Fastest man in world over 12km to defend title at FNB Cape Town 12 ONERUN

FNB Cape Town 12 ONERUN
Morris Gachaga photo credit Tobias Ginsberg

It is official, the fastest man ever over 12km will return to defend his title at the FNB Cape Town 12 ONERUN this coming Sunday, 20 May 2018.

Morris Gachaga, the 23-year-old Kenyan, stormed to a 33:27 win at the FNB Cape Town 12 ONERUN in 2017 to set the fastest time ever recorded over the 12km distance.

Gachaga is in better shape than before.  On 09 February he finished 5th in the RAK Ras Al Khaimah Half Marathon, clocking 59.36.  That was followed up with a 3rd place finish in Lisbon where he covered the 21.1km in 60:17 on 11 March, before heading off to London as pace maker to Eliud Kipchoge who won the 2018 edition of the London Marathon.

The 59.36 (RAK Ras Al Khaimah Half Marathon) places Gachaga 8th in the world this year over the half marathon and is a personal best for him over the distance by more than a minute (1min 2sec) from his previous best of 60:38 run in Paris on 5 March 2017.

Clearly he will be coming into the race on 20 May in the best shape of his life and could potentially challenge his own “record”* time if the rest of the field go with the required pace.

“I am looking forward to coming back to Cape Town to defend my title,” says Gachaga. “I have good memories of that race and want to do well. I am in great shape.  If things go well, maybe I can better my 33:27 and lower the World Best.”

This will be Gachaga’s 3rd visit to South Africa and 2nd to Cape Town since running that World Best. Injury curtailed his chances to challenge Uganda’s Joshua Cheptegei at the inaugural FNB Durban 10K CITYSURFRUN in 2017 where he had to settle for 10th in a season’s best of 29:47.

Mathew Kiprotich Kimutai of Kenya will be making his debut appearance at the FNB Cape Town 12 ONERUN on Sunday 20 May. Kimutai will add depth to an already impressive men’s line up.  His 43:48 for 15km run in Kabarak (Kenya) on 29 July 2017, shows that he is no slouch and will be ignored at the rest of the field’s peril.

The 12km is a non-standard race and hence the time is ratified as a World Best, not a World Record.

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