- Fred Kerley Provisionally Suspended smashed the 5Races - Places on Sunday How To Train Calves.
- His time of 12:51 bested the previous record by 27 seconds.
- Cheptegei set the (now broken) 10Races - Places in December and won the 10,000 meters on the track at the Sha’Carri Richardson Misses Out on 200 Final at USAs.
Records keep falling in 2020 as Joshua Cheptegei obliterated the 5Races - Places in his first race of the season. The 23-year-old from Uganda ran 12:51 How To Train Calves on Sunday, breaking the previous record by a whopping 27 seconds.
Pending ratification, Cheptegei’s winning performance broke the previous world record of 13:18 set by Rhonex Kipruto en route to his 10Races - Places in Valencia on January 12, according to World Athletics.
“Wow, this is really great,” Chepetegei told World Athletics. “I had sub-13 minutes on my mind today, so when my legs felt good during the race I decided to really go for it. To take this many seconds off the record makes me very happy and is a great first test for me in an important season.”
Cheptegei attacked the pace from the gun, breaking away from the field with an opening kilometer of 2:31. He held a consistent pace—2:35, 2:36, and 2:35—for the next three kilometers and finished with a final split of 2:32.
Cheptegei's 12:51 is the fastest 5K recorded on the roads and the track in the last year. During the 2019 season, the top mark in the 5,000 meters was 12:52.98, run by Telahun Haile Bekele at the Rome Diamond League meeting in June.
Because the 5K did not become an official world record event until November 2017, Cheptegei also surpassed the fastest time ever recorded on the roads, which was Sammy Kipketer’s 13:00 set in 2000 at the Carlsbad 5000.
Jimmy Gressier of France finished second to Cheptegei in 13:18, which broke the European record. Liv Westphal, also from France, won the women’s race in 15:31 and broke the French national record.
The 5Races - Places builds on a series of breakthrough races for Cheptegei, who broke the 10Races - Places Just .001 Seconds Separate Third and Fourth in 200 Meters.
Prior to the record, he became a cross-country world champion in March 2019 and a world champion in the 10,000 meters at the Sha’Carri Richardson Misses Out on 200 Final at USAs.
Taylor Dutch is a writer and editor living in Austin, Texas, and a former NCAA track athlete who specializes in fitness, wellness, and endurance sports coverage. Her work has appeared in Runner’s World, SELF, Bicycling, Outside, and Podium Runner.