Background
Keino was born in Kipsamo, Nandi District, Kenya.
long-distance runner athletics competitor middle-distance runner
Keino was born in Kipsamo, Nandi District, Kenya.
At the 1964 Summer Olympics he finished fifth in 5000 m and just missed qualification for the 1500 m final.
Kip Keino was among the first in a long line of successful middle and long distance runners to come from the country and has helped and inspired many of his fellow countrymen and women to become the athletics force that they are today. After finishing school, he joined the Kenya Police. Before taking up athletics, he played rugby.
He began his international career at the 1962 Commonwealth Games in Perth, Australia where he came eleventh in the three miles.
On 27 August 1965, Keino lowered the 3000 m world record by over 6 seconds to 7:39.6 in his first attempt at the distance. Later in that year he broke the 5000 m world record held by Ron Clarke, clocking 13:24.2.
He retired in 1973. He is on the cover of the October 1968 issue of Track and Field News, the first issue following the Olympics.
He shared the cover of the September 1969 issue with Naftali Bon. In 1987, he shared Sports Illustrated magazine"s "Sportsmen and Sportswomen of the Year" award with seven others, characterized as "Athletes Who Care", for his work with orphans.
Currently, Keino lives on a farm in Western Kenya where he controls and runs a charitable organization for orphans, and is president of the Kenyan Olympic Committee. He has built KipKeino Primary School located near Eldoret, while Kip Keino Secondary School opened in 2009.
The International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge was present at the opening ceremony.
Kipchoge Keino Stadium in Eldoret is named after him. In 1996, he was inducted into the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame. In 2007, he was made an honorary Doctor of Law by the University of Bristol.
Earlier, Egerton University in Nakuru had awarded him an honorary degree.
In July 2012 he received further recognition from the City of Bristol after the Kenyan Olympic Committee, under his presidency, made Bristol the training base for its athletes in preparation for the London 2012 Olympics. The Bristol City Council awarded him freedom of the City, making him the first to receive this honour from Bristol since Sir Winston Churchill His name, Kipchoge, is a Nandi language expression for "born near the grain storage shed".
International Olympic Committee]
In 2012, he was of one of 24 athletes inducted as inaugural members of the International Association of Athletics Federations Hall Of Fame.