By Adnaan Mohamed
Stephen Mokoka arrives at the Hollywoodbets Durban 10km not as a man winding down, but as a statesman of South African road running … still racing, still teaching. At 40, with four Olympic Games, multiple World Championships, and five Shanghai Marathon victories behind him, the long-distance legend is not here for farewells. Instead, he’s at Kingsmead Stadium to test himself against the next wave, while offering them a warning.
“Many youngsters are racing too often and training too hard,” Mokoka cautioned at the pre-race press conference.
“That leads to muscle strain and long-term injuries. If you’re supposed to get 20 to 30 years out of your legs, you can cut that down to just five. You may be the best now, but once your body breaks down, people forget you quickly.”
It was advice delivered with the kind of gravity only a two-decade career can lend. Mokoka knows the traps: the lure of prize money, the rush of early success, the temptation to burn too brightly.
“Race less, stay healthy, and you’ll last longer,” he added.
“Money will always run faster than you, let the banks keep it safe. Your health and longevity matter more.”
The timing of his message is pointed. Saturday’s Durban 10km has sold out with a record 12 000 entries and boasts the richest prize purse in the country for the distance: R357 500., with the men’s and women’s winners each pocketing R37,500.
Ambition will be in the air, but Mokoka insists he’s not just there to preach. He wants a top-10 finish, still hungry to prove that his legs, though seasoned, are far from finished.
Kavanagh Chasing the Pace

If Mokoka embodies endurance, Taylor Kavanagh is South Africa’s rising flame. At 23, the Hollywood Athletics Club runner has already carved her place among the nation’s best. She showed her class by winning the Durban International 10km earlier this year, clocking a sub-32-minute at the Totalsports Women’s 10km, and taking victory in Pietermaritzburg’s Spar 10km.
Now she lines up on home streets with her eyes on a lifetime best. With Glenrose Xaba, the national record-holder at 31:12, headlining the women’s field, Kavanagh knows the opportunity is real.
“Since this is a home race, I’m more excited than pressured,” said Kavanagh .
“I know Glenrose is targeting another national record, and that kind of pace will definitely pull the rest of us to faster times. She’s in terrific form. When you run with someone like that, you brace yourself for a PB or at least a really fast run.”
Her personal best of 31:53 already places her among the elite, but Kavanagh believes progress comes through collective effort.
“Women’s running in South Africa is growing rapidly,” she said. “The more we work together, the more we can achieve. Running with Neheng [Khatala] to break that sub-32 barrier was special. It shows that when women push each other, great things happen.”
The women’s race promises fireworks: Kavanagh’s teammate and defending champion Neheng Khatala returns, while Boxer Running Club’s Karabo Mailula and Karabo More will press the pace. For Kavanagh, the challenge is not only to keep up, but to thrive.
The Passing of Torches
When the starter’s gun fires at 7:30am, the Durban 10km will be a clash of philosophies: Mokoka’s seasoned voice urging patience, preservation, and the long game, against Kavanagh’s youthful surge, chasing personal bests and fresh milestones.
For some, the prize purse will be the target; for others, it’s about personal markers. But in the larger story of South African road running, Saturday represents something deeper. It’s about the the endurance of careers, the rise of new stars, and the eternal chase against time itself.
The race will be broadcast live on SABC, bringing the spirit of the Purple Team to South African homes.
Next stop after Durban is Joburg on Saturday, 13 September.