Another Kenyan wonder

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

Kenyan teenager Pamela Jelimo is a warm favourite to complete her astonishing rise by claiming Olympic 800 metres gold in Beijing.

Pamela Jelimo took charge of the 800 metres discipline just four months ago. But since then, the 18-year-old Kenyan has been so dominant that winning a gold at Beijing has become a mere formality

NAIROBI: Kenyan teenager Pamela Jelimo is a warm favourite to complete her astonishing rise by claiming Olympic 800 metres gold in Beijing.

The 18-year-old, a sprinter in her school days, only took up the two-lap charge four months ago and has never looked back, breaking national and world junior records as well as staying on course to win the $1 million Golden League jackpot.  Jelimo ran the fastest 800m for nearly 11 years in Berlin in June — it was only her fourth race over the distance — and she has since bettered her time with a majestic run of one minute 54.97 seconds in Paris a month later. 

Throw in further victories in Rome and Oslo in the Golden League series and Jelimo, whose time has only been bettered by Russia’s Yelena Soboleva this year, looks a near certainty for gold. “It is not a question of who will or will not stop Jelimo because that creates bad blood among runners,” she said.

“I tested my strength in Rome and Paris. I think I am fine and only waiting for Beijing. I returned home to train in my country with my compatriots so that we can plan together. So far so good.”

Despite her progress in such a short space of time, her modesty is striking. “I started running in my home district (secondary) school of Koyo in Nandi South district. But I never went beyond district level,” she said. “But after finishing school in 2006, I had enough time last year and prepared well, hence where I am now.”

Jelimo was urged to ditch the shorter sprint events and take on the 800m and she ran 2:01.02 at the African Championships trials in Nairobi in April. A national junior record followed at the African Championships in Addis Ababa two weeks later. She broke the world junior record in Hengelo, Netherlands in May when she ran 1:55.76 and her progress is such that even Jarmila Kratochvilova’s 25-year-old world record of 1:53.28 looks within striking distance.

“Time will tell. There is always room for improvement and that will come to pass. I am now focusing on the Olympics.”