Jama Aden
Personal information | |
---|---|
Nationality | Somali British |
Born |
Ainaba, Somalia | August 28, 1962
Sport | |
Sport | Track |
Event(s) | 800 metres, 1500 metres, Mile |
College team | Farleigh Dickinson |
Now coaching | Genzebe Dibaba, Ayanleh Soulieman, Abubaker Kaki, Abdalelah Haroun, Musaeb Abdulrahman Balla |
Achievements and titles | |
Personal best(s) |
800 metres: 1:46.73[1] 1500 metres: 3:38.12[1] Mile: 3:56.82[1] 3000 metres: 7:53.85[1] |
Jama Mohamed Aden (born August 28, 1962) is a Somali former middle-distance runner and coach who ran for Fairleigh Dickinson University as well as representing Somalia throughout the 1980s. He would go on to pursue a career in coaching world-class middle-distance athletes. He is the older brother of former competitive runner Ibrahim Mohamed Aden.
Personal life
Jama married in 1994 to a Somali-British woman who is the mother to his five children. Aden is strongly regarded as a family man who often brings his children to numerous track meets globally. Additionally, he congratulated his eldest daughter Amina on his facebook page Coach JAMA ADEN (KARAIIN) who got accepted and currently attends Coventry Law School in the UK. Aden also praises his second Amani on her achievements on her final years of high school. Besides them, Aden has two sons, Ayman and Amin and another daughter, Amira.
Running career
Collegiate
Aden was recruited with an athletic scholarship by Farleigh Dickinson University, for which he set multiple records, many of which still stand today.[2] He was especially known for having run a 3:56.82 mile as a junior undergrad.[1] He was coached by Mal Whitfield, two times Olympic champion.
International
Aden ran for Somalia at the 1983 World Championships in Athletics and at the 1984 Summer Olympics. At the 1983 World Championships, he competed in both the men's 800 metres and men's 1500 metres, but did not advance to the finals in either distance. At the 1984 Summer Olympics, he finished in fifth place of the second heat in the men's 1500 metres. He did not advance to the finals.
Coaching
Aden earned a master's degree in exercise physiology at George Mason University, after which he pursued a coaching career.[3] He was assisting John Cook in coaching countryman and GMU runner Abdi Bile before he won the gold medal at the 1987 World Championships in Athletics.[3] Among the successful runners Aden has coached himself are two-times 800 metres world indoor champion Abukaker Kaki Khamis, 2008 Beijing Olympics 800 metres silver-medalist Ismael Ahmed Ismael, 2012 London Olympics 1500 metres champion Taoufik Makhloufi, 2012 world junior 1500 metres champion Hamza Driouch, 2013 world indoor champion and indoor world record holder at 1000 metres Ayanleh Souleiman, and several times world champion and world record holder [4] at 1500 metres indoor and outdoor as well as Mile, 3000 and 5000 metres indoor – Genzebe Dibaba. In 2011 Aden was selected as the most worthy of 132 candidates from 16 Arab countries who contended for the Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Award for Sports Excellence.
After both had run world indoor records in Stockholm Globengalan (former XL Galan) February 17, 2016 Dibaba (mile) and Souleiman (1000 m) expressed their gratitude to their coach. Souleiman said: "I want to thank my coach, Jama Aden, for working so hard with me."[5] In the same meeting another of Jama Aden's athletes, 18-year-old Abdalelah Haroun produced a 500 metres world best time and became first man ever running below 60 seconds indoor.
In an interview from November 2012 in Swedish daily news paper Dagens Nyheter, Aden describes his coaching philosophy and compares with differences between Europe and Africa. He says it takes time to become a top athlete and runner. "Have the Europeans become lazy?" he was asked, he replies: "No not at all. It's not about laziness. But it takes time for results to come in elite running, therefore you don't prioritise it". He also reveals his satisfaction when Makhloufi crossed the line as winner of the Blue Ribbon event of the Olympics, the 1500 metres, in London 2012. "I was speechless. I felt that all hard work paid back at that moment".[6] He then goes on and explains the importance of full-time coaching if you want to have long term success.
"If you look at the coaches in running today who have had success, like Alberto Salazar with Mo Farah and Galen Rupp, myself, Peter Coe and Harry Wilson, who coached Steve Ovett, we are, or have been, full time coaches. I live next to my athletes and they are like my family. In Sweden, you coach part time. Then it becomes more difficult for the runner to achieve great success". [6]
Controversies
In 2015 two of Jama Aden's athletes were suspended for doping violation, Laila Traby France and Hamza Driouch Qatar. Driouch for inconsistencies in his biological passport, dated to 2 Aug 2012 during London Olympics when Aden was his coach.[7] Actual suspension time was set to 31 Dec 2014 to 30 Dec 2016.[8] Hamza Driouch left Aden in September 2012 after Olympics, and by April 30, 2013 Driouch was coached by Abdelkader Kada, Hicham El Guerrouj‘s former coach. Jama was forced by Qatari federation to continue assisting and coaching Hamza in Team Jama Aden and Hamza was running with the team again in February 2015 in Ethiopia.[9] A plausibel explanation for the delayed announcement of Driouch's doping ban is found in the WADA Independent commission report #2 (page 68). It is further explained under entry Hamza Driouch.
The ban was announced in February 2015 and was immediately followed by harsh Twitter-statement (to +15k followers) by New Zealand middle distance runner Nick Willis who put Hamza's coach Aden under spotlight.[10]
January 30, 2016, the French athletic site SPE15.fr established by Gilles Bertrand and Odile Baudrier with the motto – "No Drug, just fighting spirit" – released an interview (in French) with Hamza, where he accuses Jama. "I believed in my coach, and that was the wrong decision. The doping problem comes from the coach Jama Aden".[11] A full translation of the French interview can be found at Letsrun.com.[12] Surprisingly on February 15, 2016, less than three weeks later, Hamza took his accusations back via the same French athletic site, "Jama gave me vitamins for recovery, and I'm not a victim due to Jama Aden".[13]
Aden's second athlete caught for doping in 2015, Laila Traby, was suspended for EPO-use after French police found EPO in her apartment (Font-Romeu) in Nov 2014 and later she tested positive.[14][15] Aden was not as clearly linked to her as to Hamza but Aden posted a congratulation during European Athletic Championship 2014 in Zürich when she got bronze at 10000 metres. On his Facebook fan page Coach JAMA ADEN (KARAIIN)´s Page, the "follower" Matt Yates (winner at 1500 metres of 1992 European Athletics Indoor Championship ) comments “One of Yours? ”, 14 Aug 2014 at 2.37 am (local time), and the editor (Coach Jama Aden) replies, “Yes Matt Yates” 14 Aug at 5.12 am (local time).
When interviewed by French sport paper L'Equipe after Genzebe Dibaba set the world record i Monaco Diamond League 2015, Aden told the journalist his personal best at 1500 meter was 3.36. "un athlète moyen, dit-il. 1'46’’ sur 800 m et 3’36’’ au 1 500 m".[16] According to statistics from IAAF, Aden's personal best at 1500 metres is 3.38.
It is common in athletics with so called "behind the scene" doping-accusation following a world record. However, such an outspoken critical voice as Volker Wagner's (coach to among other Tegla Leroupe) is not common. In one of the biggest Swedish daily news paper – prior to 2015 World Championship in Beijing – he commented Genezbe's world record at 1500 metres with: "This is something I don't believe in! ". Indirectly accusing her and her team and coach of doping. The Ethiopian sport journalist Bizuayehu Wagaw with running as specialization commented in turn what Wagner said with: "He should be silent [...] it is a shame people say like that without the person is proven guilty".[17]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 All-Athletics. "Athlete profile for Jama Aden".
- ↑ Farleigh Dickinson University - FDU Hall of Fame: Jama Aden Class of 1984
- 1 2 Negash, Elshadai (September 1, 2009). "Sudan's Desert Warriors".
- ↑ "List of world records in athletics".
- ↑ Rowbottom, Mike (2016-02-17). "IAAF: Globen Galan Stockholm 2016 Dibaba Souleiman". iaaf.org. Retrieved 2016-02-18.
- 1 2 Wallerstein, Johan (2012-11-12). "Stjärntränaren sågar svensk löpning - DN.SE". DN.SE (in Swedish). Dagens Nyheter. Retrieved 2016-02-20.
- ↑ Hugosson, Joakim (4 Jun 2014). "OS-uppladdning på Skryllegården" [Preparing for London Olympics at Skryllegården]. Malmö: Swedish Public Television. Retrieved 26 Aug 2015.
- ↑ "Former world junior 1500m champion Hamza Driouch banned for doping". Athletic Weekly. 25 Feb 2015. Retrieved 26 Aug 2015.
- ↑ "Mo Farah pictured running with Qatari drug cheat Hamza Driouch". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-10-19.
- ↑ "Nick Willis on Twitter". Twitter. 2015-02-15. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- ↑ Baudrier, Odile; Bertrand, Gilles (2016-01-30). "Hamza Driouch charge Jama Aden pour son dopage". spe15.fr. Retrieved 2016-02-18.
- ↑ "Translation of SP15 Article: DOPING: Hamza Driouch blames Jama Aden - LetsRun.com". LetsRun.com. 2016-02-18. Retrieved 2016-02-19.
- ↑ Baudrier, Odile; Bertrand, Gilles (2016-02-15). "Hamza Driouch donne des précisions sur le sujet paru". spe15.fr. Retrieved 2016-02-18.
- ↑ Baudrier, Odile Baudrier (8 Feb 2015). "ENQUÊTE AUTOUR DE L’AFFAIRE LAILA TRABY". SPE 15 Track Origin. Retrieved 26 Aug 2015.
- ↑ "French Distance Runner’s Test Reveals Banned Substance". New York Times. 12 Nov 2014. Retrieved 26 Aug 2015 – via Associated Press.
- ↑ "Aden au paradis". L'Equipe. 2015-07-19. Retrieved 2015-09-18.
- ↑ Holmberg (2015-08-25). "Det här är någonting som jag inte tror på". Expressen. Retrieved 2016-01-25.