Africa now has a medalist in the sprints at the World Championships, and all of Botswana celebrates their young superstar. Thanks, Deji; on this one, Letsile has entered the world stage!
Letsile Tebogo: From frustrated footballer to first 100m African medallist at the World Championships
It might have come a tad early for Tebogo, but when he made the decision to switch to athletics in 2018 after being benched a lot as a footballer in High school, he wouldn’t have envisaged he would become the first African to step on the podium in the men’s 100m at the African Championships. Five years later, he picked up Silver in a new National Record of 9.88s in the final inside the National Athletics Center in Budapest.
Budapest, Hungary
August 19-27, 2023, photo by Kevin Morris
It was a packed final, and he wasn’t picked as the favorite for a medal considering how raw he still was, plus his additional focus in the 200m. But as he showed the world today, he’s got the raw talent to deliver when it mattered the most, finishing behind eventual winner Noah Lyles who ran a world lead of 9.83s.
Going into the Championships, all hopes had been put on Akani Simbine, and Ferdinand Omanyala held the hopes of millions of Africans who could potentially get on the podium. Why not? They had finished 1-2 at the African Championships in Mauritius last year and looked very confident all through the season. Simbine had been at every major championship final since the Rio Olympics and 2016, while Omanyala was the second fastest man in the world before the world.
Unluckily for Simbine, the South African false started in the semis, and although very harsh, the rules meant he couldn’t get a chance to race in the final. For Omanyala, he sneaked into the final by one-hundredth of a second after defending world champion Fred Kerley ran 10.02s in his semis.

Budapest, Hungary
August 19-27, 2023, photo by Kevin Morris
The stage was then set for Tebogo to race against the more experienced runners such as the former world champion Christian Coleman, Lyles, who was looking to get on the podium for the first time, Britain’s Zharnel Hughes, and Oblique Seville of Jamaica. Seville had gotten the better of Tebogo in their semifinal race and it was just a case of seeing whatever happened in the final.
At this point, it was a race anybody could win. Tebogo and Lyles…
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