Opinion
Our athletes should get smarter to conquer the world
Posted Saturday, October 24 2009 at 14:15
On Sunday, thousands of unknown and upstart athletes are participating in the 6th StanChart Nairobi International Marathon. At the end of the gruelling race, the winners will be garlanded and gifted with money.
Truth but tragic, Sunday’s winners may never be heard from again. Like many other Kenyan athletes before -- both in local and international races -- they appear from nowhere, win and disappear!
On Thursday, October 29, 2009, Usain Bolt will arrive in Kenya on charity and environmental mission. Bolt is the world’s record holder and champion in 100 metres, 200 metres and 4x100 metres.
Like lightning, he has struck the world with his athletic prowess and, in his wake, he leaves all awed. The world hasn’t heard the last of Bolt and we will not, for a long while.
It is time Kenyans confront the dark truth as to why, though our athletes are world champions, we have no icon like Bolt. If you check on any available statistics of the world’s highest paid or influential athletes, no Kenyan appears anywhere.
This year, Tiger Woods will be the first athlete to gross $1 billion, yes, One billion dollars in prize money and endorsements.
In confession, Paul Tergat is my best friend. When he was winning marathon races from London to New York, Berlin to Chicago, I flew to those cities to cheer him and to join his beautiful wife Monica at the finishing line to congratulate him and hoist the Kenyan flag high.
I did this because of our friendship and because I was proud of Tergat’s humble background and his sheer scaling to the top of the world. I was also proud of being Kenyan.
And in all his post-race press conferences, I always knew that he will answer all questions intelligently and with poise. There was not a single day he embarrassed me at press conferences. Tergat is the first and last Kenyan iconic athlete of our generation. And the reasons are plenty.
Isaiah Kiplagat, Chairman of Athletics Kenya (AK), told me this week that the IAAF intends to make the X-Country World Championships bi-annual instead of current annual allegedly because Kenya and Ethiopia are dominating it and the world is losing interest.
Since the championships began in 1973, Kenya has won 253 medals and Ethiopia 214, and the rest of the world less than 60! But is the dominance by Ethiopia and Kenya the main reason for this demotion? Isn’t US and Jamaica dominating all races from 100 metres to 400 metres relays and they are being run weekly? The truth is sadder.
Our athletes are, by and large, from village schools and mainly from Kalenjin and to a lesser extent Kikuyu tribes. Most of them begin running in primary school and their level of education is stunted there. Because of it, their language of communication is mainly their mother tongues or a smattering of poor Kiswahili.
To them, English may as well be Mandarin. After winning in their races, they are hardly interviewed by international media and, in the few instances when asked their strategy for winning, they say something like this: “I run, I run, I run, I win and I prayed!”
Usain Bolt, Tiger Woods, Serena Williams, David Beckham and Manny Pacquiqo receive multi-million-dollar endorsements for few reasons: their eloquence in English, their fashion style, their poise and above all their charisma and presence.
These are athletes who ooze confidence and presence and when they walk into a room, even a dictator stands up for them. In my travels with Tergat, I have seen strangers in Milan and New York walking to him and literally crying for meeting him. If you cannot make strangers weep when they meet you, then you are no icon.
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Submitted by mzee_mojaPosted October 26, 2009 07:07 PM
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Submitted by wuod_aketch
This author has a complex of inferiority? Kenyan athletes may be philosophers but this is not what we expect of them. I understand what you are trying to say but most sportsmen/women are never eloquent. What do you prefer, a dumb winner or a looser who is fluent? Kenyan athletes should not change. Just continue concentrating on winning us those medals and not on learning some useless languages. The fact that our athletes communicate poorly adds mystery to their prowesses. Those wanting to communicate with these gods, should learn their mother tongues.
Posted October 26, 2009 04:41 PM -
Submitted by Dolly1450
Good job Mr. Kipkorir.! Great categorical inferences to the strategic brand mgt of “Kenyan athletic celebs - a terrific spin of doctoring techniques of the past to give way to the strategic integration of brand management, PR and media planning in the creation of our athletic celebs that are debuting into the world arena to create a more permanent “stay factor” in stardom. We have a PREMIUM BRAND of athletes that must increase their brand equity by re-positioning themselves in the same competitive space like other world athletes. We must leverage our current superior brand by ADDING VALUE .
Posted October 26, 2009 04:17 AM -
Submitted by chaimoto
you are not being fair to our runners. kenyans athletes speak better english than ethiopians morrocans and even algerians. golf is a different sport, it enjoys support from rich wealthy nations, billions of money are invested in golf. usain bolt is the only athlete i know who is using his character and speed to charm the fans. athletics don;t bring in alot of money, even good US runners don't make much. be fair
Posted October 25, 2009 10:34 PM -
Submitted by madhair
so the person who wants to be a real person must wear dolce y gabbana stuff? this is one journalist who have been enslaved by the western capitalism to the inner most part of his brain. You dont have to speak english to be the best in anything! and it seems wierd on a journalist to belittle his country men liek this!!
Posted October 25, 2009 06:25 PM




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I agree with you Kipkorir ONLY on styling up and some good PR. But you do not need to wear Dolce and Gabanna, Nike, or any other trade mark to prove your worth. Infact you can even wear a MONKEY SKIN and still speak good english worth listening(e.g. RUTO). You should also give credit to the athletes coz English is a second language to mother tongue. The other athletes you are trying to glorify have been speaking English since day one when they were born, it makes a difference.