Marathon Man Paul Lonyangata Sets Sights On Record Third Paris Title
5th April 2019
The second of five children, he was born in December 1992 in Pokot, in northwest Kenya. When he was nine, his elder sister was killed, aged 12, in a tribal dispute
- As dawn breaks high in Kenya's Rift Valley, car headlights pick out groups of elite athletes, mere silhouettes on roadsides as their grinding daily training routine gets under way
- Coach Lawrence Saina, himself a sub-2hr 10min marathon runner in his day, oversees nine of his Kenyan proteges, sending them out on a 40-kilometre (25-mile) run
- One of those is Paul Lonyangata, who is aiming to become the first three-time winner of the Paris Marathon when he takes to the streets of the French capital on April 14
ITEN, Kenya- As
dawn breaks high in Kenya's Rift Valley, car headlights pick out groups of
elite athletes, mere silhouettes on roadsides as their grinding daily training
routine gets under way.
Coach Lawrence Saina, himself a sub-2hr 10min marathon
runner in his day, oversees nine of his Kenyan proteges, sending them out on a
40-kilometre (25-mile) run.
Hitting the tarmac under a wan rising sun, the athletes take
advantage of the cardiovascular benefits from training at an altitude of 2,500
metres (8,200ft), which boosts oxygen-carrying red blood cells.
"Today, it won't be quick," said Saina, his
charges still clocking mind-boggling speeds of 3min 42sec per kilometre, far
removed from the average runner.
These are, after all, elite athletes: among the nine
breaking sweat in the cool morning are Saina's younger brother Emmanuel, fourth
in the Dubai marathon in January in 2hr 05min 02sec. He is due to race over the
42km distance in Rotterdam on Sunday.
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After an hour the group head off the road into fragrant tea
plantations, the breaking dawn sun finally lighting up the rock-strewn, and at
times treacherous, red soil underfoot.
"When we go out for more than 35km in the morning, we
don't do anything in the afternoon," said Saina of his training squad who
live all year round, apart from when they go abroad for competitions, in Iten.
Bedrooms are shared, with two or four beds in each. There is
a living area, kitchen and a rubdown room with two full-time physios working
flat out to keep the demands of 20 elite runners in check.
There are dozens of similar camps up and down the Rift
Valley, and they have churned out some of the best distance runners the world
has ever seen.
One of those is Paul Lonyangata, who is aiming to become the
first three-time winner of the Paris Marathon when he takes to the streets of
the French capital on April 14.
The 26-year-old's path to the peak of long-distance running
has not been without its bumps.
- 'A very long story' -
"My story is a very long story," said Lonyangata,
who is based in Kaptagat, along with marathon world record holder and Olympic
champion Eliud Kipchoge.
The second of five children, Lonyangata was born in December
1992 in Pokot, in northwest Kenya. When he was nine, his elder sister was
killed, aged 12, in a tribal dispute.
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The conflict was serious enough to force Lonyangata's family
to flee to neighbouring Uganda for three years before returning.
Lonyangata himself only took to the track when he started
secondary school in 2005 in Kapcherop.
Up until that point, he had walked -- often great distances
-- in the absence of not only access to a car but also a road.
"From my home to my school, it was very far. About 15km
from one place to another. Every day 30km for sure, for six days of the
week."
His first victory, in an 8km cross-country came in 2006 in
Eldoret, quickly followed by an international high school cross-country race in
Seattle after which he was given two million Kenyan shillings ($22,450, 20,000
euros) by a sponsor.
It was not until 2009, with his schooling behind him, that
he launched himself full time into athletics, winning bronze in the 10,000m at
the world junior championships in Moncton, Canada, a year later.
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Twelve months later, he was signed up to one of Italian
agent Federico Rosa's Kaptagat training camps. The camp is led by James
Kwambai, who clocked a marathon best of 2:04:27 in Rotterdam in 2009 and is
currently Lonyangata's coach.
- Target Bekele's Paris record -
Lonyangata has a personal best of 2:06:20 set when racing to
victory in the Paris Marathon in 2017 when his ex-wife Purity Rionoripo
famously won the women's race.
And he has one thing on his mind: "I need to come this
time to run a course record."
His training mate Cosmas Kiplimo Lagat will act as pacemaker
as Lonyangata targets Ethiopian Kenenisa Bekele's Paris record of 2:05:03, set
in 2014.
Kenya's long-distance running success and its Rift Valley
training camps have attracted foreign athletes keen to benefit from altitude
training alongside top-drawer rivals.
While foreigners are not housed in the same camps as the
Kenyans, the two parties mix in training, meaning that the group of runners
setting out on a run can number up to 100.
Among them is Swiss runner Julien Wanders, who set a new
European half-marathon record of 59:13 in February, smashing the previous best
set by Britain's multi-medalled Mo Farah, another athlete who has spent time
training around Iten, notably when he made the switch to marathon racing.
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Wanders has been coming to Iten since 2016 and is in no
doubt about the benefits: "The altitude helps and there is undulating
terrain," he said.
And the level of his training partners is a major factor
too.
"The level is very high, you'd never find that in
Europe," he concedes.