Faith Kipyegon to attempt first women's sub-four minute mile

Gold medallist Kenya's Faith Kipyegon celebrates after competing in the women's 1500m final of the athletics event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at Stade de France in Saint-Denis, north of Paris, on August 10, 2024. (Photo by Jewel SAMAD / AFP)
Triple Olympic and world 1,500 metres champion Faith
Kipyegon is to attempt the first women's, unofficial sub-four minute mile in a
Nike "Breaking 4" project following the success of Eliud Kipchoge's
sub-two hour marathon.
Nike said on Wednesday that Kipyegon, 31, is to
attempt the feat on June 26 at Stade Charlety, Paris, where she beat her own
1,500 metres world record last year.
Full details are yet to be revealed but, as with her
compatriot's 1:59:40.2 marathon in Vienna in 2019, she is likely to be aided by
"in and out" pacers, new high-tech shoes and kit and other
technological, physiological and psychological help that will mean any record
would not be officially recognised.
Kipyegon set the current official mile world record
of 4:07.64 for the now-rarely run distance in 2023, taking almost five seconds
off Sifan Hassan's 2019 mark, so would need a huge leap forward to achieve the
landmark time.
"I’m a three-time Olympic champion. I’ve
achieved World Championship titles. I thought, What else, why not dream outside
the box?" Kipyegon said. "I want this attempt to say to women, 'You
can dream and make your dreams valid'."
Kipyegon won the Olympic 1,500m title at the 2016,
2020 and 2024 Games and the world title in 2017, 2022 and 2023, when she also
took 5,000m gold.
As well as the mile record, she also holds the
1,500m world record of 3:49.04 and barely seemed to take a breath after taking
time away from the track to have a baby.
"Becoming a mother has changed my entire mental
attitude," she said. "You have to engage yourself, you have to show
your child the way."
Nike will be applying the lessons learned from
Kipchoge's attempts, where he narrowly failed and then subsequently succeeded
in getting under two hours.
Along with carbon-plated "super shoes",
one key aspect was the use of pacers in a v-formation, with a turnover of
athletes to ensure fresh legs. Innovative apparel technology and laser pacing lights
also played a part, and are likely to do so again for Kipyegon's attempt.
Nike said full details of the attempt, including
information on pacers, supporters in the stadium and kit, will be revealed in
the coming weeks.
Kipyegon has known Kipchoge for more than 10 years
and they share the same coach in Patrick Sang. "Faith can absorb any goal,
she is a big dreamer," Kipchoge said.
"She is the woman to take on this challenge
because she is open to trying."
To improve her record mile by at least 7.65 seconds,
Kipyegon will need to run each of her four and a bit laps an average of nearly
two seconds faster than her previous best.
"Faith is a once-in-a-generation talent, and
her audacious goal is exactly what Nike stands for,” said Elliott Hill, Nike
President & CEO.
"Breaking4 is the kind of bold dream we will do
everything in our power to make real — helping both elite and everyday athletes
to believe anything is possible.
"Alongside Faith, our innovators are breaking
barriers by combining cutting-edge sport science with revolutionary footwear
and apparel innovation to help her achieve a truly historic goal."
Britain's Roger Bannister was the first man to go
under four minutes in May 1954, with compatriot Diane Leather the first woman
to break five minutes later the same month. The current men's record is the
3:43.13 set by Hicham El Guerrouj in 1999.
Hassan's 4:12.33 run in 2019 just edged the record of Russian Svetlana Masterkova that had lasted 23 years.
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