Friday, 13 May 2016

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY - AFRO-NIGERIAN " BLESSING OKAGBARE " IS A TRACK AND FIELD ATHLETE WHO SPECIALIZES IN LONG JUMP AND SHORT SPRINTS - GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                                                     BLACK      SOCIAL      HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      

































































































































































































Blessing Okagbare
Blessing Okagbare
2013 World Championships in Athletics (August, 12)- 6.JPG
Okagbare at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics in Moscow
Personal information
Born September 10, 1988 (age 27)
Sapele, Delta State, Nigeria
Height 1.8 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight 68 kg (150 lb)
Sport
Country Nigeria
Sport Athletics
Event(s) Long jump, sprints
Medal record[hide]
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place 2008 Beijing Long jump
World Championships
Silver medal – second place 2013 Moscow Long jump
Bronze medal – third place 2013 Moscow 200 m
Commonwealth Games
Gold medal – first place 2014 Glasgow 100 m
Gold medal – first place 2014 Glasgow 200 m
Silver medal – second place 2014 Glasgow 4x100m
All-Africa Games
Gold medal – first place 2011 Maputo Long jump
Gold medal – first place 2011 Maputo 4x100 m
Gold medal – first place 2015 Brazzaville 4x100 m
Silver medal – second place 2007 Algiers Long jump
Silver medal – second place 2011 Maputo 100 m
African Championships
Gold medal – first place 2010 Nairobi 100 m
Gold medal – first place 2010 Nairobi Long jump
Gold medal – first place 2010 Nairobi 4x100 m
Gold medal – first place 2014 Marrakesh 100 m
Gold medal – first place 2014 Marrakesh 4x100 m
Silver medal – second place 2012 Benin 100 m
Continental Cup
Bronze medal – third place 2010 Split 100 m
Blessing Okagbare (born 9 October 1988) is a Nigerian track and field athlete who specializes in long jumping and short sprints. She is an Olympic and World Championships medalist in the long jump, and a world medallist in the 200 metres. She also holds the Women's 100 metres Commonwealth Games record for the fastest time at 10.85 seconds. Her 100 m best of 10.79 makes her the African record holder for the event. She was the African 100 m and long jump champion in 2010. She has also won medals at the All-Africa Games and the IAAF Continental Cup.

Contents 
1 Career
1.1 Early life
1.2 Olympic and African medals
1.3 London 2012 and 2013 World Championships
1.4 2014 Commonwealth Games
2 Personal bests

Career
Early life
Okagbare was born in Sapele, Delta, in Nigeria. Given her athletic physique, teachers and family encouraged her to take up sports. Initially she played football as a teenager at her high school and later, in 2004, she began to take an interest in track and field. She participated in a number of disciplines early on, competing in the long jump, triple jump and high jump events at the Nigerian school championships and winning a medal in each. On the senior national stage, she was a triple jump bronze medallist at the 2004 Nigerian National Sports Festival. Okagbare's first international outing came at the 2006 World Junior Championships in Athletics, where she performed in the qualifying rounds of both the long and triple jump competitions.[1]

In May 2007, at the All-Africa Games trials in Lagos, she established a Nigerian record of 14.13 metres in the triple jump.[2] At the 2007 All-Africa Games she won the silver medal in the long jump[3] and finished fourth in the triple jump.[4] In the latter competition her Nigerian record was beaten by Chinonye Ohadugha, who jumped 14.21 metres.

Olympic and African medals
As a 19-year-old, she won a bronze medal in the women's long jump event at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.[5]

Okagbare scored a 100 m/long jump double at the NCAA Women's Outdoor Track and Field Championship for University of Texas at El Paso, completing an undefeated collegiate streak that year.[6] She won the Nigerian 100 m title in 2010, running a time of 11.04 seconds, and stated that she was opting out of the long jump in order to save herself for the upcoming African championships.[7]

At the African Championships in 2010, she won gold in the long jump again with a distance of 6.62 m while her compatriot Comfort Onyali took silver. Okagbare also won gold in the 100 m distance with a run of 11.03 s flat, while Gabon's Ruddy Zang Milama and compatriot Oludamola Osayomi won silver and bronze with runs of 11.15 s and 11.22 s respectively . She won her third gold at the end of the championship as part of the Nigerian 4×100 m women's relay team. The team of Okagbare, Osayomi, Lawretta Ozoh and Agnes Osazuwa set a new championship record with a run of 43.43 s, more than a full second ahead of the silver-winning Cameroonian quartet.

In 2011, Okagbare continued to build on her earlier endeavours by establishing herself as a 100 m runner. At the 2011 World Championships in Daegu, Okagbare placed fifth in the 100 m final with a run of 11.12 s. However she did not make it to the final of the long jump as her best jump of 6.36 m was not enough to get her out of her qualifying group.[8] She concluded her 2011 season by winning three medals at the All Africa Games in Maputo, Mozambique. She won silver in the 100 m behind compatriot Oludamola Osayomi with a run of 11.01 s and gold with in the long jump with a jump of 6.5 0m. She was part of the Nigerian quartet that won gold in the 4 × 100 m with a time of 43.34.

2012 was a busy year for Okagbare. She jumped 6.97 m in the long jump in Calabar during the Nigerian championship. She won new continental medals at the 2012 African Championships in Porto Novo. In the 100 m she was beaten to silver by Zang Milama, while in the long jump she claimed gold with a jump of 6.96 m.

London 2012 and 2013 World Championships
At London 2012, Okagbare participated in her second Olympic Games. Going into the Olympics she had run a number of fast 100 m races and there was much anticipation and hope of a medal. However the 2012 Olympics were not as successful for Okagbare as her 2008 outing. She established a new personal best of 10.92 s in the 100 m semi-final but placed eighth in the final with a run of 11.01 s.

2013 would prove to be a breakthrough year for Okagbare. In April 2013, in Walnut, California, Blessing Okagbare set a personal record in the 200 m with a time of 22.31 s. Then, in July, she improved her personal best in the long jump with successive jumps of 6.98 m at the Athletissima meet in Lausanne, and 7.00 m during the Monaco Herculis meet. On July 27, 2013, at the London Anniversary Games, Okagbare set a new African record of 10.86 s in her 100 m race. She won the final about an hour later, setting a new African record of 10.79, in a race where she beat reigning 100 m Olympic gold medalist Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. Okagbare's record eclipsed the existing record by compatriot Glory Alozie of 10.90 s which had stood since 1998.[9]

At the 2013 World Championships in Moscow, Okagbare won the silver medal in the long jump. Her jump of 6.99 m put her in second place behind Brittney Reese of the United States by only two centimetres.[10] In the 100 m final, she placed sixth with a run of 11.04 s and also placed third in the 200 m race.

2014 Commonwealth Games
Okagbare participated in both the 100m and 200m races. She made it through to the finals of the 100m and won with a time of 10.85, breaking the games record of 10.91 seconds set by Debbie Ferguson-McKenzie 12 years earlier at the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester. Okagbare also won the gold medal in the 200, with a time of 22.25 seconds. In doing so, she became the fourth woman to win the 100m and 200m double at the Commonwealth Games.

Personal bests
100 metres – 10.79 seconds (2013)
200 metres – 22.23 seconds (2014)
Long jump – 7.00 m (22 ft 111⁄2 in) (2013)
Triple jump – 14.13 m (46 ft 41⁄4 in) (2007)
60 metres (indoor) – 7.18 seconds (2010)B

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