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Oludamola Osayomi
Nigerian 100 metres sprinter

Oludamola Osayomi

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Nigerian 100 metres sprinter
Places
Work field
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Osun State
Age
38 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Oludamola Bolanle ("Damola") Osayomi (born 26 June 1986 in Ilesha, Osun State) is a Nigerian sprinter who specializes in the 100 metres and 200 metres. She is a four-time gold medallist at the African Championships in Athletics and won an Olympic bronze medal with Nigeria in the 4×100 metres relay at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. She also won the 100 and 200 m sprints at the 2007 All-Africa Games.
Her personal best for the 100 m is 10.99 seconds, set in São Paulo in 2011. She studied business administration at the University of Texas at El Paso and represented the school athletically in 2006. She was the original winner of the 100 m at the 2010 Commonwealth Games but was stripped of her title and banned after her doping test came back positive for the stimulant methylhexanamine.

Career

Osayomi's first international appearance for Nigeria came at the 2003 World Youth Championships in Athletics where she was a semi-finalist in both the 100 m and 200 metres. She began to compete in senior competitions the following year as part of the Nigerian 4×100 metres relay team. On her Olympic debut, her team came seventh in the women's final at the 2004 Athens Olympics and the team repeated that position at the 2005 World Championships in Athletics the next year. Osayomi proved herself individually at the 2007 All-Africa Games by taking a 100/200 m gold medal double before helping the relay team to the silver medal. On her world 100 m debut at the 2007 World Championships in Athletics, she made her way into the final round (finishing eighth) and set a personal best of 11.15 seconds in the heats. The Nigerian women did not reach the relay final on that occasion.

She opened the 2008 indoor season with a personal best of 7.19 seconds in the 60 metres and went on finish sixth in the final of that event at the 2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships. At the 2008 African Championships in Athletics she became a double continental champion, winning golds in the 100 m individual and relay races, as well as taking a bronze medal in the 200 m. Two personal bests came at that year's Nigerian Championships, as she claimed the 100 m title in 11.08 seconds (also a meet record) and won the 200 m in 22.74 seconds (half a second ahead of runner-up Gloria Kemasuode). This gained her the opportunity to represent Nigeria at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. She was a 100 m semi-finalist and a 200 m quarter-finalist. Together with Kemasuode, Agnes Osazuwa and Ene Franca Idoko she also took part in the 4×100 m relay. In their first round heat they placed fourth and reached the final as the fastest non-qualifiers. Osazuwa was replaced with Halimat Ismaila for the final team and they sprinted to a time of 43.04 seconds, taking third place and a bronze medal behind Russia and Belgium.

She was not in the same form in the 2009 season: she was eliminated in the heats stage of the sprints and relay at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics and her season's bests of 11.31 and 23.41 seconds, both set at the FBK Games, were much slower than the previous year. In 2011, her fastest times of the year came at the 2010 African Championships in Athletics, where she won the 200 m, took the 100 m bronze, and set a Championships record in the relay alongside Blessing Okagbare. She was selected to represent Africa at the 2010 IAAF Continental Cup and following a fifth place in the 200 m, she won a relay bronze medal in a team comprising the top four 100 m runners from the African Championships (Gabon's Ruddy Zang Milama and her compatriots Osazuwa and Okagbare).

At the 2010 Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, Osayomi won the women's 100 metres but lost her gold medal after her B sample tested positive for methylhexanamine, which has only been recently added to the World Anti-Doping Agency's prohibited list. Ironically, before being banned she had said: "I don't know why they allow people to participate in the competition if they cannot follow the rules."

Achievements

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
Representing  Nigeria
2004Olympic GamesAthens, Greece7th4 × 100 m relay
2005World ChampionshipsHelsinki, Finland7th4 × 100 m relay
2007World ChampionshipsOsaka, Japan8th100 m
6th (heats)4 × 100 m relay
All-Africa GamesAlgiers, Algeria1st100 m
1st200 m
2nd4 × 100 m relay
2008World Indoor ChampionshipsValencia, Spain6th60 m
African ChampionshipsAddis Ababa, Ethiopia1st100 m11.22
3rd200 m
1st4 × 100 m relay
Olympic GamesBeijing, PR China8th (semis)100 m
6th (quarter-finals)200 m
3rd4 × 100 m relay43.04 s
2009World ChampionshipsBerlin, Germany6th (q-finals)100 m
8th (heats)200 m
6th (heats)4 × 100 m relay
2010African ChampionshipsNairobi, Kenya3rd100 m
1st200 m
1st4 × 100 m relay
Continental CupSplit, Croatia5th200 m
3rd4 × 100 m relay
Commonwealth GamesNew Delhi, IndiaDQ100 m
4th (semis)200 m
2011World ChampionshipsDaegu, South Korea21st (sf)100 m11.58
6th4 × 100 m relay42.93
All-Africa GamesMaputo, Mozambique1st100 m10.90 (GR)
1st200 m22.86

Personal bests

  • 60 metres - 7.19 s (2008, indoor)
  • 100 metres - 10.99 s (2011, São Paulo (IDCM))
  • 200 metres - 22.74 s (2008, Abuja)

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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