Mary Wacera Ngugi

Mary Wacera Ngugi (born 17 December 1988) is a Kenyan long-distance runner who competes in road running events. She holds personal bests of 66:29 minutes for the half marathon, 31:28 minutes for the 10K run, and 2:27:36 for the marathon.

Mary Wacera Ngugi
Medal record
Women's athletics
Representing  Kenya
World Half Marathon Championships
2016 CardiffTeam
2014 CopenhagenTeam
2014 CopenhagenIndividual
2016 CardiffIndividual

As a junior, she was a 5000 metres bronze medallist at the 2006 World Junior Championships in Athletics and the 2007 African junior champion. She is the widow of Samuel Wanjiru, the 2008 Olympic champion in the marathon, and had a daughter with him in 2010.

Biography

Early career

Her first major international appearance was in the 5000 metres at the 2006 World Junior Championships in Athletics. In a strong field featuring future world champions Florence Kiplagat and Bai Xue, she took the bronze medal.[1] She topped the 5000 m podium at the 2007 African Junior Athletics Championships, seeing off a challenge from the reigning world junior cross country champion Pauline Korikwiang.[2]

She made her debut on the major European track circuit in 2008, running at the Golden Gala, but was some way off the winner.[3] She won the Kenya Police title in the 5000 m that year.[4] In 2009, she ran track bests of 8:55.89 minutes for the 3000 metres and 15:20.30 minutes for the 5000 m. She defended her Kenyan Police Championship title and also had some success in cross country running, placing at the Lotto Cross Cup de Hannut and winning the Le Mans Cross Country.[3]

Marriage to Samuel Wanjiru

It was in 2009 that Wacera met Samuel Wanjiru, the 2008 Olympic marathon champion. The two ran at the same track in Nyahururu and soon bonded, with the pair legally marrying in December 2009. This caused relationship issues as Wanjiru already had two children by Terezah Njeri, whom he had married in a traditional ceremony, but not a legal one. Wacera, Njeri and Wanjiru's mother all lived on the same street and frequently argued with Wanjiru, who began drinking in excess and ceased his training.[5] Wacera had a child with Wanjiru around August 2010 called Ann, after Wanjiru's mother.[6] On St. Valentine's Day in 2011 Njeri and Wanjiru publicly reconciled on television and the runner swore that Njeri was his official wife, rather than Wacera.[5]

Wanjiru had relationships with further women and on 15 May 2011 he returned to his residence with Jane Nduta, a waitress he was dating. Njeri arrived soon after and the women began arguing, resulting in Njeri leaving the residence in anger after locking Wanjiru and Nduta in the bedroom. Wanjiru fell off the upstairs balcony of his house and subsequently died due to the injuries he sustained in the fall. His death was ruled as suicide, although many family members suggested he was murdered and police did not properly conduct a forensic investigation of the scene.[5] Wacera, Njeri and Wanjiru's mother were in dispute of the funeral arrangements and management of the estate, with Njeri claiming to be Wanjiru's legal wife at time of death and Wacera and Wanjiru's mother claiming that Wacera had that position, legally.[7]

Return to running

Wacera began competing in road running competitions towards the end of 2012, including a 10K run best of 31:28 minutes and a win at the Semi Marathon Saint Denis in a time of 70:54 minutes.[3] The former mark ranked her 11th in the world that year for the event.[8] She made three outing ver the half marathon distance in 2013: she was third at the Nice Half Marathon and the Mardi Gras Half Marathon, but came only fifth at the Luanda Half Marathon. She also had success in her track specialty, coming second in the 5000 m at the Police Championships, before winning at the Kenyan Athletics Championships. She failed to finish at the trial event for the 2013 World Championships in Athletics, however.[3]

At the start of 2014 she established herself among the top road runners by winning the World's Best 10K, defeating Gladys Cherono, Linet Masai and 2013 champion Joyce Chepkirui.[9] Her first senior international medal followed in March at the 2014 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships. Part of a strong Kenyan women's team that won the team gold by taking all top five positions, Wacera ran a personal best of 67:44 minutes for second place behind Gladys Cherono.[10]

17 January 2016 - Mary Wacera won Houston Half Marathon in 66:29. Mary's time is a United States soil record.

Personal bests

gollark: That is a very, very big if, and I don't think your conclusion follows from that in any case.
gollark: The first one is meant as a hierarchy of arguments, the second one is meant to be of disagreements themselves.
gollark: Also this.
gollark: "Lies" isn't much of an argument. I have a diagram *somewhere*.
gollark: What specifically are you calling lies, and what's your evidence?

References

  1. Chinese Xue Wins Women's 5000m. Xinhua (2006-06-18). Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  2. 2007 African Junior Championships Archived 2014-04-07 at the Wayback Machine. World Junior Athletics History (2012-12-01). Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  3. Mercy Wacera. Tilastopaja. Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  4. Njenga, Peter (2008-06-06). Wins for Wacera and Kitwara; Kiprop through to 1500m final – Kenyan Police champs, Day 1. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  5. Epstein, David (2012-04-16). To Run In Kenya, To Run In The World: The Mercurial Life and Mysterious Death of Sammy Wanjiru. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  6. Wanjiru's mother claims son was murdered in bedroom. The Standard (2011-05-11). Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  7. Kenyan Marathon hero's kin in court over funeral. The East African (2011-05-19). Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  8. 10 Kilometres - women - senior - outdoor - 2012. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  9. Clavelo Robinson, Javier (2014-02-24). Kenyan double for Karoki and Wacera at World’s Best 10K. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
  10. Rowbottom, Mike (2014-03-29). Cherono leads historic Kenyan sweep – IAAF/AL-Bank World Half Marathon Championships. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-04-03.
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