
Two-time Olympic champion Faith Chepngetich and world champion Timothy Cheruiyot end the year on a high note.
The duo has been announced as the 2021 winners of the Diamond League awards for the most consistent female and male distance athletes of the year.
According to a statement from Wanda Diamond League, Chepngetich was awarded for proving to be the most consistent middle and long distance performer of the season, with victories in Doha and Eugene.
“In 2021, the Wanda Diamond League is awarding a prize to honour those athletes who consistently delivered excellent performances throughout the summer season.
“Kenyan legend Timothy Cheruiyot may have missed out on Olympic gold this year, but he continued to dominate in the Diamond League. The 1500m star picked up four wins, including a PB of 3:28.28 in Monaco, as he charged to an emphatic defence of his 2019 title and secured a fourth successive Diamond Trophy.
“Each winner will receive US$20,000 in prize money,” the statement read in part.
Chepngetich had a successful 2021, defending her 1500m Olympic title in Tokyo and her winning streaks at the one-day circuits has paid off.
She crowned the fruitful season with victory in the Diamond League finals in Zurich, winning the Diamond Trophy for the first time since she became a mother in 2018.
Her win in Zurich didn’t come easy. Sifan Hassan of the Netherlands put up a brave fight in the final 300m stretch, but Chepngetich had saved enough gas for the kick and went ahead to win in 3:58.33.
She is also clinching the award for setting a Kenyan record in Monaco and her astonishing battle with Sifan Hassan in Florence.
President Uhuru Kenyatta honoured Chepngetich and Olympic marathon champion Peres Jepchirchir with the Order of the Grand Warrior medals on December 12, for their exemplary performances.
Cheruiyot who won silver for Kenya at the 2020 Olympic Games also powered to victory at the Diamond League finals.
The rivalry between world champion Cheruiyot and Olympic champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen of Norway played out in Zurich, during the finals in September.
In August, he was promoted to the rank of Senior Superintendent of Prisons after his performance in Tokyo. Before the Tokyo Games, Cheruiyot was a Chief Inspector at the Prisons Service.