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Articles tagged #Neheng Khatala
Today's Running News
The 2024 Soweto Marathon was won by South Africa’s Onalenna Khonkhobe in a time of 2:18:36 on Sunday.
Khonkhobe also won this year’s Two Oceans Ultra Marathon.
Second place went to Lesotho’s Joseph Khoarahlane Seutloali on 2:18:54, with Kenya’s Kipkemoi Kipsang in third in 2:19:05.
Meanwhile, the women’s Soweto Marathon was won by Lesotho’s Neheng Khatala in a time of 2:43:07.
In an all-international podium, Kenya’s Margaret Jepchumba took second (2:44:55) with Ethiopia’s Worke Degu Amena rounding out the podium in third in 2:48:11.
‘Exceptionally proud’
Around 25 000 runners tackled this year’s Soweto Marathon, half-marathon and 10km races.
Soweto Marathon spokesperson Thokozani Mazibuko said he was exceptionally proud of the race and all those who worked tirelessly to ensure a safe, pleasurable and well run event.
“It’s been a fantastic day! This was one of the biggest Soweto Marathon’s since the inception of the race,
epitomising the spirit of Soweto!
“Our team and treasured partners have gone above and beyond for the valued people of Soweto, South Africa and far beyond our borders.
“We are truly grateful for those who helped us run a successful event and a hearty congratulations to our over 25 000 runners who took to the streets today.
“The Soweto Marathon medal is one of the toughest – and you’ve earned it fair and square so well done to you!”
(11/04/2024) Views: 70 ⚡AMPThe Soweto Marathon is an annual event which takes place in Soweto at the NASREC Expo Centre. It is a circular race and will begin and end at the Expo Centre.The marathon is sponsored by Energade, Netcare 911 and the MTN Expo Centre. Metro police will be directing traffic where there are road closures on the day.The Soweto Marathon is...
more...Lesotho national marathon holder Neheng Khathala has confirmed her participation in this weekend’s Absa Run Your City Cape Town10K thus spicing up the women’s race.
Fresh from running her second fastest marathon time late last month when she finished 10th at the Hamburg Marathon with an impressive 2:28:37, Khthala will be up against her compatriot Blandina Makatisi who finished runner-up in the season-opening race of the popular Series in Gqeberha early last month.
Reflecting on her run in the German city, Khathala said she could have clocked a quicker time were the latter stages of the race not as difficult as they were.
“The second half of the race (refering to the Hamburg Marathon) was tough with a few small hills all the way to the finish. So that’s where I struggled. But I was well looked after and made it to the finish,” the Hollywoodbets Athletics Club athlete said.
‘See how the body responds’
She has been recuperating well since and she is looking forward to the sprint in the Mother City on Mother’s Day: “For recovery, I’ve just been jogging and seeing the physio - the usual stuff, nothing much. For Cape Town, I’ll just see how the body feels on the day and then I’ll take it from there. I don’t have a pre-determined objective to run a certain time. I will just run according to how the body responds.”
Having run just 31 seconds outside of her national marathon record, bet on Khathala to be among those challenging for victory in Cape Town where she has good memories of her previous Run Your City races. She ran a personal best time of 32:06 in 2022 and last year she occupied the third step on the podium, a sign that she enjoys running in the Mother City.
But the athlete based in Potchefstroom will have to bring it all out if she is to deny Diana Chepkorir a second successive victory in this year’s series. The 22-year-old Kenyan who is one of only 17 women worldwide to have broken the 30 minutes for the 10km, won the Absa Run Your City Gqeberha 10K early in April and will definitely toe the start line on Sunday as the favourite.
"We're thrilled to have Neheng Khatala return to the Absa Run Your City Cape Town 10K in 2024," says Michael Meyer, Managing Director of Stillwater Sports and Series Founder.
"With Neheng and Diana Chepkorir both confirming their entries, we're seeing an exceptional level of talent that’s elevating the standard of women's racing in the series. Their participation not only adds to the competitive edge but also underscores the international appeal of the Absa Run Your City Series. We’re expecting an exciting race in the women's field and look forward to witnessing their outstanding performances.”
(05/08/2024) Views: 489 ⚡AMPThis fast flat route takes runners through a working harbour and into a quiet city centre for a scintillating, fast and furious finish; music, enthusiastic support and a later than usual start time for a road race. The FNB Cape Town 10k, the most passionate and welcoming road race on the South African running calendar....
more...Defending champion Bernard Koech and fellow Kenyan Irine Cheptai won the Haspa Marathon Hamburg with world-class times. Koech crossed the line in a brilliant 2:04:24 and clocked the eighth fastest time in the world this year. Missing his own course record and PB by just 15 seconds Koech became the first man to successfully defend the title in Hamburg since Julio Rey of Spain in 2006. Ethiopia's Haymanot Alew took second with 2:05:30 and Philemon Kiplimo of Kenya was third in 2:05:37. There was a thrilling duel in the women's race. Irine Cheptai won the battle and produced one of the fastest marathon debuts in history with 2:18:22. Fellow Kenyan Winfridah Moseti smashed her PB with 2:18:25 for second place. These are the second and third fastest times in the history of the race. Ethiopia's Gotytom Gebreslase took third with 2:21:19.
Organizers registered a record entry number of 38,210 athletes for the 38th edition of the Haspa Marathon Hamburg. This includes races at shorter distances. 15,000 marathon runners were among the entries. “It was a superb race which produced some of the fastest times ever in Hamburg. However for many athletes conditions became tough when it suddenly warmed up strongly during the race,” said Chief Organizer Frank Thaleiser.
For long periods of the race the leading group was on course to break the course record of 2:04:09 which Bernard Koech established a year ago. After a 1:28:14 split time at 30k the last pacemaker dropped out and then Koech took off, immediately leaving behind Haymanot Alew, Philemon Kiplimo and fellow-Kenyan Ronald Korir. Koech covered the next 5k section in a breathtaking 14:17 and when he went through 35k in 1:42:31 it looked like he might finish in around 2:03:30. “But then I had a difficult section and because of that I missed the course record,” Bernard Koech explained later. “But this is sport, I am not at all disappointed. It was a great race and I might well come back again next year.” For the second time since 2022 four athletes ran sub 2:06:00 in Hamburg.
Germany's Sebastian Hendel finished in a strong tenth place with a huge PB of 2:08:51. The 28 year-old had a personal record of 2:10:14 before and now became the ninth fastest German marathon runner ever.
For over 30 kilometers Gotytom Gebreslase, the Marathon World Champion from 2022, ran together with Kenyans Irine Cheptai and Winfridah Moseti in the leading group. However with 10k to go the Ethiopian dropped back. With the leaders out of sight her dream of competing in the Olympics probably vanished. In the end Gotytom Gebreslase finished a distant third in 2:21:19. The battle for victory continued right into the home straight. Then the 2017 World Cross Country Champion Irine Cheptai opened a small gap and crowned her strong marathon debut with a win in 2:18:22. She was three seconds ahead of Winfridah Moseti. The two Kenyans managed to run the second half quicker than the first (69:44) and placed themselves on positions eleven and twelve in the 2024 world list.
“I never expected to win the race. I had hopes to maybe finish second or third,” said Irine Cheptai. “Perhaps I can now run between 2:14 and 2:15 in my next marathon. I would like to run here in Hamburg again next year.” In seventh place Argentinian Daiana Ocampo was the only athlete in Hamburg to achieve Olympic qualification. There was very bad luck for Katharina Steinruck once more. The German, who hoped to break her mother's PB (Katrin Dörre-Heinig, the Olympic bronze medalist from 1988, ran 2:24:35 in Hamburg 25 years ago), had to side step at a refreshment point when a pacemaker stepped into her way. She then collided full speed with a drinks table, fell and had to give up injured shortly after that. This happened shortly before the half way point and she had been running 2:23 pace. Rabea Schöneborn was the best German with 2:35:07 in 13th place.
Results, Men:
Bernard Koech KEN 2:04:24
Haymanot Alew ETH 2:05:30
Philemon Kiplimo KEN 2:05:37
Ronald Korir KOR 2:05:41
Tsedat Ayana ETH 2:06:40
Oqbe Ruesom ERI 2:06:50
Brimin Misoi KEN 2:07:06
Getaneh Molla ETH 2:07:38
Martin Musau UGA 2:08:42
Sebastian Hendel GER 2:08:51
Women:
Irine Cheptai KEN 2:18:22
Winfridah Moseti KEN 2:18:25
Gotytom Gebreslase ETH 2:21:19
Jackline Cherono KEN 2:21:40
Aminet Ahmed ETH 2:23:27
Cynthia Limo KEN 2:25:10
Daiana Ocampo ARG 2:26:24
Kidsan Alema ETH 2:26:50
Ayantu Kumela ETH 2:27:19
Neheng Khatala READ 2:28:37
(04/29/2024) Views: 603 ⚡AMPThe HASPA MARATHON HAMBURG is Germany’s biggest spring marathon and since 1986 the first one to paint the blue line on the roads. Hamburcourse record is fast (2:05:30), the metropolitan city (1.8 million residents) lets the euphoric atmosphere spill over and carry you to the finish. Make this experience first hand and follow the Blue Line....
more...Kenyan duo Victor Kipruto and Veronica Loleo reigned supreme in Sunday's Run Your City Cape Town 10K, which was run in windy and blustery conditions in the Mother City,
Kipruto won the men's event in 28:28 after an exciting duel in the final stages of the race. The next eight runners all finished in under 29 minutes.
The next four places went to South Africans led by Precious Mashele (28:36), Thabang Mosiako (28:38) and Elroy Gelant (28:51).
“My plan was to win the race. I came here to win,” said Kipruto, who ran the second half of the race in 13:45.
“We were a big bunch in the beginning because of the wind, and it is easier to run in a bunch when the wind blows, but once we had some shelter, I knew it was time to go.”
Second-placed Mashele led a bunch of about 20 runners that included SA 5 000m record holder Gelant, at the halfway mark. He said the cool conditions proved restrictive in the final stages.
“I felt a bit cold towards the end and that stopped me from being able to sprint in the final kilometre,” said Mashele, who broke the SA 10km record in Gqeberha, taking three seconds off the previous record.
The women's race was dominated by international runners who claimed the first five places.
Loleo, who came into the race with a 30:53 personal won in 31:38, She was followed by Ugandan Docus Ajok (32:09), Lesotho's Neheng Khatala (32:13), Uganda's Prisca Chesang (32:45) and Ethiopia's Genet Abdurkadir Habela (33:08).
The first South African across the line was sixth-placed Glenrose Xaba in 33:35.
After the race, Loleo said the race had gone according to plan.
“I stuck to the pacesetter as he was doing exactly what we asked him to do,” said Loleo. “I’m really happy with my run in the wind.”
Michael Meyer, managing director of Stillwater Sports and founder of the Run Your City Series said: “Congratulations to Victor Kipruto and Veronica Loleo for their stellar performances.
“Not even the Cape Doctor could get in the way of these world-class athletes.
"Today the event was back to its full-scale, post the Covid-19 pandemic, and it felt amazing. From Monday onwards it’s full steam ahead as we shift our focus to Durban.”
(05/15/2023) Views: 649 ⚡AMPAround the corner we have one more edition of the 10K Valencia Ibercaja, organized one more year by the C. 10K VALENCIA Athletics premiering the running season in Valencia. It is a massive urban race with more than 3,000 registered annually of 10 kilometers, where the maximum duration of the test will be 1 hour 40 minutes (100 minutes). The...
more...More than 50 athletes from the sport of athletics will carry the flags for their nation at the Closing Ceremony of the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 on Sunday (8).
Ten days of competition, which included three world records, 12 Olympic records and 28 area records, came to a close with the men’s marathon on Sunday morning, with Kenya’s marathon great Eliud Kipchoge retaining his title.
Now his fellow Olympic gold medallists Sifan Hassan, Damian Warner, Pedro Pichardo and Peruth Chemutai will be among the flag bearers returning to Tokyo's Olympic Stadium as the 2020 Games come to a close.
For Hassan, the moment will cap an incredible performance in Tokyo, with the Dutch star having claimed an unprecedented medal treble of 5000m and 10,000m golds plus 1500m bronze over nine days.
“I am so happy and I cried during the medal ceremony,” the 28-year-old said after her 10,000m triumph on Saturday. “I actually realised that I am done, the Games are over.”
Warner’s victory had been secured on Thursday, when he became just the fourth man in history to break the 9000-point barrier to win the decathlon title. The Canadian’s 9018-point tally was one of the 12 Olympic records set at the Tokyo Games.
Portugal’s Pichardo, meanwhile, leapt to the triple jump title, setting one of the 151 national records achieved at these Olympics with his winning mark of 17.98m. In that same competition, the bronze medallist was world indoor record-holder Hugues Fabrice Zango and as a result, Burkina Faso became the 100th country to have won an Olympic medal in athletics.
For Chemutai, victory came in the 3000m steeplechase. Other medallists in Tokyo carrying their nation’s flag will be Ethiopia’s Selemon Barega, Grenada’s Kirani James, Kenya’s Timothy Cheruiyot and New Zealand’s Valerie Adams.
With the 2020 Games delayed a year due to the pandemic, athletes and fans now have only three years to wait until Olympic action returns in Paris in 2024.
Athletics flag bearers at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Closing Ceremony
Listed in the order in which they will march. List correct at time of publication and may be subject to change.
Antigua and Barbuda (ANT) - Cejhae Greene (men’s 100m)
Andorra (AND) - Pol Moya (men’s 800m)
Italy (ITA) - Lamont Marcell Jacobs (men’s 100m and 4x100m)
Uganda (UGA) - Peruth Chemutai (women’s 3000m steeplechase)
Uruguay (URU) - Maria Pia Fernandez (women’s 1500m)
Ecuador (ECU) - Glenda Morejón (women’s 20km race walk)
Estonia (EST) - Maicel Uibo (decathlon)
Eswatini (SWZ) - Sibusiso Matsenjwa (men’s 200m)
Ethiopia (ETH) - Selemon Barega (10,000m)
Eritrea (ERI) - Nazret Weldu (women’s marathon)
Netherlands (NED) - Sifan Hassan (1500m, 5000m and 10,000m)
Guyana (GUY) - Emanuel Archibald (men’s 100m)
Canada (CAN) - Damian Warner (decathlon)
Gambia (GAM) - Ebrima Camara (men’s 100m)
Cuba (CUB) - Zurian Hechavarría (women’s 400m hurdles and 4x400m)
Grenada (GRN) - Kirani James (men’s 400m)
Kenya (KEN) - Timothy Cheruiyot (men’s 1500m)
Cote d'Ivoire (CIV) - Marie-Josee Ta Lou (women’s 100m and 200m)
Costa Rica (CRC) - Noelia Vargas (women’s 20km race walk)
Comoros (COM) - Fadane Hamadi (men’s 110m hurdles)
Congo (CGO) - Gilles Anthony Afoumba (men’s 400m)
Zambia (ZAM) - Sydney Siame (men’s 200m)
Djibouti (DJI) - Souhra Ali Mohamed (women’s 1500m)
Jamaica (JAM) - Demish Gaye (men’s 400m and 4x400m)
Sri Lanka (SRI) - Yupun Abeykoon Mudiyanselage (men’s 100m)
Saint Lucia (LCA) - Levern Spencer (women’s high jump)
Chinese Taipei (TPE) - Chen Chieh (men’s 400m hurdles)
United Republic of Tanzania (TAN) - Male Alphonce Felix Simbu (men’s marathon)
Czech Republic (CZE) Jakub Vadlejch (men’s javelin)
People's Republic of China (CHN) - Su Bingtian (men’s 100m and 4x100m)
Tuvalu (TUV) - Karalo Hepoiteloto Maibuca (men’s 100m)
Dominica (DMA) - Thea Lafond (women’s triple jump)
Trinidad and Tobago (TTO) - Andwuelle Wright (men’s long jump)
Namibia (NAM) - Beatrice Masilingi (women’s 200m)
New Zealand (NZL) - Valerie Adams (shot put)
Haiti (HAI) - Mulern Jean (women’s 100m hurdles)
Pakistan (PAK) - Arshad Nadeem (men’s javelin)
Panama (PAN) - Jorge Castelblanco (men’s marathon)
Bahamas (BAH) - Megan Moss (women’s 4x400m)
Paraguay (PAR) - Derlys Ayala (men’s marathon)
Barbados (BAR) - Tia-Adana Belle (women’s 400m hurdles)
American Samoa (ASA) - Nathan Crumpton (men’s 100m)
Virgin Islands, US (ISV) - Eddie Vovett (men’s 110m hurdles)
Bosnia and Herzegovina (BIH) - Amel Tuka (men’s 800m)
Botswana (BOT) - Anthony Pasela (men’s 4x400m)
Bolivia (BOL) - Angela Castro (women’s 20km race walk)
Portugal (POR) - Pedro Pichardo (men’s triple jump)
Honduras (HON) - Ivan Zarco Alvarez (men’s marathon)
South Africa (RSA) - Anaso Jobodwana (men’s 200m)
South Sudan (SSD) - Abraham Guem (men’s 1500m)
Republic of Moldova (MDA) - Andrian Mardare (men’s javelin)
Luxembourg (LUX) - Bob Bertemes (men’s shot put)
Rwanda (RWA) - John Hakizimana (men’s marathon)
Lesotho (LES) - Neheng Khatala (women’s marathon)
United States of America (USA) - Kara Winger (women’s javelin)
(08/08/2021) Views: 1,080 ⚡AMP