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Yego confident he will win Kenya's first javelin medal in Rio

Julius Yego, the pioneeringKenyan thrower, said on Saturday that he believes he will win the country's first javelin medal at the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro this summer.Yego has become a sporting trailblazer in a country famed for its runners as the firstKenyan athlete to win a Commonwealth Games gold in a field event in 2014, a feat he then repeated at an even higher level in last year's world championships.

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by REUTERS

News20 January 2019 - 11:58
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Julius Yego of Kenya celebrates after winning gold at the men's javelin throw final during the 15th IAAF World Championships at the National Stadium in Beijing. Photo/REUTERS

Julius Yego, the pioneering

Kenyan thrower, said on Saturday that he believes he will win the country's first javelin medal at the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro this summer.

Yego has become a sporting trailblazer in a country famed for its runners as the first

Kenyan athlete to win a Commonwealth Games gold in a field event in 2014, a feat he then repeated at an even higher level in last year's world championships.

Yet now the 27-year-old Yego has set his sights on the ultimate prize by becoming

Kenya's first Olympic javelin medallist. Only a miracle can stop him, says his coach Joseph Mosonik.

"Everybody thinks I should win a medal,

Kenya's first javelin medal in Rio. Even myself, I think I will do it. I have a feeling that I will do it," Yego said at the

Kenyan Police Championships on Saturday after winning with a modest throw of 78 metres.

"Rio is three months away and I am looking forward to a good build up. I am well ahead of my schedule, almost 60 percent fit at the moment, and obviously better than this time last year.

"I am waiting for communication from my manager on future competitions although I know I will be in Eugene (for the Diamond League meeting) at the end of May," Yego added.

Yego, who caused a sensation by winning the world title in Beijing last year, is in even better shape this year, according to Mosonik.

"Last year, he threw 74 metres in his first competition. This year he threw 78 metres last week at his first competition in Eldoret and 78 again today," Mosonik told Reuters.

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