Career
He currently holds the world record for the 3000 metres both outdoors (7:2067 set in 1996) and indoors (7:2490 set in 1998). In addition, with his 7.58.61 world record in the 2-mile race set in 1997, he remains the only man in history to run back-to-back sub-four-minute miles, splitting circa 3:59.4 on both the first and second half of the race. Komen was also the second man, after Saïd Aouita, to break both the 13-minute mark for the 5,000 m, the 7½-minute mark for 3,000 m, and the 3½-minute mark for the 1,500 m.
Komen is from the Keiyo sub-tribe of Kalenjin people and grew up in a rural area of Kenya"s Rift Valley Province.
One of fourteen children, Komen began running at the age of seven as a means of getting to and from school. Two years later, Komen began to dominate the 5,000 m.
On 1 September 1996 in Rieti, Italy, Komen ran a spectacular world record time of 7:20.67 in the 3000 metres, breaking Noureddine Morceli"s former record by 4.44 seconds. A year later, Komen made history again.
In Hechtel, Belgium, Komen became the first (and so far only) man to run two miles in under eight minutes, clocking a world record 7:58.61.
His first mile was faster than Roger Bannister"s first-ever sub-four, while his second equalled lieutenant Just seven months later, at an Australian athletics meet in Sydney, Komen ran 7:58.91, missing his world record by 0.30 seconds. In August 1997 he broke the 5000 m world record and took two seconds off of Haile Gebrselassie"s best to bring it to 12:39.74.
Only twelve days after the previous world record of 7:26.15 was set by Haile Gebrselassie, Komen broke the indoor 3,000-metre record with a time of 7:24.90, set in Budapest on 6 February 1998.
This mark is still referred to as "Mount Everest" in athletics circles and has been bettered only twice outdoors, one of them being Komen"s own world record. Kenenisa Bekele believes that breaking Komen"s record is only "possible on a special day if the pace is good and if everything else also is perfect."
Daniel Komen"s personal records, and their place on the world ranking of all times, unless otherwise noted.
All times and placings are taken from Komen"s IAAF bio (as of August 2011):.