Log In

Akinyosoye, Brou lead Nigeria's charge with daring displays at African Fencing Championships

Published 14 hours ago2 minute read

In a week dominated by powerhouse nations, Nigeria’s Oluwafolayemi Akinyosoye and Inkosi Brou emerged as breakout stars at the 23rd African Fencing Championships, stunning opponents and igniting fresh hope for the country’s fencing future.

Akinyosoye delivered one of the most talked-about performances of the championships by toppling the tournament’s No. 1 seed, 27-year-old Fares Ferjani of Tunisia; an Olympic silver medallist and the reigning giant of African sabre fencing.

The 20-year-old, who recently committed his international future to Nigeria after representing England at junior levels, edged Ferjani 5-4 in a nail-biting preliminary bout that lit up the venue and sent Nigerian supporters into a frenzy.

His performance wasn’t a flash in the pan. Akinyosoye marched into the round of 16 and confidently dispatched Algeria’s Lotfi Ibrihen 15-9, showing maturity and poise beyond his years.

Though his run ended in the quarterfinals with a 15-8 loss to Tunisia’s Ahmed Ferjani, the young sabreur earned admiration across the fencing community and firmly planted his name among the sport’s rising African stars.

Fellow Nigerian standout Inkosi Brou also turned heads with a gritty campaign in the men’s sabre event. A bronze medalist at the African Junior Championships and grandson of the late NAFDAC DG, Dora Akunyili, Brou displayed sharp footwork, cool nerves, and solid technique en route the round of 16.

Article Page with Financial Support Promotion

There, he went toe-to-toe with Niger Republic’s fifth seed, Evann Girault, eventually falling 15-11 in a tightly contested duel that underlined his potential to become a major force in African fencing.

In a twist few saw coming, defending champion and Olympic medalist Fares Farjani didn’t survive past the round of 16, crashing out in a 15-13 loss to Egypt’s Adham Moataz.

READ ALSO: Fencing: Continental heavyweights arrive Nigeria for 23rd African Championships

The early exits of both Ferjani brothers; Fares and Ahmed, blew the men’s sabre event wide open and served as a symbolic shift, with emerging talents like Akinyosoye and Brou making their mark on the continental stage.

In the women’s individual epee event, Nigeria’s Sarah Idongesit and Adebodunrin; two of the youngest athletes in the draw; advanced out of their group stages before bowing out in the round of 32 against experienced opposition from Algeria and Morocco.

Their progression, however, highlighted the depth and growing competitiveness of Nigeria’s women’s fencing programme.

With more action ahead in the men’s foil and women’s sabre events today Friday, 27 June, Nigeria’s new generation of fencers have already made headlines; and they’re not done yet.





Origin:
publisher logo
Premium Times Nigeria
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

You may also like...