HISTORY HAS BEEN MADE 🫨
Sabastian Sawe becomes the first person ever to break the 2-hour barrier in official race conditions, storming to a historic 1:59:30‼️
@KejelchaYomif, on his marathon debut, also breaks 2 hours with a stunning 1:59:41 and @jacobkiplimo2 clocks 2:00:28, also faster than the previous world record 😤
New School Record 🏆
Drake Relays Update - Korima, Indigo, Emma, and Praise set a New 4 x 1600m School Record with a 8th Place Team Finish 🔥
#chicagoscollegeteam
EAST AURORA BOYS VOLLEYBALL 2026 - Boys Volleyball is Official at EA! Support the program by purchasing some spirit wear. The program receives 20% back of all sales. Come check out the first home game ever on Thursday, March 26!
https://t.co/gUV6ihgFP9
New Indoor Track & Field Top 10 Performance 🏆
With a 2:13.02 - 800m at the Notre Dame Meyo Invite,
Korima Gonzalez is now #6 All-Time 🔥☝🏽
#ChicagosCollegeTeam | #FireUpFlames
Roger Federer broke the internet with one statistic that will change how you see every setback in your life.
1,526 singles matches.
Won almost 80% of them.
20 Grand Slams. 103 titles.
Now answer honestly:
What percentage of total points do you think he won across his entire career?
70%? 65%? 60%?
Try … 54%.
He lost literally almost EVERY SECOND POINT he ever played for 24 years.
And still became one of the greatest of all time.
Watch him explain it himself (2:07 of pure life-changing wisdom):
“In tennis, perfection is impossible… When you lose every second point on average, you teach yourself to say:
‘Okay, I double-faulted — it’s only one point.’
‘Okay I got passed at the net — it’s only one point.’
Even a screaming overhead smash that ends up on SportsCenter Top 10… still just one point.
So when you’re playing your point, it has to be the most important thing in the world.
The moment it’s over — it’s behind you.
That mindset frees you to attack the next point, and the next, and the next with absolute intensity and clarity.”
Then he looked at the crowd and said the line that hit a billion people in the soul:
“The real sign of a champion is not that they win every point.
It’s that they lose again and again and again… and have learned how to deal with it.
Negative energy is wasted energy.
Cry it out if you have to. Then force a smile.
Move on. Be relentless. Adapt. Grow.
Work harder — and work smarter.”
Save this post.
The next time you lose a deal, bomb a presentation, get ghosted, miss a deadline, or just have “one of those days” — come back here and read it again.
You’re not falling behind.
You’re just in the 46%.
And the 46% is exactly where every single legend has spent most of their career.
Keep playing the next point.
(full 2:07 clip — sound on)
🗣️ “I'm getting old for track and field and I've been thinking about it for a while…Because I'm very happy with how my career went, it made the decision easy.”
Reflected on one heck of a career w/ Evan Jager for nearly 2 hours for a CITIUS MAG Podcast Exit Interview on the legacy he’s leaving behind in the steeplechase, stories from his medal performances in Rio 2016 🥈 + London 2017 🥉 — and how often he thinks about the fall at the 2015 Paris Diamond League.
🎧 https://t.co/VoOF2SvL4Y
Evan Jager has retired from professional running. The Running Effect broke the news.
An incredible career.
-2016 Olympic 🥈
-2017 Worlds 🥉
-8:00.45 American record
-7 straight US steeple titles
-Greatest American steepler ever
📷Kevin Morris
https://t.co/NfZSfsLmW3
HISTORY MADE 😱
Benson Kipruto becomes the first man in history to win the Boston, Chicago, and New York as he takes the crown at the 2025 NYC Marathon in 2:08:09.
Kipruto battled runner-up Alexander Mutiso to the line and nearly got caught, but held on for a 0.3 second margin of victory in a dramatic finish.
🏆 New York City Marathon women's champion 🏆
Hellen Obiri makes history with a sensational run of 2:19:51 to regain her crown in the Big Apple 🗽
The Kenyan becomes the first ever female athlete to run sub-2:20 in NYC and takes apart Margaret Okayo's course record of 2:22:31 from 2003 🇰🇪
HE DID IT 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Conner Mantz makes HISTORY in Chicago with a 2:04:43 fourth-place finish, the fastest time ever run by an American.
Mantz breaks Khalid Khannouchi’s 23-year-old American record of 2:05:48, as well as the all-conditions best of 2:04:58 set by Ryan Hall in 2011.
Even though my time as a runner at NCC wasn’t as long as others, Al always treated everyone like they were the most important person in the world. I will always “run for fun and personal bests”. Thank you for everything coach 🔴⚪️🏃♂️🏃♀️
Congratulations to our Cardinals of the Week! Salmeron had a great first college meet, she tackled the 6k and was our 2nd Cardinal to finish! Lawson put together a strong week of workouts and kept that rolling today! ❤️❤️