In the beginning of September, World Cup current Yolanda Ngarambe ran "The Match". A competition where athletes from Europe met the United States. Ngarambe was forced to drop the lead at 3000 meters and finished in goal on a sixth place.

Seasonal best by superstar Felix at 400 meters

Allyson Felix, a legend in sprinting, has been away from the track because of childbirth but returned to "The Match" with a year-best 400 meters.

Felix, who won six Olympic golds and has ten World Cup golds, suffered a financial setback in her pregnancy when a major sponsor announced that she would receive 70% less in financial compensation after she became a mother.

The athlete star stood up to the sponsor with words like "If I can't stand the rights of pregnant women, then who can?"

The sponsor later announced that they had implemented a policy within the company to guarantee full compensation for women giving birth, which would apply up to 18 months after childbirth. A victory against the sponsor and a victory for female athletes, says Yolanda Ngarambe, who, in anticipation of a doping check after the joint competition, shared dressing rooms with Allyson Felix.

- It was just me and Felix there. I felt a little starstruck, but thought I had to say something. So I talked to her a little bit and said I thought it was cool that she stood up for herself against the sponsor. She was very happy, said it was hard and scary, Ngarambe tells SVT Sport.

Ngarambe is developing further.

- It is impressive to stand up for something when needed. Because it can cost something, like a sponsor. It's just to applaud, Ngarambe concludes.