Personal information | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Nationality | British | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | 30 December 1979 London, England |
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Sport | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Running | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Event(s) | 100 metres, 200 metres | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Abiodun Adesola "Abi" Oyepitan (born 30 December 1979) is a British sprint athlete who specialises in the 100 and 200 metres. She won the 100 m at the 2001 Summer Universiade and at the 2002 Commonwealth Games she took a bronze medal with the 4×100 metres relay team. She became one of Britain's best female sprinters, becoming the first British female to reach an Olympic final in a sprint event since Kathy Cook.[1] However, following her performance in the 2004 Athens Olympics, she suffered an injury which all but brought her career to a halt. She made a winning comeback in 2010, competing in the Diamond League and winning a silver medal for England at the Commonwealth Games in Delhi in the 200 metres.
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Abi was born in Westminster, London to Nigerian parents and represents Shaftsbury Barnet Harriers athletics club. Her first outing to a major athletics came at the 1998 World Junior Athletics Championships where she finished fourth as part of the British 4 x 100 m relay team. She continued to perform well at the junior level, but her progress was interrupted in 2000 by an injury. She managed to bounce back the following year, with her comeback including a silver medal at the European under-23 Championships.
She was again part of the 4 x 100 m relay squad at the 2001 World Championships. Although the squad came away empty handed, they set the second fastest time ever by a British squad. She went on to take gold at the World Student Games that same year.
2002 saw Abi make the final of the Commonwealth Games 100 m and improve on this in the relay by taking silver behind an Australian team. She also made the final of the European Athletics Championships where Ekaterini Thanou took the gold.
She continued to improve and in 2003 broke her 200 m personal best in taking her first national senior title.
2004 saw Abi step up to hold her own with the best in the world. At a meeting in Kalamata, Greece in May she won the 100 m then beat the reigning European Champion Muriel Hurtis in the 200 m.[2]
At the 2004 Summer Olympics Abi was unfortunate in not making the 100 m final. Running in the faster of the two semi-finals she finished fifth in her heat with a time of 11.18 s that equalled LaTasha Colander's fourth placed time that saw her through in the second semi.
Despite not making that final, her good form gave her confidence for her preferred event the 200 m where she set a personal best in the first round then comfortably progressed through round two and the semi-final, finishing second in both to Allyson Felix. She was passed early on in the final by eventual winner Veronica Campbell and eventually finished joint 7th, but happy with her overall performance.[3]
Her appearance in the 200 m final was the first women's Olympic sprint final ( 100 + 200 metres ) to feature a Brit since Kathy Smallwood-Cook at the Los Angeles Olympics twenty- years previously. She was also the only Briton to reach the sprint finals, all of the men failing for the first time in twenty-eight years, despite later going on to win the 4x100m relay.
Following the Olympics, a stress fracture injury caused her to miss the 2005 athletics season. She returned to the track in 2006 but the injury continued to limit her performances.[4] In 2010, she returned to take Silver in the 200 metres and a Gold in the 4 x 100m relay at the Commonwealth Games in Delhi.
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Notes |
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Representing United Kingdom | ||||
1999 | European Under-23 Championships | Gothenburg, Sweden | 1st | 4 x 100 m relay |
2001 | World Student Games | Beijing, China | 1st | 100 m |
European Under-23 Championships | Amsterdam, Netherlands | 2nd | 200 m | |
1st | 4 x 100 m relay | |||
2003 | National AAA Championships | England | 1st | 200 m |
Representing England | ||||
2002 | Commonwealth Games | Manchester, England | 3rd | 4 x 100 m relay |
2010 | Commonwealth Games | Delhi, India | 2nd | 200 m |
1st | 4 x 100 m relay |
Event | Best | Location | Date |
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60 metres | 7.27 s | Glasgow, Scotland | 24 January 2004 |
100 metres | 11.17 s | Birmingham, England | 23 July 2004 |
200 metres | 22.50 s | Athens, Greece | 23 August 2004 |
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Preceded by Joice Maduaka |
British Champion in 100m 2004 |
Succeeded by Laura Turner |