Tsehay_Gemechu

Tsehay Gemechu

Tsehay Gemechu

Ethiopian athlete


Tsehay Gemechu (born 12 December 1998)[1] is an Ethiopian long-distance runner. She finished fourth in the 5000 metres at the 2019 World Athletics Championships. Gemechu won the 10,000 metres at the 2019 African Games. She placed second at the 2023 Tokyo Marathon.

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Career

Notice of Charge Issued 11/30/2023 Tsehay Gemechu ETH Use of a Prohibited Substance/Method (Article 2.2) - ABP case

Tsehay Gemechu twice won the Delhi Half Marathon (2018, 2019), setting new consecutive course records. She placed second at the Great Ethiopian Run, a 10 km road race in Addis Ababa, in 2018.

In 2019, she won the 10K Valencia Ibercaja, setting a new national record of 30:15 and slicing 15 seconds off Tirunesh Dibaba's previous best.[2] She competed in the senior women's race at the World Cross Country Championships held in Aarhus, Denmark in March of that year, finishing in sixth place and helping Ethiopia take team title.[3] In August, Gemechu took victory in the 10,000 metres at the African Games in Rabat, Morocco, and in October, placed fourth in the 5000 metres event at the Doha World Championships in Qatar.[1]

The 22-year-old competed in the women's 10,000 metres event at the delayed 2020 Tokyo Olympics in 2021, but was disqualified.[4] After the Games, she won the Copenhagen Half Marathon with a new course record and personal best of 1:05:08, and then the Lisbon Half Marathon (1:06:06).[1]

In March 2022, Gemechu placed second at the Istanbul Half Marathon (1:05:52) to take her second successive Lisbon Half Marathon title two months later (1:06:44). In August, she finished second at the Antrim Coast Half Marathon in Northern Ireland, setting new personal best of 1:05:01. She debuted in the marathon in October, placing third at the Amsterdam Marathon with a time of 2:18:59.[1]

In March 2023, on her debut in a World Marathon Major and her second race over the classic distance, the 24-year-old finished second at the Tokyo Marathon with a new personal best time of 2:16:56, becoming just the eighth woman in history to run a sub-2:17.[1][5]

On 23 November 2023 Gemechu was provisionally suspended for a doping infringement.[6]

Personal bests


References

  1. "Tsehay GEMECHU – Athlete Profile". World Athletics. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  2. "Senior women's race" (PDF). World Athletics. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 June 2020. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  3. "Athletics GEMECHU Tsehay - Tokyo 2020 Olympics". Olympics.com. IOC. Archived from the original on 2021-08-09. Retrieved 2021-08-09.
  4. Athletics Weekly (30 November 2023). "Ethiopian marathoner Gemechu suspended for doping". Retrieved 1 December 2023.

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