1. First generalization is Kenyans growing up at altitude for many generations and perhaps physiologically better able to carry an oxygen debt (higher hemoglobin levels, lung capacities, O2 exchange capacity?) because of that.
2. Secondly diet and lack of sitting around in front of a TV in
early childhood. Living on mom's milk, then high carbohydrate diet, of corn meal, limited protein, makes for some lean children. (Wanna solve our infant formula problem? Get back to breast feeding.)
3. Next walking barefoot for six or more years before they get their first pair of shoes, perhaps aiding foot development. Walking and running everywhere including the run to school and back everyday, for some that's five or six miles, again at altitude. Playing soccer at school, developing strength through intervals in the game. Working when they get home tending cattle, or in the fields.
4. Girls going for firewood and hauling more than half their body weight on their backs or heads, who needs a gym?
5. Kids developing an independent spirit in play sometimes out for days at a young age with their peers in the forest. That means in the bush with other kids four and five years old with knives or machetes to gather food while out there.
6. Once they discover running in competition at school and learn that it is a means out of poverty toward riches and a better life, there must be incredible incentive, it's a means of survival in a tough world.
7. Pour all that into a mixing pot and skimming off the cream and you have some incredible individuals well suited for the sport.
8. Once discovered they will then be spirited away to a couple of schools where there are some great coaches including that Irish brother ( Colm O’Connell at St Patrick’s High School in Iten ). He has coached a lot of the great ones. If you look at the map of Kenya, you are drawing these runners out of a very small area of the country. You don't find them coming from the coast or Sudanese border areas or from the slums of Nairobi. It's out in the Western highlands and Rift valley area. A few come from Eastern Uganda bordering on the Western Highlands, but they are closely related and live a similar lifestyle.
9.Of the very successful I'm not sure you will find a second generation of great runners. The successful runners now have money and live a more comfortable lifestyle that will soften the next generation. Kip Keino's son Martin was fairly good but not great. I think he went to Rutgers on a scholarship, but I don't recall him winning any national championships anywhere.
10.They say that Eliud Kipchoge lives a monastic life on a farm and houses a bunch of up and comers there.
10. Corruption is also a part of the game now in Kenya with agents and Kenya Athletics people, aka vultures, taking over a lot of the young runners and widespread doping. Anything to get in on that prize and sponsorship money available in Europe or the marathon circuit. Still a bunch of clean great ones seem to keep coming out of the woodwork.
1 comment:
Armchair critics are often the most severe. You can say Martin Keino was “not great” if you’d like, sure. But an NCAA 5000 title (1995) and PRs of 3:33, 3:52, 7:35 and 13:21 were not chopped liver. Faster than his father at each of those distances. Better tracks, better shoes, yes. Still, Martin Keino could run. An Arizona grad, he never attended Rutgers. I believe that was his less accomplished brother Bob.
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