Tag: Kiptum

  • Kiptum: Tearful tributes for Kenyan marathon prodigy

    Kiptum: Tearful tributes for Kenyan marathon prodigy

    Hundreds of grieving people  yesterday paid an emotional tribute to marathon prodigy Kelvin Kiptum, who died in a car crash earlier this month.

    His coffin, encircled with flowers, was carried in a hearse through Kenya’s long-distance running hub of Eldoret, some watching in silence, others singing hymns.

    Kiptum’s mother Mary Kangongo and his wife Asenath Rotich were inconsolable at the mortuary as the wooden coffin was loaded into the black hearse.

    Kiptum was killed on February 11 in a road accident near Eldoret at the age of 24, just a few months after he smashed the world marathon record.

     “It is difficult to accept this happened,” Athletics Kenya executive committee member Barnaba Korir said. “It is a big void in Kenyan athletics.”

    A married father of two, Kiptum was to be laid to rest on Friday in Naiberi, near Eldoret, where the government is building a new home for the family.

    World Athletics head Sebastian Coe and Kenyan President William Ruto were to be among those attending the funeral.

    The procession snaked its way through roads lined with fans and athletes as it headed towards Iten, the legendary high-altitude training region, where mourners viewed Kiptum’s body in a half-open casket.

     “We have to accept that Kiptum is no longer with us,” cleric Philip Chumo said ahead of the procession.

     “He is here in spirit.”

    Local sports official Purity Koima said Kiptum was loved by everyone.

     “We lost so many athletes here in Iten but Kiptum’s death has hit everyone hard,” she said.

    Shoe-shiner Paul Ouma, who followed the procession on foot for more than two kilometres (over one mile), said Kiptum’s death “is very painful”.

    “We were expecting a lot from him,” Ouma told AFP.

    In Iten, dozens of mourners signed a book of condolence.

    Police said Kiptum was driving near Eldoret around 11:00 pm (2000 GMT) when his car veered off the road into a ditch and hit a tree.

    His Rwandan coach Gervais Hakizimana, 36, also died in the accident while another passenger, a woman, was injured.

     “We found that the late Kelvin had severe head injuries and there were severe fractures which were mainly at the base of the skull,” chief government pathologist Johansen Oduor said on Wednesday after an autopsy.

    Toxicology tests were still under way, he added.

    Hakizimana was laid to rest in Rwanda on Wednesday, a day after a vigil was held at his family home.

    Kiptum burst onto the marathon scene in 2022 and shattered the world record in Chicago in October last year.

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    He ran the distance in two hours 35 seconds, slicing 34 seconds off the previous fastest time, set by his Kenyan rival, the marathon legend Eliud Kipchoge.

    After flying through the course, the then 23-year-old waved and blew kisses at spectators before crossing the finish line.

     “A world record was not in my mind today,” he said afterwards. “I knew one day one time I’d be a world-record holder.”

    The young athlete had competed in only three marathons recording three of the all-time fastest seven times for the event.

    He was favourite to take gold at this year’s Paris Olympics, where he was expected to go head-to-head with Kipchoge for the first time.

    Known for maintaining a gruelling training schedule that sometimes topped 300 kilometres (190 miles) a week, Kiptum had only recently announced he was hoping to smash the mythic two-hour mark in Rotterdam in April.

     “Kelvin, you achieved greatness and inspired us all,” Coe said in a tribute on X last week.

  • Kenya marathon star Kiptum’s funeral for February 24

    Kenya marathon star Kiptum’s funeral for February 24

    The funeral for Kenya’s world marathon record-holder Kelvin Kiptum, who died in a weekend car crash, will be held on February 24, an athletics official said , with the government promising a “heroic farewell”.

    Kiptum will be buried at the family home in Chepsamo near Eldoret, the heartland of Kenyan distance running in the west of the country, Athletics Kenya executive committee member Barnabas Korir told AFP.

     “We have settled on February 24 following consultations with the family and the government which have taken over all the funeral arrangements and protocol,” Korir said, a day after visiting the bereaved family.

    Police said Kiptum, a 24-year-old father of two, was killed after the car he was driving veered into a ditch and ploughed into a tree in the Eldoret area on Sunday night.

    His Rwandan coach Gervais Hakizimana also died in the accident while a woman passenger was injured.

    Kiptum’s death, just four months after he broke the world marathon record, shocked Kenya and the world of athletics.

     “We expect some high dignitaries to attend the burial including the President William Ruto and the head of World Athletics Seb Coe,” Korir said.

    He added that the funeral service would be funded by the government.

     “In honour of Kenya’s departed world marathon record holder, a true national hero, the Government will support Kiptum’s family in according him a befitting heroic farewell,” Kenya’s cabinet said in a statement yesterday.

     “Kiptum was a sporting powerhouse whose record shattering achievements inspired millions around the world. He remains the only human in history to run a marathon under two hours and 1 minute.”

    Kiptum shattered the world record in Chicago in October last year, slicing 34 seconds off the previous fastest time set by his Kenyan rival, Eliud Kipchoge.

    The young athlete had competed in only three marathons, and recorded three of the all-time fastest seven times for the event.

    He was the favourite to take gold at the Paris Olympics, where he was expected to go head to head with Kipchoge for the first time.

    Athletics Kenya also announced it was cancelling trials for the African Games that had been due to take place this coming Friday and Saturday “in honour of the late Kelvin Kiptum”.

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    It said the selection process for the team to represent Kenya at the Games in Ghana’s capital Accra next month will take place on an as yet unspecified date.

    Tributes have poured in for Kiptum, with Coe describing him as “an incredible athlete leaving an incredible legacy”.

    Kiptum was the latest in a number of Kenyan athletes to have lost their lives in recent years, and lawmakers on Tuesday had called for support and protection for the country’s sporting talent.

    The cabinet said it noted “interventions” by the sports ministry for improved protections for athletes, without giving details.

    It also urged road users to uphold traffic laws and practice safe road use to prevent “tragedies such as the one that robbed Kenya and the world of Kelvin Kiptum”.

    According to National Transport and Safety Authority figures, the number of people injured in road accidents in Kenya rose by about five percent last year to a total of 22,885, including 4,324 fatalities.

    Between the beginning of January this year and February 11, the number of recorded deaths on the roads was 563, up almost five percent from the same period last year.