Eighty-nine kilometers. Twelve hours.
On paper, it’s a test of patience. Actually, it is much deeper than that. Because the thing that defines such a journey is not the distance — but the reason why a person continues even when his body is ready to stop.
And along the way, every runner ends up being forced to answer a very deep and personal question: why are you running?
Every June thousands of South Africans answer that question with their feet. Before dawn, they meet on the streets of Durban or Pietermaritzburg, entering a race that will test more than just their physical strength.
They will have sore feet, tight muscles, and wonder about all the decisions that got them there. But still, many will cross the finish line — sometimes with just a few minutes left, sometimes on their hands and knees, thinking about next year.
No completely logical explanation can explain this. But the human knows.
They ran to the mother who gave everything and didn’t ask for anything in return. They ran for a body that lived in things it was not meant to overcome. They ran to the coach who refused to let them stop. They run to the friends they lost. They run for their vision that they are still trying to achieve.
Ask any runner why they run, the race quickly turns into something else entirely. Beneath the surface is a story that belongs to all of us. It is a story of perseverance, resilience, overcoming challenges and success. Not giving up or everything inside is crying “stop”.
Even if the path is personal, you cannot walk it alone.
At 5 am, long before race day, the runner starts the training app in the dark. Somewhere, there is someone making sure you get home safely.
- A timely message.
- The voice note that comes when the body is ready to let go.
- A support group that follows every kilometer, encouraging him from a distance.
For families, friends and spectators, the race happens in real time, updated on phones, shared in chats. The journey extends beyond the road itself.
These times don’t sound like technology. They sound like a human presence, and Cell C has the power to make this all-important connection happen.
Not just on race day, but in all the early morning practice sessions, all the check-in sessions, all the messages of support, and all the moments that keep people going.
Although it is purpose that drives runners forward, communication is what keeps them going. It’s not just about technology, it’s more about connecting runners with support from family and friends. A group that helps them to keep going strong.
Cell C comes to the 2026 Comrades Marathon and has also run its own race.
Over the past few years, the company has faced one of the most difficult changes in business in South Africa, rebuilt, changed its direction, and emerged with a clear sense of purpose. Its listing on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange in November 2025 was not the last thread, but the beginning of a new chapter.
This is a journey defined by perseverance—asking the hard questions and pushing forward when giving up would be too easy.
It is that understanding that strengthens its presence in the Comrades Marathon, as an official partner of the Ultimate Human Race from 2024.
This is what the campaign brings to the fore — stories that often go unnoticed.
- A first-time runner trying to prove something to himself.
- Returning from injury, illness, or loss.
- The 58-year-old is honoring his father who did not finish the race.
- A woman who continued to exercise while being treated because the road gave her something that nothing else could give her.
These stories are unusual because they are rare. They are amazing when we talk about them.
Because somewhere between those 89 kilometers, every runner answers the same question: why are you running?
Although the race is measured in distance and time, it is purpose that carries people to the finish line and communication is what keeps them going when it matters most.
Cell C’s message to every runner, every supporter, and every South African watching is simple:
Whatever your reason, whatever your method — #NothingShouldStopYou #SkaFelaMoya
The 2026 Comrades Marathon will be held on 14 June 2026. Cell C is the official sponsor of the Comrades Marathon Association from 2024. Visit Cellc.co.za to find out more.