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SPAR Grand Prix ambassadors announced

The two women have expressed delight at being the faces of the SPAR Grand Prix, which offers prize money of more than R2-million over the six-race series.

The SPAR Grand Prix gets underway at the end of June.

Two of the competition’s best-known runners, René Kalmer and Kesa Molotsane, have been named as ambassadors for the series.

The women have expressed delight at being the faces of the SPAR Grand Prix, which offers prize money of more than R2-million over the six-race series.

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“SPAR has played a huge role throughout my running career over the past 30 years,” said Kalmer, who has won more SPAR 10km races than any other runner and the Grand Prix three times.

“I feel honoured to be able to represent the SPAR Grand Prix. It is going to be very different this year, with only 250 runners in each of the six SPAR Grand Prix races.”

She said runners will miss the excitement of taking part in a race normally featuring thousands of entrants, but the elite runners are happy to be racing again.

Molotsane, who won the SPAR Grand Prix in 2017, said being an ambassador for the series blended well with her own efforts to promote healthy living and good nutrition.

“I work with the Mother and Child Academic Hospital attached to the Universitas Hospital in Bloemfontein. We help mothers throughout their pregnancy and until the baby is two years old, giving advice on various aspects of healthy living. So what I am doing as an ambassador for the SPAR Grand Prix works well with that,” she said.

Molotsane is returning to competition after sustaining an injury that kept her out of action for several months, and like Kalmer, is looking forward to a return to competitive running.

“It is hard to motivate yourself to train when there is no competition, so we are all very excited at the thought of testing ourselves in a race once again,” she said.

The first race in the six-race SPAR Grand Prix series takes place in Durban on June 27. There will be 250 invited participants representing the elite of all categories.

No spectators are allowed, but the race will be live-streamed.

Each of the six SPAR Grand Prix races, sanctioned by Athletics South Africa, will be run in a strictly monitored Covid-19 bio-bubble as per the safety rules stipulated by the national government.

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