Three reasons to be cheerful for the future of Irish athletics

Gina Akpe-Moses, Patience Jumbo-Gula and Rhasidat Adeleke represent new generation

Ireland’s Patience Jumbo Gula celebrates after winning the bronze medal  in the 100m the European Youth Olympic Festival  in Gyor, Hungary. Photograph:   Eóin Noonan/Sportsfile
Ireland’s Patience Jumbo Gula celebrates after winning the bronze medal in the 100m the European Youth Olympic Festival in Gyor, Hungary. Photograph: Eóin Noonan/Sportsfile

So, even after all the loose talk, still nothing sparks a sporting debate quicker than the subject of nationality. Only if this week’s lesson is anything to go by, what we know and what we think we know can sometimes be two completely different things.

Part of the problem, it seems, is deciphering the difference between what it means to represent your country and what country represents you. It’s always been something of a moveable feast and you only need to run through the current list of Irish runners and cyclists, soccer and rugby players, swimmers, divers, rowers etc to appreciate that.

That’s because nationality, in the sporting context or otherwise, isn’t always decided on strictly fixed terms, and even less so these days. Although for those who do get to compete on the international stage, it should never be decided by something as hideously narrow-minded as the spelling of their name or the colour of their skin.

The sight of three young Irish athletes on the medal podium of European underage sprints championships within the past week was certainly conspicuous, and not just because these are events where in the past most Irish athletes have had to settle on being the also-rans.

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Ireland’s Rhasidat Adeleke  after  winning a silver medal in the  200m final at the European Youth Olympic Festival   in Gyor, Hungary. Photograph: Eóin Noonan/Sportsfile
Ireland’s Rhasidat Adeleke after winning a silver medal in the 200m final at the European Youth Olympic Festival in Gyor, Hungary. Photograph: Eóin Noonan/Sportsfile

Neatly divided across gold, silver and bronze, their achievement, even if at essentially developmental level, was significantly representative of the new generation of Irish athletes.

And that's not only because all three have an African background, all three the daughters of immigrants who had made Ireland their home over the last decade and more, but also because all three have roots in Irish athletics about as deep as they can go, coming up through the club and schools ranks as much as any young Irish athlete born here to a strictly Irish background (whatever that is).

Indeed each of their journeys into the sport and the now modest success that has come with it have in some way been carefully steered by the Irish athletics system, starting with the gold medal won by Gina Akpe-Moses over 100m at the European Under-20 championships in Grosetto, Italy last Friday.

Three years ago, not long after winning an intermediate sprint double at the Irish Schools championships in Tullamore, Gina Akpe-Moses was beaten. Not once, but twice. And worse still by the same athlete she’d beaten just a few weeks previous.

It was at the Schools Interprovincial championships in Santry. Then aged 15, and already the standout athlete at her school, St Vincent’s Dundalk, and her club, Blackrock AC, Akpe-Moses was gently taken aside by Fintan Reilly, one of her club mentors, and politely told she needed to become more disciplined with her training.

Talent, he told her, would only take her so far. The rest came down to hard work and dedication. Part of the issue there was Dundalk has no running track (and that’s another story), and also her parents, who immigrated here from Lagos, Nigeria when she was three years old, didn’t have the time or resources to be driving her around the country to races and proper training venues.

International debut

So Reilly set her up with sprints coach John Shields in Dublin, and from then on, her older sister Joy took her down either by train or bus to the Morton Stadium, twice a week, in order to seek those necessary improvements. Akpe-Moses was determined to make it, and the following summer, made her Irish international debut, winning the silver medal over 200m at the European Youth Olympics over 200m in Tbilisi.

Gina Akpe-Moses shows off her gold medal from the 100m at  the European Athletics Under-20 Championships in Italy on the Ireland squad’s return at Dublin Airport. Photograph:  Sam Barnes/Sportsfile
Gina Akpe-Moses shows off her gold medal from the 100m at the European Athletics Under-20 Championships in Italy on the Ireland squad’s return at Dublin Airport. Photograph: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile

“She’s always been an integral member of our club, and we’ll always see her as a Dundalk person,” says Reilly. “She went to primary school here, then secondary school at St Vincent’s, and her sister Joy did her Leaving Cert there. Education was a big, big focus for the parents.”

Around the same time, the family moved again to Birmingham, and for a while she wasn't sure how that would work out. Joining up with Birchfield Harriers, and club coach Andy Paul, the move turned out to be a blessing in disguise, given their world-class training facilities, although Akpe-Moses insisted she would continue to race for her club, Blackrock AC, and also Ireland.

“I wouldn’t see myself ever changing country, after so long,” she says. “I think that would feel like a bit of a betrayal if I decided that. I’ve always had great support, great encouragement, from Athletics Ireland.”

By Tuesday afternoon, Patience Jumbo-Gula, another young Dundalk athlete from the St Gerard's club, and also at school at St Vincent's, had won the bronze medal in the 100m at the European Youth Olympics in Gyor, Hungary, at age 16, her marginally wind-aided 11.59 seconds actually faster than what Akpe-Moses ran to win gold.

Not long after crossing the line, Jumbo-Gula was embraced by Irish team-mate Rhasidat Adeleke, who runs with Tallaght AC and last month won a junior sprint double at the Irish Schools championships running in the colours of Presentation Community College in Terenure. Adeleke is still just 14, very young even by Youth Olympics standards, yet came out on Thursday afternoon and won the silver medal over 200m, also with a slightly wind-assisted personal best of 23.81 seconds.

What both unites and perhaps sets apart these three is the fact they’ve never known themselves to be anything other than an Irish athlete. Which also makes them completely separate to the debate over the transfer of allegiance, and why the IAAF froze their rule on that earlier this year such was its widespread abuse or at least lack of respect.

What they also represent is that ever-increasing percentage of the Irish population which comprises foreign nationals, their success of the past week not just a natural progression for Irish athletics but surely soon something all of Irish sport can learn from.