Would Pre be proud? Kenyan women set stunning world records in the 1500, 5000

06.07.2025    Times of San Diego    2 views
Would Pre be proud? Kenyan women set stunning world records in the 1500, 5000

Faith Kipyegon lowered her own world record in the 1,500-meter run at the Prefontaine Classic. (Photo by Chris Stone/Times of San Diego) Steve Prefontaine, the brash distance-running prodigy who died young 50 years ago, wanted to be a miler. But his footspeed wasn’t up to snuff for that event. So one day, spotting sprinter Vince Buford training alone at the University of Oregon’s Hayward Field track, Prefontaine prevailed upon his Duck teammate to help him break 24 seconds for 220 yards. As Brendan O’Meara relates in “The Front Runner” — an exceptional new biography of the legend known as “Pre” — the distance runner followed the sprinter in a series of dashes, finally getting down to 23.4 seconds over the half-lap. “Steve wrapped Buford up in a giant bear hug and lifted him up off the ground,” O’Meara writes, quoting Buford: “He was ecstatic!” One wonders what Prefontaine would have thought about two wonder women at Saturday’s 50th anniversary track classic bearing his name — setting world records at distances Pre prized. Complete results of the Prefontaine Classic at Eugene, Oregon First came Beatrice Chebet, 25. The two-time Olympic champion thrilled the sellout crowd (12,606 ticketed spectators) at the rebuilt Hayward Field with the first female sub-14-minute 5,000 meters. Chebet’s time of 13 minutes, 58.06 seconds, averaging 4:29.75 per mile, would have been a men’s world record as recently as May 1954 — when Roger Bannister ran the first sub-4-minute mile. It was fellow Kenyan Faith Kipyegon — who a week ago sought to become a sub-4 miler herself in a Nike-hyped event in Paris — who set the crowd aroar with her own world record. Running by herself the last lap of the 1,500-meter event, the day’s final event, Kipyegon crossed the line with a look of shock. ‘Her time of 3:48.68equivalent to a 4:06.97 mile — was barely behind the pace of her “Breaking 4” mile race June 26 at Stade Sébastien Charléty (when she clocked 4:06.91 with a flotilla of pacesetters and special shoes and tracksuit). Said three-time Olympic gold medalist Kipyegon, 31: “This is the road to Tokyo [world championships in September) and I would say I am in the right direction.” She credited her coach and managers — and competition. “To be honest, the ladies are pushing me, too, because they are running quick now and I’m happy that when I broke a world record, they are all running very fast, and that is what I wanted, to motivate the younger generation to come and do even better. “For them to follow me, it feels so great that they are pushing me as well to break records.” Chebet and Kipyegon overshadowed a raft of marks that rated headlines, including an American record in the hammer throw by 30-year-old Rudy Winkler of Washington, D.C. ‘In the Diamond League series’ first event — at 10 a.m. before the national NBC telecast at 1 p.m. — Winkler spun the 16-pound ball-on-a-steel-wire 83.16 meters (272 feet, 10 inches). He upped his own national record of 82.71 (271-4 1/4) set at the same stadium-adjacent venue in 2021. And he thus beat Paris Olympic champion Ethan Katzberg of Canada. A throw of 82.71 would have been a world record as recently as 1982 during a period of Soviet dominance. “I saw it land, and I was like ‘It looks like it could be a PR,’ and then it came up as 83 and then I kind of blacked out for a few seconds,” Winkler said, “but I had to regain my composure for my last couple of throws.” Also notable: former world champ Brooke Andersen, a graduate of Rancho Buena High School in Vista, took second in the women’s hammer throw, going 78.88 (258-9 1/2) behind Olympic champ Camryn Rogers of Canada at 78.88 (258-9 1/2). Typically, the Prefontaine Classic ends with the Bowerman Mile, where sub-4 is assumed for the whole field. In Saturday’s edition, the winner was Niels Laros of the Netherlands, catching American record-holder Yared Nuguse in the final yards. Laros ran 3:45.94. Nuguse: 3:45.95. Only a photo could separate them. And Paris Olympic champion Cole Hocker (an Oregon grad) fourth at 3:47.43 behind France’s Azeddine Habz’s 3:46.65. How deep was the mile field? In 15th place was Oliver Hoare of Australia. He ran 3:51.60. (And in the invitational “B” race earlier, Ethan Strand won in 3:48.86 as fellow Americans Vincent Ciattei and Gary Martin trailed in 3:49.68 and 3:49.73.) When Chebet set her 5K mark Saturday, she beat earlier 5K world records set first by Kipyegon and then Ethopia’s Gudaf Tsegay — 14:00.21 at this meet in 2023. When Pefontaine set his first American record at 5000 — in 1971 at the USA-USSR duel in Berkeley — his time was 13:30.4. Or only 2.2 seconds a lap faster that Chebet’s pace. “When I was coming here to Eugene, I was coming to prepare to run a world record,” Chebet said. “I said if Faith is trying, why not me?” As for Kipyegon, only 5-feet-2, her remarks in the media tent were open and honest. “I was preparing myself for something special, which was to run under four minutes in a mile, and I think I pushed myself, getting better and better toward the 1500, so I knew it was possible to still run under 3:49,” she said. But when I asked Kipyegon if any 5-foot-2 man could beat her in the mile, she giggled and mumbled something as her handler whisked her away.

Similar News

Catalytic converter theft is down by 80% in NYC. Here’s why.
Catalytic converter theft is down by 80% in NYC. Here’s why.

A van with seized catalytic converter thefts is parked outside police headquarters in Mineola, New Y...

06.07.2025 0
Read More
Youngest girls at Camp Mystic were sleeping just feet from the river before horror Texas floods — with 5 kids dead, 23 missing
Youngest girls at Camp Mystic were sleeping just feet from the river before horror Texas floods — with 5 kids dead, 23 missing

The water to rose 20 feet above flood stage in just 90 minutes starting around 4 a.m. on July 4....

06.07.2025 0
Read More
Atlanta’s municipal support for the arts program grants open
Atlanta’s municipal support for the arts program grants open

‘Atlanta from the Ashes’ at Woodruff Park. (woodruff Park Facebook page) The City of Atlanta’s Mayor...

06.07.2025 0
Read More