ATHLETE

Charles Kamathi

1978 - Today

Photo of Charles Kamathi

Icon of person Charles Kamathi

Charles Waweru Kamathi (born 18 May 1978, near Nyeri, Kenya) is a Kenyan long-distance runner. He is best known for winning the 10,000 metres distance at the 2001 World Championships in Edmonton. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 19 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 18 in 2024). Charles Kamathi is the 3,685th most popular athlete (up from 4,357th in 2024), the 95th most popular biography from Kenya (up from 112th in 2019) and the 68th most popular Kenyan Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Charles Kamathi by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Charles Kamathi ranks 3,685 out of 6,025Before him are Olga Kuragina, Li Yanfeng, Gyöngyi Szalay-Horváth, Viktor Röthlin, Lucie Décosse, and Scott Moir. After him are Odalis Revé, Elisa Uga, Troy Douglas, Sevdalin Marinov, Roman Hagara, and Danny Everett.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1978, Charles Kamathi ranks 729Before him are Leonardo Bertagnolli, Karyme Lozano, Clayne Crawford, Conny Pohlers, Hideaki Kitajima, and Simone Niggli-Luder. After him are Iryna Venediktova, Jeremy Camp, Mia Tyler, Yumilka Ruiz, Sławomir Szmal, and Assefa Mezgebu.

Others Born in 1978

Go to all Rankings

In Kenya

Among people born in Kenya, Charles Kamathi ranks 95 out of 150Before him are Ruth Jebet (1996), Alfred Kirwa Yego (1986), Samson Kitur (1966), Ferguson Rotich (1989), Patrick Makau Musyoki (1985), and Eunice Kirwa (1984). After him are Nixon Kiprotich (1962), Joyce Chepchumba (1970), Brimin Kipruto (1985), Stella Mwangi (1986), Patrick Sang (1964), and Geoffrey Kamworor (1992).

Among ATHLETES In Kenya

Among athletes born in Kenya, Charles Kamathi ranks 68Before him are Ruth Jebet (1996), Alfred Kirwa Yego (1986), Samson Kitur (1966), Ferguson Rotich (1989), Patrick Makau Musyoki (1985), and Eunice Kirwa (1984). After him are Nixon Kiprotich (1962), Joyce Chepchumba (1970), Brimin Kipruto (1985), Patrick Sang (1964), Geoffrey Kamworor (1992), and Ismael Kirui (1975).