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