Kenyan Javelin star Julius Yego is looking forward to a tough 2014 as he continues to make inroads in a discipline hardly considered to be his country's forte in athletics.
Yego, 25, has speared his way to the top of the pile in men's javelin over the last two years, finishing just outside the medals during last year's World Athletics Championships with a best throw of 85.40 metres, reports Xinhua.
"We have the Africa Athletics Championships, the IAAF World Cup and Commonwealth Games this year and my aim is to win. However, there are a lot of competitors coming from Egypt and South Africa but having faced the best at the 2012 Olympics and World Championships last year, I know what to expect," the Kenya Police athlete said.
He is expecting to launch his programme for 2014 with a three-week training in South Africa with his departure penned for Jan 25 although nothing is concrete yet.
"It's winter in Finland where I have been training with my coach so South Africa is the other available option. For now, I have not trained much here, only doing some gym work," he added.
The athlete, who was denied a place at the 2008 World Juniors in Bydgoszcz, Poland by Athletics Kenya (AK), said times have changed since then.
"I never lost hope when that happened since AK did not see the reason to take me there without chances to bring a medal home. I never lost hope and I kept motivating myself to be the best at what I do," said the athlete, nicknamed 'You Tube Man' for turning to the video sharing Internet site to gain skills in his preferred discipline.
"Now, I'm pleased that AK decided to take Alex Kiprotich to last year's Africa Junior Championships where he won gold and four Javelin throwers posted over 65m during the National Championships," he added.
Kiprotich, 20, who is eager to follow in the path crafted by the first African to compete at the Olympics javelin final in London, won the top medal in Bambous, Mauritius with a best throw of 75.56m.
Despite expressing his wish to remain top-of-the-pile in his sport in the coming years, Yego is magnanimous enough to welcome internal competition to his rising status as the one to beat in Africa.
"The performances witnessed at the Nationals last year came as a result of training together with the upcoming throwers for a month before. I gave them all the skill they needed and it was nice to see them improve so much and get motivated to take up javelin. I would be happy to get someone to challenge me," he added.
Besides the Kenyan challenge, Yego cites Egypt's Ihab Abd El Rahman, who beat him to the continental crown in 2010 when the biennial was held in Nairobi, South Africa's Jayson Henning and the West African pair of John Ampomah (Ghana) and Kenechukwu Ezeofor (Nigeria) as his closest competitors.
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