the fastest performances in the history of ultradistance running, setting a new women’s 100-mile world record at the Jackpot 100 Mile in Henderson, Nevada.
Paulson stopped the clock at 12:19:34, breaking the previous mark of 12:37:04 set by Ireland’s Caitriona Jennings at the 2025 Tunnel Hill 100 Mile. Her performance shaved more than 17 minutes off the record and came during the USATF 100 Mile National Championships, held just outside Las Vegas.
The race unfolded on a 1.19-mile loop around the pond at Cornerstone Park. Cool morning temperatures and calm early conditions created a fast environment, though winds increased later in the day as runners continued circling the course.
To break the record, Paulson needed to average roughly 7:34 per mile for 100 miles. She went out aggressively, covering the early miles near the 7-minute pace and building a significant cushion on record schedule. By the halfway point she had established a comfortable margin, allowing for a gradual slowdown later in the race while remaining ahead of record pace.
Over the final miles the gap narrowed slightly, but Paulson maintained control and crossed the finish line with history secured.
The performance adds another major accomplishment to a résumé that already includes the women’s course record at the Badwater 135, one of the most demanding ultramarathons in the world. Paulson is also familiar with the Jackpot event, having won the race previously.
The course in Henderson is certified, meaning the mark is eligible for official recognition once ratified by the International Association of Ultrarunners.
Paulson entered the race openly targeting the record, and her decisive effort delivered exactly that — a new global standard for the women’s 100-mile distance.
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The streets of Daegu are set for another spectacle of endurance and speed this Sunday, February 22, as the 2026 Daegu Marathon assembles a field rich in pedigree and ambition. At the center of it all stands Tanzania’s premier long-distance force, Gabriel Geay, who returns with one clear objective — to defend the crown he claimed in emphatic fashion last year.
Armed with a staggering personal best of 2:03:00, Geay enters the race not merely as the reigning champion, but as the benchmark. His résumé places him among the fastest marathoners of his generation, and his efficiency over 42.195 kilometers has consistently demonstrated a rare blend of tactical intelligence and sustained aggression. Daegu’s flat and historically quick course appears tailor-made for his rhythm, yet defending a title is often a sterner challenge than winning it the first time.
Standing in his path are two formidable East African rivals eager to disrupt his reign.
Kenya’s Stephen Kiprop arrives with a personal best of 2:07:04. Though numerically slower on paper, Kiprop represents the relentless depth of Kenyan distance running — disciplined, strategic, and capable of surging when the race begins to fracture in its decisive stages. Championships are rarely won on statistics alone, and Kiprop’s competitive maturity could transform him into a serious threat if the contest becomes tactical.
Equally dangerous is Ethiopia’s Chimdesa Debele Gudeta, whose 2:04:44 lifetime best signals genuine world-class credentials. Gudeta possesses the kind of speed endurance that can destabilize even the strongest frontrunner. Should the pace escalate early, he has the credentials to match it — and perhaps exceed it — in the unforgiving final kilometers.
The narrative unfolding in Daegu is therefore more than a title defense. It is a clash of contrasting strengths: Geay’s proven dominance, Kiprop’s calculated resilience, and Gudeta’s formidable pace capacity. With three athletes boasting elite credentials, the 2026 edition promises a contest that could be dictated by courage as much as conditioning.
As dawn breaks over South Korea on race day, one certainty prevails — the margins will be razor thin, the pace uncompromising, and the battle for supremacy fiercely contested. Whether Gabriel Geay consolidates his authority or a new champion rises, the 2026 Daegu Marathon is poised to deliver a performance worthy of the global stage.
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Daegu International Marathon brings together varied groups of people with passion for running. With a sincere hope to host a meaningful event for everyone, Daegu International Marathon will amplify the love of running for all and promote a healthy life through running. On behalf of 2.6 million Daegu citizens, we welcome all of you and hope your race in Daegu...
more...On Sunday, February 22, 2026, the streets of Castelló, Spain, could become the stage for something extraordinary. Sweden’s distance sensation Andreas Almgren is set to attack the 10-kilometre distance once again — and this time, the target is nothing short of historic. Reports suggest he will be chasing a time under 26:40, a mark that edges dangerously close to global supremacy.
Almgren arrives in Castelló carrying the weight of momentum and the confidence of an athlete operating at the very peak of his powers. Earlier this January in Valencia, he shattered his own European 10km record, clocking a breathtaking 26:45. That performance was not an isolated flash of brilliance; it was another link in an impressive chain of continental records he has forged in recent seasons.
His résumé now reads like a masterclass in modern distance running. A blistering 12:44 for 5km. A commanding 26:45 for 10km. A superb 58:41 in the half marathon. Each mark underlines not only speed, but also remarkable strength and endurance — the rare blend required to flirt with world-record territory.
What makes Almgren especially dangerous is his fearless front-running style. He does not wait. He dictates. He stretches the field, dares others to follow, and often runs alone against the clock. Yet even for an athlete of his calibre, raw courage will not suffice on Sunday. To dip under 26:40, precision pacing will be critical. The margin for error at such velocity is razor-thin, and the assistance of disciplined pacemakers could determine whether this becomes a fast race — or a truly historic one.
Castelló is known for producing rapid times, and conditions permitting, the course may offer the perfect arena for Almgren’s bold ambitions. If the early kilometres are controlled and the rhythm sustained deep into the race, we could witness a performance that redefines European excellence and edges into global legend.
Elite contenders from Ethiopia, Kenya, France, Norway, Germany, Australia, Eritrea, Switzerland, Chile, and Ireland converge on a course engineered for velocity. With ideal winter conditions forecast and a layout designed to reward rhythm and boldness, the tempo is expected to be unrelenting from the opening stride. Tactical discipline, calibrated pacing, and uncompromising endurance will determine who survives the inevitable surge.
Elite Men’s Start List – 10K Facsa Castellón 2026
Andreas Almgren (Sweden) – 26:45 AR
Kuma Girma (Ethiopia) – 26:58
Jack Rayner (Australia) – 27:09.57
Victor Kipruto (Kenya) – 27:10
Yann Schrub (France) – 27:20
Dawit Seare Berhanyukun (Eritrea) – 27:21
Magnus Tuv Myhre (Norway) – 27:22
Dennis Mutuku (Kenya) – 27:22.89
Zerei Kbrom Mzengi (Norway) – 27:39
Morgan Le Guen (Switzerland) – 27:42
Filimon Abraham (Germany) – 27:48.82
Bereket Nega Batebo (Ethiopia) – 27:49
Carlos Díaz (Chile) – 27:58.97
Simon Boch (Germany) – 28:01
Cormac Dalton (Ireland) – 28:03
A global convergence of speed and ambition awaits in Castelló — a morning where world-class credentials meet one of Europe’s fastest 10K stages, and where the line between continental dominance and world-record territory may grow perilously thin.
World record? Perhaps. Something astonishingly close? Almost certainly.
One thing is undeniable: Andreas Almgren is not merely chasing times — he is chasing history. And on Sunday, the clock will have to be ready.
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The 10K FACSA Castelló is one of Spain’s fastest and most prestigious road races, drawing elite and amateur runners from around the world. Held in Castellón de la Plana, this race has grown exponentially, earning a reputation for its flat, high-speed course and exceptional organization. It holds a World Athletics Road Race Label, placing it among the top road races...
more...By Bob Anderson publisher My Best Runs: I was sitting in the stands at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum during the 1984 Olympic Games when one of the most dramatic moments in track & field history unfolded right in front of me.
Mary Decker and Zola Budd — two of the most talked-about athletes in the world — collided in the 3000 meters. Budd running barefoot. Decker surging shoulder-to-shoulder beside her. The tension was electric long before the contact. And when the incident happened, the stadium gasped in unison.
Watching it live was beyond words.
Television could never fully capture the atmosphere — the anticipation, the silence before the gun, the surge of 90,000 people reacting at once. It was raw, emotional, unforgettable.
That is what Olympic athletics feels like in person.
And in 2028, it returns to Los Angeles.
The Olympic Games will take place July 14–30, 2028, with the Paralympic Games following August 15–27. If you are a runner, a fan of track & field, or someone who understands what it means when the world’s best line up together, here is how you position yourself to be there.
Step One: Register for the LA28 Ticket Draw
The only way to access the first wave of tickets is to register for the official LA28 Ticket Draw at tickets.la28.org.
Registration is free. You create a profile, provide your billing ZIP/postal code and contact information, and enter the system. Registration closes March 18, 2026.
After registration closes, selected participants will receive a designated time slot to purchase tickets during the first “ticket drop,” beginning in April 2026.
This is not first-come, first-served. It’s a randomized process. If selected, you receive a specific purchase window. If not, you remain eligible for future ticket drops.
Athletics sessions are historically among the most in-demand Olympic events — especially finals in the sprints, relays, and distance races.
The Venue: A Historic Return
Track & field will once again take place inside the iconic Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum — the same stadium where I watched Decker and Budd in 1984.
The Coliseum hosted the Games in 1932 and 1984. In 2028, it will crown Olympic champions again in the sprints, middle distance, long distance, hurdles, jumps, throws, and relays.
There is something powerful about seeing Olympic track return to that same stage.
What Will It Cost?
Now the practical question: how much should you budget?
While final prices vary by session and seating tier, LA28 ticketing follows the traditional Olympic structure with multiple price bands.
Here is a realistic expectation for athletics sessions:
• Early-round heats and qualifying sessions: often starting below $100
• Daytime semifinal sessions: typically in the $100–$200 range
• Evening finals sessions (100m, relays, 1500m, 5000m, etc.): commonly $150–$350
• Premium seating near the finish line or high-demand nights: $400–$500 or more
Each session includes multiple events. A single evening ticket might include a sprint final, a field final, and a distance medal race — making it one of the most compelling Olympic experiences available.
Each person may purchase up to 12 Olympic tickets total across all events.
Strategy for Track & Field Fans
If athletics is your priority, treat this like preparing for a goal race.
Register early.
Do not wait until the final days.
Decide your must-see events.
Is it the 100 meters? The 1500? The relays? The marathon? Know what matters most.
Budget wisely.
Plan $300–$500 for premium finals sessions.
If you’re flexible, heats and early rounds at $75–$150 can still deliver world-class competition and atmosphere.
Many experienced Olympic attendees blend sessions:
• One premium finals night
• One championship distance session
• One or two value-priced heats
That approach delivers the full Olympic running experience without overspending.
Why Early Ticket Drops Matter
The first ticket drop in April 2026 will offer the broadest inventory, including more seats in lower price tiers.
Later drops often have fewer value options remaining.
Think of it like positioning yourself at the start line. You want to be ready when the gun goes off.
Watching Mary Decker and Zola Budd battle in 1984 — feeling the stadium react in real time — remains one of the most powerful sporting moments I have ever experienced.
You feel the silence before the start.
You hear the spikes biting the track.
You sense the collective breath of thousands before a final kick.
Television shows you the race.
Being there lets you feel it.
In 2028, the world’s best runners will once again line up in Los Angeles.
The only question is — will you be in the stands when history happens?
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“It’s taken a mindset shift from just trying to make it there to now being like, ‘No, I belong in it. I will put myself in it and I will race like I belong.’”
Riley Chamberlain shared those words this week on the CITIUS MAG Podcast. Days earlier, she backed them up on the track.
On February 14, 2026, at the David Hemery Valentine Invitational at Boston University, the BYU standout ran 4:20.61 for the mile, breaking the NCAA indoor record and elevating herself into rare territory in collegiate distance running.
The time did more than lower a standard.
It announced arrival.
From Contender to Believer
Chamberlain’s record did not come from nowhere. Her progression at BYU has been steady and deliberate, built on range and aerobic depth. Cross country laid the foundation. Strength over 5,000 meters sharpened endurance. The 800-meter speed remained intact.
In Boston, she combined all of it.
The pace was assertive but controlled. As the decisive laps unfolded, she did not look like an athlete trying to survive the moment.
She looked like one commanding it.
Her 4:20.61 now ranks among the fastest collegiate miles ever run and positions her not just as an NCAA favorite, but as an emerging force beyond the collegiate ranks.
The BYU Culture Effect
Chamberlain spoke on the CITIUS MAG Podcast about BYU’s program culture — what athletes there describe as “high expectations, high love.”
That environment shapes competitors. Daily training alongside elite teammates, including Jane Hedengren, raises standards internally. Sessions demand accountability. Every rep carries weight.
When intensity becomes routine in practice, championship pressure becomes manageable.
Strength Across Distances
What separates Chamberlain from many elite milers is her versatility.
She carries the endurance to race the 5K and the speed to handle the 800m. That range gives her tactical freedom. It allows her to absorb pace and close decisively.
Her Boston performance did not look fragile. It looked repeatable.
Racing With Conviction
The most striking element of the 4:20.61 was composure
Indoor mile racing at that level demands positioning, rhythm, and the courage to commit when margins tighten. Chamberlain’s quote captures the evolution perfectly. She is no longer racing to see if she belongs.
She is racing as if she already does.
The Road Ahead
With NCAA championships approaching and international opportunities within reach, Chamberlain’s breakthrough in Boston on February 14 was not simply a collegiate highlight.
It was a statement.
Records fall. Belief endures.
And right now, Riley Chamberlain has both.
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If the men’s 1500 meters at the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Toruń, Poland (March 20–22, 2026) comes down to the final 150 meters — as indoor championship races so often do — Portugal’s Isaac Nader may already hold the tactical edge.
On February 19, 2026, at the Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais in Liévin, France, Nader focused on a single objective: the 1500m. He did not attempt a double. He did not divide his attention across events. He executed with discipline and left with a composed victory in 3:32.44.
The time was strong. The execution was even stronger.
Indoor medals are rarely won through reckless aggression. They are earned through positioning, patience, and precise decision-making under pressure. In Liévin, Nader displayed all three.
A Race Built on Control
From the opening laps, Nader resisted the temptation to dictate pace. On a 200-meter oval where every bend compresses space and every surge risks being trapped on the rail, spatial awareness is everything. He remained close enough to stay dangerous, yet far enough to avoid unnecessary contact.
As the field tightened entering the decisive stages, the tension that defines elite indoor 1500-meter racing became visible. No one wanted to commit too early. No one wanted to be exposed before the bell.
Nader waited.
With roughly 200 meters remaining, he shifted gears — controlled, decisive, without panic. By the time his rivals reacted, the separation had formed. Indoors, that margin is often enough.
He did not win through chaos. He won through timing.
Why the Focus Matters
The World Indoor Championships will demand a heat and a final in compressed succession. Energy management becomes strategic. Athletes who stretch themselves thin across the indoor season often arrive sharp but fatigued.
By concentrating solely on the 1500m in Liévin, Nader signaled clarity of purpose. He sharpened one blade rather than swinging several.
That focus aligns with championship success.
The Tactical Landscape in Toruń
The field in Poland is expected to include athletes willing to test the pace early. Yet indoor finals frequently stall on the penultimate lap as runners hesitate, calculating risk versus reward.
That hesitation is where races are decided.
Nader’s Liévin performance suggests he thrives in contained tension. He absorbs surges rather than initiating them. He maintains structural positioning — avoiding being boxed, preserving outside options, and striking only when the window fully opens.
In tight indoor racing, composure can outweigh raw speed.
The Question Ahead
The issue is not whether Nader has the closing speed. Liévin confirmed that. The question is whether his rivals in Toruń can neutralize his patience.
Championship 1500-meter racing is rarely won by the athlete who leads longest. It is won by the athlete who controls the decisive movement.
If the race in Poland evolves into a tactical contest rather than an all-out tempo effort, Isaac Nader will not simply be in the final.
He will be the athlete everyone must account for.
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The 2026 Liévin Meeting in the northern French city of Liévin produced a race that far exceeded the expectations of a so-called “Final B.” What unfolded over 1500 meters was a fiercely competitive contest marked by tactical precision, fearless racing, and a record that reshaped South American middle-distance history.
From the opening stride, the tempo was purposeful. The field refused to allow the pace to drift, stringing out early and maintaining a rhythm that demanded both patience and courage. Every lap tightened the tension, every move tested resolve. By the bell, it was clear that something special was developing.
Adam Spencer of Australia delivered the decisive blow. Calm under pressure and perfectly positioned, he launched his finishing drive with controlled aggression, separating himself when it mattered most. He powered through the line in 3:35.23, a performance that reflected maturity, strength, and confidence on the indoor stage.
Close behind, Valentín Soca of Uruguay was writing a chapter of his own. Stopping the clock at 3:35.50, Soca shattered the South American Indoor Record in the 1500 meters. The performance marked a significant leap forward from his previous indoor best of 3:36.34, set in January in Antequera, Spain. The improvement was not marginal — it was emphatic. Soca did not merely lower a record; he elevated the standard for an entire continent.
France found reason to celebrate as well. Romain Mornet rose to the occasion in front of the home crowd, finishing third in 3:35.89 after holding his composure throughout a relentless pace. His podium finish added a local highlight to an already exceptional race.
The depth behind the podium underscored the quality of the field. Pinto Marques of Portugal secured fourth place in 3:36.13, narrowly ahead of France’s Titouan Le Grix, who clocked 3:36.16 for fifth. Luke McCann of the Netherlands finished sixth in 3:39.89, followed by Belgium’s Rubén Verheyden in 3:40.07. Mohamed Attaoui of Spain crossed in 3:41.31 for eighth, while Heithem Chenitef of Algeria completed the lineup in 3:41.56.
Official Results – Men’s 1500m Final B
1. Adam Spencer (Australia) – 3:35.23
2. Valentín Soca (Uruguay) – 3:35.50 – South American Indoor Record
3. Romain Mornet (France) – 3:35.89
4. Pinto Marques (Portugal) – 3:36.13
5. Titouan Le Grix (France) – 3:36.16
6. Luke McCann (Netherlands) – 3:39.89
7. Rubén Verheyden (Belgium) – 3:40.07
8. Mohamed Attaoui (Spain) – 3:41.31
9. Heithem Chenitef (Algeria) – 3:41.56
What transpired in Liévin was more than a race result — it was a reminder that elite competition knows no hierarchy of labels. In one electrifying contest, victory was seized with authority, history was rewritten with conviction, and the 1500 meters once again proved that when preparation meets daring ambition, the outcome resonates far beyond the finish line.
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There are certain race days that carry a different kind of electricity — the sense that something unforgettable is about to unfold long before the starting gun fires. The women’s field at the 2026 edition of the NYC Half is one of those rare moments. On March 15th, 2026, the world’s best distance runners will charge through the streets of the Big Apple, beginning on Center Drive in Prospect Park and racing all the way into the iconic finish in Central Park. It is a course that blends speed, scenery, and history — and this year, it will host a competition deep enough to resemble a global championship rather than a city half marathon.
From returning champions to record holders and emerging stars, the lineup brings together athletes whose careers are already intertwined with New York’s racing legacy, alongside newcomers eager to create their own defining moments. The combination of proven excellence and rising ambition sets the tone for a contest where tactics, courage, and timing could matter just as much as raw fitness.
Leading the narrative is defending champion Sharon Lokedi, returning to a city that has become a defining chapter of her career. New York has consistently brought out her best — bold racing, fearless moves, and an ability to rise when the competition is strongest. Last year’s course record victory proved she thrives under pressure, but defending a title against an even deeper field presents a completely different challenge. Champions are measured not only by how they win, but by how they respond when everyone is chasing them.
Waiting to test her once again is none other than Hellen Obiri, the reigning New York City Marathon champion and one of the most competitive racers in global distance running. Obiri doesn’t just run races — she reads them, calculates them, and then strikes when it matters most. Every meeting between her and Lokedi adds another layer to what is quickly becoming one of the sport’s most intriguing rivalries. Their battles are rarely predictable, and that uncertainty is exactly what makes this matchup so compelling.
Then comes the wildcard with enormous credentials: Agnes Ngetich. Making her debut with New York Road Runners, she arrives carrying momentum that few athletes in the world can match. A world 10K record holder and the 2026 World Cross Country champion, Ngetich blends raw speed with endurance strength — a combination that can unsettle even the most experienced competitors. With one of the fastest half marathon times ever recorded, she has already proven she belongs at the very top level. Now the question becomes whether she can translate that dominance onto one of the sport’s biggest stages.
The home crowd will also have a major contender to rally behind in American star Emily Sisson, who leads a strong domestic group determined to challenge the international dominance. Known for her toughness and consistency, Sisson brings both experience and ambition into a race where positioning and patience could be just as important as speed.
What makes this year’s race special is the collective quality of the field. On paper, it resembles a global championship lineup — Olympic medalists, world champions, national record holders, and emerging forces all sharing the same start line. That depth changes the psychology of racing. No one can afford hesitation. No move goes unanswered.
The international range of athletes in this year’s race highlights just how competitive the field has become, bringing together runners from established distance-running powerhouses and emerging nations alike.
Elite Women's Field - Personal Bests and Countries
Agnes Ngetich (Kenya) — 1:03:04
Hellen Obiri (Kenya) — 1:04:22
Fantaye Belayneh (Ethiopia) — 1:04:49
Sharon Lokedi (Kenya) — 1:05:00
Konstanze Klosterhalfen (Germany) — 1:05:41
Emily Sisson (United States) — 1:06:52
Calli Hauger-Thackery (Great Britain) — 1:06:58
Natosha Rogers (United States) — 1:07:30
Annie Frisbie (United States) — 1:07:34
Amanda Vestri (United States) — 1:07:35
Dakotah Popehn (United States) — 1:07:42
Emily Durgin (United States) — 1:07:54
Diane van Es (Netherlands) — 1:08:03
Sarah Lahti (Sweden) — 1:08:19
Susanna Sullivan (United States) — 1:08:44
Emily Venters (United States) — 1:08:48
Mercy Chelangat (Kenya) — 1:08:57
Lauren Gregory (United States) — 1:09:12
Lindsay Flanagan (United States) — 1:09:17
Natasha Wodak (Canada) — 1:09:41
Stephanie Bruce (United States) — 1:09:55
Julia Paternain (Uruguay) — 1:10:16
Elena Hayday (United States) — 1:10:56
Felicia Pasadyn (United States) — 1:11:29
Erika Prieto (Mexico) — 1:15:55
Gabrielle Yatauro (United States) — 1:15:59
Alosha Southern (United States) — 1:16:40
Megan Keith (Great Britain) — Debut
As race day approaches, anticipation continues to build for what could become one of the defining women’s distance races of the season. With champions returning, rivalries intensifying, and new contenders ready to make their mark, the stage is perfectly set for drama on the streets of New York. The energy, the depth, and the unpredictability all point toward something special — the kind of competition that reminds us why elite racing captivates audiences around the world. When the gun goes off at the NYC Half, it won’t just be about times or titles, but about who is ready to rise in the moment and seize it. March 15 promises speed, courage, and unforgettable racing.
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The United Airlines NYC Half takes runners from around the city and the globe on a 13.1-mile tour of NYC. Led by a talent-packed roster of American and international elites, runners will stop traffic in the Big Apple this March! Runners will begin their journey on Prospect Park’s Center Drive before taking the race onto Brooklyn’s streets. For the third...
more...Ireland’s middle-distance resurgence reached another milestone this week as Andrew Coscoran lowered his own Irish indoor 1500 meters record, clocking a superb 3:33.09 to finish third at the World Indoor Tour Gold meeting in Liévin, France.
Competing at the prestigious Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais, Coscoran delivered a controlled and aggressive performance against a world-class field, reaffirming his place among Europe’s premier 1500m contenders.
The race unfolded at relentless pace from the gun, with the leaders pushing through 400 meters in quick splits that immediately signaled something special was building on the fast indoor track. Coscoran positioned himself intelligently in the pack, avoiding traffic while staying within striking distance as the tempo intensified.
With 300 meters remaining, the field began to string out. Coscoran responded decisively, maintaining form and rhythm as others strained under the pressure. His finishing surge secured third place in 3:33.09 — shaving precious hundredths off his previous national mark.
The performance is pending ratification but marks another breakthrough in what has been a steady upward trajectory for the Irish star.
A Career Built on Momentum
Coscoran, who represents Star of the Sea AC, has steadily evolved from promising NCAA competitor to consistent international finalist. Known for his strength over the final lap and tactical awareness, he has become a reliable presence in Diamond League and World Indoor Tour competition.
The 3:33.09 clocking not only improves his own Irish indoor record but also places him among the fastest Europeans this season. On a historically quick Liévin track — a venue renowned for producing global-leading times — Coscoran showed he can thrive when the pace turns unforgiving.
Ireland’s Middle-Distance Renaissance
Irish middle-distance running continues to gain international traction, and Coscoran’s performance adds further depth to that narrative. His ability to compete consistently on the global circuit suggests that Ireland is no longer merely producing finalists — but genuine podium contenders.
With the championship season approaching, this run sends a clear message: Coscoran is not just chasing records — he is shaping races.
As the indoor campaign progresses, the question is no longer whether he belongs at this level. It is how much faster he can go.
For now, 3:33.09 stands as Ireland’s fastest indoor 1500m ever — and possibly a stepping stone to even greater milestones ahead.
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The Arena Stade Couvert in Liévin, France, became the stage for one of the most extraordinary performances in indoor middle-distance history as Britain’s Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson delivered a masterclass over 800 meters at the Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais.
She did not simply break the women’s indoor 800m world record — she redefined it.
Hodgkinson stopped the clock at 1:54.87, slicing nearly a full second off the longstanding 1:55.82 mark set by Jolanda Čeplak. In doing so, she became the first woman in history to run under 1:55 indoors, a barrier many believed would stand for years.
From the gun, Hodgkinson committed to the pace lights and never wavered. Her opening lap was assertive but controlled, perfectly balanced between aggression and restraint. By 600 meters she had stretched the field into single file, running alone against the clock. There was no visible tightening in the home straight — only composed acceleration and absolute conviction through the finish line.
“Thank God! … That was pretty fun,” Hodgkinson said moments after crossing the line. “I’ve been really looking forward to this for a good few weeks.”
She credited the electric atmosphere inside the compact arena.
“Thank you for the amazing crowd. I could hear you all the way around, and that was a lot of fun. Thank you.”
Despite effectively racing solo over the final stages, she smiled when asked about the pressure.
“I had lots of help in here!”
Behind her, a deep international field produced strong performances, underlining the quality of the race.
Women’s 800m Results
1. Keely Hodgkinson (GBR) – 1:54.87 WR
2. Audrey Werro (SUI) – 1:58.38
3. Tsige Duguma (ETH) – 1:58.83 SB
4. Habitam Alemu Getachew (ETH) – 1:59.54 PB
5. Clara Liberman (FRA) – 2:00.61
6. Angelika Wielgosz (POL) – 2:00.70 SB
7. Dumas (FRA) – 2:01.47
Crestan Claims Meeting Record in Men’s 800m
Earlier in the evening, Belgium’s Eliott Crestan delivered a performance of his own, storming to victory in 1:43.91 to secure his third consecutive Liévin title.
His time established a new meeting record, surpassing the mark previously associated with Polish great Adam Kszczot.
“I am very happy to beat this record; he is a legend,” Crestan said after the race.
The men’s final unfolded at a relentless tempo from the outset. Crestan positioned himself perfectly before asserting control over the final 200 meters, powering clear with authority.
Men’s 800m Results (Final A)
1. Eliott Crestan (BEL) – 1:43.91 MR
2. Maciej Wyderka (POL) – 1:44.64
3. Slimane Moula (ALG) – 1:44.80 PB
4. Mohamed Ali Gouaned (ALG) – 1:44.92
5. Samuel Chapple (NED) – 1:45.37
6. Ryan Clarke (NED) – 1:46.72
A Night That Redefines the Event
Liévin has long been synonymous with fast times and world-class competition. On this night, it delivered something even rarer — a defining generational statement.
By breaking through the 1:55 barrier indoors, Hodgkinson has fundamentally recalibrated expectations for the women’s 800 meters. Records are meant to be broken. Barriers, however, are meant to challenge belief.
In Liévin, belief shifted.
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With only sixty days remaining before the season opener, the anticipation surrounding the 2026 World Mountain Running Cup is reaching a powerful crescendo. Organized by the World Mountain Running Association (WMRA), this global series stands as the pinnacle of competitive mountain running — a demanding arena where athletic precision, endurance, and mental resilience intersect with some of the most dramatic landscapes on Earth.
Mountain running is not merely a sport; it is an encounter between human ambition and vertical terrain. Unlike road racing, where predictability dominates, mountain racing introduces variables that cannot be controlled — altitude, weather volatility, technical descents, and the relentless resistance of gravity. Success belongs not only to the strongest athlete, but to the most adaptable mind.
The 2026 season promises exceptional intensity as elite runners and rising talents converge across multiple continents, competing in three primary formats: Uphill, Up & Down, and Long Distance. Each discipline demands a distinct physiological and tactical approach, ensuring that only the most versatile athletes can contend for the overall title.
From volcanic ridgelines and alpine glaciers to forested mountain corridors and historic highland communities, every race contributes to a narrative larger than sport itself — a celebration of exploration, resilience, and the pursuit of excellence in its purest form.
2026 World Cup Race Calendar
19 April — Portugal
São Brás de Alportel Cross — Up & Down
25–26 April — China
Beijing Changping Yanshou Trail Challenge — Uphill | Up & Down
7–9 May — Spain
Transvulcania — Uphill | Long
19–21 June — United States
Broken Arrow Skyrace — Uphill | Long
5 July — Austria
Grossglockner Mountain Run — Up & Down
18–19 July — France
Serre Che Trail Salomon — Uphill | Up & Down
8 August — Switzerland
Sierre-Zinal — Long
5–6 September — Italy
Trofeo Nasego — Uphill | Long
19 September — Poland
Maraton Trzech Jezior — Long Distance Final
10–11 October — Canada
Défi des Couleurs Simard — Uphill | Up & Down (World Cup Finals)
Beyond the competitive rankings, the World Cup embodies a deeper philosophy — trust in preparation, respect for nature, and belief in human potential. Athletes are not simply racing against one another; they are confronting terrain, fatigue, and uncertainty. Every climb becomes a negotiation with physical limits, and every descent demands courage under pressure.
The 2026 circuit also reflects the accelerating global growth of mountain running. Increased participation, improved race organization, and expanding media coverage are propelling the sport into a new era of recognition. For emerging athletes, this season represents opportunity; for established champions, it is a test of legacy.
As the countdown continues, training camps intensify, strategies evolve, and ambitions sharpen. Soon, starting lines will replace anticipation, and preparation will give way to performance.
In mountain running, there are no shortcuts — only the path upward and downward.
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The University of Georgia has officially unveiled its new 60 million dollar track and field complex in Athens, marking one of the most significant facility investments in collegiate track and field in recent years.
The 59.8 million dollar project was funded primarily through private gifts and donations to the university’s athletics program, allowing the development to move forward without placing additional financial strain on students or local taxpayers. The result is a state of the art venue that serves both the Georgia Bulldogs track and field program and the broader running community.
A Modern Facility Built for Performance
Located on South Milledge Avenue, the 37 acre complex replaces the former Spec Towns Track and represents a dramatic upgrade in both scale and capability.
Key features include:
• A nine lane 400 meter outdoor competition track
• Seating for approximately 2,500 spectators with expansion capability
• Dedicated long jump triple jump and pole vault areas
• Throws fields and turf training spaces
• A 110 meter training hill
• Modern locker rooms recovery areas and sports medicine space
• Press box observation deck and event amenities
The stadium is named in honor of Forrest Spec Towns Olympic gold medalist and legendary Georgia coach whose legacy remains central to the program’s history.
Indoor Training Track Within the Stadium
What truly sets this complex apart is the integrated indoor training straightaway built beneath the grandstand. The climate controlled indoor space features five lanes and allows athletes to complete sprint sessions drills and speed work regardless of weather conditions.
The design is sleek and modern with advanced lighting and a professional performance center feel. This addition gives Georgia athletes a year round training advantage and enhances recruiting appeal within the highly competitive SEC conference.
Open to the Public
Perhaps most notably the facility includes designated public access times. Local runners walkers youth athletes and clubs will have the opportunity to train on a world class surface typically reserved for Division I athletes.
That decision strengthens the connection between the university and the Athens community and positions the city as an emerging destination for track and field enthusiasts.
Hosting Major Events
The new complex is already scheduled to host major competitions including the Classic City Track and Field Invitational and the GHSA state championships. The SEC Championships are also scheduled to be held here in 2027 further cementing Athens as a key venue in collegiate athletics.
A Bold Statement for the Sport
In an era when many collegiate programs face budget challenges this 60 million dollar investment sends a strong message about the importance of track and field at Georgia. Facilities influence recruiting performance and community engagement.
Athens Georgia now stands among the premier track and field locations in the southeastern United States offering elite competition infrastructure while remaining accessible to the public.
For the Bulldogs it is a competitive advantage.
For the community it is opportunity.
For the sport it is a powerful statement of belief in its future.
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The Haspa Marathon Hamburg in Germany returns on April 26 for its 40th edition and once again the race has assembled a powerful international field. Two time champion Bernard Koech (Kenya) headlines the event and will attempt to remain unbeaten on the streets of Hamburg.
Over the past few years Hamburg has quietly become one of Europe’s fastest and most consistent marathon stages. In 2025 it surprisingly produced the strongest overall performances among Germany’s major marathons, reflecting the event’s continued rise. Organizers expect approximately 20,000 runners for this milestone edition.
Chief organizer Frank Thaleiser said he is confident the 40th running will continue that momentum and produce another high quality race.
Bernard Koech Kenya
At 38 Koech returns to a course that has brought out his very best. He won here in 2023 in 2:04:09 which equals his personal best and followed that victory with another title in 2024 in 2:04:24. Hamburg clearly suits his rhythm and strength.
Last spring he placed third at the Seoul Marathon in 2:05:50 confirming he remains a serious contender on the global stage. A third consecutive victory in Hamburg would further cement his legacy at this race.
Stephen Kissa Uganda
Stephen Kissa (Uganda) returns to the site of his breakthrough marathon performance. In 2022 he finished second by just one second in his debut clocking 2:04:48 which at the time was a Ugandan national record and remains his personal best.
Hamburg’s flat profile and supportive crowds clearly fit Kissa’s style and he will arrive with confidence.
Abdisa Tola Ethiopia
Ethiopia’s Abdisa Tola (Ethiopia) adds further depth. The 25 year old won his marathon debut in Dubai in 2:05:42 in 2023 and ran 2:05:52 for third in Osaka last year. The younger brother of Olympic marathon champion Tamirat Tola he has both pedigree and proven speed to challenge for victory.
Samuel Fitwi Germany
Germany’s leading hope is Samuel Fitwi (Germany). He finished 15th at the Olympic Games and later broke the German national record in Valencia with 2:04:56. Although that record has since changed hands it remains his personal best and confirms his ability to compete at the highest level.
Fitwi said he is looking forward to racing the jubilee edition in Hamburg where strong local support could provide an extra lift.
Also on the elite start list are Sebastian Hendel (Germany) who improved his personal best to 2:07:33 after first breaking 2:10 in Hamburg and Aaron Bienenfeld (Germany) who will make his marathon debut after running 61:15 at the Houston Half Marathon earlier this year.
With a flat layout ideal spring conditions and a deep international field the 40th Haspa Marathon Hamburg Germany is positioned to deliver another memorable performance on April 26. A proven champion returns experienced challengers are back and emerging talent is ready to test itself on one of Europe’s fastest marathon stages.
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The HASPA MARATHON HAMBURG is Germany’s biggest spring marathon and since 1986 the first one to paint the blue line on the roads. Hamburcourse record is fast (2:05:30), the metropolitan city (1.8 million residents) lets the euphoric atmosphere spill over and carry you to the finish. Make this experience first hand and follow the Blue Line....
more...On February 9, 2021, inside the electric arena of the Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais in Liévin, Gudaf Tsegay delivered one of the most breathtaking performances the sport has ever witnessed. In a race that demanded both audacity and precision, the Ethiopian star stormed to a staggering 3:53.09 in the women’s 1500 meters indoors — a world record that did more than lower a time; it reshaped the limits of possibility.
The previous mark of 3:55.17, set in 2014 by fellow Ethiopian great Genzebe Dibaba, had long stood as a symbol of middle-distance excellence. On that winter evening in France, Tsegay did not merely edge it — she dismantled it.
From the crack of the gun, the pace was ferocious. Guided by a bold pacemaker through a searing opening lap of 58.97 seconds, Tsegay settled into a rhythm that balanced aggression with control. She crossed 800 meters in 2:05.94 and powered through 1000 meters in 2:37.36, her stride smooth, her cadence relentless. By the time the bell rang, the race had transformed from competition into exhibition.
The final lap was a masterclass in controlled fury. With approximately 30 seconds over the last 200 meters, Tsegay accelerated into history, separating herself completely from the field. Behind her, Britain’s Laura Muir clocked 3:59.58 — an outstanding performance in its own right — yet finished more than six seconds adrift. That margin alone underscored the magnitude of Tsegay’s dominance.
Indoor 1500-meter racing is unforgiving. The tighter bends, the confined straights, and the tactical positioning demand technical mastery as much as physical brilliance. To run 3:53.09 under such conditions requires supreme aerobic strength, fearless pacing, and the composure to sustain near-perfect splits. On that night, Tsegay possessed all three.
As the Liévin meeting returns once again, the question lingers in the rafters of the arena: who dares to approach 3:53.09? Records are meant to be challenged, but some performances transcend statistics. They become reference points in history — moments when the sport advances in a single, luminous leap.
In Liévin, Gudaf Tsegay did exactly that. She did not just break a world record. She redefined excellence indoors — and left the rest of the world chasing her shadow.
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The global marathon spotlight will once again circle the world in 2026 as the Abbott World Marathon Majors return with a powerful seven-race series that stretches from Asia to Europe, Australia to North America. Each stop carries its own personality, history, and racing rhythm — but together they represent the highest level of marathon competition on the planet.
Here is the confirmed 2026 World Marathon Majors calendar:
Tokyo Marathon – March 1, 2026
Boston Marathon – April 20, 2026
London Marathon – April 26, 2026
Sydney Marathon – August 30, 2026
Berlin Marathon – September 27, 2026
Chicago Marathon – October 11, 2026
New York City Marathon – November 1, 2026
Seven races. Seven cities. One global championship narrative.
Season Opener in Asia
The series begins with the Tokyo Marathon on March 1. Known for its flat layout and disciplined organization, Tokyo has become a consistent stage for fast times and tactical early-season showdowns. Elite athletes often use Tokyo to set the tone for the year — and occasionally to chase course records.
April: Marathon Royalty Month
April remains the heart of the marathon calendar.
The Boston Marathon on April 20 returns to Patriots’ Day tradition. With its point-to-point course from Hopkinton to Boylston Street, Boston remains the ultimate test of racing intelligence, strength, and patience. You don’t just run Boston — you compete Boston.
Six days later, the London Marathon on April 26 brings a different dynamic: deep elite fields, aggressive pacing, and often the fastest head-to-head racing of the spring season. London has become a proving ground for Olympic champions, world record holders, and breakout stars alike.
The April double — Boston and London — continues to define legacies.
Sydney’s Growing Influence
The Sydney Marathon on August 30 strengthens the Majors’ global footprint. As the newest addition to the series, Sydney represents the expansion of the championship to Oceania and adds a late-summer championship feel before the traditional fall European and American races.
Its presence reshapes how athletes build their seasons. With Sydney now in the mix, the Majors truly span the globe.
Fall Speed Season
The Berlin Marathon on September 27 remains synonymous with world records. Its flat, fast course has witnessed some of the greatest performances in distance running history. If athletes are chasing the clock, Berlin is often the chosen battlefield.
Two weeks later, the Chicago Marathon on October 11 continues the speed theme. Chicago’s downtown course has produced extraordinary times and dramatic finishes. It blends American racing culture with global elite competition in one of the sport’s most electric settings.
The Grand Finale in New York
The New York City Marathon closes the 2026 series on November 1. Five boroughs, 26.2 miles, and more than two million spectators lining the course. New York is rarely about world records — it’s about resilience, atmosphere, and championship racing. It’s the ultimate test of strength over speed.
The hills of the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge and the roar in Central Park ensure that the season ends with drama.
The Bigger Picture
The 2026 calendar highlights the evolution of the World Marathon Majors into a truly global championship. With seven events spanning three continents, the series now demands strategic planning from elite athletes and offers recreational runners the opportunity to pursue the coveted Six (now Seven) Star journey.
For professionals, the Majors series often determines annual rankings, sponsorship leverage, and historical standing. For age-groupers, it represents bucket-list achievement. For fans, it offers nearly nine months of high-level marathon drama.
From Tokyo’s precision to Boston’s grit, London’s speed, Sydney’s emergence, Berlin’s records, Chicago’s rhythm, and New York’s spectacle — the 2026 World Marathon Majors promise another unforgettable season.
The road to greatness is mapped out.
Now it’s time to run it.
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On February 12, 2026, at the NYRR Night of the Races held at The Armory in New York City, 80-year-old American masters runner Gary Patton delivered one of the most inspiring performances of the indoor season, setting a new M80-84 indoor mile world record of 6:38.10.
The Rock Rapids, Iowa native sliced four full seconds off the previous mark of 6:42.10, set in 2014 by fellow American Inocencio Cantu. The record had stood for more than a decade. Patton didn’t just break it — he decisively lowered it.
Already holding one masters world record to his name, Patton proved once again that his competitive drive remains as strong as ever. From the gun, he ran with poise and precision, controlling the pace and maintaining smooth mechanics throughout the four laps on the fast indoor surface. As the bell lap approached, it was clear he was on record pace. When he crossed the line, the clock confirmed history.
The Armory, one of the most iconic indoor tracks in the United States, has hosted Olympians, world champions, and American record holders. On this night, it belonged to an 80-year-old athlete still chasing excellence.
The previous record-holder, Inocencio Cantu, later went on to set mile world records in both the M85 and M90 age divisions — a testament to the longevity possible in masters athletics. Now Patton joins that elite company, continuing the tradition of American dominance in the older age groups.
Breaking records at 80 requires more than talent. It demands discipline, intelligent training, careful recovery, and unwavering commitment. In masters competition, each year brings new physical challenges, making significant time drops increasingly rare. That makes Patton’s four-second improvement especially impressive.
Patton has long been a fixture in U.S. masters running, competing at national and international championships, including the World Masters Athletics Indoor Championships. Known for his steady, focused approach, he continues to pursue performance rather than simply participation.
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