Uganda Athletic Federation ( UAF ) is a World Athletics recognised member officially representing Uganda as the national governing body for the sport of Athletics .
8-803: UAF may refer to: Organisations [ edit ] Uganda Athletics Federation Ukrainian Air Force Ukrainian Armed Forces Ukrainian Artistic Front Ukrainian Association of Football Financial Intelligence Unit (Spanish: Unidad de Análisis Financiero ), in Panama, Paraguay and other Latin-American countries l'Union des Aéroports Français (French Airports Association) Unite Against Fascism , United Kingdom United Arab Emirates Air Force (ICAO Code UAF ) University Admissions Finland University of Agriculture, Faisalabad , Pakistan University of Alaska Fairbanks , United States Other uses [ edit ] Use after free ,
16-420: A class of software vulnerability Universal Authentication Framework ; see FIDO Alliance Universal Access Fund ; see Digicel Unified Architecture Framework ; see UAF Specification from Object Management Group Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title UAF . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
24-515: Is the president of the federation. This athletics and track and field article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about sports in Uganda is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . 2013 World Championships in Athletics %E2%80%93 Men%27s marathon The men's marathon at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics was held at
32-569: The 400 metres hurdles in world record time. Ugandan women athletes have made their mark as well, Dorcus Inzikuru was the winner of the first Women's 3000 metres steeplechase world championship . Stephen Kiprotich doubled that success, winning the Olympic gold medal in the marathon and backing it up a year later with the World Championship . As of 2022, Dominic Otuchet (also spelled Dominec Otuchet, among other spelling variants)
40-534: The Luzhniki Stadium and Moscow streets on 17 August. Coming through the half marathon in 1:05:10, the lead pack stayed formed until around the 30K mark with still about 13 with that group. Over the next 5K, contenders began to fall off the pace, first a pack of six were left, with two Ugandans; reigning Olympic champion Stephen Kiprotich and Jackson Kiprop , with three Ethiopians; Lelisa Desisa , Tadese Tola and Tsegaye Kebede and Peter Kimeli Some
48-426: The last kilometer, Kiprotich was able to make a gap. A meter became ten then fifty. A jubilant Kiprotich began throwing kisses to the crowd, crossing the finish line more than a hundred meters ahead of Delisa. Tola held on for third, with Kebede barely ahead of Nakamoto. Solonei da Silva and Paulo Roberto Paula came in together, so with four Ethiopians, two Ugandans and two Brazilians, three countries put at least
56-620: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=UAF&oldid=1250852996 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing Spanish-language text Articles containing French-language text Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Uganda Athletics Federation The country of Uganda gained independence in 1962. A mere ten years later, they proudly achieved their first Olympic Gold Medal when John Akii-Bua took
64-403: The lone Kenyan. Kiprop fell back but Kentaro Nakamoto fought his way back to the pack as Kiprotich began experimenting with surges. Some and then Nakamoto started to fall behind. Kebede was next to go, followed by Tola, but Desisa stuck to Kiprotich like glue. Kiprotich crossed the roadway from side to side, more like match race sailboat tacking maneuvers and Delisa followed. Finally in
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