Kamworor focused

Kamworor to compete at Copenhagen Half Marathon

In Summary

• Kamworor won his first World Half Marathon in 2014, victories he repeated in in 2016 and in Valencia two years after that.

•Apart from the CPH Half, Kamworor will also be lining up for this year’s New York Marathon

Geoffrey Kamworor of Kenya competes in the Men’s 10,000 metres Final during 15th IAAF 2015 World Athletics Championships
Geoffrey Kamworor of Kenya competes in the Men’s 10,000 metres Final during 15th IAAF 2015 World Athletics Championships
Image: File

Three-time world half marathon champion Geoffrey Kamworor will headline the Copenhagen Half Marathon, an IAAF Gold Label road race, on September 15.

Over the past five years or so, Kamworor has been absolutely dominant on the half marathon scene, a streak that began in Copenhagen, where he — a bit surprisingly —won his first World Half Marathon in 2014, victories he repeated in in 2016 and in Valencia two years after that.

In the interim, he also raced to world cross country triumphs in 2015 and 2017 making him one of the most dominant championship distance runners of the past decade. The 26-year-old will return to the Danish capital on September 15 for the fifth edition of the Copenhagen Half Marathon with a clear mission: to run fast.

“Over these past few years, Kamworor has become the biggest name in the world of running, if we leave the marathon distance out of the account," said Henrik Paulsen, director of Sports at Sparta, the club that organises the race.

"His achievements speak for themselves. The only thing missing on his resume now is probably a world record. Therefore we are very excited that he has announced that he will be coming to Copenhagen to achievement a fast time.”

Kamworor was a pre-race favourite at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships Aarhus 2019 in Denmark in March. He, however,  had to settle for the third position on that occasion. In May, he once again clearly demonstrated his current strength when winning a ten-mile road race in Bern, Switzerland, clocking 44:57 to become the 11th fastest to ever cover the distance.

“Apart from the CPH Half, Kamworor will also be lining up for this year’s New York Marathon," Paulsen said. "These two competitions are top priorities to him and we should expect to see Kamworor in super shape and with the capacity to run really fast. This was evident at the world half-marathon championships in Valencia last year, where he ran the last 5kms in 12:58, which is just insanely fast."

The race record is 58:40 set by Bahrain's Abraham Cheroben in 2017