The day the finish line changed lanes at the Chongqing Marathon
16/03/2026 14:15In Chongqing, China, a marathon turned into a real-life sketch. On Sunday, March 15, Sheng Xueli was cruising toward a comfortable victory—until, just meters from the finish, an overzealous official redirected him off course. An absurd mistake, a few suspended seconds, then a quick turnaround to cross the line a second time. Somewhere between a solid performance and a surreal moment, the 2026 Chongqing Marathon proved that even after 42.195 kilometers, things can still go off the rails.
| Chapter 1 – A win already in sight
The scene feels familiar. In Chongqing, on a damp Sunday morning, the roads glisten under humid air. After 42.195 kilometers, one man runs alone toward the finish line. Sheng Xueli is making his marathon debut—and delivering a masterclass. No one ahead. No one behind. The kind of race where the eyes lift before the arms do. The clock ticks toward a clear victory. Around 2:23 in sight. A smooth, uneventful finish—or so it seems.
| Chapter 2 – The wrong move
Just meters from the tape, everything unravels. The clock reads 2:23:52. An official steps in. Arm extended, body committed, decision made in a split second. In his mind, it’s simple: a runner on the wrong course. In reality, he has just blocked the path of the race leader. Later, organizers would explain that the official had “incorrectly identified the race category” and “obstructed the passage” of an athlete “who was running normally toward the finish line.”
The men’s full‑#marathon winner in #Chongqing was stopped just before the finish line—by a race official. The winner Sheng Xueli was mistakenly flagged as a half‑marathon runner. He praised the staff for being “very careful and warm” in his post‑race interview. pic.twitter.com/iY1pSKDQ9D
— Shanghai Daily (@shanghaidaily) March 17, 2026
The footage says it all. After more than two hours of effort, Sheng Xueli is literally pushed out of his own finish, redirected into the half marathon lane. According to local reports, the confusion likely stemmed from a misread bib number—made worse by the rain.
| Chapter 3 – The moment everything shifts
In that brief instant, everything wobbles. The body stops, the mind hesitates, the script collapses. “I was almost pulled away by the official as I crossed the finish line,” Sheng Xueli would later explain. Then, still in disbelief: “This was my first marathon, and something like this happened. I’m speechless.” Speechless—but not passive. He turns around immediately. Back on the correct path. A few seconds lost, a victory suddenly in doubt—if only briefly. The kind of moment where everything can hinge on a detail.
| Chapter 4 – Crossing the line… twice
The confusion clears quickly. The mistake is understood—and corrected. Sheng Xueli is asked to retrace his steps and cross the finish line properly, as if nothing had happened. A surreal image: a race winner forced to replay his finish for the cameras. The clock, however, tells the truth. The official time from his first crossing stands: 2:23:18. A clear victory, despite everything.
The podium behind him:
➜ 1st: Sheng Xueli – 2:23:18
➜ 2nd: Li Zhiguang – 2:24:41
➜ 3rd: Wang Kai – 2:26:03
| Chapter 5 – When the marathon goes viral
The video spreads fast. Within hours, it circulates across China—and then worldwide. On Weibo, a hashtag related to the incident surpasses 8.6 million views. Reactions range from disbelief to humor to anger. In an official statement, the Chongqing Athletics Association acknowledged that “this behavior affected the normal progression of the race and had a negative impact.”
The federation went further, urging the official to “engage in deep self-reflection and recognize the seriousness of officiating responsibilities.” In a sport built on precision, the moment serves as a stark reminder: human error is always part of the equation.
| Chapter 6 – A sanction as a warning
The response is swift. The official, identified as Zhu, is suspended for one year—banned from officiating until March 15, 2027. A heavy sanction, matching the visibility of the incident. Beyond discipline, the goal is clear: protect the integrity of a sport where every detail matters—course markings, flow management, runner identification. On that Sunday, all of it faltered in just a few seconds.
| Chapter 7 – A victory that veered off course
In the end, Sheng Xueli did win. The results stand. The time is official. But the memory of this race will never follow a straight line. It will always carry that strange moment when a lone leader had to battle not fatigue or the clock—but a human mistake at the worst possible place. A two-part victory. A finish line crossed… then found again. And one lasting truth: in the marathon, even when everything seems written, it only takes one wrong move to turn a finish into a story.

Dorian VUILLET
Journalist