Kenya’s Ruth Chepngetich smashed the women’s world record by nearly two minutes at the Chicago Marathon on Sunday, winning in 2:09:56. Chepngetich became the first woman to break 2 hours and 10 minutes in the marathon. The 30-year-old broke the previous record of 2:11:53, which was set by Tigist Assefa of Ethiopia at the 2023 Berlin Marathon. Chepngetich has an impressive record at the Chicago Marathon: she also won the race in 2021 and 2022 and finished runner-up last year. Sutume Asefa Kebede of Ethiopia finished second on Sunday in 2:17:32. “I feel so great. I’m proud of myself and I thank God for the victory and the world record,” Chepngetich told NBC Chicago after the race. “This is my dream that has come true. I fight a lot thinking about world record and I have fulfilled it and I’m much grateful.” It was obvious from early on that Chepngetich’s race, in which she averaged 4:57.4 per mile, would be a special one. She ran the first five kilometres in just 15 minutes, and completed the first half of the course in 1:04:16, which would have been the fifth-fastest women’s half-marathon of all time. The victory earned her $100,000 and she won another $50,000 for breaking the course record. Chepngetich’s compatriot, John Korir, won the men’s race in 2:02:44, ahead of Huseydin Mohamed Esa of Ethiopia, who finished in 2:04:39. Korir and Chepngetich ran in honor of the late Kelvin Kiptum of Kenya, who broke the men’s world record at the 2023 Chicago Marathon. “The world record has come back to Kenya,” Chepngetich said. “I dedicate this world record to Kelvin Kiptum.” In February the 24-year-old Kiptum and his coach, Gervais Hakizimana, died in a car accident. Police said Kiptum lost control of his vehicle before hitting a tree near a training area in Kaptagat, Kenya. Organizers held a moment of silence for Kiptum before the race and offered the nearly 50,000 runners a memorial sticker to add to their bibs. You’ve read 1678 articles in the last year. Article count on Hang on - we"ve got something a bit different for you You"ll be aware of the bad actors spreading disinformation online to fuel intolerance. Maybe you"ll also know that there are teams of lawyers from the rich and powerful trying to stop us publishing stories they don’t want you to see. In addition, lobby groups with opaque funding structures are determined to undermine facts about the climate emergency and other established science. Meanwhile authoritarian states continue to show disregard for the freedom of the press. This is why we need your support more than ever to keep our website free and open for all. We simply cannot do it without your help. For a limited time, we’re offering readers like you 50% off an All-access digital subscription for three months. With this, you’ll unlock: 1. Unlimited articles in our app 2. Ad-free reading on all your devices 3. Exclusive newsletter for supporters, sent every week from the Guardian newsroom 4. Far fewer asks for support 5. Full access to the Guardian Feast app
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