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Ebenyo Laments Injury Has Stopped Him from Defending Okpekpe Road Race Title
Kenyan athlete Daniel Ebenyo has expressed sadness over how injury has stopped him from becoming the first man to successfully defend an Okpekpe 10km International Road Race title.
The Kenyan top runner is also lamenting his inability to be the first man to break 28 minutes at the race after setting a 28:28 course record in 2023.
The 28-year-old won the men’s title last year and had promise to return to Nigeria this year but an injury he sustained in training means he will not be in Okpekpe to defend his title.
“I had a dream to be the first man to defend my title and and run another course record but definitely I can’t again,” wrote the Kenyan in a message to the Okpekpe race media.
Ebenyo, like the good sportsman that he is, is wishing the athletes who will compete for honours this year all the best.
“I am hereby wishing all the runners all the best and may the best athlete win,” said the defending champion.
Ebenyo also has nice words for the organisers of the world-class, gold label 10km road race.
“Okpekpe is always a bridge and a mother to all races in Africa. God bless Okpekpe and God bless the organiser of the race. See you next year,” wrote Ebenyo who made the podium at both the World Athletics Championships in Budapest and World Athletics Road Running championships in Riga after emerging Okpekpe race champion last year.
This year’s race is the 10th in the series and organisers have assured of another world-class event come May 25 in Okpekpe in Edo State of Nigeria.
The race is the first road race in Nigeria to have its course measured by a World Athletics’ certified measurer and the first in West Africa to be granted label status to depicts its world-class status.