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Kenya: Dejected and Forgotten – Kipchoge Keino Stadium Stands Out Like a Sore Thump

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Kipchoge Keino Stadium in Eldoret, Uasin Gishu County, is an eyesore after renovation of the facility stalled in 2017.

A visit by the Nation Sport team revealed a sorry state. The project has been abandoned since 2017 when the second phase of renovations started. There is no word from the Ministry of Sports.

The grass is overgrown in the stadium and it’s overrun by weeds. The toilets are in pathetic condition and so is the drainage system. Work at the eastern wing and at the VIP pavilion stalled at the foundation level. That is the image that welcomes one to the stadium.

Efforts by Nation Sport to contact Sports Kenya Chairman Fred Muteti proved futile. His line was not going through and he had not replied any of our text messages by the time of going to press.

The 2016 400 metres hurdles bronze medallist Haron Koech has asked the government to finish work at the stadium. He said it is an important training facility for sprinters.

He told Nation Sport that the stadium cannot be used in that state and it’s dangerous especially now that it’s raining.

“The stadium has taken long to complete. I would like the government, through the Ministry of Sports, to know that the facility will be of good use especially for the sprinters once complete,” Koech said.

Koech, a member of Kenya’s gold medal-winning 4x400m relay team at 2018 African Championships in Asaba, Nigeria, has shifted his training base from Moi International Sports Centre, Kasarani to the North Rift. He trains in Eldoret and Iten.

Athletics Kenya had asked the government to complete the stadium in honour of the late 2015 World 400m hurdles champion Nicholas Bett who died in a road accident in 2018.