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Will Her Marathon Record Still Stand? And should it?

It’s been almost five years since Ruth Chepngetich survived the carnage on Doha’s Corniche to win the 2019 World Marathon title in suffocating heat. But her story has now taken a dramatic turn. In July 2025, Chepngetich was provisionally suspended by the Athletics Integrity Unit following a positive test from March 2025. That case reached its conclusion on October 23, 2025, when she was officially banned for three years. Despite the ruling, World Athletics has not yet nullified her 2:09:56 world record from Chicago, leaving the running world in a state of uneasy debate — can a mark achieved by an athlete later found guilty of doping still stand as the pinnacle of the sport?

The Record That Shocked the World

At Chicago 2024, Chepngetich didn’t just win — she obliterated the women’s marathon barrier. Clocking 2:09:56, she slashed nearly two minutes off the previous world record of 2:11:53, averaging roughly 4:57 per mile. Her first half of 1:04:16 hinted that she was chasing history, and she never faltered. The performance instantly became one of the most astonishing in distance-running history and redefined what many thought possible for women over 26.2 miles.

Talent, Technology, or Something Else?

In assessing whether this record will stand, several factors come into play — her undeniable talent, cutting-edge technology, and advances in fueling and pacing.

• Talent: Chepngetich’s pedigree is unquestioned — a world champion, multiple Chicago winner, and one of the most aggressive front-runners of her generation.

• Technology: Like nearly all modern elites, she raced in next-generation “super shoes” featuring carbon plates and advanced foams that improve running economy by several percent.

• Fueling and Pacing: A meticulously calibrated mix of carbohydrate drinks, male pacemakers, and near-perfect weather created ideal conditions for record-breaking.

Each of these factors may have contributed — but so, it now appears, did something illicit. Her three-year ban has cast a long shadow over what was once hailed as the cleanest, purest form of endurance achievement.

The Broader Question

Can a mark set under suspicion survive as a legitimate benchmark for future generations? The answer lies with World Athletics’ final ruling, but even if the record stands on paper, the perception of it has changed. Chepngetich’s run pushed the limits of human endurance — yet the revelation of a doping violation has blurred the line between brilliance and betrayal.

A Legacy Rewritten

If the ban is upheld, Chepngetich will likely be stripped of her record, joining a short but painful list of athletes whose names once glittered atop the record books before being erased. Regardless of the outcome, her performance will remain a pivotal moment — the day a woman first broke 2:10. It proved that such times are possible and that the next generation, running clean, will one day do it again.

Conclusion

Whether Ruth Chepngetich’s 2:09:56 survives the scrutiny of time or not, the marathon has been changed forever. Her run forced coaches, scientists, and competitors alike to reconsider what’s possible for women over the classic distance.

But now the question isn’t only how she did it — it’s why.

(10/23/2025) Views: 388 ⚡AMP
by Boris Baron
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