XABA SUPERCHARGED TO TAKE ON STANDARD MARATHON
- Matshelane Mamabolo
- Aug 24, 2024
- 4 min read

Brilliant in the 10km and national champion in the half marathon, Glenrose is ready to graduate
Glenrose Xaba is ready to make the big move up to the standard marathon. And there is every chance she is going to do very well there.
South Africa’s national record holder in the 10km – she set the new mark of 31:12 at the Absa RUN YOUR CITY DURBAN 10K in July - and the country’s half marathon champion, the Boxer Athletics Club starlet believes the time is ripe for her to graduate to the 42.195km distance.
“I am focused on moving to the longer distances. Not the ultras, but the marathon. In South Africa, we lack girls in the marathons and if there can be more of us doing marathons and supporting those that are already doing it, we can do much better.”
Xaba turns 30 at the end of the year (December 31) and having gone through all the development steps of track, cross country and the shorter road distances (10km and 21.1km), the lass from Mpumalanga is ripe to take on the marathon. And such was her stellar showing in all those disciplines in which she was national champion that it is easy to foresee her doing well in the 42.195km.
Formerly a shy girl who was so reticent as to be unreachable, the athlete who is trained by Caster Semenya has become a confident young woman who always talks up her chances. Though many would be daunted by the prospects of moving up in distance, Xaba believes she will set the bar in the marathon.
“I am going to run the marathon soon. I can’t promise you when, but soon,” she tells me immediately after she’d won the Johannesburg leg of the Totalsports Women’s Race at a canter, a minute ahead of the second-placed runner “If I can run a 2:20 or a 2:22 or even a 2;19, then we are close to matching those Ethiopians and Kenyans. And if one of us can do it, then the other ones will follow.”
To the uninitiated, South Africa's marathon record is Gerda Steyn's 2:25:28.
Lest you start thinking Xaba is over-ambitious, the man who laid the foundation for her current incredible form and growth as an athlete is of the view her former athlete has what it takes to do very well in the standard marathon.
“Glenrose looks ready to do the marathons now. This is her time and I know she will run very good times,” said legendary coach Michael Sponge Seme.
Xaba is currently in the form of her life, finishing on the podium in every race she’s run this year, and looks set to bring back the Spar Grand Prix title back to the country for the first time since 2018.
“The focus is on the Grand Prix, yes. There are two races to go (Gqeberha and Johannesburg) and I am crossing my fingers because I am almost there. I must take it one step at a time. If I bring the title back home it will motivate youngsters, they will believe that we can do better as South Africans. If I can win it, then Cacisile (Sosibo, her teammate at Boxer) can win it also. I will be very happy because the last time we got the title was in 2018.”
The victor back then was, you guessed it, Xaba.
She has put herself in line for this year’s title with two victories out of the three races already completed. In one of those, Tshwane, she beat reigning perennial champion Tadu Nare of Ethiopia for the first time.
“I did beat Tadu Nare but she said she was not okay (on race day) but you know how we athletes are. I am just glad I beat her because she is a good athlete, she motivates us, and it shows that I am going somewhere. She is the greatest and beating her means I am almost there to be the most greatest” Xaba chuckles.
She is running yet another race this weekend, the Absa RUN YOUR CITY TSHWANE 10k in Pretoria tomorrow (Sunday) and you can bet your last cent she will be on the podium. Lest you start thinking she is over-racing, Xaba assures that she is taking care of herself.
“I have been working with Power2Health. They help athletes to recover using various methods such as ice baths, oxygen and ozone. I started working with them in 2020 when I had a knee problem. Now they understand my body because I have been attending their sessions consistently. I usually attend three recovery sessions a week when I am busy racing. It helps me a lot,” Xaba explains.
Just like the Totalsports Womens Race last weekend, the RUN YOUR CITY TSHWANE 10K is run on a hilly course at altitude but Supercharger believes the likes of Sosibo, Ethiopia’s Ebste Atagoud Btaw and Lesotho’s duo of Neheng Khatala and Olympian Blandina Makatiisi will chase her shadow.
“When it comes to hills, I destroy them,” says Xaba jokingly.
She will not be joking when she speeds off from the start at the Union Buildings intent on being the first woman back to the finish on the lawns of the country’s administrative headquarters.
And then she will set her sights on securing the Spar Grand Prix title before she makes that long-awaited marathon debut.
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