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Spotakova rewards MOWA with paraphernalia

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World record-holder gifts final World Championships uniform to Museum

 

Barbora Spotakova competes at the 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha (© Getty Images)

As the 19 surviving entrants moved from the field to the track in Santiago’s Estadio Nacional for the final event of the heptathlon at the 2000 World U20 Championships, Barbora Spotakova occupied one of the podium positions, Simon Turnbull reports for World Athletics Heritage.

 

A mighty javelin throw of 54.15m had propelled the teenage Czech multi-eventer into the third spot – behind one Carolina Kluft of Sweden and Russia’s Lidiya Bashlykova-Nokrhina.

 

With just seven points to spare, young ‘Bara’ – as she was known to her teammates, family, and friends – could not afford to let Sanna Saarman get ahead of her in the 800m if she was to collect the bronze medal. Sadly, it was not to be.

 

As the 17-year-old Kluft comfortably secured the gold (6056 points) and Bashlykova-Nokrhina the silver (5898), the 19-year-old Spotakova edged out of third place.

 

She finished fifth in the third and final 800m heat in 2:24.30 – one place and 2.10sec behind Saarman. The Finn took bronze with 5707 points. Spotakova finished fourth with 5689.

 

Like Kluft, ‘Bara’ was to become one of the all-time greats of track and field – but not as a multi-eventer. Her six appearances at the senior World Athletics Championships were all as a javelin thrower. From the last of those, in Doha in 2019 – in which she finished ninth – she has kindly chosen to donate her singlet, name bib, and throwing boots to the Museum of World Athletics (MOWA).

 

The MOWA is delighted to receive them because the one-time track and field all-rounder, the nearly-girl of the heptathlon at those 2000 World U20 Championships, proceeded to establish herself as the undisputed queen of the weapon, capturing three world titles and two Olympic gold medals, and setting a world record mark of 72.28m that has remained intact for 15 years now.

 

Barbora Spotakova's vest from the 2019 World ChampionshipsBarbora Spotakova’s vest from the 2019 World Championships (© MOWA)

 

“Every fairytale comes to an end.”

 

The first of Spotakova’s five global championship successes came in Osaka in 2007. At those same World Athletics Championships, Kluft bade farewell to her heptathlon career at 24, completing a hat-trick of world titles to add to the Olympic gold she won in Athens in 2004.

 

Remarkably, Spotakova was still a major championship medal winner as a 41-year-old mother of two young boys. She announced her retirement from international competition after claiming a brilliant bronze at the 2022 European Athletics Championships in Munich.

 

“Every fairytale comes to an end, and mine had a wonderful happy ending in the form of a bronze medal at the European Championships in Munich, symbolically closing the circle,” Spotakova announced at a press conference in Prague in September last year.

 

Even though she has stepped off the international circuit to concentrate on the upbringing of her two boys – Janek, now 10, and Darek, five – the standard bearer of the women’s javelin has not quite been able to lay down her spear for good.

 

In 2023, at 42, she finished second in the Czech Championships, sixth in the Golden Spike meet in Ostrava, and threw a season’s best of 60.32m, good enough for 44th on the world list and 19th on the European list.

 

It all might have been very different, of course, had Spotakova chosen to stay in the multi-events game – instead of gaining the singular focus that Kluft craved in her later career as an injury-plagued long jump specialist, who also fleetingly dabbled in the triple jump.

 

Barbora Spotakova in Osaka in 2007Barbora Spotakova in Osaka in 2007 (© Getty Images)

Switch to the weapon

 

Spotakova’s father, Frantisek, was a decathlete, and her mother, Ludmila, was also an athlete and coach.

 

At 14, Barbora moved from the family home in Jablonec nad Nisou in the north of Czechia to study at the Pripotocni Gymnasium, a specialist sports school in Prague. In her teenage years in the Czech capital, she spent some of her spare time earning money as a cleaner and gained a fondness for drinking beer and listening to punk bands in pubs.

 

Still, Spotakova kept at her studies and emerged as a talented track and field all-rounder under the guidance of coach Rudolf Cerny, finishing runner-up in the Czech U20 indoor pentathlon in 1999.

 

Outdoors, the following year, she finished ninth in the heptathlon in the Multistars meet at Desenzano, notched a victory at the Combined Events International in Hexham, and finished third at the Czech Championships in Prague, improving her PB to 5873 points – a score that would have comfortably secured bronze at the World U20 Championships in Chile.

 

In the 2001 season, she was a watershed for Spotakova. She again placed third at the Czech Championships and seventh in the European Athletics Multi-Events competition at Maribor but failed to kick on, registering an annual best of 5414.

 

On a subsequent one-year stay at the University of Minnesota, from 2001-02, Spotakova began to focus on the weapon. However, she took the 2002 Big Ten heptathlon title at Madison, Wisconsin, with a score of 5400.

 

After that, she only contested two more heptathlons, notching a creditable fourth place twice at the end of season Decastars meet in Talence in 2004 and 2012, on the latter occasion with a lifetime best haul of 5880 points.

 

After taking javelin silver with 56.76m at the 2002 Czech Championships in Ostrava, Spotakova opened the circle of her major championship career in the arena where she was to close it 20 years later – narrowly missing the cut for the final at that year’s European Championships in Munich’s Olympiastadion.

 

Surprisingly, given the success she enjoyed at the world level, Spotakova only managed two European Championships titles – in Zurich in 2014 and Amsterdam two years later – plus a silver in Gothenburg in 2006 and bronzes in Barcelona in 2010 and Munich last year.

 

Barbora Spotakova on her way to winning European javelin gold in ZurichBarbora Spotakova on her way to winning European javelin gold in Zurich (© Getty Images)

That was, however, two continental crowns more than her celebrated compatriot Jan Zelezny, who succeeded Cerny as her coach, managed to gain during a trailblazing career as a three-time world and Olympic javelin champion and world record-breaker.

 

Spotakova claimed five global championship golds, the first at the 2007 World Championships in Osaka. She broke her Czech record twice in the final, throwing 66.40m and 67.07m to beat German favorite Christina Obergfoll.

 

Her golden streak continued at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, snatching victory and the European record with 71.42m in the final round. In doing so, the Czech moved to second place on the world all-time list, behind the 71.54m Osleidys Menendez. Still, in her final competition of the year, at the World Athletics Final in Stuttgart, she eclipsed the Cuban’s world record with a monster throw of 72.28m.

 

Coach Zelezny

 

Spotakova took silver behind Germany’s Steffi Nerius at the 2009 World Championships in Berlin. 2011, with Zelezny now guiding her, she regained the world title in Daegu, throwing 71.58m, the second-best mark of her career.

 

Her two other global titles came in London, five years apart: at the 2012 Olympics and 2017 World Championships. She also earned bronze at the 2016 Olympics, becoming the first woman to win three Olympic medals in the javelin.

 

Barbora Spotakova in the javelin at the London 2012 Olympic GamesBarbora Spotakova in the javelin at the London 2012 Olympic Games (© Getty Images)

 

Despite taking breaks in 2013 and 2018 to give birth to her sons, Spotakova managed to maintain her major championship medal-winning form right through to the end of her marathon career.

 

In 2021, she made her fifth Olympic appearance, narrowly failing to qualify for the final in Tokyo. Still, in Munich a year later, she mustered a 60.68m throw to sign off in style at the 2022 European Championships – earning bronze at the age of 41, behind teenagers Elina Tzengko of Greece and Adriana Vilagos of Serbia.

 

“I hope I’ve been able to show that you can last long in the javelin,” said the one-time track and field all-rounder. “I hope I have shown that my technique looks easy – like you don’t have to be a weightlifter or a powerful person.”

 

That Spotakova happens to be an inspiration was clear when Haruka Kitaguchi won the 2023 world title in Budapest.

 

Asked which javelin thrower she admired the most, whose performances she studied the most, the Japanese thrower, who trains in Czechia, replied: “Barbora Spotakova.

 

“I love Barbora Spotakova. I love that I am training in the Czech Republic, her country.”

 

AFCON 2023: Pedro Gonçalves speaks!

Exclusive Interview with Angola Coach

 

 

Angola’s major assignment in the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Côte d’Ivoire 2023 is to do better than they have done in previous editions. And Pedro gets it.

 

After having stints with almost every other Angolan national team, Pedro tells CAFOnline exclusively that he thinks he knows the psychology of the team and that a TotalEnergies CAF AFCON is worth the try – again.

 

In this interview, he discusses the ideal target and navigating past the group stage.

 

You have handled the Angolan national teams at all levels (U-17, U-20, U-23) and now the senior team. What’s the experience been like so far for you? 

 

Yes, I have been in Angola since 2015; before that time, I had never been to Angola, and this is a passion we are developing.

 

After November 2019, I focused on working in two ways. Angola has lots of players abroad playing at a high level. On the other hand, I know the potential of the young players because I worked with them on the youth side. So that process helped me to know who the guys with better potential were, not at the moment, but for the future to push into the senior team. That’s why we have six players from the U-17 World Cup playing in the senior team.

 

I feel like an Angolan. Maybe I will depart someday to come, but in my heart, it will be with me.

 

Angola has had a rough time in the AFCON. Before this qualification, they had qualified just once in the last 4 tournaments. What did the magic this time around? 

 

We feel that at this moment, we have the capacity to achieve and win more matches. We won two games in the qualifiers and lost to only Ghana in the last game. It was tough.

We have been consistent. We are in the middle of the process.

 

People are delighted sometimes; others too get disappointed, but we must focus on the process. When we look back, we see progress and step by step; we are getting better, so right now, it’s a show for us and everybody.

 

What does playing in the AFCON mean to you and your career as a coach? 

 

Playing in the AFCON is perhaps the brightest spot of my career. I was at the CHAN, I was at the U-17 World Cup, but the AFCON is the biggest stage of my career. It’s a big step, and I am delighted about it.

 

Let’s look at the group you’re in. You will play Algeria, Burkina Faso, and Mauritania; what’s your assessment of the group?

 

We are not the favorite, but we have our chances; Algeria is undoubtedly the favorite. Burkina Faso has been doing a great job in the last five tournaments: twice in the semi and once in the final. They are consistent.

 

With Mauritania, we have played a lot against them recently. They have a significant investment and are growing, so they participated in the last CHAN and AFCON.

 

The focus is to cross the group.

 

What is your ideal target here?

 

Let’s do what we haven’t done before; this is our main focus. We know if we win twice, we qualify. We will see where our performance and capacity will take us, but we can qualify from the group and try to win the knockout phase. If you do that, then you can go to the finals. Let’s see.

 

‘We are playing against African giants’

We will not get drawn into the underdog’s discussions – Ananias Gebhardt

 

 

Vice-captain of the Namibian national team, Ananias Gebhardt, says the team will not be drawn into the underdog’s title discussions and will be approaching Tuesday’s TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 Group E opener against Tunisia with a clear plan of intent.

 

The lanky defender, flanked by his coach Colin Benjamin, spoke from the Amadou Gon Coulibaly Stadium in Korhogo, where they are preparing to make their fourth TotalEnergies CAF AFCON appearance.

 

“We don’t want to get lost in that underdog discussion in this competition. There is a match to be played, and we have to approach it as such. We will concentrate on what we can do. It will not be easy. We are playing against African giants and a team that is well recognized globally and is respected”, cautioned Gebhardt.

 

The 35-year-old left-back, who plies his trade in South Africa’s second division, responded to CAFOnline’s question of whether the team drew any confidence in Mozambique and Cape Verde’s impressive performances against Egypt and Ghana in their respective opening matches.

 

With this being their fourth appearance, the Brave Warriors are yet to make it out of the group stages of the competition, and being drawn against a group consisting of two former champions in Morocco and South Africa as well as a strong Mali side; the squad will rely on experienced players such as Peter Shalulile for inspiration.

 

“We are blessed to have a generational player like Shalulile. The Numbers don’t lie. He’s been doing great for the past few seasons. He doesn’t have to say much, but his work in every training speaks volumes. He is very influential and is our captain. It’s great to have a player like Shalulile,” concluded the coach about their on-field leader.

 

Kick-off at the Amadou Gon Coulibaly Stadium on Tuesday is at 17h00

‘No more advantage for Africa’s big teams’

The opening matches have been an eye-opener – Jalel Kadri

 

 

Tunisia’s head coach, Jalel Kadri, says the opening matches of the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 have been an eye-opener.

 

Kadri compared Mozambique’s impressive performance against Egypt and Ghana’s shock defeat to Cape Verde in their opening matches.

 

Speaking from the Amadou Gon Coulibaly Stadium in Korhogo, where the 2004 champions will face Namibia in their opening Group E match on Tuesday, Kadri said playing against Namibia in the opening match was in no way an advantage as the tournament has already shown that there are no small teams in Africa.

 

“Namibia is a serious opponent, and we don’t have any easy team. The results in the opening rounds have shown that there is no small team in Africa as we saw, so we need to show them respect and play to our best ability. The opening matches have shown that”, cautioned Kadri.

 

Tunisia is making its 21st appearance in the competition, with this edition being the 16th in a row – a record in the tournament’s history thus far.

 

An unfavorable statistic that the coach will have to discard from his mind is the fact that Tunisia has failed to win any of their last four opening matches of the TotalEnergies CAF AFCON.

 

On his tournament objectives, Kadri was very modest in his response, saying that the team had prepared enough to go as far as possible in the competition.

 

“We will try to go as far as possible. We have good quality teams, so we will try to win each match and go as far as possible. We must be respectful to all opponents. Africa’s best teams are present, so ours is to do our best in every match and take it game by game,” concluded the coach.

 

Kick-off at Korhogo’s Amadou Gon Coulibaly Stadium is at 17h00.

 

AFCON Matchday 2 PHOTOS OF THE DAY

The best pictures of Matchday 2 of the TotalEnergies CAF AFCON

 

Check out the best photos of Matchday 2 of the TotalEnergies Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 after three matches were played on Sunday.

 

Below are the photos:

 

 

 

AFCON 2023: Algeria v Angola

Group D: Facts & Figures

 

 

  • Algeria and Angola are facing each other for the second time at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations. Their only previous encounter produced a goalless draw in the group stages of the 2010 edition.

 

  • Algeria are making their 20th appearance at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations. They will be attempting to win the trophy for the third time, after 1990 and 2019.

 

  • Algeria’s two previous AFCON titles were won on North African soil: at home in 1990 and in Egypt in 2019.

 

  • The only previous time Algeria reached the final outside of North Africa was in 1980, in Nigeria.

 

  • This is Algeria’s sixth consecutive appearance at AFCON, their longest streak since qualifying for seven tournaments between 1980 and 1992.

 

  • Algeria scored with only one of their 46 shots at the 2021 CAF Africa Cup of Nations. They converted 13 of their 77 shots to the title in 2019.

 

  • This is Angola’s ninth appearance at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations. They have qualified from the AFCON group stages on only two occasions (2008 and 2010, the latter as hosts) but have never won a game in the competition’s knockout phase.

 

  • Angola are winless in their last eight AFCON matches (D4 L4), their joint-longest drought in the competition. Their last victory was their 2012 opening group match against Burkina Faso.

 

  • Angola’s last three matches of 2023 in all competitions ended goalless (v DR Congo in October, v Cape Verde and Mauritius in November).

 

  • Angola are unbeaten in their last five opening matches at a CAF Africa Cup of Nations tournament (W1 D4). The last time they lost their first match at an AFCON edition was 2006 (1-3 v Cameroon).

 

  • Angola has scored only two goals in their last seven AFCON matches – one of them was an own goal.

 

  • Mohamed Amoura (3 goals) was the only Algerian player to score more than one goal in the qualifiers for this year’s tournament.

 

Senegal gearing up for title defense

Defending champions ready for opener against Gambia

 

TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations defending champion Senegal kick off their title defense on Monday, 15 January, against The Gambia.

 

The Lions of Teranga and The Scorpions officially open what has been deemed the Group of Death in Group C, consisting of Cameroon and Guinea.

 

Nothing less than a second consecutive title would put a smile on coach Aliou Cisse and his star-studded squad, which is touted as one of the tournament favorites with star players such as Sadio Mane in their arsenal.

 

Interestingly, no African champion has progressed further than the round of 16 in the last six editions of the competition.  Another interesting fact that favors the defending champions is that they have won their opening game in the last four editions.

 

In The Gambia, Senegal meets one of the underdogs of the competition, who are only making their second appearance. However, this is the same nation that reached the quarter-finals in their inaugural participation in 2021.

 

Speaking to CAFOnline upon their arrival, The Gambia coach, Tom Saintfiet, said they were aiming to do well in their second appearance and were well prepared for the competition.

 

“We are delighted to arrive in Côte d’Ivoire for the second consecutive Africa Cup of Nations. We are well prepared for the competition and ready for the start of the competition. We expect the Africa Cup of Nations finals in Côte d’Ivoire to be special and good, especially with the presence of The Gambia in Group C alongside Senegal, Guinea, and Cameroon”

 

Kick off at Yamoussoukro’s Charles Konan Banny Stadium is at 14h00 Local Time.

 

AFCON 2023: Cameroon vs. Guinea

Group C: Facts & Figures

 

 

  • This will be the third encounter between Cameroon and Guinea at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations, all taking place in the group stages. The two previous meetings ended in draws: 2-2 in 1998 and 1-1 in 2015.

 

  • Cameroon is making its 21st appearance in the CAF Africa Cup of Nations, a tally only bettered by Egypt (26), Côte d’Ivoire (25), and Ghana (24). Egypt (7) is the only team to have won the tournament more often than The Indomitable Lions (5).

 

  • Cameroon won the only previous AFCON to be held in Côte d’Ivoire in 1984. They beat Nigeria 3-1 in the final.

 

  • Penalty shoot-outs excluded, Cameroon have lost only one of their last 17 matches at the Africa Cup of Nations (W8 D8), a 3-2 defeat against Nigeria in the round of 16 of the 2019 edition.

 

  • Guinea are taking part in their 14th CAF Africa Cup of Nations. It’s the most appearances for a team at the tournament without ever winning it – the closest they came was in 1976 when Guinea finished second to Morocco in what was then a final group stage.

 

  • Guinea has reached the knockout stages of the Africa Cup of Nations in six of their last seven participations but has never actually progressed in the knockout phase of the competition, either in normal/extra-time or on penalties.

 

  • Guinea has won only two of its last 13 matches at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations (D6 L5), a 2-0 win against Burundi in 2019 and 1-0 against Malawi in 2022.

 

  • Vincent Aboubakar and Karl Toko Ekambi scored 13 of Cameroon’s 14 goals at the 2021 CAF Africa Cup of Nations, eight and five, respectively. Aboubakar’s total was the highest in an edition of the tournament since 1974.

 

  • Cameroon’s Rigobert Song is making his first CAF Africa Cup of Nations appearance as head coach. As a player, he featured in eight joint-record AFCON tournaments and won twice (2000 and 2002).
  • Guinea’s nine goals in the qualifiers of this African Cup of Nations were scored by eight players, with Naby Keïta the only player to find the net twice.

 

AFCON 2023: Gambia v Senegal

Group C: Facts & Figures

 

 

  • This will be the first encounter between Senegal and Gambia at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations. Excluding the CAF African Nations Championship, Senegal and Gambia last faced each other in the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifiers; both games ended in draws (0-0; 1-1).

 

  • Senegal is making its 17th appearance at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations. They will aim to win back-to-back AFCON tournaments for the first time since Egypt’s three in a row from 2006 to 2010, although no AFCON defending champion has progressed further than the round of 16 in the last six editions of the CAF Africa Cup of Nations.

 

  • Senegal has won their opening game in the last four CAF Africa Cup of Nations (v Ghana in 2015, v Tunisia in 2017, v Tanzania in 2019, v Zimbabwe in 2022).

 

  • Since 2017, Senegal has kept more clean sheets than any other team in the Africa Cup of Nations (13 in 18 matches).

 

  • This is Gambia’s second appearance at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations. They reached the quarter-finals in their inaugural participation in the 2021 edition, eventually losing 2-0 to Cameroon.

 

  • As per the last edition, Gambia was the only team to make it through the preliminary round and group stage of the 2023 CAF Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers, beating Chad in the preliminaries and finishing second to Mali in the group phase.

 

  • Despite reaching the quarter-finals in AFCON 2021, Gambia never scored more than one goal in their five matches (W3 D1 L1). All three of their victories were by a 1-0 scoreline.

 

  • Sadio Mané has scored or assisted 48% of Senegal’s goals over the last three CAF Africa Cup of Nations (8 goals, three assists). He’s also had 97 touches in the opposition box (5.4 per game) and completed 57 dribbles (3.2 per game) since his debut in the competition in 2015, more than any other player.

 

  • This is Aliou Cissé’s fourth consecutive CAF Africa Cup of Nations as Senegal’s head coach – under his leadership, the Lions of Teranga were quarter-finalists in 2017, beaten finalists in 2019, and champions in 2022. Senegal has also won more games (11) and kept more clean sheets (13) at AFCON than any other team during the same period.

 

  • Musa Barrow was directly involved in all four of Gambia’s goals at the 2021 CAF Africa Cup of Nations, scoring twice and assisting the other two.

 

Condé Chiquinho: ‘We are sad’

‘And that’s a good thing’

 

 

The usually jovial Conde Chiquinho appeared to be visibly disheartened after his side let go of a lead to draw 2-2 after coming from a goal down against Egypt in their opening TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 match.

 

A late penalty conversion by Mohamed Salah saw Egypt escape a shock defeat to salvage a point.

 

“We were so close. The result was almost in our hands. However, it is up to us to work harder so that this does not happen again”, said a disappointed Chiquinho.

 

After conceding in as early as the second minute, Chiquinho says the goal did not startle his side.

 

“The opening goal did not disturb our plan. It motivated us to play even harder”.

 

Concluding his remarks on the match, Chiquinho said even though they managed to hold the former champions to a draw, he was not satisfied with getting a point in a match that he feels could have gone their way.

 

“I feel like I have completed my task. We are sad, which is good because we are not satisfied with what we got today,” concluded the Mozambican tactician.