Yego to clash with familiar foes for javelin gold at 2024 Kip Keino Classic
11th April 2024
Yego will be competing in the Kip Keino Classic for the third successive year.
- Yego finished fifth at last year’s edition held at the Moi International Sports Centre Kasarani.
- He will face competition from 2016 Olympics champion Thomas Rohler who will be making his debut at the Kip Keino Classic.
- Last year’s winner Timothy Herman will be hoping to make it two straight wins in what will be his fourth time competing on Kenyan soil.
When it comes to javelin, the first name that comes to every
Kenyan mind is Julius Yego.
Known as the “Mr YouTube”, Yego showed the world there is
talent in field events in Kenya when he won silver at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
Since then, Yego has remained consistent at the top level
and continues to inspire hundreds of upcoming athletes to try their hand at the
sport.
This year, he will be one of the star attractions at the
fifth edition of the Kip Keino Classic in which he will be competing for the
third successive year.
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Having finished fifth at last year’s edition at the Moi
International Sports Centre Kasarani, the African champion will be out for
redemption on home soil even as he casts his eyes wide to the summer Olympics
in Paris.
Considering javelin is likely to be one of the first events
on the programme of activities, victory for Mr YouTube will be the perfect
appetizer for the home crowd as far as the event is concerned.
It won’t be a walk in the park for Yego though as he will be
facing a familiar field of foes with whom he has battled with on numerous
occasions.
Standing between him and glory is the 2016 Olympics champion
Thomas Rohler who will be making his debut at the Kip Keino Classic.
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The German’s last competition was in September last year in
his homeland, where he finished a disappointing ninth at the ISTAF annual track
and field meet in Berlin.
Victory in his first visit to Nairobi will be the perfect
way for Rohler to wipe away the memories of an underwhelming 2023. It is a
chance that the German will be eager to take with both hands.
Equally no stranger to Yego is Egyptian Abdelrahman Ihab who
he has brushed shoulders with on numerous competitions.
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Ihab, just like Yego, boasts a decorated CV that includes
the African title in 2010, the African Games in 2015 as well as silver at the
World Championships in Beijing in 2015 and at the 2008 World Junior
Championships in Bydgoszcz, Poland.
Having finished third at last year’s edition, the Egyptian
will feel the only way forward is to win gold – or at worst silver.
Of course, last year’s victor, Timothy Herman, will
definitely have something to say about that.
The Belgian will be hoping to make it two straight wins in what will be his fourth time competing on Kenyan soil.
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