Two weeks. Two records. Two completely different ends of the endurance spectrum.
On April 26, Sabastian Sawe of Kenya ran the London Marathon in 1:59:30 — becoming the first person in history to run a sub-two-hour marathon in official race conditions. A barrier that has haunted the sport for decades. Gone. And if that wasn’t enough, second place finisher Yomif Kejelcha also went under two hours — in his very first marathon.
Then last week at Cocodona 250, Rachel Entrekin ran 253 miles through the Arizona desert in 56 hours and nine minutes — not just winning the race outright, but becoming the first woman in the event’s six-year history to win overall. A new course record. A new benchmark for what women can do in ultra distance racing.