Beatrice Chepkoech explains her main shortcoming as she triumphs in unfamiliar race
28th January 2024
Chepkoech took part in the 5000m race.

- Chepkoech will be seeking to win the elusive 3000m steeplechase Olympic Games gold medal in the 2024 edition.
- The 2019 World Athletics Championships gold medallist further divulged that she will take part in an indoor event next month in Italy.
3000m steeplechase world record holder
Beatrice Chepkoech was in a class of her own at the third Athletics Kenya (AK)
track and field meet held at the Nyayo National Stadium on Saturday, January
27, 2024.
The 32-year-old surprised most athletics
fans when she took part in the 5000m race and comfortably won it. She led from
the start and went on to cross the finishing line in a time of 15:22.06s.
Speaking to SportPesa News shortly after
the race, Chepkoech disclosed that her main challenge recently has been speed
endurance.
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According to her, she ran the 5000m race
instead of her 3000m steeplechase speciality to improve her speed endurance ahead
of the busy 2024 season.
"Actually I am looking for speed
endurance. The season is still fresh, so I am working on my speed," she
stated.
Speed endurance basically refers to the
ability of a runner to maintain high speed.
The 2019 World Athletics Championships gold
medallist further divulged that she will take part in an indoor event next
month in Italy.
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"I think next week but two I will be
doing indoors in Turin. I will run 1500m race. What I am lacking is speed. So,
I want to start this season indoors, at least to gain that speed," she
commented.
Chepkoech, who was born in Bomet County,
will be seeking to win the elusive 3000m steeplechase Olympic Games gold medal
in the 2024 edition which is scheduled to be held in Paris, France from July.
In Paris, Chepkoech is expected to go head-to-head with the likes of Kenyan-born athletes Winfred Yavi Mutile and Norah Cheruto Tanui. Yavi, who is the reigning world champion, changed her citizenship to Bahrain while Tanui switched allegiance to Kazakhstan.
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Olympic Games defending champion Peruth
Chemutai is also likely to be in the mix. Peruth won Uganda's first ever gold
medal in the discipline at the delayed Tokyo 2020 edition, crossing the
finishing line in 9:01.54.
Her time was slower than the current world
record of 8:44.32 that Chepkoech set at the Monaco Diamond League six years
ago.
United States representative Courtney
Frerichs and Kenya's Hyvin Kiyeng settled for silver and bronze medals
respectively in Tokyo. Frerichs stopped her stopwatch at 9:04.79 while Kiyeng
crossed the finishing line in 9:05.39.
Besides Chepkoech, other Kenyan runners who are expected to make it to Kenya’s 3000m steeplechase team to the Paris Olympic Games are the highly-rated duo of Faith Cherotich and Jackline Chepkoech.
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