
World's oldest marathon runner, Fauja Singh, dies in a hit-and-run at 114
Born in India in 1911, Singh lived much of his life in London. On Oct. 13, 2011, in Toronto, he set a flurry of world age-group records at a meet established especially for him, the Ontario Masters Association Fauja Singh Invitational.
Singh, nicknamed the 'Turbaned Tornado,' ran the 100 meters in 23.14, 200 meters in 52.23, 400 meters in 2:13.48, 800 meters in 5:32.18, 1500 meters in 11:27.81, one mile in 11:53.45, 3000 meters in 24:52.47 and 5000 meters in 49:57.39. He was 100 years old.
'He rested between the events by sitting down and having a few sips of tea,' Ontario Masters official Doug Smith told the New York Times in 2017. 'He was actually running — both feet off the ground.
'It was the most astonishing achievement.'
Singh became the first centenarian to finish a marathon three days later, completing the Toronto Waterfront Marathon in 8 hours, 11 minutes and 6 seconds. He didn't begin the race until 14 minutes after the starting gun because of the congestion of runners, so his official time was 8:25:17.
Guinness World Records wouldn't recognize the feat because Singh didn't have a birth certificate. India didn't keep official birth records when he was born in 1911. The birth date on his passport was April 1, 1911.
A Punjabi Sikh, Singh moved to London in 1992 to live with an adult son after his wife, Gian Kaur, a son and a daughter died. He took up running two years later to alleviate his grief after the death of his fifth son, Kuldip.
'The villagers would tell one of his sons to take him to the UK because he would keep visiting the cremation ground and sit there for hours,' his biographer, Khushwant Singh, told NDTV.
Running soon became his passion. Easily identified by his long white beard and orange Sikh turban, Singh was honored with a letter from Queen Elizabeth II of England when he turned 100 and was the subject of a biography launched in the House of Lords.
In all, Singh completed nine marathons and ran his last competitive race in February 2013 when he was 101, finishing a 10K run in Hong Kong in 1 hour 32 minutes and 28 seconds.
Singh returned to India during the pandemic and was hit by a car Monday while on his daily walk in his home village of Beas Pind. He died in a hospital, his former coach Harmander Singh told the New York Times.
'We would always tell him that someone his age running in India would always run the risk of being hit given how reckless the driving here is,' Khushwant Singh said. 'This is what ultimately happened, unfortunately,'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Olympic champion Lyles to make 100m season debut at London Diamond League
Olympic champion Noah Lyles reignites competition with Letsile Tebogo over 100m at Saturday's Diamond League meet in London, a week after the American marked his return to action with victory in the 200m over the Botswanan in Monaco. Lyles runs his first 100m of 2025, headlining an afternoon featuring the cream of track and field athletes, winners of 75 medals between them from the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest and the 2024 Paris Olympics, across both individual and relay disciplines. A sell-out crowd of 60,000 is expected at the London Stadium, home to Premier League club West Ham and the venue for a memorable athletics programme at the 2012 London Olympics. AFP Sport looks at five stand-out events at the 11th leg of the 15-meet Diamond League circuit: - Men's 100m - Tebogo admitted in Monaco that Lyles was the crowd pleaser and that when his face appears on posters, people want to come and see him. The Botswanan, who won the 200m gold at last year's Paris Olympics as Lyles came third, was edged out in Monaco by the American, who clocked an impressive 19.88sec in his return to the track from a tendon injury. Lyles said it had been tough watching early-season competition from home, but his comeback was timely with the World Championships in Tokyo on the horizon in September. "I have a bye for the US Trials which makes it less stressful because it gives us the time to work on the races," Lyles said. "It gives us time to see what works and what doesn't and to be able to make moves from there." The home nation will be represented by Louie Hinchliffe, world indoor champion Jeremiah Azu and world 100m bronze medallist Zharnel Hughes. The Jamaican duo of Oblique Seville and Ackeem Blake, and South African Akani Simbine fill out the field in what should be a top-notch race. - Women's 200m - Julien Alfred was in dominant form when she scorched to victory in the 100m in Monaco in 10.79sec. It looked to be perfect preparation as athletes finetune their bodies, both mentally and physically, ahead of the world championships. "The last week was not the best for me but it also showed me that I am not where I should be and that there are things that I still need to work on," Alfred said after winning in Monaco. "The season is long but I don't have any trials so I will have time to work on the details. I took a step back and realise that I won't put any pressure on myself this year. I was listening to all that outside noise but I focus on just Julien right now." Britain's Dina Asher-Smith, Daryll Neita and Amy Hunt will provide the competition, along with the sole American in the field, Brittany Brown. - Men's 1500m - The men's 1500m features a stellar cast of homegrown athletes, notably the last two world champions Jake Wightman and Josh Kerr. That pair each outsprinted Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen for victory in Eugene in 2022 and Budapest a year later, respectively. Ingebrigtsen was a late withdrawal from London, his team saying he "still needs a little more time to heal the injury he has been struggling with lately... he does not want to risk anything". Further British hopes ride on the shoulders of Neil Gourley, George Mills and Elliot Giles, while it is Kenya's Phanuel Kipkosgei Koech who owns the fastest time of the season in 3:27.72. - Women's 800m - There may be no local hero Keely Hodgkinson on the cards as the Olympic champion is still bidding to recover from injury, but the two-lap race is another loaded one. Laura Muir, Jemma Reekie and Georgia Hunter Bell form a strong home trio. The presence of Uganda's Halimah Nakaayi and Jamaican Natoya Goule-Toppin will ensure a rapid race. - Men's 800m - All eyes will be on Kenya's world champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi, who heads a pack of runners hunting down David Rudisha's world record of 1:40.91. Rudisha set that mark when he won gold at the London Olympics, but for the first time in more than a decade, there are a handful of middle distance stars seemingly capable of pushing their limits to the max. lp/gj


Los Angeles Times
6 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Minor league baseball could be coming to Long Beach
Could the fourth time be the charm for minor league baseball in Long Beach? On Tuesday, the Long Beach City Council is scheduled to consider whether to order city staff to work toward an agreement with the ownership group for a 'new professional baseball team' that would play at Blair Field, the city's storied ballpark. The ownership group includes Paul Freedman, one of the co-founders of the Oakland Ballers, a successful independent league team launched last year amid the departure of the Oakland Athletics. The new team would open play next season and participate as an expansion team in the Pioneer League, the same league in which the Ballers play. The league includes teams in California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Utah and Wyoming. 'I got into this industry because of love for baseball and the community, and love for Oakland,' Freedman said. 'I see a tremendous amount of parallels between the city of Oakland and the city of Long Beach, and I think the kind of community-oriented baseball that is working in Oakland can work in Long Beach as well.' In minor leagues affiliated with major league organizations, those organizations sign and pay players, then assign them to a minor league team. In an independent league, the teams sign and pay players, most of whom hope to play well enough to earn a contract from a major league organization. Independent leagues also serve as labs for the major leagues: The 'swing-off' that decided this week's All-Star Game has been a rule in the Pioneer League since 2021. Three independent minor league teams have come and gone in Long Beach over the last 30 years: the Barracuda (renamed the Riptide) in 1995-96, the Breakers (2001-02) and the Armada (2005-09). Freedman said he believed the struggles reflected instability in the various leagues in which the teams played more than an inability of Long Beach to support a team. 'It's a city with a huge baseball tradition,' Freedman said. 'It's a diverse city on the rise. It's hosting the Olympics. I think now it's time to have a team to represent the town. 'I think baseball has worked in Long Beach, and I think Long Beach is in an even better condition now to embrace a new kind of baseball.' The Long Beach State baseball team, proudly known as the Dirtbags, attracted more fans last season than any of the other nine Big West Conference teams based in California. The Dirtbags are the primary tenant of Blair Field, and the motion before the city council would require city staff to work with Long Beach State on a 'collaborative partnership agreement.' A city spokesman did not return a call seeking comment.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Nuggets MVP Nikola Jokic's expected decision on EuroBasket 2025 play revealed
Three-time Denver Nuggets MVP center Nikola Jokic has apparently made a decision on whether or not he will play in the 2025 EuroBasket competition for his native Serbia. Per Dorde Matic of Meridian Sport, it is anticipated that the 6-foot-11 superstar will announce that he'll suit up for Serbia this year, after all. Jokic, widely seen as the best player in the world, led a talented Serbian squad to a bronze medal during the 2024 Paris Olympics last summer, almost upsetting eventual gold medalists Team USA in a hotly contested semifinal matchup. That talented 2024 club included three other then-NBA pros: L.A. Clippers guard Bogdan Bogdanovic, Miami Heat power forward Nikola Jovic, and now-Hapoel Tel Aviv point guard Vasilije Micic. Micic at the time was plying his trade for the Charlotte Hornets. Jokic, of course, was the primary reason Serbia has had its recent run of spectacular international success, although Bogdanovic is no slouch either. The seven-time All-NBA big man has a decorated international resume, having brought Team Serbia to the 2016 silver medal at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics. Across 70 healthy regular season contests last year, the 30-year-old averaged an eye-popping 29.6 points on .576/.417/.800 shooting splits, 12.7 rebounds, and 10.2 assists for the 50-32 Nuggets — making him just the third player in league history to average a triple-double over the course of a full season. Should he partake in EuroBasket competition (which tips off next month), the 2023 Finals MVP would immediately elevate Serbia to contender status this summer. MORE NEWS:Nuggets champion pens touching tribute after joining EuroLeague