
The Olympic track and field competition begins on Friday with all eyes on Jamican sprint sensation Usain Bolt.
And Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce
will attempt to complete an unprecedented hat-trick of Olympic gold in
the woman’s 100m. Tori Bowie, who posted the United States’ fastest
times in 100 and 200m, is another favourite for the sprint titles.
Africa’s fastest woman Ivory Coast’s
Murielle Ahoure (10.78) is expected to pose a major challenge for
Fraser-Pryce and Bowie in the sprint double – along with Nigeria’s
Blessing Okagbare.
Okagbare, who won gold in the 100m and
200m at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow two years ago, will represent
Nigeria in the women’s sprint double and 4x100m relay, as well as long
jump.
The 27-year-old Sapele-born
multi-talented athlete will look to climb onto the medal table in Rio
after missing out on medals in all her events at the London 2012 Olympic
Games.
Okagbare, who won bronze in long at the
Beijing 2008 olympics, ran 11.01 to come last the women’s 100m final
of London 2012. Ann Fraser-Pryce won the title with a time of 10.75.
United States’ Carmelita Jeter ran 10.78
to take silver while veteran Jamaican sprinter Veronica Campbell-Brown
picked bronze with 10.81.
Nigeria will feature athletes in the
men/women’s 100m and 200m, men’s 110m hurdles, women’s 100m hurdles,
men/women 400m hurdles, women’s long, women’s high jump, women’s
discuss and men/women shot put.
Others are men’s triple jump, women’s heptathlon and women’s 4x100m.
Nigeria will be represented in the women’s 100m by Okagbare, Gloria Asumnu and Peace Uko.
National champion Seye Ogunlewe will
represent Nigeria in the men’s 100m alongside Divine Oduduru and
Ogho-Oghene Egwero. Tosin Oke will feature in the men’s triple jump
while will take part in the women’s high jump.
Ten days of competition in Rio de
Janeiro’s Olympic Stadium get under way with officials keen to draw a
line under a miserable 12 months which has left the athletics’ image
languishing at an all-time low, according to AFP.
As ever, it will be left to track and
field’s greatest showman, Bolt, to restore the feel-good factor as the
sport attempts to turn the page on the Russian doping scandal and
corruption allegations.
In his last Olympics, Jamaican star Bolt
is gunning for 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay gold after sweeping the
titles in 2008 and 2012.
The first leg of Bolt’s “Treble Treble”
quest gets under way on Saturday, with the opening heats of the 100m
before the final on Sunday.
“As a young kid you grow up looking
forward to the big games,” Bolt told AFP. “Championships are what
matters. This is what I do.”
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