Jebet took the opportunity to run for Bahrain at the age of sixteen,
transferring her eligibility in February 2013. In April she won the
3000 metres and the
5000 metres at the Kenyan high school championships. The teenager excelled in her debut outing for Bahrain, coming second in the
3000 metres steeplechase to Moroccan Olympian
Salima El Ouali Alami at the
2013 Arab Athletics Championships. Her time of 9:52.47 minutes was a
Bahraini national record for the event. She improved upon her own mark that July at the
2013 Asian Athletics Championships, where she seized the lead from the start and never relinquished her position. She defeated pre-race favourite and
Asian Games champion
Sudha Singh by more than fifteen seconds and her time of 9:40.84 minutes was a new
championship record. This time ranked her as the top Asia steeplechase runner that year. In 2014, still only 17, she won the
World Junior Championship ahead of two other Kenyan girls. That same month at the
Weltklasse Zurich with older competition, she set the
Asian continental record at 9:20.55, missing the
World junior record by only 0.13 of a second (ranking her #31 of all time). In the
2016 Summer Olympics, she became the first Bahraini athlete to win an Olympic gold medal by winning the
3000m steeplechase with a time of 8:59.75 making her the second fastest within the event of all time. She finished ahead of Kenya's
Hyvin Jepkemoi, who ran 9:07.12 to take silver, and American
Emma Coburn, who ran 9:07.63 to capture the bronze. On 27 August 2016, at the
Paris stage of the
2016 IAAF Diamond League, Jebet smashed the existing
3000-metres steeplechase world record running at 8:52.78, more than six seconds faster than the old record. In March 2018, Jebet became embroiled in a drug-testing scandal when she tested positive for r-EPO (recombinant erythropoietin), a performance-enhancing drug that increases stamina by producing more red blood cells. Her agent at the time, Marc Corstjens, denied any knowledge. Jebet told the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) she had not taken it intentionally, but after a two-year investigation into the matter a disciplinary tribunal in March 2020 ruled against her, handing down a four-year suspension, which began on 18 February 2018, and stripped Jebet of all her results from 1 December 2017 to 4 February 2018. The ruling didn't affect her gold medal from the 2016 Olympics because she won that before testing positive, nor did it affect her 2016 world record performance. Jebet has been a controversial figure in Kenya because she switched allegiances to run for Bahrain, offending many Kenyans who have accused her of disloyalty. Running for Bahrain she benefits financially far better than if she ran for Kenya. It was reported she received $500,000 USD, (the equivalent to 52 million Kenyan shillings) from the Bahrain government for winning her Olympic gold medal. As point of comparison, two-time
800 metres gold medalist and world record holder
David Rudisha, running for Kenya, was paid about 1 million Kenyan shillings, about $10,000 USD. ==References==