Career
He represented Kenya over 10,000 metres at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics and took ninth place. He also competed in the 2013 Moscow World Championships and took the bronze medal in the same event. He has a personal best of 26:49.41 minutes for that event.
Hailing from Nakuru, Kenya, he began competing in major domestic cross country races in the 2007–2008 season: in two of the junior races at the Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath/Athletics Kenya Cross Country meetings he made the top eight, and he went on to finish in sixth in the junior race at the Kenya National Cross Country Championships in 2008.
He competed on the track at the provincial level in June and ran a time of 14:19.76 for second place in the 5000 metres behind Evans Mayoyo. Tanui improved further the following season, finishing fourth in the junior race in Meru, winning at the Nyanza South Provincial Championships, then taking second place in the junior race at the 2009 Kenya Championships, behind John Kemboi.
This gave him automatic selection for the Kenyan team at the 2009 IAAF World Cross Country Championships. He came close to making the podium but ended up in fourth despite recording the same time as bronze medallist Moses Kibet.
Despite not reaching the top three, he managed to help the Kenyan junior men to the team gold that year.
After moving to Fukuoka, Japan in mid-2009 to improve his running, the 2010 season proved to be another step up for Tanui. At the beginning of the year he took part in the New Year Ekiden for the Kyudenko Corporation, where he ran the fastest in his stage. Competing in the men"s senior race at the Kenya Championships for the first time, Tanui surprised his competitors with a significant victory.
With former champions Kenenisa Bekele and Zersenay Tadese not competing at the 2010 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, Tanui was suggested as a tentative favourite for the competition.
Seventh place at the 2011 Kenyan trials meant that he was not selected for the world event, but a dispute between Leonard Komon and Athletics Kenya saw Tanui drafted in as a late replacement. Tanui also led the Kenyans to the team gold medal.
A third-place finish at the Trofeo Alàsport meet behind Merga and Caleb Ndiku brought his cross country season to a close. He ran a series of track bests that year starting with 10,000 metres run of 26:50.63 minutes for fourth place at the Prefontaine Classic, a time of 13:04.65 minimum for the 5000 m in Barcelona and then 3000 metres best of 7:50.88 minimum in Arzana.
As one of the fastest Kenyans over 10,000 m that year, he was chosen to compete in that event at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics.
However, he ran a minute slower than his season"s best in the event final and finished ninth overall. All information taken from IAAF profile.