Yahoo – AFP,
Phil HAZLEWOOD, with Jim Slater in Washington, Feb 3, 2018
Lagos (AFP) - Nigerians met their Winter Olympic bobsled team for the first time just one week before the start of the Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Lagos (AFP) - Nigerians met their Winter Olympic bobsled team for the first time just one week before the start of the Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Thirty
years after a Jamaican squad became a global sensation, the trio of Nigerian
women Seun Adigun, Ngozi Onwumere and Akuoma Omeoga will become the first
African bobsleigh team in Winter Olympic history.
Born to
Nigerian parents they all live in the United States but travelled to Lagos for
a rousing Nigerian send-off on Friday night at a corporate reception held in
their honour at a luxury hotel.
Their
qualification late last year for the February 9-25 Games has since attracted
massive interest around the world and won the previously crowd-funded athletes
a string of big-name sponsors.
Many people
in Africa's most populous nation said they were unaware the country even had a
bobsled team. Some were keen to play up their supposed ignorance for comic
effect.
"So,
you are the driver?" the comedian compering the event said, pointing at
Adigun.
"And
you are the brake... appliers," he ventured eagerly to Onwumere and
Omeoga, as if searching for the correct terminology. "And what is that
thing you are pushing? A wheelbarrow?"
"First
question," he asked the women's team-mate Simi Adeagbo, who will also make
history by becoming the first African to compete in the skeleton. "What is
that?"
Despite
being new to hurtling down an icy track at 150 kilometres (93 miles) per hour,
Nigerians -- noted more for their passion for football -- are happy to cheer
the team on.
On the
hotel's rooftop bar, with temperatures still in the mid-30s Celsius (95
Fahrenheit) by late evening, guests drank champagne and ate "small
chop" (finger food). Dance music distorted through a skyscraper of
loud-speakers. Most people arrived late. Everyone blamed bad traffic.
But
Nigeria's pioneering winter sports team were made to feel at home with fairy
lights and Christmas snowflake decorations twinkling overhead, above white
plastic sheeting stuck to the floor with gaffer tape.
![]() |
Nigerian
bobsled team member Seun Adigun was a 100m hurdler for Nigeria
at the 2012
London Summer Olympics (AFP Photo/Stefan HEUNIS)
|
Dry ice
and cotton wool
To complete
the frozen idyll, a bored-looking teenager wearing a single red rubber glove
operated a dry ice machine that sent damp-smelling fog curling over snow drifts
of cotton wool.
Nearby, air
conditioning units were set to the equivalent of 16 degrees -- a good 10
degrees below the temperature that normally makes some in tropical Nigeria don
a hat and coat.
The team
took the gentle ribbing with good humour, batting back comparisons to Jamaica's
participation in the 1988 Games in Calgary, Canada, that led to the 1993
Hollywood film "Cool Runnings".
Adigun is
the driving force behind the team's Olympic dream, from working with the US
team to learn the sport to hammering and nailing together a makeshift wooden
sled in Houston and gathering fellow sprinters to make a run at history.
She was a
100m hurdler for Nigeria at the 2012 London Summer Olympics. Omeoga was a
sprinter for the University of Minnesota and Onwumere was a double sprint
medalist at the 2015 African Games.
"I
basically got into the sport of bobsledding in 2015 after a little bit of a
hiatus from athletics," the US magazine People recently.
"I
also learned that Nigeria had never had any Winter Olympians... and then to cap
it off I learned the continent of Africa had never been represented, man or
woman, by any bobsleigh team.
"So I
was like, 'OK, this is obviously something that's going to hang over my head if
I don't step in and try and do something about it."
At the
reception, questions about the basics of the sport -- from timings to the
number of people participating -- were met with polite responses.
But in a
country where self-sufficiency is a matter of life and death for most people,
the women's hard work and commitment to achieving their goals got the loudest
cheer.
Adigun
explained that once she had told herself out loud that she was going to try to
make the Winter Olympics there was no going back.
"Once
you speak (something) into existence, that's an affirmation that you're going
to commit," she added.
"Can
you speak gold into existence?" asked the compere.
Adigun
smiled. Then the dancing started.



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