Before the record came a face plant. The scene can be found easily on YouTube and traces to last Friday, when a minor miscalculation by a runner led to an involuntary amputation ahead of Sunday’s Beijing half marathon.
We don’t know the name of the runner in the red bandana. But we can see the raised casing of some cables that stretched across the road a few metres in front. Alas, the runner didn’t see that bump coming.
And so there was a trip and both the runner’s arms fell off upon impact with the tarmac. As did the bandana. The legs? They thrashed hard against the ground for a few moments until a stretcher arrived.
Not a great day to be that robot, really.
But come the Sunday, the machines did rise – Lightning, a semi-autonomous humanoid created by Honor, who ordinarily manufacture smartphones, would go on to complete that half marathon course in 50 minutes and 26 seconds.
To apply a one layer of context, the human world record for 13.1miles, held by Jacob Kiplimo of Uganda, is around seven minutes slower. To apply a second, Lightning’s time was close to two hours quicker than the winning mark of a robot a year earlier, when the Beijing half marathon first introduced humanoids to their race.
Lightning, a humanoid robot, smashed the human competition at the Beijing half marathon, finishing the 13–mile (21 km) course in a blistering 50 minutes and 26 seconds
All of which has garnered some attention since Sunday – footage and reports on YouTube about Lightning’s run have generated upwards of eight million views. Like the competing humans on the other side of a barrier, most of those glares were conducted with a smirk and some curiosity.
And therein lies a question about frontiers, because what comes next? To pose that another way, is there a scenario where robots become involved in sport, beyond the applications of AI and movement tracking that is fast taking hold in the present.
It is a silly question, really. But where curiosity exists, investment usually follows, which is why the prospect of human-against-robot contests in a sporting sphere isn’t dismissed out of hand by those in the know.
‘For centuries, man has been intrigued by contests outside of humanity,’ says Ed Warner, formerly the chairman of UK Athletics and the author of the Sport Inc substack, which casts an informed eye over the intersection of sport and finance.
He told Daily Mail Sport: ‘If you go all the way back, you will see men wrestling bears, men racing against horses, men racing greyhounds. There’s always been an intrigue there and the development of robots will be a continuation.
‘Even if it comes down to ultimately watching robots physically battling each other in sort of mixed martial arts type ring, there will be a swathe of humanity that find it fascinating.
‘The robots in Beijing were a bit comedic, but there will be points in the future when someone looks to pit a Usain Bolt-type against a robot, and that will sell tickets in the same way that people fill the o2 to watch people video gaming against each other.’
The interest levels are evidently growing. A YouGov survey in 2025, drawing on more than 1,000 sports fans in the US, found that one in three wanted to see leagues based on robot athletes. Almost half of those respondents were aged between 18 and 34 with combat sport, American Football and basketball the prime areas of intrigue.
The catchily-named RoboCup was inaugurated in Japan in 1997 with the developmental target of creating ‘a team of fully autonomous humanoid robot soccer players’
Lightning beat the human record of 57 minutes and 20 seconds set by Ugandan runner Jacob Kiplimo last month
It seems daft. But it is a fast-expanding field of exploration and investment – last year, Beijing hosted the inaugural World Humanoid Robot Games, fetching entries from 280 teams across 16 nations, drawn predominantly from universities and private companies.
It was covered in part by both the BBC and New York Times, though the ‘comedic’ element of Warner’s assessment was also apparent – one robot in a track event ran into a human official and knocked him down and boxing droids mostly prodded thin air. The next edition will be held in August, again in China, and follows similar efforts around a version of football.
The footballing element lends itself to farce – the catchily-named RoboCup was inaugurated in Japan in 1997 with the developmental target of creating ‘a team of fully autonomous humanoid robot soccer players’ capable of ‘winning a game against the winner of the most recent FIFA World Cup’ by the middle of this century.
By way of meeting some of the sniggering head-on, their website added: ‘It took only 50 years from the Wright Brothers’ first aircraft to the Apollo mission, to send a man to the moon and safely return him to the earth.’
If Lightning’s run proved anything, it was that the technological progress from 2025 to 2026 was rapid, though equivalent footage of footballing robots hints at a shallower learning curve. At the World Humanoid Robot Games, the footballers regularly toppled over (make your own jokes) or collided at slow pace.
On the matter of whether these interactions can ever become a competitive spectacle, an earnest point is there to be made. Because just as curiosity leads to cash, the opposite is equally true – cash is flooding into this space and curiosity will be inevitable as companies use sport-style challenges to trial and showcase advancements.
That arena has escalated enormously in recent years, with something of an arms race developing between the United States, Japan and China as they seek to dominate the emerging market of autonomous robotics. Sport in that regard is nothing close to the endgame, so much as a testing ground of athletic movement in machines intended for far wider purposes, be it military, manufacturing or healthcare.
‘Sport is the sort of Trojan horse or battering ram into much broader applications,’ says Warner. Indeed, Tesla, Hyundai and Unitree Robotics have all invested heavily in humanoid technologies and sporting contexts are where they mostly meet the public eye. For now, the Chinese appear to be at the leading edge.
In a massive improvement from the 2025 robot half marathon, more than half of the entries ran the course autonomously and navigated without human intervention
‘Beijing is using sports events to compress the path from prototype to product, an industrial strategy disguised as entertainment,’ Dr Alex Wissner-Gross, a respected researcher who was educated at MIT and Harvard, posted on social media last month.
An expert on the use of robotics within sport, Dr Wissner-Gross added: ‘The United States has nothing comparable (to what is happening in China).
‘We have combat robotics, educational competitions, academic research tournaments and drone racing. What we don’t have is a professional sports league for humanoid and quadruped robots competing for a mass audience. One of the densest robotics talent corridors in America, home to Boston Dynamics, MIT, Harvard, and hundreds of startups, has never had a public-facing showcase for its own technology. We build the most advanced robots on Earth and then hide them at trade shows.’
The latter situation appears to be shifting, though. On the same weekend that Lightning broke a record in Beijing, a group called the Professional Robotics League, partially founded by Wissner-Gross, staged a 50-meter sprint at the Boston Marathon. It drew only the tiniest fraction of publicity compared to what happened in China but was pioneering in its own way.
‘I do believe there will be a market for watching these events,’ says Warner. ‘Most of us will be shaking our heads to some extent and asking what the world is coming to, but what we think won’t matter. It’s about what the 18-28-year-olds think and I’m sure there will be an interest.
‘In a way, it’s no so different to the Enhanced Games (which will allow doping at its inaugural Olympic-style event in Las Vegas this summer), which will create a grotesque spectacle that draws curiosity. People will find a thrill in it.
‘On the robotics side, curiosity of its own kind will exist because there will be more products coming through with greater capabilities and it will attract interest when they operate in ways we are not seeing currently.
‘I can certainly see someone being tempted to insert the idea into an athletics meet down the line.’
Framed like that, it almost seems probable. But it remains to be seen if the interest would concern frontiers or face plants. In today’s sporting world, the distinction might not even matter.







