Tokyo Olympics: How Team Nigeria Relay Athletes Could Qualify

0 556

The Nigeria relay team stands a chance of qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics after the latest qualification ranking of countries bidding to qualify for the Games was announced by World Athletics with the conclusion of the two-day World Relays in Poland.

The first eight places in each relay event for the Olympics were awarded to the top-eight teams at the 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha.

In cases where those teams have also qualified among the top-eight in Poland, the remaining quota places for Tokyo (16 per event) will be allocated according to the World Athletics top performance lists as of 29 June 2021.

In the women’s 4x100m event, only two slots are available after the conclusion of the World Relays. Brazil (15) and Nigeria (16) currently occupy those two positions based on World Athletics top list of performances drawn from May 2019 to Monday, May 3rd, 2021.

What this means is that Team Nigeria only needs to compete in more relay events, run faster than the 43.05 seconds achieved in Doha in 2019, and stay ahead of some of its major competitors to stand a chance of battling for one of the three medals on offer at the Games. Australia (17), Kazakhstan (18), Canada (19), and Ghana (20) are the other contenders.

The women’s 4x400m team also have a great chance of qualifying based on the ranking and the quality of the nations who occupy the remaining four slots available for grabs after the World Relays.

The team is ranked the 17th best behind Australia in 13th (3:28.64), Switzerland in 14th (3:29.15), India in 15th (3:29.42), and Dominican Republic in 16th (3:30.02).

Experts believe Nigeria can run at least 3:26.00 to move into 13th and qualify with the full complement of its team.

For the men’s 4x100m, the task will be a little tougher as they are presently ranked 17th best with the 38.59 seconds the team ran at the African Games in Rabat, Morocco in July 2019.

There are also four slots available after the Poland event with Canada (37.91), Jamaica (38.15), Trinidad and Tobago (38.46), and Turkey (38.47) provisionally through to Japan.

The 4x100m team will have to at least run faster than the 37.91 seconds Canada ran in Doha, which will be a new national record, to stand a good chance of making it to Tokyo.

They would also have to win Nigeria’s third relay medal in the event at the Games.

For the men’s 4x400m team, the task looks insurmountable as they will have to break the 3:03.00 seconds barrier for the first time since they ran 3:02.39 to win the gold medal at the 2012 African Championships in Port Novo, Benin Republic to qualify.

With Mexico, the 16th team on the list provisionally through via their 3:02.89 run in Italy in July 2019, the Nigerian team knows anything short of 3:03.00 seconds will mean failure to qualify for the Games.

The Mixed Relay team will have to break 3:16.00 seconds to stand a chance of qualifying.

There are three slots presently available with Ukraine (3:16.65), Canada (3:16.76) and Germany (3:16.85) provisionally through to Tokyo.

 

Chidi Nwoke/The Guardian.

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.