Munyai to race against Indoor World Champion in Manchester

Posted on May 17, 2016

On Friday, at the Great City Games in Manchester, Clarence Munayi (TuksSport High School), will live his dream when he will race against Trayon Bromell (USA) over 150 metres.

Bromell, who is 21 years old, burst onto the senior scene in 2015 with a third-place finish in the IAAF World Championships in Beijing.  With a time of 9.92 he was behind Bolt and Justin Gatlin.  His time of 9.84, achieved in the USA team trials, made him the joint tenth fastest man in history.

In 2014, when he ran 9.97 at the NCAA Men's Outdoor Track and Field Championships, he became the first junior to break the ten-second barrier.  Bromell got off to a flying start earlier this season when he won the 60m in the IAAF World Indoor Championships in Portland, Oregon.

“As far as I am concerned, Trayon has the ability to become the next real deal in international sprinting. He is a definite role model for me and it still seems unrealistic that I will be racing against him. I hope it will be an awesome race,” said the 18 year old Munayi, who has shown signs that he himself could develop into a world class sprinter.

Under the guidance of Hennie Kriel (coach at Tuks/HPC) he has won the South African junior as well as senior titles in the 200 metres.  He has qualified for the Olympic Games in Rio on two occasions by running times of 20.36s. He has also improved his best time in the 100 metres to 10.28s.

In spite of Munayi’s success, Kriel is realistic about the challenges that await them.

“A study of the IAAF’s all-time list of fastest junior sprinters (under-20) does not make for good reading. Most of the athletes never had any impact as senior sprinters. They disappeared from the scene without ever fulfilling their potential. Our main challenge at the moment is to give Clarence the necessary guidance and support to help him bridge the gap between excelling at junior level and being equally successful at senior level,” the Tuks/HPC coach said.

His advice for Munayi for Friday’s ‘big race’ is to enjoy the moment and to learn as much as he can from racing against the best.

Munyai said he is grateful that his coach had the vision to let him run against senior athletes this season.

“It has toughened me up mentally. I am no longer intimidated when I compete against older athletes because I now realize that they are also just human and have the same anxieties and expectations that I have as a youngster.

“I know I cannot beat Trayon or athletes like Kim Collins but that does not mean that I am not going to race flat-out. It will be strange to race over 150 metres.”

**Thando Roto (Tuks/HPC) finished jointly first yesterday in the 100 metres (10.41s) at a meeting in Rehlingen, Germany. Lesotho’s Mosito Lehata also ran 10.41s. Gift Leotlela (TuksSport High School) was third in 10.48s.

According to Kriel the athletes had to contend with cold and windy conditions.

- Author Wilhelm de Swardt

Copyright © University of Pretoria 2024. All rights reserved.

FAQ's Email Us Virtual Campus Share Cookie Preferences