By Wynne Davis
Kenya’s Brigid Kosgei won the 2019 Chicago Marathon on Sunday with at time of 2 hours 14 minutes and 4 seconds. Kosgei’s time also marks a new world record marathon time.
Quinn Harris/Getty Images
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Quinn Harris/Getty Images
Kenya’s Brigid Kosgei won the Chicago Marathon on Sunday with a time of 2 hours 14 minutes 4 seconds, breaking the previous world record by 81 seconds.
At 25, the Kenyan defended her title after winning last year’s event, and put almost 7 minutes between herself and her competition. Both from Ethopia, Ababel Yeshaneh finished second with a time of 2:20:51 and Gelete Burka came in third at 2:20:55.
The previous world record time of 2:15:25 was set by Britain’s Paula Radcliffe in 2003 at the London Marathon.
WORLD RECORD: Brigid Kosgei sets the new world record in the marathon at the 2019 @BankofAmerica #ChicagoMarathon! pic.twitter.com/lakum2XoET
— Chicago Marathon (@ChiMarathon) October 13, 2019
After Kosgei broke Radcliffe’s record, the two of them posed for a photo together.
Radcliffe says it marked a bittersweet moment for her, according to The Guardian.
“If you had told me when I set it in 2003, that it would last that long I wouldn’t have believed it,” Radcliffe said. “But I always knew this time would come — and when I saw how fast Brigid was running today I knew the record would go if she could maintain her pace.”
Former world record holder @paulajradcliffe poses with Brigid Kosgei at the finish after Kosgei broke the record this morning at the 2019 @BankofAmerica #ChicagoMarathon ? pic.twitter.com/niyGYZJ5Tp
— Chicago Marathon (@ChiMarathon) October 13, 2019
Kosgei’s world record race came just a day after fellow Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge broke the 2-hour marathon barrier with a time of 1 hour 59 minutes 40 seconds in Vienna, Austria, during an assisted event.
Because of the nature of the event, Kipchoge’s time does not count as an official world record, but was celebrated nonetheless. Both Kosgei and Kipchoge were sporting Nike’s new model of the Next% training shoes.
Kipchoge’s victory was on Kosgei’s mind, she said, as she set out on the Chicago course.
“I kept saying, ‘Tomorrow is my day,'” Kosgei told The New York Times. “I wanted to be the second Kipchoge — the Kipchoge for women. I focused on that.”