Birth Date: | 1997 6, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Rift Valley Province, Kenya |
Sport: | Athletics |
Event: | Steeplechase |
Rosefline Chepngetich (born 17 June 1997) is a Kenyan steeplechase runner. She holds a personal best of 9:35.75 minutes for the 3000 metres steeplechase and is ranked third on the all-time youth lists for the 2000 m steeplechase distance.
In the youth category she was a gold medallist at the World Youth Championships, Youth Summer Olympics and the African Youth Games. She was a silver medallist at World Junior level.
Born in Rift Valley Province and raised in Keringet, she attended Keringet Winners Girls High School and began training as a steeplechase specialist under her coach Charles Ng'eno.[1] She quickly established herself among the world's best young steeplechasers by running a time of 6:12.0 minutes for the 2000 metres steeplechase in Nairobi in 2013, moving up to third on the all-time lists for the event.[2] [3] She won the gold medal in that event at the 2013 World Youth Championships in Athletics, running 6:14.60 minutes (the fourth fastest time ever) to defeat her compatriot Daisy Jepkemei.[4] [5] It was her second gold medal for Kenya that year, as she was a team winner at the 2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, where she placed seventh individually at age fifteen.[6] A fourth-place finish in the junior race at the 2014 African Cross Country Championships brought her another team gold.[7]
Chepngetich won two gold medals in the 2000 mm steeplechase in the 2014, taking the title at the 2014 African Youth Games before winning at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics (holding off Ethiopia's Zewdenesh Mamo both times).[8] [9] She held the world's four fastest times for the event that year.[10] In the junior ranks she won the Kenyan junior title then moved into the top twenty of all-time for the 3000 m steeplechase with a run of 9:40.28 minutes to claim the silver medal at the 2014 World Junior Championships in Athletics, where she was only behind Ruth Jebet.[11] [12]
She returned to grass for the 2015 World Cross Country junior race, but the Kenyan team was well-beaten by the Ethiopians and Chepngetich came twelfth as part of the silver medal-winning team.[13] A third-place finish in a steeplechase personal best of 9:35.75 minutes at the 2015 Athletics Kenya World Championship Trials brought her her first senior national selection.[14]
In 2017 Chepngetich was suspended for 8 months after she failed a drug test.[15]
2013 | World Cross Country Championships | Bydgoszcz, Poland | 7th | Junior race | 18:21 |
bgcolor=gold | 1st | Junior team | 14 pts | ||
World Youth Championships | Donetsk, Ukraine | bgcolor=gold | 1st | 2000 m s'chase | 6:14.60 |
2014 | African Cross Country Championships | Kampala, Uganda | 4th | Junior race | 19:39.71 |
bgcolor=gold | 1st | Junior team | 13 pts | ||
African Youth Games | Gaborone, Botswana | bgcolor=gold | 1st | 2000 m s'chase | 6:21.81 |
World Junior Championships | Eugene, United States | bgcolor=silver | 2nd | 3000 m s'chase | 9:40.28 |
Youth Olympics | Nanjing, China | bgcolor=gold | 1st | 2000 m s'chase | 6:22.67 |
2015 | World Cross Country Championships | Guiyang, China | 12th | Junior race | 20:38 |
bgcolor=silver | 2nd | Junior team | 33 pts | ||
World Championships | Beijing, China | 15th | 3000 m s'chase | 9:46.08 |