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Athletics: Olympic hopeful Cheruiyot pushed by fellow Kenyan runner – Metro US

Athletics: Olympic hopeful Cheruiyot pushed by fellow Kenyan runner

By Omar Mohammed and Isaac Omulo

NAIROBI (Reuters) – When Kenyan runner Timothy Cheruiyot is sprinting to the finish at the world’s top races he knows one man can stand between him and gold: his best friend. 

The shy 24-year-old trains alongside fellow Kenyan Elijah Manangoi, 26, who was the 1,500 meters world champion until Cheruiyot took the title this year.

The pair’s coach Bernard Ouma loves their “sibling rivalry”, praising Manangoi’s speed, Cheruiyot’s endurance and their drive to outperform each other.

“Tim is working extra-hard to catch up with him. And this is putting Elijah on his toes – ‘ah! This young boy should not catch up with me!'” said coach Ouma, channeling his elder protege.

Cheruiyot was already coming close by 2017, taking silver 38 seconds behind Manangoi at the 1,500 meters world championships.

“My toughest athlete (has been) my partner Manangoi … I love how he trains,” Cheruiyot told Reuters at his training camp at the Rongai Athletics Club, located on the outskirts of Nairobi.

This year, Cheruiyot won the Diamond League trophy for the third time in a row and in October took his first 1,500 meters world championships gold in punishingly hot Doha.

The heat woke Cheruiyot at 5 a.m. on race day. He had hamstring tightness and was missing friend Manangoi, whose injury meant he was unable to defend his title.

He put that out of his mind to focus on the goal.

No pacing. No tricks. No partner. Just run. Fast.

“GOT THE GOLD”

In the lead from the gun, Cheruiyot finished in 3 minutes 29.26 seconds, more than two seconds ahead of Algeria’s Taoufik Makhloufi.

“I got the gold but it’s not the end of everything,” said Cheruiyot, whose new dream is next year’s Tokyo Olympics.

The worst day of his career was in 2016 when he missed qualifying for the Rio tournament by half a second.

The eldest of four siblings, he was born to tea and maize farmers in a west Kenyan village.

He started running to-and-from primary school, was competing at regional level by high school, but returned to the farm in 2011. Fortunately, friends encouraged him to keep running.

One was neighbor and local coach Jonathan Bellion, who developed a program and pushed him to rest between races and eat a balanced died. “He taught me how to run,” Cheruiyot said.

His preferred race at the time was the 800 meters.

At the 2014 trials for the World Under-20 Championships in Kenya, he had to finish in the top two to qualify, but came third, seconds separating him from his dream.

But the strong, 6-foot (183 cm) 18-year-old with a rugged run had impressed an onlooker – coach Ouma, who saw a future champion. “I decided, let me polish him and see how fast he can run.”

(Reporting by Omar Mohammed and Isaac Omulo; Writing by Omar Mohammed; Editing by Katharine Houreld and Andrew Cawthorne)