Road runners to pay tribute to past super-stars at University of Cape Town race
Isavel Roche-Kelly with Cheryl Winn
Merrilyn Smith, Isavel Roche-Kelly and Lindsay Weight were all extraordinary athletes who contributed substantially to South Africa’s marathon and ultra-marathon legacy.
All three ran for the University of Cape Town and their lives are celebrated each year at the UCT 10km Memorial Race, run each year on a scenic, but hilly course from the Groote Schuur campus. The first woman home wins the Merrilyn Smith Trophy and many of the country’s former greats have their names engraved on the trophy.
Athletics South Africa Road Running Chairperson, Enoch Skosana, was at the finish of the Two Oceans Marathon, just a few metres away from the route of the UCT Memorial 10 km race.
“When our universities promote sporting excellence, and running in particular, this leads to greater physical and mental well-being of its students,” reflected Skosana. “Hosting the Two Oceans Marathon and its own Memorial Race in a few weeks’ time are examples of this.”
This year’s 41st edition of the race on Sunday 5 May will be held on the traditional 10km scenic but hilly course through Newlands and Rondebosch, including a section through the upper campus of the University, and especially celebrates the life of Isavel Roche-Kelly, one of South Africa’s most talented distance athletes ever.
Now a household name at the Comrades Marathon, both through her record-breaking victories and her name on a Comrades Marathon medal, Roche-Kelly left the planet all too early on the threshold of also achieving greatness as a cyclist.
Just eleven months after embarking on her running career with a 500 metre jog around her residence at UCT, Roche-Kelly became the first athlete to run under 7 hrs 30 min for the Comrades Marathon (7 hrs 18 min), improving the previous record by over an hour.
Just a year later she was back at Comrades – this time on the ‘up’ run and her time of 6 hrs 44 min bettered that record by over two hours, ensuring her place in Comrades history.
After her second Comrades win, Roche-Kelly switched focus to the standard marathon, and just over three months later had improved Sonja Laxton’s national mark to 2:43:16 at Faure. She improved the record by a further minute with an astounding 2:42:27 on the hilly Winelands Marathon course two months later.