Coaches attribute strong perfomances by Kenyan female athletes to hard work, discipline

A collage of Kenyan top female athletes.

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Athletics coaches have attributed the towering performance
by Kenya female athletes at the concluded World Athletics Championships in
Tokyo Japan to good mental and physical preparations.
Kenyan girls – Faith Kipgeon, Beatrice Chebet, Peris
Jepchirchir, Faith Cherotich and Lilian Odora- all bagged gold in their
respective discipline as Team Kenya put a strong performance to bag 11 medals
in total and top Africa, coming second overall behind the USA, and veteran
coach David Letting, says good preparations were key, even as they shift their
focus to training more women in athletics, and nurturing upcoming talents.
“The coaches have concentrated on training women, and they
are rising, that to me, is a plus,” he remarked.
Letting added that the promise given to the athletes by the
President was a motivating factor that pushed them to perform well in the
tracks.
“I would also like to thank the government for promising a
reward to the athletes, because this brought out results.”
At the same time, Bernard Rono Kalyet, coach to steeplechase
runner Faith Cherotich, also commented on the performance, attributing the
women's victory to their discipline, stating their hard efforts and focus
during training pushed them to outperform the men in the championships.
“The women were more disciplined; they gave all their energy
and focus in training,” coach Rono remarked.
He also noted that this year's training camps were better,
as they had some similarities with the Olympics training camps.
The notable performance tally were from Beatrice Chebet who had a standout tournament, winning two
golds in the women's 10,000m and 5,000m Faith Kipyegon extending her dominance
in the 1,500m, winning her fourth title on that discipline. Faith Cherotich on
the other hand set a championship record after claiming the 3,000m
steeplechase; Lilian Odira added gold, producing a dramatic victory in championship
record time of 1:54.62 in the 800m while Peres Jepchichir claimed gold in the
women's marathon with a strong finish.
These collective efforts ensured Kenya finished as one of
the top nations in Tokyo, continuing the country’s proud tradition of producing
excellent female athletes and inspiring the next generation of runners.
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