Athletics - Two-hour mark tipped to tumble, but not for another
decade
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[January 02, 2019]
By Andrew Both
(Reuters) - Eliud Kipchoge moved
tantalizingly close to the magic two-hour mark for the men's
marathon last year, but a former world record holder and a sports
science expert both think it could take another decade or so for the
barrier to fall.
Kipchoge's record time of two hours, one minute and 39 seconds, set
in Berlin in September, has ignited talk in the athletics world of
whether the Kenyan, or perhaps someone else, can dip under two hours
sooner rather than later.
Derek Clayton is a member of the 'later' camp.
"For the past 40 years I have been watching with great interest the
improvement as the time edges closer to the two-hour barrier,"
Clayton said in an email to Reuters.
The 76-year-old Australian knows his subject.
Clayton set a world record in clocking 2:09.37 at Fukuoka, Japan, in
1967, a time that a half century later would still have placed him
seventh in Berlin last year.
He went even faster with 2:08.34 in Antwerp in 1969.
"In an effort to see if it was possible for it to be done in my
lifetime I have been plotting each world time since my 2:08,"
Clayton said of the two-hour mark.
"It has been an amazing constant downward trend, indicating a
two-hour marathon around the year 2030, with 2025 the absolute
earliest.
"I have been forecasting (as a bit of fun as against any real
science) the year 2030 for the past 20 years and so far it seems I
am still on course. Hopefully I will still be around to see it!"
CLAYTON WORKED FULL-TIME ON TOP OF PUNISHING TRAINING REGIMEN
Clayton ran his times for the classic 42.2-km race despite being
self coached and working a full-time job on top of a punishing
training regimen of roughly 250 km a week.
It makes one wonder what he might have done had he run full-time,
and enjoyed the benefits of modern shoes, a scientifically-devised
training regimen and a good support system.
Kipchoge's Berlin record came wearing Nike's Vaporfly shoes, which
have a curved, carbon-fibre plate embedded in a thick layer of
lightweight foam.
Independent studies have concluded that the shoes improve metabolic
efficiency by 4 percent, though that does not necessarily mean a
runner will be 4 percent faster.
Whatever the specifics, it makes logical sense to conclude that
modern shoe technology is of some assistance.
Michael Joyner, a doctor and researcher at the Mayo Clinic in
Minnesota, backs Clayton's opinion that it will probably take
another decade or so for the two-hour barrier to be breached.
He wrote a paper nearly 30 years ago predicting that a sub two-hour
time was feasible, and has observed nothing in the ensuing years to
change his mind.
Much as he admires Kipchoge, he thinks it is doubtful the reigning
Olympic champion will be the one to do so.
Kipchoge performed his Berlin barnstormer despite running solo for
nearly half the race, and on a day that was warmer than the ideal
distance running temperature.
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Kenya's Eliud Kipchoge celebrates after winning the Berlin Marathon
and breaking the World Record REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch
It came some 16 months after Kipchoge clocked 2:00.25 in an
unofficial Nike-organized attempt on the Monza motor race track.
Pacemakers there dropped in and out and ran in a diamond formation
to shield the Olympic champion from the wind.
Pacemakers, to be sure, are allowed in official races, but cannot
drop in and out of the race.
AGE NOT ON KIPCHOGE'S SIDE
But Kipchoge is now 34 and, while he is still improving, it would be
a big ask to expect him at his age to take another 100 seconds off
his personal best, even if someone was good enough to push him until
the dying stages.
"If he stays motivated and avoids injury, no reason he can’t go
another three or four years at a high level," Joyner told Reuters in
a telephone interview.
"My guess is he probably thinks he can get another 10 or 20
seconds."
Joyner thinks there is a roughly 50 percent chance that somebody
will break two hours by 2028.
A more likely candidate than Kipchoge is perhaps Ethiopian teenager
Selemon Barega, who ran 12:43.02 in the 5,000m this year, a time
bettered by only three others in history.
Kipchoge ran 12:46.53 for the 5,000m in 2004 before stepping up to
the marathon, where he has lost only once in 11 career starts.
Whether it is Kipchoge, Berega or someone else, Joyner thinks a
legal version of Kipchoge's Monza's run is the best bet to break two
hours.
"If you got the right people, on the right course, on the right day
with the right prize money scheme, it would really help," he said.
Joyner doubts that today's runners have cardio measurements much if
any higher than the greats of yesteryear.
"The engines of these elite athletes aren’t getting any bigger," he
said.
"All of these guys are turbo charged."
So what will be the final piece of the puzzle to push someone across
the sub two-hour line?
The shoes perhaps?
"I assume there will be a shoe arms race and that the materials
science folks will have a field day," Joyner said.
"At some point there might be more detailed rules about the
mechanical properties of the shoes that limit what is allowed."
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by
Christian Radnedge)
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