Athletics Kenya Not Letting Pamela Jelimo Run in Berlin By Bob Ramsak
(c) 2008 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved May 29, 2008
BERLIN After her stunning breakout performance at the FBK Games in
Hengelo last Saturday, Pamela Jelimo can be forgiven for getting just a
little bit ahead of herself.
Moments after her brilliant 1:55.76 run, a world junior record and the
fastest 800m in the world in five years, the 19-year-old told reporters
that her next outing would come at Sunday's AF Golden League opener in
Berlin.
But as Kenyan media are reporting, Athletics Kenya, the countrys
governing body, may have other ideas. Aiming to keep their latest star
fresh for the Olympic Games, the federation apparently hasnt granted
permission for her to compete, requesting instead that she report to a
pre-Olympic training camp post haste.
The world will have to wait just a little bit longer for another
glimpse of the fleet-footed super teen, whose feat on Saturday landed
her in the No. 20 spot all-time in just her first race on the
international circuit.
That was unbelievable! said Ellen van Langen, the 1992 Olympic 800m
champion and a leading organizer of the Hengelo meet, after Jelimo can
within a stride of the 1:55.54 which brought the Dutchwoman gold in
Atlanta. Just amazing.
It was the first outing for Jelimo after taking gold at the African
Championships, where she clocked an impressive 1:58.70 in the altitude
of Addis Ababa in what was, by many accounts, only her second outing
over the distance.
Jelimo spoke calmly and matter-of-factly after her race, simply
explaining how the change in altitude between the Ethiopian capital and
Hengelo venues impacted her performance, as if it wasn't a particularly
big deal.
In Ethiopia where it was very high I ran 1:58, but here where it is
lower, I knew I could run much better, which is what I did.
Better in fact, than the worlds current No. 1 in the event, Kenyan
Janeth Jepkosgei, who set the previous Kenyan record of 1:56.04 at last
summers world championships.
Jelimo said she looked up to Jepkosgei as an idol. Both are from
Kapsabet in Kenyas Rift Valley, and train together. Despite one-upping
her idol, Jelimo insists there is no rivalry.
I dont see any problem because if were from the same place, and train together, then it is ok.
Before her victory at the African Championships trials in Nairobi on
April 19, where she clocked 2:01.02, Jelimo was a sprinter with modest
credentials by world standards. She won the African junior 400m title
in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, last year, with a personal best 54.93,
and clocked a clocked a national junior record of 24.68 in the 200m.
The explanation for moving up in distance was just as straightforward.
Last year I was sprinting in the 400 meters, but after many struggles in training, I managed to improve my times.
As was her prediction for her next race, whenever and wherever it may come.
I was very happy with the race, she said in Hengelo, and I think I will do much better than Ive done today.
In the meantime, Jepkosgei will be the clear favorite at Sundays
DBK-ISTAF meet in Berlin where shell kick off her chase for a slice of
the $1 million AF Golden League Jackpot in her 2008 debut. The field
also includes Australian Tamsyn Lewis, the reigning world indoor
champion; Jamaican national record holder Kenia Sinclair; Russian, an
Osaka finalists Svetlana Klyuka of Russia and Brigita Langerholc of
Slovenia; and Ukrainian Tetyana Petlyuk, the world indoor silver
medallist.