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Taking training to new heights

High-altitude Kenyan town welcomes Olympic champions and amateurs alike

China Daily | Updated: 2025-03-10 00:00
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As dawn breaks over the sleepy town of Iten, its dusty tracks come alive with packs of runners keeping a steady rhythm, often followed by cheerful children headed to school.

Some of the athletes are elite Kenyans. Others travel from farther afield.

All are here because this unassuming little town lies at about 2,400 meters above sea level and has produced some of the best long-distance runners in the world.

To cater to the ever-growing interest from both professional and amateur athletes, hotels, lodges and short-stay rental apartments continue to spring up around the town, located 350 kilometers northwest of Nairobi.

"I came to Kenya to experience this elite running community here," said Ryan Mex of Malta.

Mex, a semi-professional runner and coach, brought three athletes with him to get a competitive edge ahead of Malta's marathon season.

It's his first time here.

"Next time, I want to come with a larger group, because we really like the training environment here," Mex said. "This is the best place in the world to come for a training camp."

Olympic heritage

Iten is home to some 42,000 people, mostly subsistence farmers, and it has also been a temporary home to plenty of world champions, including two-time Olympic gold medalists Eliud Kipchoge (marathon) and David Rudisha (800m), both of Kenya. British four-time Olympic champion Mo Farah would train in Iten for months at a time.

The town was declared a World Athletics Heritage Landmark in 2019, and proudly calls itself the "Home of Champions".

Lornah Kiplagat, a Kenyan-born three-time Olympian for the Netherlands, attended high school in Iten and now runs a training center here for runners who want to up their game.

"If you train at 2,400 meters, your lungs expand, your red blood cells increase, and so when you go to low altitude you feel like you are flying," explained Kiplagat, the 2008 world half-marathon champion.

Amanal Petros, a top marathoner from Germany, spends six months at Kiplagat's center every year. Born in the Eritrean highlands, he was accustomed to running at high altitude, but Iten's elevation isn't the only reason why he keeps coming back.

"I've trained in many places in the USA and Europe," he said. "Organizing a training partner in Europe is not easy, but in Iten, the home of champions, wherever you go you find a lot of athletes who can train with you."

Jean-Paul Fourier opened the Kerio View Hotel in 2002 starting with a just few rooms. It now has capacity for 50 guests and includes a fitness center.

"I made a small investment and it has really grown," he said. The main season runs from April to September.

"We see many foreigners flocking to not only my hotel, but also neighboring hotels. There are many hotels springing up around the area, but we still get our share of visitors," he said.

Before the boom

One man here still remembers what Iten was like before all this happened: Brother Colm O'Connell, former headmaster at St Patrick's High School, the alumni of which include Rudisha, Vivian Cheruiyot, Matthew Birir and Brimin Kipruto.

O'Connell first came to Iten to teach in 1976.

"It was just a scattering of houses and a school called St Patrick's," he said. "That was really the starting point of what Iten eventually became, and what we see today."

The town's transformation started "when the sport became professional", he said.

"Before that, athletes were confined to their place of work. But, when professionalism came in, athletes could now sit down with their managers and with shoe companies and decide no, I can become a full-time career athlete."

The rest, as they say, is history. O'Connell went on to transform the athletics program at St Patrick's, and 25 of his students became world champions, some of whom returned to run their own athletics programs.

The town around the school boomed, as runners from all over the world discovered its training potential. O'Connell estimates that in peak season there are around 500 visiting runners in the town at any one time.

"We see fun runners, we have runners with personal goals, we have people running a marathon to fundraise," he said. "In other words, running is a sport for everybody, and it has something to offer everybody."

AFP

 

Maltese athletes in the company of locals train along the Iten-Kaptagat road in Iten, Elgeyo Marakwet County, Kenya, on Jan 31. AP

 

 

Eritrean-born German Amanal Petros shops at the local market in Iten, Elgeyo Marakwet County, Kenya, after training on Jan 31. AP

 

 

Running gear on sale at the Iten Club in Elgeyo Marakwet County, Kenya. AP

 

 

Iten has been a temporary home to numerous world and Olympic champions. Now, runners of all abilities and from all over the world go there to train. AP

 

 

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