Comparison
Winner: Tie
Both sources show similar manipulation risk. Compare factual evidence directly.
Source B
Topics
Instant verdict
Narrative conflict
Source A main narrative
The source frames the situation as continuing armed confrontation without a clear turning point.
Source B main narrative
It was the first time three women have run under 2 hours, 16 minutes in a marathon.“ I screamed when I finished because I knew I was breaking the world record," Assefa said.
Conflict summary
Stance contrast: emphasis on military escalation versus emphasis on political decision-making.
Source A stance
The source frames the situation as continuing armed confrontation without a clear turning point.
Stance confidence: 69%
Source B stance
It was the first time three women have run under 2 hours, 16 minutes in a marathon.“ I screamed when I finished because I knew I was breaking the world record," Assefa said.
Stance confidence: 66%
Central stance contrast
Stance contrast: emphasis on military escalation versus emphasis on political decision-making.
Why this pair fits comparison
- Candidate type: Closest similar
- Comparison quality: 49%
- Event overlap score: 23%
- Contrast score: 70%
- Contrast strength: Strong comparison
- Stance contrast strength: High
- Event overlap: Event overlap is weak. Headlines describe a close episode.
- Contrast signal: Interpretive contrast is visible, but event linkage is moderate: verify against primary sources.
Key claims and evidence
Key claims in source A
- The defending champion was locked in a tight battle with Ethiopia's Yomif Kejelcha in the closing stages but surged clear to cross the line in 1hr 59min 30sec.
- Audio By Vocalize Kenya's Sabastian Sawe runs to the finish line to win the men's race in a new world record time in central London on April 26, 2026.
- Kejelcha also dipped under two hours, with a time of 1:59:41, with Uganda's Jacob Kiplomo third (2:00:28).
- All three finished under the previous men's world record of 2:00:35 set in Chicago in 2023 by the late Kelvin Kiptum.
Key claims in source B
- It was the first time three women have run under 2 hours, 16 minutes in a marathon.“ I screamed when I finished because I knew I was breaking the world record," Assefa said.
- Sawe, who retained his title in London, said it was a “day to remember for me” and thanked the huge crowds who lined the streets of the British capital to witness a milestone of human physical achievement generations in…
- In any case, Sawe surpassed that time by 10 seconds on a mostly flat course across London in dry, sunny conditions.“ The goalposts have literally just moved for marathon running,” Paula Radcliffe, a former winner of the…
- In a race for the ages, Sabastian Sawe of Kenya won the London Marathon in 1 hour, 59 minutes and 30 seconds on Sunday, shattering the previous men’s world record by an astonishing 65 seconds.“ What comes today is not f…
Text evidence
Evidence from source A
-
key claim
Audio By Vocalize Kenya's Sabastian Sawe runs to the finish line to win the men's race in a new world record time in central London on April 26, 2026.
A key claim that anchors the narrative framing.
-
key claim
The defending champion was locked in a tight battle with Ethiopia's Yomif Kejelcha in the closing stages but surged clear to cross the line in 1hr 59min 30sec.
A key claim that anchors the narrative framing.
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causal claim
But the time was not ratified as a world record because he ran with specialised shoes, standard competition rules for pacing and fluids were not followed, and it was not an open event.
Cause-effect claim shaping how events are explained.
Evidence from source B
-
key claim
It was the first time three women have run under 2 hours, 16 minutes in a marathon.“ I screamed when I finished because I knew I was breaking the world record," Assefa said.
A key claim that anchors the narrative framing.
-
key claim
In a race for the ages, Sabastian Sawe of Kenya won the London Marathon in 1 hour, 59 minutes and 30 seconds on Sunday, shattering the previous men’s world record by an astonishing 65 secon…
A key claim that anchors the narrative framing.
Bias/manipulation evidence
No concise text evidence snippets were extracted for this section yet.
How score signals are formed
Source A
26%
emotionality: 25 · one-sidedness: 30
Source B
26%
emotionality: 27 · one-sidedness: 30
Metrics
Framing differences
- Source A emotionality: 25/100 vs Source B: 27/100
- Source A one-sidedness: 30/100 vs Source B: 30/100
- Stance contrast: emphasis on military escalation versus emphasis on political decision-making.
Possible omitted/downplayed context
- Review which economic and policy factors each source keeps outside focus.
- Check whether alternative explanations are acknowledged.