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Wednesday, 27 May 2026

Kingsley Awodi Welcomes Nigeria’s Para-Powerlifting Team After Algeria Championship Success


 

Kingsley Awodi Welcomes Nigeria’s Para-Powerlifting Team After Algeria Championship Success


Fresh from the 2026 African Open Para-Powerlifting Championship in Algeria, Nigeria’s para-powerlifting team returned not just with luggage, but with 49 medals and a story of grit that had already begun to ripple across the country.


Leading the welcome was Kingsley Awodi, a philanthropist who has quietly backed Nigerian sports for years. Recall that he re-grassed the Moshood Abiola National Stadium, Abuja under Sunday Dare, restoring one of the country’s key sporting venues for athletes and fans.


Awodi is also a major stakeholder in the sports industry. In the past, he single-handedly paid athletes’ grants to ensure competitors could focus on training and competition without financial strain. His support has remained consistent and practical: in April, he hosted and sponsored the Kingsley Awodi Para-Powerlifting Championship in Abuja, providing the team with competitive exposure just weeks before their departure for Algeria. That same commitment was evident again at their homecoming.


Addressing the athletes, coaches, and officials gathered in the arrival hall, Awodi opened by framing their achievement within the larger narrative of Nigerian resilience and excellence on the continental stage:  

“I am deeply honoured to welcome home our victorious Nigeria Para-Powerlifting Team from the 2026 African Open Para-Powerlifting Championship in Algeria. You have once again shown the world the strength, resilience, discipline, and fighting spirit that Nigerians are known for.”


For four days in Oran, Nigeria’s lifters competed against Africa’s best and returned with 32 gold, 12 silver, and 5 bronze medals. The result secured second place overall behind Egypt and reinforced Nigeria’s standing as a powerhouse in para sports. Beyond the medal count, it was the composure and precision of their performances that drew widespread praise.


Recognizing the collective effort behind the success, Awodi acknowledged the pride and honor the team had brought to the nation:  

“Your performances have brought pride, joy, and honour to our nation, and I celebrate every athlete, coach, and official who contributed to this remarkable success.”


He then turned to the responsibility of sustaining such progress, commending the leadership of the National Sports Commission while emphasizing the need for broader private sector involvement:  

“While I sincerely appreciate the Chairman of the National Sports Commission, Mallam Shehu Dikko, and the Director General, Hon. Bukola Olopade, for their work in repositioning sports in Nigeria, government efforts alone cannot carry the weight. This is the moment for the private sector to step forward and actively support our athletes and sporting institutions.”


To match words with action ahead of the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, Awodi announced immediate cash rewards for medal winners:  

“Every gold medalist will receive ₦1.5 million, every silver medalist ₦1 million, and every bronze medalist ₦500,000. This is not merely about financial rewards, but about recognizing sacrifice, hard work, and the courage to represent Nigeria with pride.”


As the team posed for photos with medals around their necks, the message was clear. The performance in Oran was about more than weight on a bar, it was about raising the standard for Nigerian sports and showing what becomes possible when athletes are consistently backed.


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