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Pamela Chepchumba

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Pamela Chepchumba (born March 8, 1979, in Kapsait, West Pokot District) is an athlete from Kenya. Her best achievements are from cross country running.

Aged only 13, Chemchumba competed at the 1992 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, finishing 27th in the junior race. Still at junior level, she participated in the 1994 and 1995 edition of IAAF World Cross Country Championships, finishing 7th and 10th respectively. At the time she took a break in running to concentrate in schooling, where she was lagging. She went to Kapkenda Secondary School in 1997.[1]

Pamela Chepchumba was suspended for two years after testing positive for EPO at the 2003 IAAF World Cross Country Championships held in Lausanne, Switzerland.[2] She had finished sixth, but was disqualified.[3] She returned in 2005 and won the Udine Half Marathon.[1]

Her husband Boaz Kimaiyo is also a runner, as is her younger brother Nicholas Koech, who mainly competes in road races. She has two daughters (as of 2007). She is managed by Federico Rosa and coached by Eric Kimaiyo.[1]

Achievements

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Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
Representing  Kenya
1993 World Cross Country Championships Amorebieta, Spain 2nd Junior Race (4.45 km) 14:09
1994 World Junior Championships Lisbon, Portugal 5th 3000m 9:13.33
2000 World Half Marathon Championships Veracruz, Mexico 5th Half marathon 1:11:33
2001 World Cross Country Championships Ostend, Belgium 5th Long Race (7.7 km) 28:20
1st Long Team Race 18 pts
2002 World Cross Country Championships Dublin, Ireland 9th Long Race (7.974 km) 27:30
World Half Marathon Championships Brussels, Belgium 5th Half marathon 1:09:30
2007 World Cross Country Championships Mombasa, Kenya 6th Long Race (8 km) 27:34
World Road Running Championships Udine, Italy 3rd Half marathon 1:08:06
1st Team Race 3:23:33
2008 World Road Running Championships Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 3rd Half marathon 1:10:01
2nd Team Race 3:31:24

More achievements

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See also

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References

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Pamela Chepchumba at World Athletics Edit this at Wikidata

  1. ^ a b c IAAF, October 10, 2007: Focus on Kenya - Pamela Chepchumba
  2. ^ BBC Sports, September 5, 2003: Kiptanui anger at doping rise
  3. ^ a b Daily Nation, May 28, 2003: Kenyan tests positive for banned drug
  4. ^ Arrs.net: List of Parelloop winners
  5. ^ "AIMS: World Running". www.aims-association.org. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2018-05-02.
  6. ^ AIMS: Running into the heart of Africa
  7. ^ "AIMS: World Running". www.aims-association.org. Retrieved 2018-05-02.
  8. ^ "Women 2006 - Beijing Marathon". Archived from the original on 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2007-12-04. Beijing marathon 2006 results
  9. ^ "AIMS: World Running". www.aims-association.org. Retrieved 2018-05-02.
  10. ^ a b c d e trackandfieldnews.com: Main Contenders
  11. ^ IAAF, December 2, 2007: Cheruiyot wins in debut, Chepchumba cruises to personal best in Milan
  12. ^ IAAF, November 20, 2008: Chepchumba returns to defend; organisers hopeful of records – Milan Marathon PREVIEW
  13. ^ September 21, 2008: Wanjiru, Chepchumba take Half Marathon victories in Porto
  14. ^ October 18, 2009: Gebrselassie just outside 60 minutes at Porto Half