Nigerian bobsled pilot, Seun Adigun
continues to break new boundaries and set standards after leading
three other team members to represent the African country at the
recently held Winter, Olympics in Pyeongchang County, South Korea.
Adigun who also recently bagged a
doctorate degree in Chiropractic has now been officially recognized
as the first African, both in the male or female categories to
compete in both the winter and summer Olympics.
Ayako Itoof the International Olympic
Committee (IOC), in a message noted that The Olympic Study Centre has
confirmed that Seun Adigun is the first ever African athlete to
compete in both Summer and Winter Olympic Games.
It would be noted the African star
athlete and bobsled driver is among the only two athletes to be so
recognized at the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics. The second being of
Pita Taufatofua of Tonga, a taekwondoistturned skier. Adigun and
Taufatofua now join a list of elite Summer and Winter Olympians
catalogued by online reference site, Wikipedia.
Adigun who represented Nigeria in
Athletics at the Summer Olympics and Nigeria in Bobsleigh in 2018 at
the Winter Olympics expressed her delight at being bestowed with such
a prestigious accolade.
With a strong support system of her
management team, Lagos-based pan-African agency, Temple Management
Company, she restates her commitment to African excellence. She said,
“This is a real-life example of what it means to represent African
excellence and a true testament to the fact that impossible is
nothing. This milestone is truly a blessing”.
Discussing her preparations for the
2012 Summer Games, Adigun remarked, “My preparations during
athletics was driven by the desire to prove to myself that I was
capable of competing with the best in the world in the women's 100
meter hurdles. I wanted to look back on my career as a hurdler and
know that despite any limitations or health obstacles, I genuinely
gave all that I had to achieving the highest level of competition”.
Adigun further disclosed how she
prepared for the winter Games, “The preparations for the winter
Games was different in the sense that my passion was driven by my
self-less intentions to create positive representation for Nigerians
and Africans, globally. That passion was accompanied by several
thoughts of fear and anxiety, but it was overcome by God's grace and
the support of everyone who played a part in the journey, no matter
how big or small”.
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