Modern Athlete Magazine Issue 121, August 2019 | Page 21
“After that I was invited by a colleague to take part in a
marathon. I didn’t even know which race it was, and it
turned out to be the City to City 50km from Centurion
to Johannesburg. That was my first ever race, and I did
it in four hours and 19 minutes. That’s where I saw that
I can do this, because I wasn’t sore afterwards, but I
also learnt that I need to eat before a race, because at
30 kays I was so hungry, I could see stars before my
eyes! I ran past a Spaza shop, and 100 metres later
I turned around and went back to the shop, because
luckily I had R100 in my pocket. I bought apples and
peanuts, then started running again.”
Siya looking back and finally
realising that he has the final rose
“What really inspired me was this 60-year-old man
who passed me on a hill, even though he was limping!
I only caught him again near the finish. That’s when
I said to myself, next time I’m not going be beaten
by an old man, and I also said to myself, one day I’m
going to run the Comrades and finish in the top 10.
That was the day I made it my goal.”
Silver Specialist
In 2011, Siya ran his first Comrades, finishing in
7:23:33 and earning a silver medal. The following year
he was confident of doing still better, perhaps even
breaking six hours for the Down Run, but blisters
put paid to that hope. “Up till Cowies Hill I was still
on course to break six hours, but then I had to take
off my shoes and walk the last 15 kilometres. I still
managed a 7:15:15 for another silver, but it was
disappointing to me.”
In 2013 he was back to his best and clocked 6:31:30,
which caught the eye of his Discovery Running Club.
“I was a top runner in the club, so they approached
me to go run the London Marathon in 2014. It was
fast and flat, and I was the first South African to cross
the line, in 2:29. After that I went on to achieve my
Comrades PB in 6:11 in the 2014 race, using the
speed I had built for London.” The following year he
clocked 6:21:30, then had a bad run in 2016, only
finishing in 8:50:48.
Having moved to Cape Town to take up a job as a
specialist running shoe salesman at the Sportsmans
Warehouse in Sea Point, he missed the 2017
Comrades, but this would turn out to be the year that
really launched his running career. It began when
he sold former international rugby referee Jonathan
Kaplan some new shoes and they got chatting. “I
didn’t have a club yet, because I had just come to
Cape Town, so Jonathan told me he would get me
sorted out with his club, Atlantic. He said everybody
would be so excited to have a 6:11 Comrades runner
in the club! They gave me the kit and stuff I needed,
and Jonathan would come and see me, just to
encourage me to keep on going. They also helped me
get to races, and I am very grateful for their
support. It was a great club to join.”
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