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Kenya’s Cheptai and Kimeli Earn Massive Sh4 Million Pay-Day After Breaking Course Records in India

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Nairobi — Kenya’s Irene Cheptai and Nicholas Kimeli ran course records of 30:35 and 27:38 respectively at the Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) World 10K Bengaluru 2022, a World Athletics Elite Label road race on Sunday, earning themselves a whooping Sh4mn pay day.

The two took home first place cheques of USD $26,000 (Sh3.1mn) for their victories and course record bonuses of USD $8000 (Sh928,000).

Cheptai beat multiple world champion Hellen Obiri and took 44 seconds off the women’s course record which had stood to the late Agnes Tirop at 31:19 since 2018.

“When we raced through an inclined patch on the route [just after 7km], I felt like Hellen’s pace reduced, that’s when I tried harder to take lead,” said Cheptai. “But even when I entered the stadium for the final lap, I was fearing Hellen and kept pushing my speed to win.”

After a super-fast opening two kilometres of 3:02 and 3:04, a quick time was always likely and the race was soon down to just three women at the front: Cheptai, two-time world 5000m champion Hellen Obiri and fellow Kenyan Joyce Tele.

Tele started to lose contact with her compatriots in the fifth kilometre before Obriri, pushing the pace with Cheptai running in her slipstream, passed the halfway point in 15:15.

Obiri led the race for the next two kilometres, going through 6km in 18:23 and 7km in 21:32, before Cheptai took her turn to push at the front for a kilometre as Obiri briefly went through a bad patch.

However, Obiri soon recovered her poise and regained the lead just after embarking on the penultimate kilometre.

The Kenyan pair carried on their enthralling head-to-head battle, but with just 250 metres to go Cheptai darted past Obiri and was never headed before crossing the line in a personal best of 30:35, her first time inside 31 minutes.

Obiri eased off once she knew the race was lost but still came home in an outstanding 30:44, also inside Tirop’s former course record, while Tele was a distant third in 31:47 to complete an all-Kenyan podium.

-Kimeli tops men’s race –

The men’s race unfolded in a very different fashion to the women’s.

Kimeli, fourth in the Olympic 5000m final last year, took the lead with a kilometre to go and pulled away from Ethiopia’s world U20 10,000m champion Tadese Worku to reduce the men’s course record by six seconds from the previous mark set by his compatriot Geoffrey Kamworor in 2014.

The race started off in an unusual manner with Kenya’s Reynold Kipkorir – who was to eventually finish ninth – out on his own for much of the first 5km, passing the halfway point in 14:00 with the rest of the elite field staying about 70 metres in arrears.