The day the marathon miracle man 'went to the moon and back'

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
2019 delivered plenty of incredible sporting memories, but watching Eliud Kipchoge cross the finish line in Vienna to become the first
runner in history to complete a marathon in under two hours was something I will never ever forget. "We went to the moon and we came back
to Earth, together," the Kenyan superstar told me afterwards.He looked fresh, beaming that big smile of his and happily signing autographs
I'm not ashamed to say I asked for one
This was the 'moon landing' moment for marathon runners all over the world and I was lucky enough to report on it.Image:Kipchoge covered the
distance in 1.59.40 - a full 20 seconds ahead of the two-hour markI'd first met Kipchoge in Kenya in August 2018 when he appeared at the end
of my fifth marathon in five days, across rural conservation areas
"No human is limited," he said as he put a medal around my neck.We chatted and discussed the possibility of him trying once more to run
sub-two hours
It was clear then that he felt he had it in him to make history and make the world take notice.Image:Enda Brady, Eliud Kipchoge and Liz
Winton in Kenya in 2018He had narrowly missed out by 26 seconds previously in Monza, but in Vienna he absolutely smashed it.Yes, he had
phenomenal pacemakers
Yes, he had expensively designed running shoes and a car-guided laser beam at 13.1mph to guide him home
But he still had to run at most average runners' sprint speed, the entire marathon distance.Image:Eliud Kipchoge with his Vienna team of
pacemakersThe buzz along the route was so special, everyone willing him to succeed
I remember talking to the champion cyclist Chris Froome and he was just in awe of Kipchoge
"He doesn't even look like he's breaking sweat," the four-time Tour de France winner told me.And then there were the pacemakers, all 41 of
them
The image of them grinning their heads off and falling back to allow Kipchoge to cross the line in 1:59:40 will stay with me
forever.Image:The pacemakers helped Kipchoge run at an average speed of 13.1mphIt was wonderful, it was teamwork and sport at its
brilliant, most beautiful best
It was far and away my favourite memory of 2019, it showed just what can be achieved when people work together.I've signed up to run the
Vienna marathon in April 2020
If everything goes to plan I'll have 16 miles completed in that time!