Kenyan legendary runner donates kit to IAAF

Kenya Ports Authority Managing Director Daniel Mabuku (left) poses for a photo with Marie-Jose Ta Lou (centre) and Soya Awards founder Paul Tergat before starting the tour of the port on January 11, 2019. PHOTO | PHILIP ONYANGO |

What you need to know:

  • The opening ceremony of IAAF Heritage Cross Country Running Display – 1819 to 2019 takes place in Aarhus on February 28.

  • The exhibit will remain open until the IAAF World Cross Country Championships Aarhus on March 30.

Five times World Cross Country champion Kenya's Paul Tergat has donated one of his iconic running kit to International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF).

Tergat has generously given the uniform, which he wore when striding to his third gold medal in Turin, Italy in 1997.

The kit will be on show in Aarhus, Denmark during the World Cross Country Championships planned for March 30 this year.

The mini-exhibition will feature text and photographic based displays, archive video and artefacts dating back to the early 1800s.

The highlight from the modern era will be competition spikes and clothing from several multiple gold medallists from the IAAF World Cross Country Championships.

“I really glad to be able to donate my kit to IAAF Heritage and to support their historic exhibit in Aarhus,” confirmed Tergat.

“I’m looking forward to seeing the display when I visit the IAAF World Cross Country Championships in Aarhus.”

Tergat made history as the first   man in history to claim  the World Cross Country titles five times in a row,  winning in 1995 Durham, 1996 Stellenbosch, 1997 Turin, 1998 Marrakech and 1999 Belfast.

However, he was the second man to win the title five times after fellow country man John Ngugi.

Tergat's attempt for a sixth consecutive title ended with a bronze in Vilamoura, Portugal in 2000 where he lost to Mohammed Mourhit of Belgium.

"IAAF Heritage is delighted to announce that Kenya’s five-time world cross-country champion Paul Tergat has become the latest famous athlete to donate competition kit to the IAAF Heritage Collection," stated a statement from the IAAF.

Tergat is one of a half-a-dozen winners of the world title who have been invited to Aarhus to celebrate 200 years of cross-country running when the 43rd edition of the championships take place.

The discipline of cross-county running, as we know it today, was first recorded in 1819 in the English school of Shrewsbury as a paper chase game called ‘Hare and Hounds’.

The IAAF Heritage display takes visitors along a timeline from those early days to the establishment of the sport across the UK in the 1830s and then, via its mention in Thomas Hughes’ famous 1857 Rugby School novel Tom Brown’s School Days, across the Atlantic to America.

Cross country’s development is followed to the eventual establishment of the International Cross Country Union (ICCU) in 1903.

That same year the ICCU began the organisation of the ‘International Championships’, which steadily increasing in popularity came under the flag of the IAAF in 1973. The timeline continues through the 42 editions of the IAAF World Cross Country Championships which have taken place since.

The opening ceremony of IAAF Heritage Cross Country Running Display – 1819 to 2019 takes place in Aarhus on February 28.

The exhibit will remain open until the IAAF World Cross Country Championships Aarhus on March 30.