Sydney 2000 Olympics gold medalist, Tafida Gadzama, has tasked Nigerian student-athletes who made the podium and those who set lifetime bests at the just-ended NCAA Outdoor Championships to take the form to Budapest, Hungary this August at the World Athletics Championships.
Udodi Onwuzurike ran new lifetime bests in the 100m (9.92) and 200m (19.76) en route to making the final of the former and clinched a historic gold in the latter while Godson Oghenebrume ran 9.90 in the 100m event to finish second in the final.
Favour Ashe improved his personal best in the 100m to 9.96 while Nathaniel Ezekiel ran inside 49 seconds consistently at the Championships to finish third in the 400m hurdles.
Rosemary Chukwuma and Favour Ofili also made it to the final of the 100m and 200m respectively and Gadzama believes these are signs that their rising profiles since 2021 were not by happenstances.
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“I am delighted with the steady progress we have been making since 2021 when Tobi Amusan won the Diamond League trophy. We have since produced a world outdoor champion and record holder. For the first in our history, we have three Nigerian sprinters break 10 seconds in the event the same year and chances are could have one or two more do that before the end of the outdoor season,’ says Gadzama who is also the first Vice President of the AFN.
Gadzama, who insists he is talking in his capacity and as an Olympic gold medal winner, believes Nigerian athletes can shake the tables in Budapest in August.
“Oghenebrume has shown the kind of spirit I want the others to imbibe. The 20-year-old student-athlete at Louisiana State University has warned the world he is ready to ruffle feathers at World Athletics’ flagship event.
“I am confident we can get to the final of the men’s 100m for the first time since 2007 when my friend, Olusoji Fasuba, came fourth and made the podium for the first time,” said Gadzama, a former African U20 400m champion.
Gadzama is also excited that Tobi Amusan is on course in her preparations to successfully defend the World 100m hurdles title she won last year and see great development in the women’s long jump event.
“I see Ese Brume and Ruth Usoro jumping farther than ever to enable two Nigerians to make the podium in an individual event for the first time at the championships,” Gadzama said.
“Ese has won silver and bronze in the event and who says she or Ruth cannot aspire to gold this time.”
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6 Comments
Dreamers republic!!!
He is not dreaming, That Udodi and Oghenebrume are for real but not because Nigeria is responsible for their forms, it is their schools and individual desire to really excel.
At least, you shouldn’t be this negative in your own life. There’s absolutely nothing wrong with what he said. Sometimes you just come here and write nonsense… Some of you are adults and quite old, and how you just don’t just try to filter what you write baffles me.
@Chima you certainly know your athletics, those newbies may not make the podium in the next world championships, but by the Olympics I am sure one of them would make the podium if current improvements continues. Look at their times now, and you would see that they have made dramatic improvements. Udodi who is the current 200meters world junior champion just became the 2023 NCAA 200meters champion too, and Godstime just came second.
Why are Nigerian athletes not in the current Diamond League with the best in the world?
Because they are not good enough, all of them have lost form after last years heroics. Amusan, Brume, Ofili etc are not just improving and people are failing to call for improvement.