Manangoi eyes Stockholm World Indoor win - Capital Sports
Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Features

Manangoi eyes Stockholm World Indoor win

Elijah Manangoi when competing at 2015 World Championships in Beijing, China. PHOTO/FILE

Elijah Manangoi when competing at 2015 World Championships in Beijing, China. PHOTO/FILE

SWEDEN, February 16 –  Kenya’s upcoming 1500m world silver medallist Elijah Manangoi will be out to compete at Stockholm’s Ericsson Globe Arena in the IAAF World Indoor Meeting on Wednesday.

Manangoi who will take part in the 1000m field, face stiff competition from Djibouti’s world indoor 1500m champion Ayanleh Souleiman.

Souleiman, won the 1000m in Stockholm three years ago in a Djiboutian record of 2:17.05 before going on to improve his outdoor bests to 1:42.97 over 800m and 3:29.58 over 1500mbe joined by  World silver

In the men’s 3000m, the Kenyan contingent headed by Isiah Koech and Paul Kipsiele Koech will take on Ethiopian pair of Yenew Alamirew and 18-year-old world junior 5000m champion Yomif Kejelcha, second in the opening World Indoor Tour 3000m in Karlsruhe.

The highlight of the night will see Ethiopian Genzebe Dibaba seek a third consecutive world indoor record there in what will be her only IAAF World Indoor Tour meeting of the winter.

After setting world indoor records over 3000m and 5000m in her past two appearances at Stockholm’s Ericsson Globe Arena, Dibaba will attempt to better the 26-year-old world indoor mile record of 4:17.14 set by Romania’s Doina Melinte.

This Stockholm meeting – the third of the four events that make up the new IAAF World Indoor Tour – has hosted 16 world indoor records since its inception in 1990.

The 25-year-old Ethiopian’s world indoor record attempt is one of three scheduled on the night.

Dibaba – voted IAAF Athlete of the Year in 2015 after a season in which she won the world 1500m title and ran a world record of 3:50.07 – will expect her main opposition to come from compatriots Axumawit Embaye, the 21-year old world indoor silver medallist, and world junior silver medallist Gudaf Tsegay.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Sweden’s Abeba Aregawi, the second-fastest indoor 1500m runner of all time behind Dibaba, has had to drop out of the event with a reported back injury.

The men’s 800m brings together a potent field including Ethiopia’s world indoor champion Mohammed Aman, Poland’s world indoor silver medallist and European champion Adam Kszczot and world bronze medallist Amel Tuka of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Eight of the 13 featured events will count towards the IAAF World Indoor Tour standings, which will be completed at Saturday’s concluding meeting in Glasgow.

The individual overall winner of each event will receive Sh2.03m (USD20,000) in prize money and wild card qualification for the next edition of the IAAF World Indoor Championships, starting with next month’s competition in Portland.

The men’s 60m offers Kim Collins, the 2003 world 100m champion who turns 40 in April, the opportunity to demonstrate that he still has all it takes to remain at the forefront of world sprinting.

The man from St Kitts and Nevis takes on a field that includes 30-year-old Mike Rodgers of the United States, who ran 6.53 at the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix in Boston on Saturday to make it two wins out of two on the World Indoor Tour so far.

Collins, who has also run 6.53 this season, has beaten Rodgers in seven of their past eight meetings. Watch out too for 20-year-old Trayvon Bromell, an unexpected world 100m bronze medallist last season, who finished second behind Rodgers in Boston in 6.57.

The men’s long jump will not count towards the standings, but it will offer one of the high points of interest for home supporters as Sweden’s Michel Torneus and Andreas Otterling, respectively gold and bronze medallists at last year’s European Indoor Championships, take on a field which includes three of the top four at last year’s World Championships.

Torneus has won four of the past five editions of this meeting, but he will have his work cut out to add another victory given the presence of Australia’s Fabrice Lapierre and the Chinese pair of Wang Jianan and Gao Xinglong, respectively second, third and fourth in Beijing.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The women’s long jump, a World Indoor Tour event, is of a similarly high quality, involving Britain’s Shara Proctor, who took silver in Beijing with a national record of 7.07m, and bronze medallist Ivana Spanovic of Serbia.

Cuba’s world indoor and outdoor champion Yarisley Silva heads the entries in the women’s pole vault, which also features Brazil’s 2011 world champion Fabiana Murer and Greece’s 2015 IAAF Diamond Race winner Nikoleta Kyriakopoulou.

Home interest will centre on 2015 Swedish Athlete of the Year Angelica Bengtsson, fourth at last year’s World Championships.

Sweden’s 2012 European 400m champion Moa Hjelmer, back in the running after taking time out to have a child, will test herself in her first run in three years on this once-familiar track against the Czech Republic’s double world 400m hurdles champion Zuzana Hejnova, who has a 400m personal best of 51.27 and has run 52.85 this season.

Advertisement

More on Capital Sports

Football

NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct 27 – DStv and GOtv subscribers are in for a treat of the world’s best football this week as the 2020-21...

Football

NAIROBI, Kenya, May 25 – There is light at the end of the tunnel. After failed promises over the last three years since its...

Football

NAIROBI, Kenya, Sep 6 – Gentrix Shikangwa scored with two minutes left as Vihiga Queens sailed to the final of the CECAFA regional qualifiers...

NFL

NAIROBI, Kenya, Aug 13 – Kenya’s history making Daniel Adongo, the first Kenyan to play in America’s National Football League (NFL), is now living...

© 2024 Capital Digital Media. Capital Group Limited. All Rights Reserved