2011: Lost His Feet to Frostbite. 2018: Finishes a Marathon

Marko Cheseto also just became a US citizen
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Nov 14, 2018 8:51 AM CST
2011: Lost His Feet to Frostbite. 2018: Finishes a Marathon
In this Aug. 19, 2018, photo, Marko Cheseto competes in the Skinny Raven Half Marathon in Anchorage, Alaska. Cheseto, a former University of Alaska Anchorage runner who lost both of his feet to frostbite in 2011, ran his first marathon on Nov. 4 and became an American citizen two days later.   (Bill Roth/Anchorage Daily News via AP)

A former University of Alaska Anchorage runner who lost both of his feet to frostbite in 2011 ran his first marathon and became an American citizen last week, the AP reports. Marko Cheseto, 35, finished 613th overall out of nearly 53,000 runners at the New York City Marathon on Nov. 4, the Anchorage Daily News reports. Two days later, he became a US citizen. Cheseto, who's from Kenya, went to Anchorage in 2008 on an athletic scholarship, quickly earning honors in track and cross-country. Grieving the death of another Anchorage runner from Kenya, Cheseto disappeared in the woods near campus in November 2011, his senior year of school. Temperatures dipped to the single digits, and it snowed more than a foot. On the third day he was missing, Cheseto stumbled back with his shoes frozen to his feet, resulting in amputations.

Fitted with a pair of running blades, Cheseto began running again 18 months later. He graduated from college, got married, and had three children. He remained in Anchorage until his move to Orlando, Fla., earlier this year to work and train at Prosthetic & Orthotic Associates. Cheseto finished the marathon last week in 2 hours, 52 minutes, 33 seconds—about 10 minutes off the world record for a double-leg amputee. "I was happy with my time," Cheseto said. "My biggest challenge was going over the bridges, and sharp inclines." Cheseto said one of his goals "is to run with elites in one of the major marathons." "The ultimate goal is to break the overall world record and finish a marathon in less than two hours," Stan Patterson, POA's head prosthetist, notes. "We believe that Marko is the man to do it." (A double amputee conquered Everest.)

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