Nigeria’s table tennis star,
Segun Toriola, on Thursday made history in Khartoum, Sudan when he booked a
place at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games.
He will become the first African
athlete to
feature in seven Olympics when he lands in Brazil.
The former African champion
defeated Togo’s Mawussi Agbetoglo 4-0 in the semi-final of the ITTF Africa
Olympics Qualification Tournament. Toriola also defeated Congo’s Saka Suraju
4-1 in the final to win the men’s single title of the tournament.
The Nigerian contingent will be
completed by Edem Offiong, who also qualified for the Games after beating
Algeria’s Lynda Loghraibi 4-0 in the women’s singles semi-finals on Thursday.
She also went on to win the women’s single when she defeated Tunisia’s Saidani Safa
4-0 in the final.
Nigeria will now have four
places – same as Egypt – in Brazil. Quadri Aruna and Funke Oshonaike had
earlier qualified for the Games in 2015.
Toriola now joins Sweden’s
Jorgen Persson, Croatia’s Zoran Primorac and Belgium’s Jean-Michel Saive as the
four players who have to date qualified for the table tennis events at seven
consecutive Olympic Games.
The 41-year-old debuted at the
1992 Barcelona Olympics in Spain and since then he has been participating at
every Olympics. He also holds the record as the most successful African table
tennis player at the Olympics, when he made it to the fourth round of the men’s
singles at the 2008 Beijing Olympics in China.
Toriola told the ITTF website
that he was happy with the record.
He said, “I never believed I
could be playing in my seventh Olympics of my career. I am happy that I made
history as the first African to achieve this feat. It was a bit difficult for
me because I played under a lot of pressure.
“I ensured I was not too
confident in all my matches and I am glad that I made it and I hope to now
focus on the preparation which is vital to me as well.”
Apart from the history he made,
Toriola has also featured at four consecutive editions of the All Africa Games.
He won the men’s singles at Harare 1995, Johannesburg 1999, Abuja 2003 and
Algiers 2007 to become the first athlete to achieve such feat.
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