Catherine Ndereba

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Catherine Nyambura Ndereba<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> (born 21 July 1972) is a retired Kenyan marathon runner. Between 2003 and 2008, she finished in the top two in five successive global championship marathons. Ndereba has twice won the marathon at the World Championships in Athletics and won silver medals at the Summer Olympic Games in 2004 and 2008, becoming Kenya's first female multi-medalist. She is also a four-time winner of the Boston Marathon and a two-time winner of the Chicago Marathon. It was at the latter in 2001 that she broke the women's marathon world record with a time of 2:18:47.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

She retired in 2012 having been described by the Chicago Tribune as the greatest women's marathoner of all time.<ref name=great/>

Career

Ndereba comes from Gatunganga in Nyeri District,<ref>Template:Cite Sports-Reference</ref> and went to Ngorano Secondary School where she pursued her running career. In 1994, she was recruited into its athletics program by the Kenya Prisons Service.<ref>The Standard, 28 October 2007: Template:Usurped</ref> Ndereba was awarded the 2004 and 2005 Kenyan Sportswoman of the Year awards.<ref>IAAF, 2 March 2006: Athletes dominate Kenyan Sports Awards</ref> She was awarded the Order of the Golden Warrior by President Mwai Kibaki in 2005.<ref name="fitting">Daily Nation, Lifestyle Magazine, 15 November 2008: Fitting tribute to Marathon Queen Template:Webarchive</ref>

Ndereba is a four time Boston Marathon winner between 2000 and 2005.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ndereba finished seventh at the 2009 London Marathon, equalling Katrin Dorre's record of 21 sub-2:30 hours marathons.<ref>IAAF, 27 April 2009: Ndereba matches Dorre’s record total of 21 sub-2:30 marathons</ref> She placed third at the Yokohama Women's Marathon later that year, finishing the course in a time of 2:29:13 hours.<ref>Catherine Ndereba. Marathon Info. Retrieved on 17 October 2011.</ref> She did not finish another marathon race until October 2011, when she crossed the line in 2:30:14 hours for third at the Beijing Marathon.<ref>Jalava, Mirko (16 October 2011). Kiprop and Wei Xiaojie triumph in Beijing. IAAF. Retrieved on 17 October 2011.</ref>

Ndereba decided to retire quietly in 2012. She had problems with the ligaments in her right ankle and she was told that it could be improved by surgery but she wanted to recover naturally. She later made the analogy of a car that needs too many repairs.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> She retired as the "greatest womens marathoner".<ref name=great>Chicago Tribune, 8 October 2008: Ranking the Top 10 women marathoners</ref>

Ndereba, whose nickname is "Catherine the Great",<ref>Marathon Great Catherine Ndereba Retires. Runner's World (2014-05-28). Retrieved 2020-05-25.</ref> lives in Nairobi with her husband Anthony Maina and daughter Jane.<ref>Hersh, Philip (2002-10-10). World record-holder Catherine Ndereba trains with her husband and sister, but it's her 5-year-old daughter who best motivates mom. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2020-05-25.</ref> Her brother Samuel and sister Anastasia are also marathon runners.<ref>Catherine Ndereba. Time. Retrieved 2020-05-25.</ref>

Achievements

Ndereba competing in the 2005 World Championships marathon.

Bibliography

  • Catherine Ndereba: The Marathon Queen, by Ng’ang’a Mbugua. Sasa Sema Publications, 2008<ref name="fitting"/>

References

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