Given Kenya’s ongoing points with doping, was the world document too good to be true? Matt Majendie appears on the prolonged measures taken by the marathon star to point out he’s clear.
When the clock stopped at 1:59.30 on the Mall for Sabastian Sawe, the doubters weren’t as cynical of his superhuman achievements as they may ordinarily have been.
The Kenyan could hail from a nation whose athletes have been culpable for greater than a 3rd of all optimistic doping checks for the reason that Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) was arrange a decade in the past however, regardless of that and the extraordinary effort required to dip beneath the hallowed two-hour mark, there was perception it may need been achieved with out resorting to foul means. Already final 12 months, Sawe knew he was encroaching on the world document, a feat he may need achieved in Berlin final September had the local weather not been so surprisingly scorching for the autumnal street race.
Understanding the scepticism that may greet such a efficiency, he determined to endure as a lot scrutiny as doable so, through his agent Eric Lilot, made contact with the AIU to ask in the event that they could be thinking about organising a testing programme particularly for him to successfully make him probably the most examined athlete on the planet. The issue is that such testing is pricey so Sawe’s sponsor, Adidas, stepped in to satisfy the £50,000 required.
In a press release, the corporate stated: “We consider that sport must be honest and we assist efforts made by the AIU and different testing our bodies to make sure a stage taking part in discipline by way of enhanced testing. We have now supported Sabastian’s selection for enhanced testing and, together with different sports activities manufacturers, we contribute to the work of the AIU in enabling entry to industry-leading testing for athletes.”
What adopted was Sawe enterprise 25 checks within the area of two months main as much as Berlin – successfully two or 3 times per week, on one explicit day twice – each urine and blood, and never simply the usual anti-doping checks. From every pattern, examinations might be carried out for EPO, testosterone, human development hormone and far more moreover.
There have been no anomalies thrown up, and the testing was not merely a one-off. This 12 months, the testing has been much less intensive however is unfold over the entire season, equating to a different 25 checks – almost one a fortnight – however with Sawe having no prior information of when such a take a look at may happen.
It makes this athlete a trailblazer not simply as a superhuman runner however as a powerful anti-doping advocate at a time when the highlight stays on the validity of marathon runners and, particularly, Kenyan marathon runners.
Brett Clothier, the CEO of the AIU, says trailblazer is the apt phrase to sum up Sawe’s enterprise. He says: “This was his initiative I’m informed, he was proactively wanting to put himself beneath plenty of scrutiny. However we’re not within the belief enterprise, we’re within the verification enterprise, and he’s topic to the best stage of verification of any athlete on the planet.”
What Clothier is successfully saying is that whereas he can not steadfastly affirm the world document holder is a clear athlete, Sawe is giving extra proof than any athlete ever has earlier than to attempt to ship the message that the quickest occasions ever run could be carried out with out doping.
The AIU was clear that Sawe and his workforce may haven’t any information throughout this relationship of what the testing may entail.
“It’s very clear by way of settlement to do that that the testing programme is run utterly independently with no discover, no information of after we’re coming to check him and what we’re testing for,” provides Clothier. “There’ll all the time be cynics about these items and we are the largest cynics of all however we additionally do know precisely what’s concerned within the course of. This can be a very, very excessive stage of assurance on this programme primarily based on our information of anti-doping.”
Clothier describes Sawe’s testing routine because the “most artillery” for anti-doping with the “max menu for checks and samples taken at every take a look at”. And the testing received’t merely finish in 2026, his samples might be saved for 10 years with the understanding that officers can once more revisit these samples as testing improves for sure banned substances within the intervening years.

The AIU has lengthy had a historical past of working in partnership with others of their quest to catch the cheats. Again in 2019, they launched their anti-doping programme the place all the main street races got here along with subsequent backing from shoe manufacturers to pool their sources.
That partnership raised $3 million for a particular anti-doping fund. It created a far larger testing pool of the 150 high women and men in marathon working and, unsurprisingly, the optimistic checks ramped up because of this. Clothier shouldn’t be about to recommend the battle in opposition to the dopers is already received.
With 300 athletes to check and funding not limitless it’s nonetheless troublesome to catch athletes microdosing for instance out of competitors. Typically, such microdosing means substances will solely keep in an individual’s physique for a most of simply 24 hours, giving a really small window to efficiently detect doping.
“When the programs are good, we are able to catch high-level dopers however we’d like to take action extra rapidly,” admits Clothier. “And we are able to get athletes off the board to guard the credibility of achievements at main races.”
Previous to the broader partnership with marathons and shoe manufacturers, 75 per cent of podium finishers within the main marathons weren’t even examined within the 12 months previous to that exact race. There was a marked change since then. It’s, although, what the Australian nonetheless calls “a piece in progress”.
He provides: “I inform individuals on a regular basis that now we have much more optimistic instances however quite a bit much less doping occurring.
“That’s simply the truth. Earlier than the AIU got here into existence, the IAAF registered one case in opposition to a Kenyan athlete, now now we have 30 a 12 months in opposition to Kenyans on our facet.
“Anybody on the bottom on the market can actually see the adjustments. It was a complete wild west earlier than. There’s nonetheless plenty of doping but it surely’s a lot better than earlier than and an important factor is that clear athletes have the possibility to compete and win races.”
Clothier shouldn’t be about to get bombastic concerning the AIU and accepts there may be nonetheless loads of work to be carried out, partnerships to enhance, funding to extend and so forth on this fixed struggle.
“I can’t give ensures about something,” he concludes about Sawe and different elite marathon runners. “That’s not our line of labor. Clearly there’s been sufficient shock within the historical past of anti-doping with untraceable substances that I by no means make outlandish statements. However, primarily based on our intensive expertise in marathon working and catching dopers, this can be a actually excessive assurance programme. We are able to depart it as much as others to evaluate.”
This text additionally seems within the Sub-two particular version of AW journal, out now



















