Jacob Kiplimo Turns Chicago Into a Showcase of Brilliance and Endurance
It felt like Jacob Kiplimo was racing against the clock in Chicago. For twenty-two miles through the streets of the big shoulders, he flirted with the unimaginable. The half-marathon world record holder moved with the kind of rhythm that makes other runners look like they’re standing still. His stride, smooth, compact, relentless, had him brushing against world-record pace until fatigue finally crept in. When he crossed the line in 2:02:23, it was a reminder that talent alone can take you close to greatness, but patience and consistency are what keep you there.
This was only Kiplimo’s second marathon. The first, a 2:03:37 runner-up finish in London, hinted that something special was building. No doubt, Chicago confirmed it. For much of the race, the 23-year-old Ugandan looked untouched by pain or pressure, clocking 13:58 for the first 3 miles and hitting halfway in 60:16, numbers that belong in world-record conversations. Even when the pacers stepped aside, he ran as if guided by instinct, carving out his own pace and dropping Kenya’s John Korir and Amos Kipruto one by one.
By mile 19th, Kiplimo was alone in the wind. The crowds lining Michigan Avenue leaned into the moment, sensing they were watching a rare mix of speed and grace. He was still on pace for history at mile 22, 1:41:05 on the clock, but the body eventually betrayed the mind. His cadence slowed, his shoulders tensed, and the last five miles stretched into survival, 4:46, 4:50, 4:55, 5:05, and 5:20. The world record faded, but the victory never did.

October 9-12, 2025
Chicago, Illinois, USA, photo by Kevin Morris for Bank of America Chicago Marathon
At the finish, Kiplimo collapsed, legs buckling under the weight of his effort. “I’ve learned that in the marathon, you need to be patient,” he said afterward. “It’s about how you prepare yourself, how you add the mileage in your body.” It sounded less like a quote and more like a realization. For all his raw ability, the marathon remains a different kind of puzzle. Kiplimo may be the most gifted distance runner alive, but to stay at the top of this event, he’ll need the discipline that only repetition can teach.
There’s a lesson to be learned about timing, something Kiplimo is still refining. His half-marathon brilliance, that 56:42 world record from Barcelona, reflects pure speed. But over 26.2 miles, it’s less about velocity and more about control. Eliud Kipchoge, Kelvin Kiptum, and others have built their legacies not on a single performance, but on a body of work that spans multiple seasons. Chicago showed that Kiplimo belongs in that company; now he must prove he can stay there.

If Kiplimo’s victory was a glimpse of potential fulfilled, Hawi Feysa’s win in the women’s race was about transformation. The 24-year-old Ethiopian arrived as an underdog. She is talented, yes, but unproven on this stage. She left as the first Ethiopian woman to win in Chicago in eight years, running 2:14:56 and cutting more than two minutes from her personal best. Her even splits, 67:30 through halfway and 67:26 to close, told a story of control. She made her move near 28 kilometers, broke free from Tanzania’s Magdalena Shauri, and never looked back.
Feysa’s rise has been steady rather than spectacular. Third in Tokyo, a win in Frankfurt, and now this, a performance that places her fifth on the all-time list. “Winning here has been amazing,” she said. “My coach has been extremely instrumental in this block, and I have to thank him.” Her words reflected the humility of an athlete still processing her own progress. Like Kiplimo, Feysa showed that mastery in the marathon isn’t about chasing records but learning when to push and when to wait.

For the Americans, it was a day of breakthroughs. Conner Mantz finally erased Khalid Khannouchi’s 22-year-old record, finishing fourth in 2:04:43. His gamble was an aggressive 62:18 halfway split, which paid off in full. Natosha Rogers also delivered, cutting her personal best to 2:23:28 to finish as the top American woman. Each performance hinted at something larger: that the marathon, with all its unpredictability, still rewards those who run with equal parts daring and patience.

Kiplimo’s Chicago win will be remembered for its speed, but what makes it meaningful is what comes next. He has the raw gifts to chase records every time he lines up, yet the marathon rarely rewards raw gifts alone. To join the greats, he’ll need to master the slow art of consistency, the kind that turns flashes of brilliance into something lasting. Chicago was the spark. What he does with it will decide if it becomes a legacy.
Author
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Deji Ogeyingbo is one of Nigeria’s leading Track and Field Journalists as he has worked in various capacities as a writer, content creator, and reporter for radio and TV stations in the country and Africa. Deji has covered varying degrees of Sporting competitions within and outside Nigeria which includes, African Championships and World Junior Championships. Also, he founded one of Nigeria’s leading Sports PR and Branding company in Nikau Sports in 2020, a company that aims to change the narrative of how athletes are perceived in Nigeria while looking to grow their image to the highest possible level.
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