Kenya's Cheruiyot adjusts to reality of preparing for the Olympics in a
pandemic
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[May 13, 2021]
By Omar Mohammed
NAIROBI (Reuters) -Coach Bernard Ouma
barked orders to start stretching and the team of a dozen athletes
fanned out in the morning sunshine, leaving a good six feet between
them.
Among them: Kenya's 1,500 metre world champion Timothy Cheruiyot,
who has been struggling to keep a consistent training schedule in a
topsy-turvy year as he prepares for this summer's Olympic Games
scheduled in Tokyo.
Cheruiyot was one of the top contenders for an Olympic gold in Japan
after an impressive 2019, when he won the world title in Doha. Then
the Games were postponed amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Now, the three-time Diamond League champion is being forced to
adjust. He sometimes has to train alone, rather than in his
traditional team environment.
This makes the mental aspect of the sport even more important, Ouma
said. He has pared down the intensity of Cheruiyot's training,
putting more emphasis on the process.
"I said I am not interested in timing," said Ouma. "I just want to
see effort. Show me how you can run, this eases pressure."
He has worked with Cheruiyot more closely on his mental strength to
help build his resilience, checking in how he is coping and what is
happening with three younger siblings and his parents, who are
farmers in western Kenya.
"Last year was bad, this year ... we are prepared for any
eventuality," Ouma added.
"We live together, all of us, that means the bubble is working for
us and we try to keep up the adherence of the COVID-19 protocol."
Their routine is simple: train at the track or running on a track in
Nairobi's National Park - home to lions, hyenas and rhinos.
"Luckily the animals don't have COVID," Ouma joked.
Cheruiyot still managed to compete in some races last year despite
the pandemic.
He won in Monaco and Stockholm, showing little signs of rust in
either race, although he lost a 2,000 metre virtual race in June,
where his "Team Cheruiyot" pitted themselves against the Norwegian
"Team Ingebrigtsen".
"When we go to races, we normally go there and train. But now, you
are going there and stay in a room. It's a bit challenging,"
Cheruiyot said.
[to top of second column] |
Timothy Cheruiyot, winner of the 1500
meters gold medal at the 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha,
runs during a training session in Nairobi, Kenya, May 8,
2021.REUTERS/Baz Ratner
"RUNNING AGAINST TIME"
He told Reuters that all athletes are grappling with similar
COVID-19 related disruptions.
Cheruiyot has not yet received the COVID-19 vaccine, Ouma said, but
he is in the queue.
He has adjusted to competing without fans, a reality at most
sporting activities in the past year and a strong possibility at the
upcoming Olympics.
"I can balance my race because we have competitors," Cheruiyot said.
"Although I know there are no fans on the track, there are sounds in
the track so I can run without fans."
"I am running against time," he added.
While the 25-year-old hopes to compete in some races in Europe and
Qatar in the next few weeks, COVID restrictions permitting, his
focus remains the Olympics.
But he needs to qualify at next month's trials first. In Kenya,
which scooped 13 Olympic medals four years ago in Rio and boasts
world record holders such as marathon runners Eliud Kipchoge and
Brigid Kosgei, making the team can be even more daunting than the
Olympics themselves.
In 2016, Cheruiyot failed to qualify for the Rio Games after
finishing fourth in the trials for the 1,500m race, a mere half a
second from making the team - a moment he described as one of the
worst of his career.[https://reut.rs/2L2AXKZ]
"Trials in Kenya is very competitive," he said.
But he's itching for an elusive Olympic win.
"I lack a medal in Olympics, so that is my goal," he added.
(Reporting by Omar Mohammed; editing by Katharine Houreld and
Christian Radnedge)
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