UCT Prof Tim Noakes’ top honour for sports science work

09 Oct 2014
09 Oct 2014

UCT Professor of Sports Science Tim Noakes has been awarded the prestigious South Africa Medal (Gold) by the Southern African Association for the Advancement of Science (S2A3) for his work in sports science. The medal is awarded annually to a person who has contributed to the advancement of science, in Prof Noakes’ case, sports sciences. It is one of the highest awards to a scientist in Southern Africa.
 
“Professor Noakes’ contribution to science in and for South Africa has been recognised internationally,”  says UCT Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Research Prof Danie Visser.

“He is an A1-rated scientist with over 14 000 citations, and authored or co-authored over 500 internationally peer-reviewed, indexed articles and more than 80 book chapters. His international stature is reflected by his past and on-going involvement with 17 editorial boards for international, peer-reviewed journals,” adds Professor Visser. 

Professor Noakes has been an invited speaker for several of the most prestigious international lectures in the disciplines of Sports Medicine and Exercise Science, Public Health, and Physiology. 

 

 

He is the recipient of numerous prestigious international and national awards. In recognition of his work on fluid ingestion during endurance sport, and his other contributions in the field of Sports Medicine, in 2009 Professor Noakes was awarded the Lifetime Achievement in Marathon Sports Medicine Research Award, on behalf of the International Marathon Medical Directors Association (IMMDA). Most recently, he received the National Research Foundation (NRF) Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012.  His early work on the Central Governor Theory of Fatigue during Exercise has resulted in leading to a remarkable growth of research and scientific enquiry, in what was a previously unexplored focus in the discipline. 

“Professor Noakes is nationally and internationally recognised as the force or impetus behind the growth and acceptance of the sports sciences in South Africa and indirectly to the growth of biokinetics and sports medicine,” says  Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences Prof Wim de Villiers, “ and the Faculty is very proud of this latest acknowledgement of his contribution to the field.” 

Over and above his peer-reviewed contributions to science and medicine, Professor Noakes has made an enormous impact with respect to research translation, on a global platform - his ‘Lore of Running’ is recognised globally as the “Bible” of running. He has popularised the value of sports science for the benefit of all South Africans, not just those with special athletic abilities. His three books – ‘Lore of Running’, ‘Rugby without Risk’ and ‘Bob Woolmer’s Art and Science of Cricket’ (with Bob Woolmer) – have addressed three of the most popular South African sports.  In addition his recently release scientific autobiography ‘Challenging Beliefs: Memoirs of a Career’ has become an instant best-seller is in its second edition within 6 months of publication and has been nominated as an entrant for the Allan Paton Book Award for South African non-fiction. 

It was through his vision that the UCT/MRC Research Unit for Exercise Science and Sports Medicine was founded. He was the co-founder and driving force behind the Sports Science Institute of South Africa (1995), the development of which has stimulated the growth of similar research- and teaching-related facilities or groups at many of South African tertiary institutions.

However, perhaps the best indication of the magnitude of his contribution to South Africa was recognised in 2008 with the award from the South African President of the Order of Mapungubwe (Silver) for “excellent contribution to the field of sport and the science of physical exercise”.

The most recent UCT Faculty of Health Sciences recipients of this award include Prof Wieland Gevers and Prof Dan Stein.