Running News Daily is edited by Bob Anderson and team. Send your news items to bob@mybestruns.com Advertising opportunities available.
Index to Daily Posts · Sign Up For Updates · Run The World Feed
Articles tagged #Dibaba sisters
Today's Running News
In the misty highlands of Bekoji—a town better known for producing champions than headlines—three sisters began a journey that would reshape the landscape of global distance running. Raised on altitude, discipline, and quiet determination, the Dibaba sisters did more than collect medals. They built a legacy that carried Ethiopia onto the grandest sporting stages and inspired an entire generation to believe that greatness could emerge from humble beginnings.
At the heart of that dynasty stands Tirunesh Dibaba, one of the most decorated distance runners in history. Known as the “Baby-Faced Destroyer,” she combined tactical brilliance with devastating finishing speed, dominating the 5,000m and 10,000m across Olympic Games and World Championships. Her victories were never just about time or medals—they were statements of authority in an era crowded with talent.
Her younger sister, Genzebe Dibaba, chose a different path—one defined by precision and speed over shorter distances. Where Tirunesh conquered championships, Genzebe rewrote record books. Her world records in events from the 1,500m to the indoor mile showcased an athlete operating at the limits of human physiology, blending elegance with ruthless efficiency. For a period, she seemed untouchable, running times that forced the sport to reconsider what was possible.
The foundation for both was laid by the eldest sister, Ejegayehu Dibaba, an Olympic and World Championship medalist whose success proved that international triumph was within reach for their family. She opened the door—Tirunesh and Genzebe stormed through it.
What makes the Dibaba story extraordinary is not only the medals—Olympic golds, world titles, and records—but the continuity of excellence. Few families in any sport have produced multiple athletes who each reached the pinnacle of global competition. Their achievements blurred the line between coincidence and destiny, turning their surname into a symbol of endurance greatness.
Yet their true impact extends far beyond podiums. In Ethiopia, they became national icons. Across Africa, they became proof that women’s distance running could command global respect. Worldwide, they became inspiration—evidence that perseverance, environment, and belief can combine to create something timeless.
The Dibaba sisters did not merely win races. They transformed expectations. And long after records fall and medals tarnish, their legacy will endure—in every young runner who dares to dream from a dirt road in the mountains to the brightest stadium lights on Earth.
Login to leave a comment
The Dibaba Sisters, from Ethopia, is the fastest family on earth.
Ethiopian distance runner Tirunesh Dibaba made history at the 2008 Beijing Olympics when she became the first woman to win gold in both the 5,000-metre and 10,000-metre races. She defended her gold medal title in the 10,000 metres at the 2012 London Olympics, becoming the first woman to win the event at two consecutive Olympics.
She was inspired by a family of runners. In fact, she and her sisters have been amazing in the field of distance running. The Dibaba sisters — Tirunesh, Genzebe, Anna, and Melat — are the only siblings in recorded history to hold concurrent world records, and they are a fiercely competitive family from a humble background.
Their parents, Gutu Tola and Dibaba Kaneni, were not athletes themselves but their children have always acknowledged the support that their parents have given them to thrive in athletics.
Her baby-like face combined with her track performance gave her the perfectly fitting nickname ‘The Baby Faced Destroyer’.
Fourth born in a family of six, Tirunesh started running with a clear focus on becoming a professional athlete at the tender age of 14.
Her sister, Ejegayehu Dibaba was already a professional athlete, and her cousin, Derartu Tulu, also helped inspire to take up athletics.
Moving to the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa in 2000, the year her cousin Ejegayu had won her second Olympic gold during the Sydney Olympics in the 10,000-meter race, Tirunesh moved in to live with Ejegayu launching her athletic career.
Just over two years later, in 2003, Tirunesh would win her first international medal by scooping gold in the 5000 metres during the IAAF World Track & Field Championships.
A year later, Tirunesh competed in the Olympics winning the bronze medal finishing behind teammate Meseret Defar and Kenya’s Isabela Ochichi.
From there Tirunesh went on to establish herself as one of the greatest ever long-distance woman runners of all time becoming the youngest female World Champion in the history of athletics. She has gone on to win three Olympic gold medals.
In her highly decorated career, Tirunesh boasts of three Olympic gold medals and three bronze along with five World Championship gold and one silver. Additionally, she has four World Cross Country Championships 4 gold medals, and 2 silver, and has won two African Championships gold and one silver medal.
In total, ‘The Baby Faced Destroyer’ has 14 gold medals, four silver, and three bronze medals from all major global athletics events.
The biggest reason behind her success has been the blistering speed that she used in the final laps leaving the competition in her wake.
Now 37 years old, Tirunesh has informally retired as one of the greatest track and field athletes of all time. She has won everything and set records that will take a while before they are broken.
Ejegayehu Dibaba
Ejegayehu is the eldest of the Tirunesh’s and just like her younger sister she has also carried the Dibaba’s flag high and to the top.
Winner of the 10,000m silver medal in the 2004 Athens Olympics, Ejegayehu finished ahead of her cousin Derartu Tulu who took the bronze.
Other medals from major internationals include two World Championships bronze in Helsinki 2005 in the 5000m and 10,000m.
She also went on to surprise the world by winning her debut marathon in Chicago in 2011.
Genzebe Dibaba
Genzebe is the youngest of the family and has also tasted the sweetness of winning an Olympic medal. Her moment of glory in the Olympics came in the 2016 Rio Olympics winning silver in the 1500m race.
In total Genzebe won a total of 11 gold medals, five silver medals, and two bronze medals in her athletic career.
Derartu Tulu
Cousin of the three sisters, Derartu Tulu's exploits were an inspiration to the Dibabas setting the pace for her cousins by concurring the world.
Tulu became the first Black African woman to win an Olympic gold medal winning the 10,000m race at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.
Eight years later she would win her second Olympic gold at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.
She would have an incredible achievement winning a medal in three different Olympics winning a bronze at the 2004 Athens Olympics in the 10,000m.
Other major titles in her illustrious career include 10,000m gold and silver medal at World Athletics Championships in Gothenburg 1995 and Edmonton 2001.
Sileshi Sihine
Sileshi Sihime is a two-time Olympic silver medalist with over a dozen major athletics medals under his belt. Married to Tirunesh Dibaba, he is a three-time Olympic gold medalist.
Conclusion
In terms of ‘Sports Dynasties’, the Dibabas are the 'African Sports Dynasty’. Talent, hard work, and dedication are clearly what enabled the Dibabas to conquer the world of women's long-distance races for decades.
Login to leave a comment
Ethiopian distance runner Tirunesh Dibaba made history at the 2008 Beijing Olympics when she became the first woman to win gold in both the 5,000-metre and 10,000-metre races. She defended her gold medal title in the 10,000 metres at the 2012 London Olympics, becoming the first woman to win the event at two consecutive Olympics.
She was inspired by a family of runners. In fact, she and her sisters have been amazing in the field of distance running. The Dibaba sisters — Tirunesh, Genzebe, Anna, and Melat — are the only siblings in recorded history to hold concurrent world records, and they are a fiercely competitive family from a humble background.
They were raised in a round mud hut in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, without electricity. Their parents were subsistence farmers who grew wheat, barley and teff. As a matter of fact, the Dibaba siblings are seven in all, and all of them run. Tirunesh, however, is the most decorated, having three Olympic gold medals. She had wanted to enroll in school but opted for the Corrections (Prisons Police) sports club.
At age 15, she debuted internationally on Ethiopia’s junior squad at the 2001 world cross-country championships, where she placed fifth. She continued with junior-level silver medals in cross-country and on the track in 2002. She won the world junior cross-country title in 2003, set a 5,000-metre junior world record and won gold in the 5,000 metres at the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) world track and field championships, making her the youngest-ever world champion in her sport.
Her sister, Genzebe, is not doing badly in sports. Ejegayehu, who is their older sister, is also an Olympian who won silver from Athens. Their cousin, Derartu Tulu, was the first Black African woman to win Olympic gold in the 1992 games. She won another Olympic gold medal in Sydney in 2000.
“It’s not a stretch to say they are the world’s fastest family”, Ato Boldon, NBC’s track analyst, told Vogue in 2016. The sisters have remained a household name in Ethiopia, a country that has produced some of the world’s greatest runners, alongside Kenya.
The mother of the Dibaba sisters told Vogue that the siblings are successful thanks to the environment they were raised in, especially the ready supply of milk they get from the family cows. According to Vogue, author David Epstein has said that much of Ethiopia and Kenya lies in an altitude “sweet spot” high enough to cause physiological changes but not so high that the air is too thin for hard training.
The runners’ feat is also attributed to their diet — especially teff rich in iron and calcium — and their “small lightweight frame”. The Dibaba sisters have the body type good for sports, analysts say. Boldon said in 2016 that if one compares the sisters to a car, they would be a Ford Focus with a Ferrari engine.
The Dibabas are good at sports but they don’t really like watching sports. They prefer movies, especially Amharic films, said Tirunesh, who in 2008 married fellow track-and-field Olympic medalist Sileshi Sihine in a nationally televised wedding ceremony.
And just like other successful athletes, the Dibabas have invested their monies back into their communities. The sisters, alongside their in-laws, are real estate moguls owning several buildings in Addis Ababa. Still, the sisters continue to shine brightly in the sports world.
Login to leave a comment