JEM1017 wrote:
Is it talent? The recent rash of 'unbelievable' marathon times has coincided with several small stories leaking out regarding doping at kenyan training camps. Most are ignored, some, like the one that popped up around London 2012 got limited airplay. I'm a cycling, as well as running, fan. It all looks eerily similar to the Lance Armstrong saga (albeit with a country, rather than a single athlete). Complete dominance accompanied by slight cracks in the facade that are mostly ignored because they don't fit the current narrative, only to be brought up later as 'evidence' by folks who 'knew it all along.' I know the money's better in the big marathons than on the track, but the testing is also much less structured(and OOC testing is abysmal in third world countries like Kenya and Jamaica, when compared to the U.S. and European countries), with long periods of training(once again, with no testing) followed by 2, maybe 3 competitions a year, rather than a consistent track race schedule likely(or at least more likely) to produce testing at several races over a 4-5 month period. To my admittedly cynical view, it just seems like a perfect storm. We can try to rationalize it, like people did during LA's time in the sun (he targets only 1 race, he pedals with a high cadence, the cancer tore his body down and he 'rebuilt' it into a TdF contender, etc.), but it looks to me like the most likely answer to this question is staring us right in the face, the majority of people just refuse to see it.
It's certainly possible, though I would think somebody would've been busted or someone would've leaked this out. However, 2:03 is flying. I remember when the Djiboutians were having all of their success in the early-to-mid 80s and thought the performance peak was probably in the 2:04 range. Anyway, if Ritz is a high-2:06 guy on the perfect day, that is the equivalent of the WR back in 1988, which stood for a decade, a WR that Hall has bested.