News Archive

News Archive

Olympic Running Events (IX): Steeplechase with Ezekiel Kemboi

THE SITUATION:

The steeplechase is African property, certainly it belongs to the Kenyans

above all, since one of their runners has been first across the line in the

last five Olympic Games. There’s been the same dominance at World

Championships but what extraordinary scenes there were last year in the Stade

de France in Paris!

"5" />Ezekiel Kemboi was beaten by Saif Saeed Shaheen, running in the colours

of Qatar after the strangest race in the history of the World Championships.

Yet both men come from Kenya and Shaheen had already made a name for himself as

a top runner and is the brother of Christopher Kosgei, the 1999 World

steeplechase champion. This conundrum contains a tale of pride and sporting

ability in equal measure.

Will it be repeated in Athens, a drama as tense as any thriller? It’s

hard to see rivals outside of the Kenyan heritage, perhaps only the Moroccan

Ali Ezzine, Olympic bronze medallist in Sydney and second at the World

Championships a year later, might have a say. On the other hand it was not yet

decided if Sheheen would be allowed to run in Athens after switching

citizenship. He would need a go ahead by his former federation from Kenya!

KENYA’S STEEPLECHASERS – RUNNING AS NATURE

INTENDED

Kenya always wins the steeplechase, that’s what they assume in Kenya.

For Kenyans, it’s the most prestigious distance of all, more so than the

1500 metres or marathon. It is cross-country with barriers and water jump but

on the track instead of the bush. Kenyan runners, from Kip Keino on the 1960s

to Ezekiel Kemboi and the new hope, Brimin Kipruto, only 19-years-old, feel at

home around eight laps of the track.

Kemboi and Saif Saeed Shaheen, who won the Commonwealth title two years ago

as Stephen Cherono, are classic examples. But the track rivalry was

overshadowed by considerations of sports politics. Cherono believed he

wasn’t treated fairly by the Kenyan Federation. He went looking for a new

home for his talents. Other Kenyan runners have had similar experiences. Qatar

in the Persian Gulf had an exchequer rich in funds from oil production and

wanted to raise its sporting profile. Both sides quickly came to an agreement

and out of Stephen Cherono was born Saif Saeed Shaheen, right on cue for the

World Championships.

Kemboi lost a thrilling duel with Shaheen eleven days before Paris at the

Zurich Golden League meeting. There was an extra factor adding spice to the

final: Shaheen’s brother, Abraham, had qualified and would finish fifth.

The pace was crazy: covering the first lap in 59 seconds, Shaheen and his

team-mate Abdullah Saifeldin were together and then the former Kenyan went

through the first kilometre in 2:36.24, on course for a world record by five

seconds!

By the second kilometre Shaheen had slowed and Kemboi was only a few metres

behind. That’s when the funny stuff started: each wanted to prove that

they had the better finish. Slow, slow, quick, quick, slow, it was the

strangest race ever witnessed by spectators at a World Championships. Shaheen

proved the stronger, but only after coming off the last barrier, winning in

8:04.39 against 8:05.11 for Kemboi. Eliseo Martin of Spain took third, with the

last lap run in a super fast 57.5 seconds.

Can Ezekiel Kemboi take revenge in Athens?

Can Ezekiel Kemboi take revenge in Athens? Both are 22 and have been in good

form this season, though Shaheen still seems to have the edge in basic speed.

For Europeans such Simon Vroemen, runner-up in the European Championships in

Munich two years ago, a place in the top five would be a dream come true. For

Kemboi or Shaheen, failure would be not winning gold.