
This is our daily post that is shared across Twitter & Telegram and published first on here with Kindness & Love XX on peace-truth.com/
#AceNewsRoom With âKindness & Wisdomâ July.01, 2022 @acebreakingnews

Follow Our Breaking & Daily News Here As It Happens:
#AceBreakingNews – In the world of long-distance running, east Africans have long been the dominant force, and soon they may also be setting the pace in the whitest of elite sports: cycling.

This month, the Migration Gravel Race (MGR) brought together 100 of the worldâs top cyclists in a four-day showdown on the rocky, red dirt roads of Kenyaâs Maasai Mara.
With a third of the entrants from east Africa, it was a rare opportunity for the regionâs riders to show they can rival the best according to The Guardian News by Stephen Burgen
âCycling is a very Eurocentric sport,â says Mikel Delagrange, the prime mover behind the event. âIn over 100 years of the world championship, only three athletes outside of Europe have ever won, and they came from the US and Australia.â
For 11 years, Delagrange, a human rights lawyer, worked mostly in central and east Africa, for the international criminal court in The Hague. He quit last year and now works with the UN in Palestine.
âThe obstacle for east African riders is that they lack access to international competition,â he says. âYou might be the best in your neighbourhood but you wonât progress if youâre only beating people in your neighbourhood.
âBut if we send an east African to an international race, weâre spending an unbelievable amount of money on visas because everyone thinks theyâre a migrant, then on flights, plus staying in Europe is prohibitively expensive for most.
âAfter a lot of consultation, we thought: instead of clawing at the door, why donât we bring international competition here?â
Against a backdrop of acacias and euphorbia candelabra trees, amid the zebras, giraffes, impalas and wildebeest of the savannah, the four-day race takes riders along 650km of rough roads, climbing above 3,000 metres. Each day, before the course is cleared by Maasai motorcycle sweepers, dressed in their traditional red plaid blankets, a helicopter goes ahead to check for elephants and buffalo.
âWhat Mikel is doing is giving east African riders a home-based platform, not a European one,â says Kenyan cyclist David Kinjah. âThey get a chance to compete against the best, in their country.â
This is special because now black people can see that we can be pros
Nancy Akinyi, Kenyan cyclist none
Organising a travelling band of 100 cyclists in a region that lacks infrastructure is a challenge. All the logistics, from security to cooking to building the campsites, is done with support from local Maasai.
Last year, Delagrange set up the Amani team â eight men and four women from the top cycling clubs in Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda. âAmani has changed my life, but not just mine,â says Suleiman Kangangi, 33, a Kenyan cyclist. âThis is a big deal for east African riders. We selected the best for this race, and they know thereâs something to aim for.â
Nancy Akinyi, 32, another Kenyan cyclist, says: âItâs not just about bringing these people here to compete, itâs to prepare these young riders for what could be their future if they excel. Thanks to Amani, we can send riders from east Africa and show we can do it. If you go to the world championship, you donât see black people there.
âAmani is special because now black people can see that we can be pros. Itâs unusual to see people from the northern part of Africa â Iâm going to say black people â doing so well,â she says.
âIt started here in east Africa, but now I get emails from women in Congo, Tanzania and even Lesotho who say they want to join the team.â
Non-African riders, who include big names such as Lachlan Morton from Australia, Italian cyclist Mattia de Marchi and Lael Wilcox from the US, paid âŹ1,250 (ÂŁ1,075) to enter, some of which goes towards funding the Amani team.
Everyone is racing for fun and glory; there is no prize money.
âThe Europeans didnât expect the African riders would be so tough to beat,â says Kinjah. âWhen we compete in Europe, everything is different: the food, the language, the roads. This affects your performance.â
The home advantage changes the odds. On the eve of the first stage, Delagrange thanks the non-Africans for coming, then adds: âJust for a change, youâre going to be the people who stand out and donât speak the language.â
The fast-growing sport of gravel racing, essentially putting mountain bike tyres on high-end âŹ10,000 road bikes, is more open and democratic than road racing. Like a marathon, anyone can line up with the best.
âWhat you have here â where you can sit around the campfire after a race and chat with people from all walks of life, make new friends and also hammer each other for five hours on the road every day â that doesnât exist in the majority of races,â says Morton, who finished fifth overall, behind three Amani riders. âItâs an experience thatâs so much more fulfilling. Iâd come back in a heartbeat.
âIn an event like this, the bullshit fades away. Itâs like, hereâs the start line, hereâs the finish, go for it. It doesnât matter where youâre from, weâre all going to sleep in tents and weâre all going to eat the same food, so letâs get on with it.â
Wilcox, who once rode 3,000km from her home in Anchorage, Alaska, to reach the start line of the 4,500km Tour de Canada, and then broke the womenâs record by four days, is another fan: âItâs cool that thereâs a really good womenâs field here. Theyâve put a lot of effort into inviting women and making them feel like they belong. Itâs good to see.â
Juliet Elliott, a 44-year-old cycling pro, says: âA race like this, where we all race together but there are separate podiums, thatâs pretty cool. If Iâd had to do road races against guys, I probably wouldnât have bothered, but gravel is more open. In these long-distance disciplines, women tend to do better.â
Delagrange says they had the good luck to be ready with a concrete proposal when the Black Lives Matter movement made some realise that âracial disparity is a thing, and continues to beâ. There was some overdue reflection in cycling, he says, and many âwere looking for a fig leaf to cover how white the sport is. We acted as a hub for corporations to know where to direct their resources.â
He believes the industry is beginning to understand that itâs not diverse enough to be considered an international sport. âImagine if running was still just Roger Bannister. We arenât pushing the limits of human capability. Without allowing the rest of the world to play this game, we still donât know what can be done on a bike.â
The idea that east African cyclists can hold their own against the best was entirely vindicated. Amaniâs John Kariyuki was the overall winner over the four stages. Two of his teammates, Jordan Schleck Ssekanwagi and Kangangi, came third and fourth. Fifteen of the top 20 finishers were Africans.
Distance rider Marin de Saint ExupĂŠry, from Switzerland, says itâs the first time heâs raced against Africans. âI canât keep up with this pace,â he says. âI was really attracted to the idea of this project, and met some of the team when they came to Switzerland last year. We shouldnât need a project like this, but we do.â
Kinjah, 51, who finished 14th, believes many sporting projects in Africa fail because they have a European mentality and donât understand the culture. âThis project is different because they take the best from several countries,â he says. âThey bring unity by putting these good riders in one team. Some of these guys have never been in the Maasai Mara or seen an elephant. Now they are having an adventure in their own country â and racing against the best in the world.â
Racial disparity is a thing, and continues to be. Imagine if running was still just Roger Bannister
Mikel Delagrange, race organisernone
âThe scale is small,â Delagrange admits. âRight now, we have 12 athletes whose lives weâd like to improve through opportunities. Weâre trying to make it easier for those outside east Africa to invest in great human beings. Maybe we will have those breakout athletes who will change the face of cycling. Youâve got to start somewhere.
âI think many Europeans still cling to a LiveAid mentality. People saw a bunch of things in the 80s, and theyâre, like: OK, thatâs what Africa is like. If you always see people in a disempowered position, it will reinforce your subconscious view of them. But when people come and meet athletes who kick their ass, they donât see disempowered people, they see real competitors.
âHopefully, after four days, they go home with a different view of what Africa is about.â

Editor says âŚSterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/ and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com




You must be logged in to post a comment.