What you need to know:
On Sunday, Eliud Kipchoge made world headlines again when he smashed his own world record with a time of 2 hours, 1 minute, and 9 seconds in the Berlin Marathon. With that, he sliced 30 seconds off his previous best mark of 2:1.39 on the same course in 2018.
Ethiopia’s Tigist Assefa won the women’s race in a course record of 2:15.37. There were two remarkable things about that. First, it was a head-spinning 18 minutes faster than she had ever run before. Secondly, she wasn’t on anyone’s favourite-to-win list.
Kipchoge is not a pimple-faced lad in his late teens. He is 37. Yet he had run so fast he crossed the line four minutes and 49 seconds ahead of fellow Kenyan Mark Korir. If Kipchoge had been given to the dramatic, he would have had a rapid shower and dried himself just as Korir came home.
Despite all that, there he was, saying, “My legs and my body still feel young. But the most important thing is my mind, and that also feels fresh and young.” The man might bring this thing below two hours before he turns 40.
If this were just about the marathon, it wouldn’t be in the Op-Eds but on the sports page. The spectacular success of Kipchoge and other long-distance stars from Ethiopia, Uganda, Morocco, and others, is an allegory of the possibility of national progress and African global competitiveness.
He and his ilk have taken natural resources and opportunity and turned them into world-beating products. It is something Africa is very bad at. The Democratic Republic of Congo is often spoken of as the world’s most resource-rich country, but it has done bugger all with it. It is one of the world’s poorest countries and remains mired in conflict. If you have that much natural wealth, you can buy a lot of peace and stability with it if you are smart in its use; ask the Saudis, Emiratis, and Qataris.
There have been plans to build a Grand Inga dam on the Congo River. Its potential can provide up to 40 per cent of the electricity needs of Africa. That, proponents proudly say, would be more than twice the power generated by the most powerful dam in the world, the Three Gorges Dam in China. Nothing has happened. The Kipchoge treatment would have that dam up, and supplying power-cut plagued South Africa and Nigeria.
Take Lake Victoria, Africa’s largest lake by surface area, the world’s largest tropical lake, and the world’s second-largest freshwater lake by surface area. It’s shared by Tanzania, Uganda, and Kenya. If these three countries did what Kipchoge does, they would be the world’s largest suppliers of freshwater fish. Instead, they import fish from China (fish that China catches from other African waters and re-exports to the continent).
Until recently, Nigeria was Africa’s largest exporter of oil. Now, because of corruption, theft, and sabotage, it’s the fourth, behind Angola, Algeria and Libya. Except for Algeria, all the other three import refined fuel products. And Nigeria and Angola are plagued by fuel shortages at the pumps.
If Nigeria did a Kipchoge, it would be one of the world’s leading exporters of refined fuel products.
Economists keep throwing figures to show that Africa is de-industrialising. That could be because they are measuring the wrong thing. One of the biggest industries in Africa is whining and moaning about how Europe, the Americans, the Chinese, the Gulf states, and everyone else is exploiting and rigging the global system against us.
Yes, global injustices and imperialist exploitation must be called out and resisted, but the payoff is in overcoming and bragging about it. Africa is paralysed by whining and blaming all its miseries on an evil world. Too many of us believe that it is impossible to overcome the odds.
In 2019, Kipchoge tackled this problem by demonstrating the “impossible” was possible. Running records are notoriously hard to break. The first official marathon world record was at the 1908 Olympics by John Hayes of the U.S. team. He ran it in 2:55.18.
It has taken humanity 114 years to shave 54 minutes off it. By now, we have long been to the moon, landed on Mars, and cloned animals.
Running the marathon in under two hours seemed like something that would wait for another generation until Kipchoge had something to do with it.
He broke the two-hour barrier in the Ineos159 Challenge in Vienna in 2019, clocking 1:59.40.2. The result didn’t count toward an official marathon official because he ran it under controlled, near-laboratory conditions.
He was the only competitor and had 41 pacesetters, who were divided into nine teams. That meant for every four kilometres plus, he had a set of fresh pacesetters. The point had been made.
If we were all Kipchoges, we’d say Africa would be a world superpower and its richest continent, and just do it.
On Sunday, Eliud Kipchoge made world headlines again when he smashed his own world record with a time of 2 hours, 1 minute, and 9 seconds in the Berlin Marathon. With that, he sliced 30 seconds off his previous best mark of 2:1.39 on the same course in 2018.
Ethiopia’s Tigist Assefa won the women’s race in a course record of 2:15.37. There were two remarkable things about that. First, it was a head-spinning 18 minutes faster than she had ever run before. Secondly, she wasn’t on anyone’s favourite-to-win list.
Kipchoge is not a pimple-faced lad in his late teens. He is 37. Yet he had run so fast he crossed the line four minutes and 49 seconds ahead of fellow Kenyan Mark Korir. If Kipchoge had been given to the dramatic, he would have had a rapid shower and dried himself just as Korir came home.
Despite all that, there he was, saying, “My legs and my body still feel young. But the most important thing is my mind, and that also feels fresh and young.” The man might bring this thing below two hours before he turns 40.
If this were just about the marathon, it wouldn’t be in the Op-Eds but on the sports page. The spectacular success of Kipchoge and other long-distance stars from Ethiopia, Uganda, Morocco, and others, is an allegory of the possibility of national progress and African global competitiveness.
He and his ilk have taken natural resources and opportunity and turned them into world-beating products. It is something Africa is very bad at. The Democratic Republic of Congo is often spoken of as the world’s most resource-rich country, but it has done bugger all with it. It is one of the world’s poorest countries and remains mired in conflict. If you have that much natural wealth, you can buy a lot of peace and stability with it if you are smart in its use; ask the Saudis, Emiratis, and Qataris.
There have been plans to build a Grand Inga dam on the Congo River. Its potential can provide up to 40 per cent of the electricity needs of Africa. That, proponents proudly say, would be more than twice the power generated by the most powerful dam in the world, the Three Gorges Dam in China. Nothing has happened. The Kipchoge treatment would have that dam up, and supplying power-cut plagued South Africa and Nigeria.
Take Lake Victoria, Africa’s largest lake by surface area, the world’s largest tropical lake, and the world’s second-largest freshwater lake by surface area. It’s shared by Tanzania, Uganda, and Kenya. If these three countries did what Kipchoge does, they would be the world’s largest suppliers of freshwater fish. Instead, they import fish from China (fish that China catches from other African waters and re-exports to the continent).
Until recently, Nigeria was Africa’s largest exporter of oil. Now, because of corruption, theft, and sabotage, it’s the fourth, behind Angola, Algeria and Libya. Except for Algeria, all the other three import refined fuel products. And Nigeria and Angola are plagued by fuel shortages at the pumps.
If Nigeria did a Kipchoge, it would be one of the world’s leading exporters of refined fuel products.
Economists keep throwing figures to show that Africa is de-industrialising. That could be because they are measuring the wrong thing. One of the biggest industries in Africa is whining and moaning about how Europe, the Americans, the Chinese, the Gulf states, and everyone else is exploiting and rigging the global system against us.
Yes, global injustices and imperialist exploitation must be called out and resisted, but the payoff is in overcoming and bragging about it. Africa is paralysed by whining and blaming all its miseries on an evil world. Too many of us believe that it is impossible to overcome the odds.
In 2019, Kipchoge tackled this problem by demonstrating the “impossible” was possible. Running records are notoriously hard to break. The first official marathon world record was at the 1908 Olympics by John Hayes of the U.S. team. He ran it in 2:55.18.
It has taken humanity 114 years to shave 54 minutes off it. By now, we have long been to the moon, landed on Mars, and cloned animals.
Running the marathon in under two hours seemed like something that would wait for another generation until Kipchoge had something to do with it.
He broke the two-hour barrier in the Ineos159 Challenge in Vienna in 2019, clocking 1:59.40.2. The result didn’t count toward an official marathon official because he ran it under controlled, near-laboratory conditions.
He was the only competitor and had 41 pacesetters, who were divided into nine teams. That meant for every four kilometres plus, he had a set of fresh pacesetters. The point had been made.
If we were all Kipchoges, we’d say Africa would be a world superpower and its richest continent, and just do it.
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