The Star Malaysia - Star2

Daring to dream

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WHEN Malaysia was formed on Sept 16, 1963, three stripes were added to the Jalur Gemilang (at the time, Bendera Malaysia) as well as three more points to the Malaysian flag’s 11-point star; both to signify the addition of Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore.

The fourteenth stripe and point, which remained upon Singapore’s leaving on Aug 9, 1965, eventually came to be associated with Malaysia’s federal territorie­s of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan, and Putrajaya.

Four years ago on the Malaysia Day of 2018, against the backdrop of Australia’s Sydney Opera House, Jalur Gemilang sprinted to a Guinness World Record (GWR) – figurative­ly, on the back of Yayasan MSU scholar Mohd Syahidan Alias.

The citizen runner currently undertakin­g Bachelor in Education (Physical Education and Health) (Hons) studies via the MicroCrede­ntial programme at the Management and Science University (MSU) School of Education and Social Sciences (SESS) clocked two hours, 54 minutes, 34 seconds to set the GWR for the Fastest Full Marathon Dressed in National Flag Costume at the Blackmores Running Festival in Sydney. Shattering a previous record of three hours 29 minutes, this was one of four feats that included a costume – the other three record setters were dressed as a surfer, a French maid, and a monk.

Describing himself as a citizen runner because he is a working adult with a passion for running, Mohd Syahidan is profession­ally as well as popularly and affectiona­tely called Edan Syah. Born in Terengganu but raised in Selangor, Edan started running on his own and at a later age. Growing up with both his parents as school teachers, Edan had otherwise never had sports as his natural environmen­t or a career option. Yet the regular guy with a day job as Coach at Smart Athletics Club (SAC), who had self-trained to save on coaching fees, went on to make a name in the arena.

“Dreams are good only if you commit to them. I dared to dream because I dared to work towards them. There is no shortcut to excellence; hard work beats talent. With discipline and time management, have faith that the magic will happen.”

Ever since Edan began running full marathons in 2011, he has been travelling the world for nearly 10 years now with the support of sponsors.

He went to the Abbott World Marathon Majors with a goal of clocking below the three-hour mark, and finished all six (Berlin Marathon, Boston Marathon twice, Chicago Marathon, London Marathon, New York Marathon, and Tokyo Marathon) in four years. He even finished his first Boston Marathon in 2015 as the youngest and fastest Malaysian marathoner. In 2016, Edan was honoured with “Malaysia’s Top Marathoner”, and became the first independen­t Malaysian marathoner to qualify for the SEA Games Marathon 2017 on merit as well as selected for the National Kita Juara Program at the age of 30.

On his maiden ultramarat­hon in 2018, at the Great Ocean Road Running Festival (GORRF) of Apollo Bay, Australia, representi­ng Malaysia with the support of Visit Victoria, Edan emerged the Men Open Champion and set a new record with his four hours 29 minutes – the best performanc­e by an Asian against the event’s 60km distance. And all that he had set out to do was only to complete the distance.

Inspired by Japanese citizen runner Yuki Kawauchi – the Boston Marathon 2018’s Men’s Champion – Edan has completed 33 full marathons to date and records a personal best of two hours 30 minutes; which he achieved at the Gold Coast Australia Marathon in 2017.

“I would like to thank MSU president Professor Tan Sri Datuk Wira Dr Mohd Shukri Ab Yajid for his trust and confidence in me to pursue my higher education with the support of Yayasan MSU. I had never expected to return to university at the age of 35.

“It was challengin­g at first to juggle classes, assignment­s, projects, exams and presentati­ons with my current coaching job, while also working at improving my running fitness for future marathons. Yet, I’ve had a fantastic time working with my classmates over the past six months, and I’m surprised that I’ve been able to balance my studies and obtain decent grades in my first semester.”

Because the best kind of learning does not train you to win but instead teaches you what winning might mean – build your capacity to act, for example – Edan keeps running not only towards his dreams but also towards where he can help.

“Physical education has become even more vital and critical for society, what with the recent Covid-19 pandemic. We are built to move, and many of our body’s systems perform better when we exercise regularly. I want to inspire and assist future generation­s in improving personal health through physical education. Eventually, I’d like for everyone to learn to run smart, but my current mission is to encourage everyone to stay active through physical activity. I hope more school athletes and fitness enthusiast­s will join me on the Bachelor in Education (Physical Education and Health) (Hons) programme under the School of Education and Social Sciences at MSU, and become transforma­tional leaders educating society about health and physical education.”

Edan is the Head Coach responsibl­e for bringing MSU its first athletics medal via the 3,000km Steeplecha­se event of SUKIPT 2022. He was a key facilitato­r/participan­t in the MSU Malaysia Book of Record ‘The Longest Non-Stop Baton Relay Run’ (168 hours; 2,352km; 7 days, 2 nights) in conjunctio­n with MSU’s AIDS Awareness Campaign of 2009. He also led flag bearers comprising medallists of SUKIPT 2022 into the MSU Chancellor Hall at the closing ceremony of MSU MyDay and Merdeka celebratio­n.

 ?? ?? syahidan (left) with prof Tan sri dr mohd shukri.
syahidan (left) with prof Tan sri dr mohd shukri.

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