The Daily Telegraph

Runner who in 1964 became Kenya’s first Olympic medallist

- Wilson Kiprugut Wilson Kiprugut, born 1938, died November 1 2022

WILSON KIPRUGUT, who has died aged 84, was a runner who became Kenya’s first Olympic medallist when he took bronze in the 800 metres in Tokyo in 1964, less than a year after his country became independen­t; he went one better four years later when he won silver in Mexico City.

Since that first triumph there have been 113 more Kenyan visits to the Olympic podium (106 of them in athletics), but it was Kiprugut who opened the floodgates. “Back then, in internatio­nal races we really feared the white man,” he recalled. “We thought he was powerful in everything and that no African could outrun him. To bag a bronze medal back then was no mean feat as we lacked proper training facilities, profession­al coaches and even running shoes.”

Wilson Arap Chuma Kiprugut was born in 1938 in the town of Kericho, in the far west of the country, and began running as a schoolboy. “I used to make a round trip of 40km each day to school, a thing that helped me to develop my running ability and enhanced my athletics stamina,” he recalled.

Indeed, he did start out as a long-distance runner before concluding he had more chance in shorter events. In 1958 he competed in his first East and Central African Championsh­ip, at which he was spotted by army scouts and recruited into the African Rifles, on the basis that he would be able to devote himself largely to athletics (he eventually rose to the rank of sergeant).

In 1962 he was in the Kenyan team that finished fifth in the 4 x 440 yards relay at the Commonweal­th Games in Perth, Australia – he always maintained that a bout of sickness in the team put them out of the medals – and he was eliminated in the 440 yards heats. But two years later came his chance to shine.

In Tokyo in 1964 he went out of the 400m in the quarter-finals, but was amply compensate­d by bronze in the 800m; the New Zealander Peter Snell took gold, ahead of the Canadian Bill Crothers. Kiprugut blamed a shove from the Jamaican runner George Kerr for his failure to finish better than third.

“I was the one who led the tightly packed field at 200 and at 400,” he recalled. “When Kerr pushed me, I was lucky to be strong and of good stamina, otherwise I would have fallen by the tracks.”

More medals began to come Kiprugut’s way, and in 1965, at the inaugural All-africa Games, at Brazzavill­e in Congo, he won double gold, in the 400m and 800m. In 1966, at the British Empire and Commonweal­th Games at Kingston in Jamaica, he won silver in the 880 yards.

It was at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City that Kenyan athletics finally came storming off the blocks: 11 track medals were won in six events, including gold in the 1,500m, 3,000m steeplecha­se and the 10,000m. Kip Keino was the Kenyan star, winning the 1,500m and taking silver in the 5,000m.

In his final big championsh­ip, Kiprugut was one of the favourites for the 800m and progressed through his heats with ease. He led for most of the way in the final before being overhauled on the final bend by Ralph Doubell.

The Australian’s winning time of 1:44.3 equalled the world record, while Kiprugut’s was the thirdfaste­st performanc­e in history at that time and an African record that stood until 1974.

Kiprugut retired from the track in 1969, remaining with the army as a fitness instructor for another five years. He later worked as a supervisor on a tea plantation for Unilever near his home town as well as running his own farm, where he was noted for his generosity to travellers passing through.

His fame endured, and in 2010 he was named Kenyan Sports Personalit­y of the Year. Kericho Green Stadium was renamed Wilson Kiprugut Chumo Stadium.

Wilson Kiprugut’s wife predecease­d him; they had nine children.

 ?? ?? Won Olympic bronze and silver
Won Olympic bronze and silver

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