Persons - Athlete - Daniel Igali
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Daniel Igali
Daniel Igali Barladei
(* 3. Februar 1974 in Eniwari, Bayelsa, Nigeria
Daniel Igali began wrestling at
the age of 16 and entered the Nigerian National Senior Tournament. Despite the
absence of designated age groups, Daniel Igali won his division.
Daniel Igali, wrestler (b at
Port Harcourt, Nigeria, 3 Feb 1974). Daniel Igali
is Canada's
first-ever gold medalist in Olympic
wrestling.
Igali grew up in Nigeria
as one of 21 children. Wrestling was an important part of the culture of the
Ijaw tribe. Each match was accompanied by drumming, thought to be instructing
the wrestler during the match, with traditional tribal wrestling songs being
hummed in the background. Victory was gained with a single takedown.
Early Career
Daniel Igali began wrestling
at the age of 16 and entered the Nigerian National Senior Tournament. Despite
the absence of designated age groups, Daniel Igali won his division. He
attracted the attention of Plateau State University
in Northern Nigeria, where he entered a
program in mass communications while now concentrating on Greco Roman Style
wrestling. All the rules of international freestyle prevailed, with
the exception that no holds below the waist were allowed.
Disappointment
forced him to change styles once again. In 1992 he trained hard, losing 8 kg to
make the necessary 62 kg weight class. He represented Nigeria at the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria, finishing
11th. He decided to remain in Canada,
enrolling at Simon
Fraser University
where he won 116 consecutive matches over three years. In 1998 he was fourth at
the World Championships and second at the World Cup. He became a citizen in
1998. On 30 September 1999 at Ankara,
Turkey, he won
the title in the 69 kg grouping, automatically qualifying for the Olympics. He
was the first Canadian to win the world championship. He had been motivated by
his adoptive mother, Maureen Matheny, who was dying of cancer and whom Igali
described as his greatest inspiration. Her last words to him as he showed her
the World
Championship medal were "I am so proud of you."
Daniel Igali's success
continued. He was selected for the Norton H. Crowe Award as Canada's
Amateur Athlete of the Year, and won his division at the Senior National
Championships as a member of his Burnaby Mountain Wrestling team.
Olympic Competition
Igali spent much of his time
preparing at Olympic Camp in Calgary,
where the altitude contributed to an awareness of the need for greater
conditioning. His attendance at the US trials enabled him to scout out
possible opponents.
Daniel Igali's Olympic
gold-medal performance began with his first match against a Georgian whom he
had beaten at the World championships the year earlier. He did so again. His
second bout against an Iranian ended in victory after, as the result of a tie,
rules called for other criteria to be used to determine the winner. He moved
into the quarter-finals and beat Yosmany Sanchez of Cuba
and, after another overtime match, Lincoln McIlravy of the US. Igali's
competition for the gold medal was the Russian Arsen Gitinov. He moved to an
early 4-0, lead but the Russian rallied to tie the bout and the first round
finished at 4-4. In the second, Igali scored a quick two points for taking the
Russian to the down position and a third for exposing his back to the mat. It
gave him a 7-4 victory and the gold medal. In celebration, Igali wore the
Canadian flag as a cape, removed it and placed it carefully on the mat. He ran
around it, clockwise and counter-clockwise, then knelt to kiss it. Tears
streamed down his face at the playing of the national anthem at the medal
presentation.
The canadian Lou marsh Trophy for Daniel Igali.
Continued Success
Igali amassed one additional
international title, a gold at the Commonwealth Games in 2002, before retiring
from competition.
He continues to devote time
to philanthropic endeavors. He initiated a joint project with students at Heritage Park
School in Mission,
BC, in 2001 to build a school and gymnasium in
Eniwari, Nigeria, where he grew up. The
school, which opened in 2006,was named after his adoptive mother, Maureen
Matheny, his greatest inspiration. In 2002 he created the Daniel Igali
Foundation, an organization that helps young people in developing countries
achieve academic and career goals.
Daniel Igali was inducted
into Canada's
Sports Hall of Fame in 2007, and into the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame in
2012.
He ran for political office
in British Columbia, and was defeated, but
later became a member of the House of Assembly in Nigeria’s
Bayelsa State in 2011. He has also served as a
coach for Nigeria’s
wrestling delegations to the 2008 and 2012 Summer Olympics and holds a degree
in criminology from Simon
Fraser University.
Now Daniel Igali is President of the Nigerian Wrestling Federation.
01 / 2016
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