​Ruth Chepngetich stands in front of her world record time in a tracksuit.

Ruth Chepngetich of Kenya poses with a clock after winning the 2024 Chicago Marathon professional women's division and setting a new world record with a time of 2:09:56 at Grant Park on October 13, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images.

Celebratory Messages Follow Ruth Chepngetich's Record-Breaking Race

Kenya’s Ruth Chepngetich dedicated her Chicago Marathon win to the late Kelvin Kiptum, who set the men’s record on the same course last year.

Congratulatory messages have been pouring out towards Ruth Chepngetich, after she broke the world record for the fastest-ever marathon run by a woman, at the Chicago Marathon on Sunday. The Kenyan runner finished the race, which started and ended in Grant Park, with an astounding time of 2 hours, 9 minutes and 56 seconds.

Chepngetich is the first ever woman to run a marathon under two hours and 10 minutes, and this historic win marks her third time being the fastest woman at the Chicago Marathon, after wins in 2021 and 2022 — she was the runner-up in 2023.

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On Instagram, many users shared heartfelt, congratulatory comments on Chepngetich’s page, under several posts celebrating her astounding win and even under some of her older posts. “Kenyans in the comments section are not even shocked,” IG user @h_kip_ wrote under a collaborative post between Chepngetich’s IG and the World Athletics page. “We're just so used to this [at this point]. Congratulations Ruth.”

On X, there were also celebratory posts, including from government officials. Kenya’s recently impeached deputy president, Rigathi Gachagua, shared his “hearty congratulations,” while also celebrating Kenyan runner John Korir, who won Sunday’s marathon in 2 hours, 2 minutes and 44 seconds. Chepngetich finished tenth overall.

In her congratulatory message, deputy majority leader of the Kenyan Senate, Tabitha Karanja, said Chepngetich’s “hard work and dedication have brought pride to our great nation and inspired millions. Keep shining! Kongoi!” Also, Chibanzi Mwachonda, a high-ranking member of Kenya’s medical union, called Chepngetich’s feat “extraordinary.”

After her win, Chepngetich dedicated her record-breaking race to Kelvin Kiptum, who passed away earlier this year at just 24 years old. Kiptum nearly became the first athlete to break the 2-hour mark, after running a blistering race and setting a new marathon record on the same Chicago course.

“I’m dedicating this world record to Kelvin [Kiptum]. Maybe he could have defended his title here again and got another world record,” she said. A minute of silence was held in honor of Kiptum before the race, and stickers displaying Kiptum’s record-breaking time of 2:00:35 were given to the marathon participants.

Amidst the celebrations, there is also ongoing chatter about the validity of Chepngetich’s new world record, with the complaints centering around doping concerns. Dozens of Kenyan athletes have been the subject of doping scandals, with many of them leading to extensive bans, which has caused many to call for serious development of the country’s integrity standards when it comes to anti-doping measures.

At the post-race conference, Chepngetich replied to a journalist who asked how she would react to those who believe she doped to set the new world record: “You know people must talk but… people must talk so I don’t know.” Considering her record as a two-time champion on the same course, it’s understandable that the Kenyan runner was puzzled by the question.

In the splits from her race, where she ran just over one hour and four minutes in the half marathon, it was clear that Chepngetich attacked the world record this time around from the start to the end, averaging under 5 minutes per mile. “The weather was perfect and I was well-prepared. The world record was in my mind,” she said.

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