Kipchoge’s mantra - that “no human is limited” - is one he strives to embody through his running, rather than words. “My real excitement in Tokyo is no longer about competing at an Olympic Games - it’s about making a legacy,” he said last week. On Sunday in Sapporo, the Japanese city 500 miles north of Tokyo, 36-year-old Kipchoge became the third man to defend an Olympic marathon title. Of the 14 major marathons he’s entered, he’s won 12 of them. He set the marathon world record of two hours, one minute and 41 seconds in Berlin three years ago, before becoming the first man to unofficially run the distance in under two hours the year after.
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