Namibian Christine Mboma wins BBC African Sports Personality of the Year 2021

Athletics
By Mike Kihaki | Jan 12, 2022
Namibian Christine Mboma [photo courtesy]

Christine Mboma is the BBC African Sports Personality of the Year for 2021, capping a year of unprecedented sporting success for the Namibian teenage sprinter.

Mboma became the first woman to win the accolade after a successful Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

Mboma was a strong favorite for the award from the moment she emerged from qualifying to storm through to the latter stages of the competition.

In September, the 18-year-old broke the record and became the first woman from her country to win an Olympic medal - and only the second athlete after prolific sprinter Frankie Fredericks - when she claimed silver in a stacked women's 200 metres final behind gold medallist Elaine Thompson-Herah of Jamaica.

Her performance was notable as she was forced to transition to the 200m from her preferred 400m after World Athletics ruled her and her compatriot Beatrice Masilingi unable to compete in their preferred discipline due to high natural testosterone levels.

The pair were ruled out at the start of July, less than a month before the Games, with both youngsters notably struggling with block starts.

Mboma broke the world under-20 record in the final in a time of 21.81sec, also setting a new African and national record. 

Masilingi was sixth in that final, with both athletes setting new personal bests in all three of their races.

Christine Mboma says the award was a reward for all hard work and achievements done.  "It is always great to put my country on the top spot, I always make my country proud and it feels great to win the award. My achievement will motivate young athletes from Africa, and here in Namibia, to try to do their best and to work hard for their dreams. I dedicate this BBC award to all Namibians.” Mboma told BBC Sport Africa.

Mboma won the award ahead of Kenyan Olympic champions Eliud Kipchoge and Faith Kipyegon, South African double Paralympic champion Ntando Mahlangu, Senegal and Chelsea goalkeeper Edouard Mendy and Olympic swimming champion Tatjana Schoenmaker.

She is also the second Namibian to win the award after Fredericks.

As well as silver at the Games, Mboma became the 200m Diamond League champion and under-20 world gold medallist.

Her coach Henk Botha says: “Awards like these mean a lot to all athletes. It was a very strong field, all the contestants are superstars of African sport, so for me as a coach of the athlete it is a great privilege and honour to be part of any award from the BBC. It is just out of this world for a little place like Namibia and a young girl that not more than three years ago, ran barefoot in the sand. She got such an excellent award so obviously this is unbelievable.”?

 

Share this story
Veteran goalkeeper Neuer recalled to aid Germany World Cup bid
Veteran goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was handed a surprise recall to Germany's 26-man World Cup squad, coming out of international retirement to play in the tournament for a fifth time.
Emery urges Villa to use Europa triumph to fuel bold new era
Unai Emery urged Aston Villa to use their historic Europa League final triumph against Freiburg as the foundation for an "ambitious" new era.
DR Congo cancel World Cup training in Kinshasa amid Ebola outbreak
The Democratic Republic of Congo team have cancelled a planned pre-World Cup training camp at home after the country was hit by an Ebola outbreak
For Arsenal, the time is right and the Lord has made it happen
When Patrick Paul Vieira lifted Arsenal’s English Premier League trophy in 2004, petrol in Kenya was retailing at Sh64.99, Diesel was Sh51.60, while kerosene went for Sh38.19.
Julius Yego's exit beckons after his last African show in Ghana
The 37-year-old javelin star is set for his last World Championships and Olympics next year and 2028 respectively.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS