
Olympic champion Faith Kipyegon tries to become 1st woman to break 4-minute mile next week in Paris
Faith Kipyegon's already a three-time Olympic 1,500-meter champion. She's already the world-record holder in the mile and 1,500.
Next on her to-accomplish list: Become the first woman to break the 4-minute mile barrier.
The 31-year-old Kipyegon is making a run at that hallowed mark in a Nike-sponsored event dubbed ' Breaking4: Faith Kipyegon vs. the 4-Minute Mile ' on June 26 at the Stade Charlety in Paris. She set the world record mark of 4:07.64 nearly two years ago during a Diamond League meet in Monaco.
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'I think breaking four will really cement my legacy,' Kipyegon said in a Zoom call on Wednesday. 'The next generation is looking up to us to show them the way and this is what I'm doing now. ... Everything we do, we have to dream big and just believe in ourselves that we could do it.'
It was more than 71 years ago when British runner Roger Bannister became the first man to eclipse 4 minutes when he ran 3:59.4.
For Kipyegon, finding extra speed to trim a little more than 7.64 seconds occupies her thoughts and drives her in training. But really, she and her coach, Patrick Sang, aren't altering from their routine too much to chase a sub-4 mile time.
What she's doing in workouts now has already proven highly successful. She won her third straight 1,500 Olympic title in Paris last August. A month before that, she broke her own 1,500 record on the same track where she will run next Thursday.
'For me, I would say being mentally strong and believing in everything I do,' she said of preparing for big moments. 'Believing in the training, believing in waking up to empower the next generation, believing in everything that has been from my younger time when I was running barefoot to where I am now. It has really given me that drive to wake up and go for training and just be strong.'
She will be wearing the latest innovations from Nike, too, from her aerodynamic track suit to her spikes. Should she break the mark, it would be subject to ratification by World Athletics.
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Fellow Kenyan runner, longtime friend and training partner Eliud Kipchoge has been providing emotional support. He had an event set up for him in 2019, when he ran a marathon in 1:59:40 to break the 2-hour marathon barrier at the INEOS 1:59 Challenge in Austria. The mark wasn't ratified by the sport's governing body.
'It will be lovely to see Eliud after the finish line,' said Kipyegon, who's a four-time world champion. 'I get positive messages from around the world that I can do it. ... It really motivates me a lot going on to this challenge. I know it will not be easy, but I'm going to try my best and we will see what the finish line offers.'
She's eager for the challenge to show the next generation of female runners that anything is possible. That includes her young daughter, Alyn.
'You have to dream and just be patient for it,' Kipyegon said.
Same with her quest next week, which she will approach in increments.
'You have to dream of how will I cross the 800 mark? How will I cross that 1,200 mark?' Kipyegon explained. 'It's the repetition of, 'I have to be myself and just think of how will I shed the seven seconds?'
'I will feel so great if I just run after that finish line and see under four minutes. It will be historical.'
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports
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Vancouver Sun
38 minutes ago
- Vancouver Sun
Stuart Skinner's future with Oilers a key consideration for GM Bowman
So, will Stu Skinner be back in net next season as the No. 1? Or will he be sharing the crease in a 1 and 1a scenario, but not with the good soldier Calvin Pickard as a partner? Maybe they trade for somebody who is or was a starter. Enquiring minds want to know, and they're all wearing Edmonton Oilers jerseys. There's this feeling that fixing the goaltending here is as simple as looking up plumbers on Google and having somebody come by to fix the leaking toilet. It's not. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. 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He won the Swedish Hockey League scoring title.


Calgary Herald
41 minutes ago
- Calgary Herald
Stuart Skinner's future with Oilers a key consideration for GM Bowman
So, will Stu Skinner be back in net next season as the No. 1? Article content Or will he be sharing the crease in a 1 and 1a scenario, but not with the good soldier Calvin Pickard as a partner? Maybe they trade for somebody who is or was a starter. Article content Article content Enquiring minds want to know, and they're all wearing Edmonton Oilers jerseys. Article content There's this feeling that fixing the goaltending here is as simple as looking up plumbers on Google and having somebody come by to fix the leaking toilet. Article content Article content It's not. Article content Article content For sure, Skinner was outplayed by Sergei Bobrovsky in the final against Florida, but Bob's arguably on a career path to the Hall of Fame with his two Cup rings and his two Vezina trophies, plus his 445 regular-season wins, top 10 all-time. Article content Skinner has only played three NHL seasons (189 regular-season games, 50 in the playoffs), not Bob's 15 years (777 regular-season games and 117 in the playoffs). But he did get the Oilers to the last two Cup finals, with ample help from Pickard along the way this spring. He was definitely better than the ballyhooed Jake Oettinger in the Western Conference final against Dallas, not just this year, but last spring. Article content So, how bad can Skinner be? He wasn't the reason the Oilers lost to Florida this June; they're just too deep, reminding people of the early 80s New York Islanders with their talent and their wear-you-down philosophy of play. Article content Article content Again, Skinner is a good goalie who is in the mix for one of the three Olympic spots next February. But, there still could be a different configuration in net, like maybe somebody to push Skinner for playing time. Article content Article content 'I don't want to single the goaltending out,' said Bowman, who balked at trading for goaltending help at the deadline, maybe because he won three Cups in Chicago with Corey Crawford and Antti Niemi in net, so good goalies but not great ones. Article content But, he knows the narrative in this city, where Skinner, an accountable, nice guy with lots of ability, gave up two goals in the first period of all five starts in the final series after outplaying Oettinger and Hill, specifically, in heavyweight matchups earlier. Article content 'It's something we'll investigate this summer — what's the best path moving forward for our team. It's hard to predict where that's going to go. We have to have lots of conversations about what other teams are looking to do,' said Bowman, who did concede that the forward group and the goalies would be evaluated most deeply.


Edmonton Journal
43 minutes ago
- Edmonton Journal
Stuart Skinner's future with Oilers a key consideration for GM Bowman
Article content So, will Stu Skinner be back in net next season as the No. 1? Or will he be sharing the crease in a 1 and 1a scenario, but not with the good soldier Calvin Pickard as a partner? Maybe they trade for somebody who is or was a starter. Article content Enquiring minds want to know, and they're all wearing Edmonton Oilers jerseys. There's this feeling that fixing the goaltending here is as simple as looking up plumbers on Google and having somebody come by to fix the leaking toilet. Article content It's not. For sure, Skinner was outplayed by Sergei Bobrovsky in the final against Florida, but Bob's arguably on a career path to the Hall of Fame with his two Cup rings and his two Vezina trophies, plus his 445 regular-season wins, top 10 all-time. Skinner has only played three NHL seasons (189 regular-season games, 50 in the playoffs), not Bob's 15 years (777 regular-season games and 117 in the playoffs). But he did get the Oilers to the last two Cup finals, with ample help from Pickard along the way this spring. He was definitely better than the ballyhooed Jake Oettinger in the Western Conference final against Dallas, not just this year, but last spring. So, how bad can Skinner be? He wasn't the reason the Oilers lost to Florida this June; they're just too deep, reminding people of the early 80s New York Islanders with their talent and their wear-you-down philosophy of play. Article content Again, Skinner is a good goalie who is in the mix for one of the three Olympic spots next February. But, there still could be a different configuration in net, like maybe somebody to push Skinner for playing time. Goaltending 'something we'll investigate': GM 'I don't want to single the goaltending out,' said Bowman, who balked at trading for goaltending help at the deadline, maybe because he won three Cups in Chicago with Corey Crawford and Antti Niemi in net, so good goalies but not great ones. But, he knows the narrative in this city, where Skinner, an accountable, nice guy with lots of ability, gave up two goals in the first period of all five starts in the final series after outplaying Oettinger and Hill, specifically, in heavyweight matchups earlier. 'It's something we'll investigate this summer — what's the best path moving forward for our team. It's hard to predict where that's going to go. We have to have lots of conversations about what other teams are looking to do,' said Bowman, who did concede that the forward group and the goalies would be evaluated most deeply. Article content 'Goaltending is strange. In a way, it's the most important position, but oftentimes, the goalie you (other teams, scouts, coaches, management, fans) think is the best isn't,' said Bowman, starting a long answer to a short question. 'In three of the four rounds this playoff run we had the better goaltending (against Darcy Kuemper in the LA series after the first two games, against Adin Hill in the Vegas series, against Oettinger in the Dallas win, both in five games) than our opponent, but in the final it flipped,' said Bowman. 'I can't explain how, in the first rounds, our goaltending was better. They weren't elite (goalies), but they (LA, Vegas, Dallas) were supposed to be better,' said Bowman. 'In the final, Bobrovsky was excellent. I'm not disputing that. He made a lot of big saves when we had chances early in games when we couldn't get the lead. Credit to him,' he said. Article content 'You just can't go to the corner store and get an elite goalie, though. We will devise a plan in the next couple of weeks. I won't handicap what that will look like, it's too early,' said Bowman. Skinner is young (26) and cheap ($2.6 million for one more year), so there's no pressing reason to move on from him, of course. And he's a solid goalie, probably at the top of the second tier at this time. Other goaltending options? But maybe there's a wildcat Oiler offer sheet for Blues Joel Hofer to share the net with Skinner. St. Louis, who scooped up Oilers' Dylan Holloway and Philip Broberg last August when the Oilers wouldn't match on the offer sheets, only has $5.03 million in cap space right now. Hofer, who turns 25 on July 30, has played 61 the past two seasons as Jordan Binnington's backup and has a .909 save percentage and a 35-22-5 record. An Oiler offer sheet on Hofer, who played junior in Swift Current and Portland, for no more than $4,680,076 AAV, would mean the Oilers would only have to give up a second-round pick as compensation in 2026, a draft pick they have. Article content We've heard all the other names that might be in play. The bigger names as acknowledged starters: Jeremy Swayman in Boston, Binnington in St. Louis, Juuse Saros in Nashville, with Skinner presumably going back the other way if there was a trade. The smaller names who might share duties with Skinner, 26, which would mean trading Pickard (7-1 in the playoffs) and his $1 million, an easy task to a contender. Here's a brief list: John Gibson in Anaheim, 31, who still has game but has lost the No. 1 job to Lukas Dostal there and seems to be hurt every day ending in a y; the UFA veteran Jake Allen in New Jersey, 35 in August, a former starter in St. Louis and the No. 2 behind Jacob Markstrom; and maybe former Oil Kings goalie Tristan Jarry, 30, in Pittsburgh, who found himself in the minors last season. The Ducks (Gibson) and Pittsburgh (Jarry) would have to eat significant money. Gibson has two more years at $6.4 million AAV, Jarry three more years at $5.38 million AAV. Article content Allen has played 460 games, but only 31 last season withthe Devils. Is he really that much better than Pickard? Nobody's saying the Oilers are going out to get Vezina and Hart trophy winner Connor Hellebuyck or Igor Shesterkin or Andrei Vasilevsky, but Bowman may have to address the goaltending this summer to show the team, the players, the city, the fans that he knows the younger Skinner was second-best to Bobrovsky. 'The reality of the world is you just don't go down to the corner and pick up an elite goalie. How many are there even in that group?' said Bowman. 'The guys who are considered elite (Hellebuyck, Oettinger) have had tough playoffs. 'In the goaltending world, it's simultaneously the most important (position) but in some instances it's not why teams win. If you have a strong enough team, you can win without that (elite, like with Corey Crawford),' said Bowman. Article content 'It's a great discussion point. I understand that,' he said. This 'n that: When asked if Dallas had asked for permission to talk to Oiler assistant coach Glen Gulutzan about their vacant head-coaching position, he stickhandled. 'I don't want to get into that right now,' said Bowman. 'I understand you're asking but I'm not going to make that announcement.' By not offering up a flat no, that sounds like the Stars will be interviewing the Oilers PP guru Gulutzan, who was Dallas' coach before from 2011-2013 but less experienced when current GM Jim Nill fired him… With Dallas winger Mason Marchment ($4.5 million, one year left on his contract) now traded to Seattle for a third and fourth-round draft pick because of cap reasons, you have to wonder if that's the territory if the Oilers want to move fellow winger Evander Kane (one year left at $5.13 million) because of their serious cap restraints next season with Leon Draisaitl's $14 million AAV kicking in, along with a huge raise for Evan Bouchard… So far, no word on whether assistant coach Paul Coffey wants to come back for a third year to look after the defence… With Bowman expecting changes in his roster next season, Czech centre Peter Tomasek, 29, signed to a one-year $1.2 million free-agent deal, can probably be pencilled into a spot in the top 9, and if it doesn't work out, he might have a clause to return to Europe. He won the Swedish Hockey League scoring title. Latest National Stories