The 24-year-old set a new 10,000 mark of 26
minutes, 11.00 seconds at the Valencia World Record Day event in
October to beat Kenenisa Bekele's time of 26:17.53 set in 2005.
At the Monaco Diamond League meeting two months earlier he had
also bettered Bekele's 16-year-old 5,000m record by almost two
seconds with a time of 12:35.36.
If Cheptegei wins gold medals in both events at next year's
postponed Games, he would become only the eighth man to complete
the double.
"It would be a mountain to climb, but the challenge is up to
me," Cheptegei told the BBC. "It's demanding a lot, in terms of
racing and mindset but I want to give myself a try to win both
gold medals,.
"It would be really amazing to win the double, but if I win gold
in the 10,000m I would still be grateful."
Cheptegei, who runs in Nike's Dragonfly spikes -- a lightweight
shoe that combines a unique foam and carbon plates -- said that
his gear helped him but was not the reason for his success this
year.
A debate over runners' shoes has been raging since high-tech
footwear developed by Nike played a starring role in two of the
biggest distance-running achievements of 2019.
"The shoes really do help. But in this case the shoes are not
only available to Mr. Cheptegei. They are available for everyone
who wants to attack the world record," he added.
"You have seen the likes of Yomif Kejelcha, Selemon Barega ...
it's not about shoes only, but athletes having this period
concentrating more on training and not travelling.
"I was focused on just this one thing ... that was breaking the
world record."
(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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