Daniel Komen

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Not to be confused with Daniel Kipchirchir Komen.
Medal record
Men’s Athletics
Competitor for Flag of Kenya Kenya
World Championships
Gold 1997 Athens 5.000 m

Daniel Kipngetich Komen (born May 17, 1976 in Elgeyo-Marakwet District) is a Kenyan middle- and long-distance runner. Komen is the first and only man to achieve back-to-back sub-four-minute miles, and is also the second man (after Said Aouita) ever to break both the 13-minute mark in the 5,000-meter run and the 3½-minute mark for the 1,500-meter run. He currently holds the indoor and outdoor world records for the 3,000 meters.

Komen is from the Keiyo sub-tribe of Kalenjin people in the Rift Valley of Kenya. He is one of thirteen children and began running at the age of seven as a means of getting to school. He rose to prominence in the mid-1990s after his exceptional junior career: at age 17, he placed second at the World Junior Cross Country Championships, and in 1994, he became the World Junior Champion in the 5,000 meters and 10,000 meters.

On September 1, 1996 in Rieti, Italy, Komen ran a spectacular world record time of 7:20.67 in the 3000 metres, breaking Noureddine Morceli's former record by 4.4 seconds.

A year later, Komen made history again. In Hechtel, Belgium, Komen became the first man to run two miles in under eight minutes, clocking a world record 7:58. Just seven months later, at an Australian athletics meet in Sydney, Komen ran another 7:58. These unprecedented sub-eight-minute feats remain unique to this day.

Komen's indoor 3,000-meter record of 7:24.90, set in Budapest on Feb 6, 1998, is still referred to as "Mount Everest"[1] in athletics circles and has been bettered only twice outdoors, one of them being Komen's own world record.

Other accolades include being the 1997 World Championships in Athletics and 1998 Commonwealth Games 5,000-meter champion.

Daniel Komen's personal records, and their place on the world ranking of all times, as of September 2007:

Distance Time All-Time Rank Date Place
1500 Meters 3:29.46 49th August 16, 1997 Monaco
1 Mile 3:46.38 12th August 26, 1997 Berlin
2000 Meters 4:51.30 13th June 5, 1998 Milano
3000 Meters 7:20.67 World Record September 1, 1996 Rieti
2 Miles 7:58.61 World Best July 19, 1997[2] Hechtel
5000 Meters 12:39.74 3rd August 22, 1997 Brussels
10,000 Meters 27:38.32 471 August 30, 2002 Brussels
Records
Preceded by
Flag of Algeria Noureddine Morceli
Men's 3.000m World Record Holder
September 1, 1996
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Flag of Kenya Moses Kiptanui
Men's 3.000m Best Year Performance
1996
Succeeded by
Flag of Ethiopia Haile Gebrselassie
Preceded by
Flag of Ethiopia Haile Gebrselassie
Men's 5.000m Best Year Performance
19961997
Succeeded by
Flag of Ethiopia Haile Gebrselassie

[edit] References

  1. ^ IAAF website, paragraph 12 of the article
  2. ^ World Records and Best Performances

[edit] External links