Education
He entered the 2006 Berlin Marathon as a pacemaker, but finished the race 9th.
long-distance runner marathon runner athletics competitor
He entered the 2006 Berlin Marathon as a pacemaker, but finished the race 9th.
He had back-to-back wins in the World Championships Marathon in 2009 and 2011. Kirui started running while in Samitui Primary School. He set his personal best (2:06:51) in the classic distance on 30 September 2007 at the Berlin Marathon, where he finished second after Haile Gebrselassie, who set a new marathon world record.
The time made Kirui the sixth fastest marathoner in 2007.
He finished third in the 2009 Rotterdam Marathon 2:05:04 after fellow Kenyans Duncan Kibet and James Kwambai, making him the sixth fastest marathoner ever. On 22 August 2009 he took gold over his teammate Emmanuel Mutai who took silver at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics in Berlin at a record time of 2:06:54.
After the 2009 World Championships, Kirui had many unsuccessful attempts to show the dominance he had shown in his Berlin race: he finished in fifth place at the 2010 London Marathon then failed to finish at the 2011 race. Kirui ran at the Prefontaine Classic track 25K/30K mixed race, hoping to set a new 25k track record.
Although he just managed to dip under the previous world record time for the track 25K, he was well beaten by fellow Kenyan and teammate Moses Mosop, who broke both 25K and 30K world records.
Kirui ran 2:07:38 hours beating out fellow countryman Vincent Kipruto and Ethopian Feyisa Lilesa. He ran over 10 miles at the Great South Run in October and finished as runner-up to Leonard Komon. Kirui lives at Nabkoi, 2 km east of Kapsabet town.
He is coached by Renato Canova (as of 2011).
This made Kirui the third man to defend the marathon world title, following in the steps of Abel Antón and Jaouad Gharib.