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Articles tagged #LA 2028
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In the ever-evolving journey of greatness, moments of quiet declaration often carry the loudest echoes. For Faith Kipyegon, a recent message from Los Angeles—the vibrant host of the 2028 Summer Olympics—was more than a passing remark. It was a powerful affirmation of intent.
Standing in the very city where future Olympic dreams will be forged, the Kenyan legend shared that she is “fueling her Olympic fire” ahead of LA 2028. Beneath those words lies a story not just of ambition, but of a remarkable journey—one that began far from the bright lights of global arenas.
Kipyegon’s rise is the embodiment of resilience and destiny intertwined. From running barefoot in her early school days to ascending to the pinnacle of women’s middle-distance running, her path has been nothing short of extraordinary. Born into a family deeply rooted in athletics—with a father who competed in the 400m and 800m, and a sister who excelled in long-distance road racing—her foundation was quietly laid long before the world took notice.
It wasn’t until the age of 15 that she began to seriously pursue athletics as a career. What followed was a rapid and emphatic emergence. She announced herself on the global stage by capturing junior titles at the World Cross Country Championships in Bydgoszcz in 2011 and 2013, alongside victories in the 1500m at both the World U18 and World U20 Championships. These early triumphs signaled the arrival of a rare and generational talent.
Her transition to the senior stage came at the World Championships in Moscow in 2013, where she finished fifth—a performance that hinted at the dominance to come. From that point onward, Kipyegon has established herself as a consistent force at the highest level, earning multiple podium finishes, world championship titles, and setting world records that have redefined the boundaries of women’s middle-distance running, further cementing her status as one of the greatest athletes of her era.
The Olympic stage, however, is where her legacy has reached historic heights. Since making her debut at the 2012 Summer Olympics, she has grown into one of the most decorated middle-distance runners in Olympic history. Her gold medal triumph at the 2016 Summer Olympics announced her arrival as a global force, while her commanding performance at the 2020 Summer Olympics reaffirmed her supremacy.
Yet it was at the 2024 Summer Olympics that Kipyegon etched her name permanently into the record books. On the final night of track action at the Stade de France, she produced a breathtaking run in the women’s 1500m, surging to victory in an Olympic record time of 3:51.29. With that performance, she became the first athlete—male or female—to win three Olympic gold medals in the 1500m, a feat that stands as a testament to her enduring brilliance and unmatched consistency.
Despite these extraordinary achievements, what defines Kipyegon is her relentless hunger for more. Her recent reflection from Los Angeles reveals an athlete not content with history, but driven by the possibilities that still lie ahead.
As the countdown to 2028 steadily builds, her presence in Los Angeles feels deeply symbolic—a champion returning to the stage where the next chapter of Olympic history will unfold. For fans and aspiring athletes alike, her journey is a powerful reminder that greatness is not a destination, but a continuous pursuit shaped by discipline, resilience, and vision.
From barefoot beginnings to rewriting Olympic history, Faith Kipyegon’s story continues to inspire across generations. And as the flame prepares to rise once more in Los Angeles, one truth is undeniable—her fire is still burning, brighter than ever, lighting the path toward yet another chapter of greatness.
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Sha'Carri Richardson is bubbling with excitement ahead of the LA 2028 Olympics after her successful debut in Paris.
Sha’Carri Richardson is already thinking about the LA 2028 Olympic Games after making her debut at the Paris Olympic Games.
The reigning world 100m champion in an interview with Blavity TV, explained that her Olympic debut was quite a humbling experience and there was a lot she took from that. She explained that there was a lot of lessons to be learnt and she had a great time competing against great women.
Sha’Carri Richardson went into the Olympic Games hoping to claim her first individual gold medal but failed to live up to the billing. She was certainly the pre-race favourite but Julien Alfred had better legs that day.
Alfred claimed top honours in a time of 10.72 seconds as Sha’Carri Richardson and Melissa Jefferson came in second and third in respective times of 10.87 seconds and 10.92 seconds.
She used the 100m disappointment to go for the title in the women’s 4x100m relay. After tasting Olympic glory, she is already looking forward to the 2028 Olympic Games on home tuff.
“Honestly, competing in Paris, at the Olympics, has been an honour, it has been humbling, it has been fun and I literally can’t wait for LA. I’m almost like jumping like three years ahead because this experience was something like totally unbelievable,” Sha’Carri Richardson said.
Sha’Carri Richardson has had a quite turbulent season this year, starting off with two 200m losses at the Diamond League Meetings in Xiamen and Suzhou. She then claimed her first win of the season at the Prefontaine Classic, the Diamond League Meeting in Eugene.
The world 200m bronze medallist then proceeded to the US Olympic trials where she claimed top honours in the women’s 100m, setting a world leading time of 10.71 seconds and later finished fourth in the 200m, missing out on the Olympic Games.
At the Paris Olympic Games, Sha’Carri Richardson took silver in the women’s 100m then later claimed gold in the relay. She got her sweet revenge over Julien Alfred with a win at the Diamond League Meeting in Zurich. She ended her season with an eighth-place finish at the Diamond League Meeting final in Brussels.
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Discover how the Los Angeles Candidature Committee describes their vision for the Games and the legacy they plan to leave behind: For centuries, people have been following the sun to California – to a coastal paradise of beautiful weather, inspiring landscapes and an ocean of possibilities. Since it was first settled, LA – the City of Angels – has built...
more...On Friday, World Athletics and the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic organizing committee announced a major change to the competition schedule for the 2028 Olympics. For the first time in Olympic history, athletics will take centre stage during the opening week, switching places with swimming.
The new schedule, which moves swimming events to the second week, aims to create more opportunities for athletics in terms of pre-Games promotion and Games-time viewership.
“We are excited to support this visionary timetable change for LA28,” said Sebastian Coe, president of World Athletics, in a press release. “This change underscores our commitment to innovation in athletics and elevating the global profile of our athletes. By prioritizing athletics in the first week, the Games will witness the most thrilling of starts, captivating audiences worldwide and setting the stage for an unforgettable Olympic journey.”
The marathon events will maintain their traditional placement over the final weekend, with medals being presented during the closing ceremony, continuing a legacy that dates back to the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. The track events at the 2028 Games will be held at the iconic L.A. Memorial Coliseum, which will make history as the first stadium to host events at three Olympic Games (1932 and 1984).
“We believe the positive effects of this change will extend beyond the two sports involved, strengthening the LA28 Games as a whole and ultimately benefiting all sports in the LA28 program,” said Janet Evans, chief athlete officer for LA 2028.
World Athletics and the organizing committee hope the high level of interest and excitement from the opening ceremony will carry into the athletics portion. The L.A. 2028 Games will run from July 14 to 30, 2028, featuring over 10,000 athletes from more than 200 nations competing in 35 sports.
This is the third time Los Angeles will host the Summer Olympics; it also hosted in 1984 and 1932.
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Olympic champions will receive prize money for the first time this year after World Athletics announced gold medalists at the Paris 2024 Games would be paid $50,000 (£39,400) each.
Athletics is the first sport to financially reward its stars for success at the Olympics, which has stayed true to its amateur ethos by never offering prize money.
Winners of all 48 athletics events will receive a payout from the world governing body, which says it will extend the benefit to silver and bronze medalists from the LA 2028 Olympics.
“The introduction of prize money for Olympic gold medalists is a pivotal moment for World Athletics and the sport of athletics as a whole, underscoring our commitment to empowering the athletes and recognizing the critical role they play in the success of any Olympic Games,” said World Athletics president Lord Coe.
“While it is impossible to put a marketable value on winning an Olympic medal, or on the commitment and focus it takes to even represent your country at an Olympic Games, I think it is important we start somewhere and make sure some of the revenues generated by our athletes at the Olympic Games are directly returned to those who make the Games the global spectacle that it is.”
The size of the payouts is modest compared to those on offer elsewhere in sport – the average salary of a Premier League footballer is around £3m, for instance.
But the move is nonetheless a milestone for the Olympics, and recognition that it will be increasingly difficult to justify asking the stars of its core events to compete for glory alone.
Many Olympic hopefuls rely on funding grants and personal sponsorship deals to train full-time, while others have to retain careers in order to make ends meet.
Meanwhile, athletes are being offered million-dollar incentives to defect to the doping-friendly Enhanced Games, a project Coe has derided as “bollocks”.
While winners of individual athletics events at Paris 2024 will receive $50,000, that sum will be divided up among team members for winners of the relay races.
“This is the continuation of a journey we started back in 2015, which sees all the money World Athletics receives from the International Olympic Committee for the Olympic Games go directly back into our sport,” Coe added.
“We started with the Olympic dividend payments to our Member Federations, which saw us distribute an extra $5m a year on top of existing grants aimed at athletics growth projects, and we are now in a position to also fund gold medal performances for athletes in Paris, with a commitment to reward all three medallists at the LA28 Olympic Games.”
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For this historic event, the City of Light is thinking big! Visitors will be able to watch events at top sporting venues in Paris and the Paris region, as well as at emblematic monuments in the capital visited by several millions of tourists each year. The promise of exceptional moments to experience in an exceptional setting! A great way to...
more...United States Olympic 5,000m silver medallist Paul Chelimo was the guest on last week’s LetsRun.com Track Talk podcast and he had a lot of interesting things to say about his career, running fast, his goals, doping in Kenya, racism in America, his daughter, his rivalry with Lopez Lomong, and a lot more.
As a teenager in Kenya, Chelimo ran a tryout race in the hopes of earning a scholarship to come to the United States. Though Chelimo ran poorly, he still made it to the States, and the rest is history. He arrived at NAIA Shorter (Ga.) University with $450 to his name. He’d move on to UNC Greensboro and become a two-time NCAA runner-up, but then joined the Army thinking his running career may be over. Fortunately for Chelimo, he was accepted into the Army World Class Athlete Program and in 2016 he burst onto the professional scene in the biggest way possible, ending up with an Olympic silver in the 5,000m in Rio.
Chelimo revealed two factual things of note we had not heard before. First, he said his ultimate goal is to run the Los Angeles Olympic marathon in 2028.
And he revealed that he missed two out-of-competition drug tests when he was first put into the anti-doping pool after bursting onto the scene in 2016. He said he was unfamiliar with the whereabouts system and how it worked so he missed two tests. “Since then I was so strict, because I knew if I just missed the last one, the third one, it’s gonna be a huge mess,” he said, explaining that a lack of familiarity with the system may be why runners in Kenya are now getting whereabouts failures of their own.
More highlights from Chelimo’s comments below. You can click on the timestamps to listen to them.
[60:06] On what he thinks of Moh Ahmed running 12:47 for 5,000m and Lopez Lomong going sub-13:00 and whether that makes him scared or confident:
“I never get scared. As long as we start from the same starting line in a race, and we finish at the same finishing line in a race [it] really, really doesn’t scare me…
“Usually they say it’s the lion that is smart that strikes the meat. My goal is, it’s towards the Olympics…
“If you’re going to show up and run really fast, and try to frustrate me or frustrate anyone else, I really don’t care. I have a strong mind…. I know they can run fast now. They can pace me. I don’t have to pace them anymore… So it’s good. It’s good for the sport, actually.”
On whether his rivalry with Lomong is overstated:
[62:37] “You know, it gets to a point like when someone is becoming dominant. It’s time someone else tries to break that dominance and I see Lopez Lomong try[ing] break the dominance that I’ve had in the 5K and I like it. I like challenges and Lopez Lomong is very competitive. We’re going to show up and we’re going to race and whoever wins is a champion that day.”
Chelimo says his ultimate goal is running the Olympic marathon in LA 2028, so that makes it easy to avoid taking the shortcut of doping.
[63:41] “Eventually the big goal is to get to LA 2028 in the marathon, think about me being in the LA 2028 marathon. It’s gonna be big. So I just want to keep going and keep going to when I get there. I just want to have a long career. That’s that’s what my big goal is and I just don’t want to be greedy and that’s why I don’t support the drug cheats because I know the more patient you are, the more you get. I know like if I cheat today, yeah, I’ll make a lot of money. But what happens if I get busted? I stay out of running for four years…. And it’s so easy in track and field to be so greedy. It’s so easy to be greedy, especially when people are smoking you in races. It’s so easy to be greedy and try take the shortcuts but let them… I’m happy with what the anti-doping [authorities] are doing and everything because people are getting busted. Which shows it’s working.”
On being willing to die in a race:
[89:19] “Really, it’s all about life. I just have to put food on my table. I just have to hustle hard and I just have to make a living. People hate, they don’t know what I’ve been through… I ran a 5k on a dirt track in Kenya. I ran like eight laps. And I got kicked out of the track because I got lapped in a 5k, running barefoot. And I remember I ran a cross country race in Kenya. I was third to last. I was like, second or third to be last….So, coming from that, and now Nike [is] sponsoring me, I have the best shoes in the world and you want to put me in a race against someone who has had shoes the whole time? You’re gonna think that guy is gonna beat me? I mean I’m just gonna do my best, just to do all I can win the race because I know where I’ve come from…. And I really, really want it. So am I guy, I’m willing to die in a race. And trust me if I die in a race one day, that’s the best way I could die man. I could be happy because I know I was hustling and I know I was digging deep. So that’s pretty much it. That’s pretty much me.”
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