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Kipchoge confident he'll conquer 2-hour barrier

China Daily | Updated: 2019-05-07 09:45
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Eliud Kipchoge chats with his billionaire backer, Jim Ratcliffe, next to an image of legendary British runner Roger Bannister at Iffley Road Sports Centre in Oxford. [ANDREW BOYERS/REUTERS]

Kenyan marathoner being backed by British billionaire for record attempt

OXFORD, England-Eliud Kipchoge has funding from Britain's richest man for his bid to break the two-hour marathon barrier again later this year.

The fastest marathon runner of all time announced plans for the record attempt during an April 30 visit to the track at Oxford, where Roger Bannister ran the first sub-four-minute mile 65 years ago.

"I want to unlock that thought that there are limitations in the human being," Kipchoge told Associated Press at the Iffley Road track.

"There are no barriers when you believe in yourself and try and trust in what you are doing."

The 34-year-old Olympic champion has gained the trust of Jim Ratcliffe, who founded chemical group INEOS and is estimated by the London-based Sunday Times Rich List to be worth 21 billion pounds ($28 billion).

Ratcliffe spent the London Marathon earlier this month in the pace car watching Kipchoge win the event for a record fourth time.

London is where Ratcliffe hopes the Kenyan runner will in September or October lower his world-record marathon time of 2 hours, 1 minute, 39 seconds-set in Berlin in September-to under two hours.

Kipchoge made an attempt at the Monza motor racing circuit in Italy in May 2017, falling 26 seconds short across 26.2 miles (42.2 kilometers) around an oval track.

The time was not sanctioned by the IAAF because of variables such as pacers entering mid-race and drinks being given to runners via mopeds.

This time a parklands circuit could be favored over a road circuit because Ratcliffe anticipates needing dates in London on three consecutive weekends being set aside to ensure the conditions are optimal for Kipchoge.

"If we have it in London it would need to be an iconic location that fulfills the performance criteria that's flat and has a good surface," Ratcliffe said after posing with Kipchoge in front of a clock that read "1:59.00."

According to Ratcliffe's vision, the ideal situation for the attempt would involve a circuit of two to three kilometers, and a crowd.

"It's one of those great challenges in the sporting world to try and break two hours," for the marathon, Ratcliffe told AP.

"If he does succeed it will be very inspirational for people. He's the finest marathon runner the world has ever produced and I think he's still getting better."

This is the latest foray into sports for Ratcliffe, who has taken over the Team Sky cycling outfit and renamed it after INEOS.

"We worked for 25-30 years in business and it's quite successful," Ratcliffe said.

"We can afford to do this, so why shouldn't we? We're putting a modest amount into sport. I think they are good endeavors."

There is also a risk. Ratcliffe said he has conducted due diligence into the athletes he is now funding in cycling and athletics-two sports that have grappled with doping issues.

"We probe quite deeply into that," Ratcliffe said. "I have no interest in cheating."

Neither does Kipchoge.

"This is the time to prove to the whole world that you can run in a positive way, and in a clean way and actually make sporting history," he said.

AP

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