The Citizen (KZN)

African Games: worth it or not?

- With Wesley Bo on

The African Games is under way in Ghana, and South Africans are already raking in medals, but you’d be forgiven if you didn’t even know it was happening.

As useful as it is as a stepping stone event, the truth is that the African Games provides little more than a top-flight developmen­t platform, and therefore it gets little attention.

In terms of athletic performanc­es and the level of competitio­n, the gap between the African Games and the Olympic Games is so big that many Olympic medal contenders don’t even take part at the continenta­l showpiece.

The African Games does, however, still hold a valuable place on the calendar.

In order to prepare young senior athletes for the Olympic cauldron, multi-sport events like the African Games, World Student Games and Commonweal­th Games have played key roles in ensuring individual­s are ready to compete when they reach the highest level.

The two-week competitio­n in Ghana, which features 16 sports, is an ideal opportunit­y for athletes to experience participat­ing in a foreign environmen­t while dealing with the pressure of competing for their country at an internatio­nal multi-sport event.

And the African Games, much like the Commonweal­th Games, is notorious for local organising committees delivering less than desirable living conditions and competitio­n facilities on limited budgets.

Essentiall­y, if an athlete can overcome the challenges faced at the African Games, they’re going to make a much smoother transition when they step up to Olympic level; where the organisati­on is usually top drawer and conditions are generally more suitable.

So as competitiv­e as we can be as a nation, there is generally little interest in the African Games, and results and medals achieved are less important than the invaluable experience it offers our rising stars.

Of course, we will have good reason to feel pride if we emerge triumphant at the top of the medals table at the continenta­l spectacle – something we haven’t achieved since 2011 – but with a second-string team taking part in many codes, we can’t take too much from that.

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