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Onyali to Okagbare: Your 200m record not safe, you have to run 21 seconds

Mary Onyali-Omagbemi, former African sprints record holder, has advised Blessing Okagbare-Ighoteguonor to work harder and lower her time in the women’s 200 metres.

Okagbare-Ighoteguonor on March 25 set a new African record in the women’s 200m event of the Wes Kittley Invitational, Abilene Christian University, Texas, US.

She ran a time of 22.04 seconds to erase Onyali-Omagbemi’s 22.07 seconds record set at the Wetklasse Grand Prix in Zurich, Switzerland 22 years ago.

“I am excited and fulfilled to see a record that I made years ago broken. I congratulate her,” Onyali-Omagbemi told NAN on Monday.

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“I have always known that she will break the record, since I have been monitoring her performance.

“Where the record is right now is not safe. Okagbare-Ighoteguonor needs to drop it down to 21 seconds.

“I was thinking that for Okagbare-Ighoteguonor to have broken the records, she needed to run at least 21 where it will be a little bit harder for anybody else to touch it.

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“I want her to work harder to bring it lower, because it was 22.07, and an Ivorian athlete at the last World Championship came close to it with 22.08.

“For Okagbare-Ighoteguonor to have done 22.04, it is still within the range of the Ivorian girl.

“The season is just beginning and it is going to be interesting to see who will eventually clinch it at the end of the season.”

The Olympian said the fact that her 1996 record stayed unbroken for 22 years was a sign of athletics underdevelopment in Nigeria and Africa.

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“The state of athletics in the country should be a cause for concern for stakeholders in the sports industry,” she said.

“The development of sports in Nigeria is part of the things that brought me back to the country.

“I have been working hard to see how athletics will be reintroduced in primary schools.”

Onyali-Omagbemi won the bronze medal in the 4×100m relay at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, Spain and in the 200m at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta in the US.

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