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Xulu is happy with Bafana Bafana’s progress

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Ahead of the clash with DR Congo for AFCON 2023 bronze medal title

 

DR Congo Photo Credit: CAFonline

 

South African defender Siyanda Xulu says he is happy with the team’s performance and their progress in their time at the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023, CAFonline reports.

 

Bafana Bafana reached the semi-finals, where Nigeria disappointingly knocked them out on Wednesday evening in Bouake.

 

This was the first semi-final appearance since 2000 by Hugo Broos’ charges, who will now contest the third-place play-off against the Democratic Republic of Congo on Saturday, 10 February, in Abidjan.

 

Speaking ahead of the clash with the Leopards, Xulu said he was proud of the progress made by the team and the impressive performance shown at the competition.

 

“We had our own goal as a team. We wanted to go as far as we could. We know very well our quality, especially from the coach, who has always believed in us as a team. To go this far was our objective. Reaching the semi-final is a dream. Yes, we wanted to take it home, but we couldn’t, but we can be proud of the performance,” said Xulu.

 

The last time the 1996 champions played the third and fourth play-off was in 2000 when they won 4-3 on penalties after a 2-2 draw against Tunisia.

 

How to watch and follow…

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2024 World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold – Lievin

World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold 2024 – Lievin
The 2024 World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold continues in Lievin, France, on Saturday (10), and here’s how you can watch and follow the action, World Athletics reports.

 

The Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais Trophée EDF has once again assembled incredible fields. Lamecha Girma will return to the scene of his world indoor 3000m record, but this time will target the fastest, clocking over 2000m. Fellow world champions Gudaf Tsegay, Femke Bol, Grant Holloway, Hagos Gebrhiwet, and Hugues Fabrice Zango will also be in action.

 

Many athletes will use the World Athletics Indoor Tour to prepare for the World Athletics Indoor Championships Glasgow 24 and then the Olympic Games in Paris, where athletics will start as the No.1 sport.

 

Preview
More World Indoor Tour news and announcements

 

How to watch and follow

Schedule and live results

 

A two-hour live stream of the meeting on Saturday, 10 February, will be available in several territories via World Athletics Inside Track. The live stream will start at 7:40 pm local time/CET (6:40 pm GMT) and end at 9:50 pm CET (8:50 pm GMT).

 

Sign up or log in to make sure you are ready to come on the event day.

 

Inside Track livestream

 

The live stream will be geoblocked in the following territories:
American Samoa, Anguilla, Antigua & Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Caribbean Netherlands, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Curaçao, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Finland, France, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Guam, Guyana, Haiti, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Martinique, Montserrat, Netherlands, Northern Mariana Islands, Norway, Poland, Puerto Rico, Russia, San Marino, Slovakia, St. Barthélemy, St. Kitts & Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Martin, St. Vincent & Grenadines, Suriname, Sweden, Trinidad & Tobago, Turks & Caicos Islands, US Virgin Islands, United States, Vatican City

Coverage of the meeting will be available in the territories listed below. This list is subject to change. Check local listings – some broadcasts may be live, while others include highlights.

 

FloSports (FloTrack) American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands, United States of America, Northern Mariana Islands
RTVE (Teledeporte) Andorra, Canary Islands, Spain
Flow Sports Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas, Barbados, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Curacao, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Haiti, Jamaica, Montserrat, Netherlands Antilles, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines VIN, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and Caicos Islands, Bermuda, Bonaire, Guadeloupe, Guyana, Martinique, Saint Barthelemy, Saint Martin
TV Arena Sport 5 Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia
TV Arena Sport 7 Croatia
MTV Urheilu 2 Finland
Host broadcaster France
M4 Sport+ Hungary
Sport 1 Israel
Sky Sport Arena Italy, San Marino, Vatican City
Ziggo Sport Docu Netherlands
VG+ Sport Norway
Polsat Sport News Poland
Match Arena / Match Igra Russia
Sport Slovakia
TV Arena Sport 4 Slovenia
Aftonbladet (Spring Media/Sportbladet) Sweden
Sport 1 / Sport 3 Ukraine

Social media

• World Athletics: XInstagramFacebookTikTok
• Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais Trophée EDF: website | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter

2024 World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold calendar

27 January – Astana Indoor Meet for Amin Tuyakov Prizes, Astana, Kazakhstan
30 January – Czech Indoor Gala, Ostrava, Czech Republic
4 February – New Balance Indoor Grand Prix, Boston, USA
6 Feb – ORLEN Copernicus Cup, Torun, Poland
10 Feb – Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais ‘Trophée EDF’, Lievin, France
11 Feb – Millrose Games, New York, USA
23 February – World Indoor Tour Gold Madrid 2024, Madrid, Spain

 

DR Congo wants AFCON bronze title

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Dylan Batubinsika calls on teammates to stay focused against South Africa

 

DR Congo wants the AFCON bronze medal more. Photo credit: CAFonline

DR Congo defender Dylan Batubinsika calls on his teammates to stay calm ahead of their third-place playoff game against South Africa in the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Côte d’Ivoire 2023.

After a remarkable run at the TotalEnergies CAF AFCON Côte d’Ivoire 2023, the Democratic Republic of Congo lost in the semi-finals to hosts Côte d’Ivoire on Wednesday evening at the Stade Olympique Alassane Ouattara in Ebimpe.

For defender Dylan Batubinsika, there are reasons for him and his teammates to be disappointed by the defeat, given what the Leopards have offered since the start of the competition.

“We’ll be disappointed for a while because we could go all the way,” the Saint-Etienne player said at a press conference.

Now they will have to put those regrets aside and search for a bronze medal on Saturday against South Africa, which Nigeria defeated at the Stade de Bouaké.

“I think we have a mixture of feelings with the elimination, but our ambition is to go and get this medal. We have to stay mobilized to finish in third place,” the player said.

He added,” We must be proud of what we’ve done so far; we’ve had a great run. We would have liked to go all the way, but that wasn’t the case.

The South Africa-RDC match will be played on Saturday, 10 February 2024, at the Stade Félix Houphouët-Boigny in Abidjan at 20:00 GMT.

‘Super Eagles victory affirms potency’

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Gusau: AFCON triumph will underscore the significance of the Nigerian Spirit

 

 

By Rasheed Adewuyi

 

President of the Nigeria Football Federation, Ibrahim Musa Gusau, believes that Super Eagles’ victory over the Elephants of Cote d’Ivoire in the 34th Africa Cup of Nations Final on Sunday will once more confirm to Nigerians at home and abroad the ultra-potency of the much-talked-about Nigerian Spirit.

 

“We have always talked about the Nigerian Spirit, but many pay lip service to it. The Nigerian Spirit is highly significant; it is the overpowering conviction that we can get things done with our willpower, hard work, diligence, and perseverance.

 

“Presently, we may be having challenges in certain sectors and facets of our national life, but the Nigerian Spirit can propel us to overcome those challenges and reach for glory. That is what the Super Eagles have shown here. At the beginning of the tournament, very few people believed in the team. Now, we are looking at the trophy six matches after, and I believe it will be ours.”

 

The experienced administrator has called on Nigerians from all walks of life to pray for the Super Eagles’ triumph on Sunday. “The triumph will certainly rejuvenate our collective passion to work for the greatness of our communities and the nation at large and rekindle hope that all present challenges will soon become thorns we have left behind us.”

 

The Super Eagles, who failed to win any of their two opening matches in the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifying matches in November and lost 0-2 to Guinea in a friendly in Abu Dhabi five days before the opening match of the AFCON, are unbeaten at this championship and will start as favorites against an Ivorian side that has miraculously found itself at this end of the rope.

 

Gusau used the opportunity to mourn the five individuals who lost their lives during the tension-soaked penalty shootout victory over South Africa’s Bafana Bafana in Bouaké on Wednesday.

 

“The Super Eagles already had a minute silence for the dead, but I also want to pray to God to grant the souls of the departed eternal rest. Football is a game of intense passion, and the capacity for shock and disappointing results is different from one person to another. We pray that God will grant the families and friends left behind by the dead the fortitude to bear the losses.”

 

Sunday’s encounter will be Nigeria’s eighth Final appearance in the 67-year-old continental flagship competition, with only seven-time champions Egypt and four-time champions Ghana with more Final-day games. Egypt has been in the Final a total of 10 times, losing out only thrice. Ghana has been in the Final nine times, winning only four times.

 

MOST FINAL APPEARANCES BY COUNTRIES

 

Egypt: 10 (Won in 1957, 1959, 1986, 1998, 2006, 2008 & 2010; Lost in 1962, 2017 & 2021)

 

Ghana: 9 (Won in 1963, 1965, 1978 & 1982; Lost in 1968, 1970, 1992, 2010 & 2015)

 

Cameroon: 7 (Won in 1984, 1988, 2000, 2002 & 2017; Lost in 1986 & 2008)

 

Nigeria: 7* (Won in 1980, 1994 & 2013; Lost in 1984, 1988, 1990 & 2000)

 

. Playing the 8th Final on Sunday     

 

. Cote d’Ivoire 4* (Won in 1992 & 2015; Lost in 2006 & 2012)

 

. Playing 5th Final on Sunday

 

. Algeria 3 (Won in 1990 & 2019; Lost in 1980)

 

. Zambia 3 (Won in 2012; Lost in 1974 & 1994)

 

. Tunisia 3 (Won in 2004; Lost in 1965 & 1996)   

 

. Senegal 3 (Won in 2021; Lost in 2002 & 2019)

 

Serie A’s AFCON 23 moment of decision

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AFCON final: Which five players based in Italy could feature when Ivory Coast host Nigeria

 

Photo credit: Cafonline

 

Five Serie A players could be in line to feature in the Africa Cup of Nations final between Nigeria and Ivory Coast on Sunday, including Napoli’s leading goalscorer Victor Osimhen and star Roma center-back Evan Ndicka, Peter Young reports for Football Italia.

The AFCON final contenders were decided Wednesday night after Nigeria defeated South Africa on penalties in one semi-final. At the same time, Ivory Coast defeated DR Congo 1-0 thanks to a second-half strike from Borussia Dortmund’s Sebastian Haller.

 

The final will kick-off at 20.00 GMT on Sunday evening at the Olympic Stadium of Ebimpe in Abidjan.

 

Though Ivory Coast holds the home advantage, bookmakers currently have Nigeria down as the narrow favorites to lift the trophy at the end of the weekend. Nigeria rose to a 1-0 victory when the two teams met in the Group Stages in January.

 

Up to five Serie A representatives could take to the field on Sunday, three for Nigeria and two for Ivory Coast.

 

Those are Victor Osimhen of Napoli, who has scored once and provided two assists from his six appearances for Nigeria in the competition thus far.

 

Even more productive in front of goal has been Atalanta forward Ademola Lookman. The South London-born attacker has netted three goals and an assist for the Super Eagles.

 

Milan’s summer signing, Samuel Chukwueze, could also appear in the final. He has been called upon as a starter in two matches and has appeared off the bench on three more occasions in the tournament.

Evan Ndicka is expected to start at center-back for Ivory Coast, as he has done in every game. The Roma defender has helped his nation concede just three goals in their last four matches.

 

Finally, there could also be an opportunity for Fiorentina attacker Christian Kouame, who has been in and out of the Ivory Coast side since the beginning of the tournament.

 

He has three starts to his name thus far, including the final two Group Stage matches and the quarter-final against Mali, which was won 2-1 thanks to a 122nd-minute goal from Oumar Diakite.

Super Eagles, Elephants to clash again

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Hosts Cote d’Ivoire and Nigeria set up a ‘classic’ TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Final

 

Photo Credit: CAFONLINE

 

Hosts Cote d’Ivoire completed their come-back journey by reaching the Finals of the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023, where they will meet Nigeria in what has been billed to be a ‘classic Final.’

 

The Final of the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 will be played on Sunday, 11 February at the Alassane Ouattara Stadium in Ebimpe, Abidjan at 20h00 GMT.

 

The last phase of ticket sales will open on Thursday afternoon for the members of the public. The Tickets can be purchased here.

 

Cote d’Ivoire labored to a 1-0 over the Democratic Republic of Congo (Congo DR) in front of a packed stadium in the economic hub of the Host Country courtesy of a goal from Sebastien Haller. It was a remarkable come-back from a country that was, not so long ago, written off by pundits.

 

Nigeria secured their spot in the final after a tense 4-2 penalty shootout victory over South Africa,. Nigeria, chasing their 4th African title since 2013, will face a formidable challenge from Cote d’Ivoire, who are aiming to add a third continental title to their name.

 

As anticipation builds for this highly-anticipated final, football fans across Africa are eagerly awaiting what is sure to be a memorable clash between two footballing giants.

 

Meanwhile, Congo DR will take on South Africa in the third-place playoff on Saturday at 20h00.

 

Great North Run earns acknowledgement

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With World Athletics Heritage plaque award

 

The Great North Run
The annual Great North Run (1981) history has been recognized with the award of the World Athletics Heritage Plaque (category – Competition), World Athletics Heritage reports.

 

This world-renowned half marathon in Northeast England inspired Brendan Foster, 1976 Olympic 10,000m bronze medallist and world record breaker at 3000m and two miles.

 

On 28 June 1981, 12,264 people lined up in Newcastle, England, for the first Great North Run. In 2014, the race celebrated its millionth finisher and broke the Guinness World Record for the largest half marathon, 57,000 runners with 41,615 finishing.

 

Two years later, the race attracted entrants from 178 countries, the most ever represented in a single running event in history. In 2018, the race saw 43,656 runners cross the finish line.

 

At the top end of the race, the Great North Run annually presents one of the world’s great elite fields. Its winners have included numerous world half marathon record breakers, from Grete Waitz to Peres Jepchirchir and Michael Musyoki to Jacob Kiplimo.

 

The World Athletics Heritage Plaque is a location-based recognition awarded for ‘an outstanding contribution to the worldwide history and development of the sport of track and field athletics and out-of-stadia athletics disciplines such as cross country, mountain, road, trail and ultra-running, and race walking.’

 

World Athletics President Sebastian Coe commented: “I am delighted that World Athletics is recognising the Great North Run with the World Athletics Heritage Plaque for its contribution to the worldwide history and development of running.

 

“The Great North Run, founded by Sir Brendan Foster in 1981, quickly established itself as one of the world’s most significant running events. In 2014, it celebrated its millionth finisher! The race, raising millions for charities annually, cemented its international reputation by hosting the inaugural World Half Marathon Championships 1992.

 

“The Great North Run exemplifies excellence, attracting many of the world’s greatest runners, including Liz McColgan, Tegla Loroupe, Paula Radcliffe, Carlos Lopes, Haile Gebrselassie, and Mo Farah, to name but a very few.

 

“Congratulations to Brendan and his team for their continued outstanding work for our sport.”

 

Foster, Founder and President of The Great Run Company, said: “It is fantastic that World Athletics Heritage is recognizing the Great North Run for its contribution to mass participation in road running.

 

“This accolade has only been awarded to a handful of the truly great athletes, stadia, and events, and so we are profoundly honored that the Great North Run is now among this select group.

 

“It’s recognition of 40+ years of dedication to making it a truly world-class event that stands apart from all others. We have welcomed the sport’s greatest athletes alongside over 1.25m runners along the way. We captured the imagination of our runners and the Northeast region, who, year after year, join us to do something extraordinary.

 

“60,000 runners take part in the Great North Run each year, traveling from every UK postcode and across the globe, and our attention is set on delivering another spectacular event on September 8.

 

“With just a few days left to enter this year’s Great North Run ballot, we hope this prestigious recognition encourages more people to enter and be a part of Great North Run history.”

 

South Africa, DR Congo to bow out in style

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Epic TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 losers’ final match

 

South Africa Photo Credit: CAFONLINE

 

South Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo will be looking at bowing out in the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 style.

 

Both sides were knocked out of the title race during the semi-finals stage, where Bafana Bafana was edged 4-2 on penalties after a 1-1 draw with Nigeria, while DR Congo lost by a slim 1-0 margin against hosts Cote d’Ivoire.

 

While both sides will be disappointed with the semi-final exit, the third and fourth-place play presents the perfect opportunity for either side to go home with the consolation of being the third-best team.

 

Kick-off at Abidjan’s Felix Houphouet-Boigny Stadium is at 20:00.

 

Desabre rues Leopards’ missed AFCON chances

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As DR Congo’s TotalEnergies CAF AFCON dream dies

 

DR Congo manager Sebastien Desabre was left ruing missed opportunities as his side’s TotalEnergies CAF AFCON dream died against Cote d’Ivoire.
The Leopards succumbed 1-0 to the tournament hosts in Wednesday’s semi-final, with Sebastien Haller scoring the winner.
It means DR Congo missed a shot at a third continental crown.
Instead, Desabre and his players were left crestfallen after exiting despite a spirited display. “My first impression is disappointment, considering the course of the match,” lamented the Frenchman.
Desabre pointed to multiple chances spurned in the first half as proving pivotal. Cedric Bakambu had a goal harshly disallowed before Yoane Wissa wasted a glorious one-on-one.
“We didn’t take advantage of our momentum,” rued Desabre. “We tried to equalize all the offensive weapons by changing the system, making substitutions, but unfortunately, it didn’t happen.”
Despite the heartbreak, Desabre praised the performance and effort of his Congolese warriors. He acknowledged they faced brilliant opponents in Elephants.
“It must be recognized that a great team from Cote d’Ivoire was facing us. It didn’t come down to much. We’re disappointed tonight; we could have achieved a better result,” Desabre conceded.
Attention now turns to securing third place when DR Congo faces South Africa on Saturday. “We are competitors; we need to regroup quickly. We have a match on Saturday to secure third place,” stated Desabre defiantly.
We are reaching the last four capped impressive progress for DR Congo in Desabre’s first tournament. The Frenchman has molded a youthful, dynamic team that could leave AFCON 2023 with heads held high.

With marathon debut behind him…

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Cheptegei turns focus back to 10,000m for Paris 2024

 

Joshua Cheptegei at the Tokyo Olympics (© Getty Images)

Just a few miles away from the site of his world 10,000m record three years prior, Joshua Cheptegei stumbled towards the finish line of the Valencia Marathon, George Mallet reports for World Athletics.

 

On the track, the Olympic 5000m gold medallist and three-time world 10,000m champion is renowned for his unbeatable finishing strength. But in his debut over the marathon distance, with each foot supporting a tired body on the brink, the Ugandan had to be content with 37th place in the Spanish city, clocking 2:08:59.

 

Cheptegei wasn’t too disappointed or surprised, though. Supported by race organizer Marc Roig, Cheptegei hobbled to the elite finishers’ tent immediately after the race, beaming from ear to ear.

 

A few days before, Cheptegei had warned: “The marathon has no respect for people.”

 

Not even Olympic champions, it would seem.

 

Fans have grown used to Cheptegei finding his rhythm in a leading pack, so seeing him there at halfway was no surprise. Going through 13.1 miles in 1:00:36 wasn’t part of the plan – not that there necessarily was one.

 

When asked in the build-up to the race what he wanted from his debut, Cheptegei said: “I want to learn.”

 

Joshua Cheptegei at the Valencia MarathonJoshua Cheptegei at the Valencia Marathon (© NN Running Team)

Collapsing over the line with a rueful smile, Cheptegei clarified that his objective had been achieved.

 

He knew that his preparation for the event had been far from perfect. It started with pulling out of the Wanda Diamond League final due to a reaction to wearing spikes in defending his world 10,000m crown in Budapest. Once he did return, the following weeks saw his usual runs around the rolling hills of Kapchorwa deemed too dangerous due to constant deluges.

 

Cheptegei never ran more than 160km a week – which, by the standards of most current marathon specialists, was a light schedule.

 

Yet in Valencia, he still chose to go with the pace. Many would expect little else from a world 5000m and 10,000m record holder consistently pushing the margins of the possible.

 

For many fans, their first clear memory of Cheptegei at a senior level was his performance at the 2017 World Cross Country Championships on home soil in Kampala.

 

That day, the 2016 Olympic 10,000m sixth-place finisher ripped the senior race apart, striding away through the middle section and building a massive lead into the final kilometer.

 

The Ugandan fans chasing him in bursts around the course almost went as far as to hand over the red, yellow, and black flags.

 

Joshua Cheptegei in the senior men's race at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships Kampala 2017Joshua Cheptegei in the senior men’s race at the World Cross Country Championships Kampala 2017 (© Jiro Mochizuki)

As the commentators proclaimed his title, Cheptegei had pushed himself to the limit, a smooth stride rolling to a wayward struggle.

 

Defending champion Geoffrey Kamworor – a former mentor to Cheptegei during his time in Kenya in 2015 – silenced the crowds, passing the struggling Ugandan in a fleeting second and going on to win. Cheptegei eventually finished 30th.

 

“Joshua had a great belief and determination in running,” Kamworor commented on his Ugandan rival. “Whenever you talk with him, you can see in his mind that he has great aspirations in life.

 

“He’s even becoming one of my mentors.”

 

Cheptegei won the senior title at his next attempt in Aarhus in 2019, the year of the first of three consecutive world 10,000m titles. An Olympic silver in Tokyo in that event accompanied 5000m gold.

 

Risks taken, lessons learned, all in a bid to break new ground. It’s core to Cheptegei’s philosophy as a runner and, ultimately, a role model to those who follow him worldwide, perhaps most importantly back home in Uganda.

 

It’s also followed him since his first days as a professional.

 

While training with Kamworor, Eliud Kipchoge, and the rest in Kaptagat, barely aged 20, the 2014 world U20 10,000m champion made a problematic but bold decision.

 

“I told my management that I wanted to go back home and build a running culture and to inspire the young generation here in Uganda.”

 

As a young athlete – and although it happened 24 years before Cheptegei was born – Cheptegei was made aware that John Akii-Bua earned Uganda’s first Olympic athletics medal when taking the 400m hurdles gold in Munich in 1972.

 

It’s clear that Cheptegei now feels a sense of responsibility when it comes to developing the sport in his country, much like Akii-Bua did more than 50 years ago.

 

“It’s a privilege to have had great guys like him open the way for us, especially in a difficult time where the country was unstable,” says Cheptegei.

 

Akii-Bua was forced to live much of his life outside Uganda, moving to Kenya towards the final days of the Idi Amin dictatorship.

 

Likewise, Uganda’s next Olympic gold medallist, Stephen Kiprotich, trained in their eastern neighbor for much of his career.

 

The then-15-year-old Cheptegei admits taking a break from kicking a football around the schoolyard to watch Kiprotich win Olympic marathon gold in 2012, which was the moment he made his plans for global success.

 

“I was like, ‘right, it’s in my heart. I want to become a champion, a national hero like him.”

 

Cheptegei has developed those ambitions. For better or worse, he aims to show the next generation they need not leave home deliberately: no altitude camps elsewhere, high-tech facilities, or trips to some winter sun.

 

“I have always trained in Uganda, always and always,” he reiterates.

 

Joshua Cheptegei on a training runJoshua Cheptegei on a training run (© NN Running Team)

Despite the world records, Olympic gold, and world championship titles, Cheptegei still feels that to prove that one achievement remains to tick off.

 

It’s all about the number 10.

 

“2024, it’ll be ten years running internationally,” he says. “10 years at a high level.

 

“I’m still in love with the 10,000m, the special distance. I still want to go to Paris and win.”

 

Only Kenenisa Bekele and Haile Gebrselassie have won more world 10,000m titles than Cheptegei. Both won two Olympic golds in the event.

 

Cheptegei will head to the French capital hungry to find his first, motivated in the knowledge that he’ll send a message to that young Ugandan watching, hoping to follow in his path.