
Audio By Carbonatix
National 100m record holder and member of the 4x100m men's relay team, Benjamin Azamati has revealed that breaking the 24-year-old record of 38.12s at the just ended Olympics did not come to his team as a huge surprise.
Ghana booked a place in the final of the men’s relay event after qualifying as one of the ‘fastest losers’ with a time of 38.08s at the Tokyo Olympic Games.
The quartet of Sean Safo-Antwi, Benjamin Azamati, Emmanuel Yeboah and Joseph Paul Amoah broke in the process broke the national record which stood at 38.12s.
The record was set at the 1997 World Championships in Greece by the quartet of Abu Duah, Eric Nkansah, Aziz Zakari and Emmanuel Tuffour.
Azamati explained, the feat didn’t look beyond this group in an exclusive with Joy Sports.
“We had it in us; we knew we could break that record looking at the time we were running this season we knew we could come up with the time that could break the national record.
"So, it was not really surprising we knew our capabilities, it was just about getting the stick around and we did that, and we were happy that we came out with the 38.08.
"But it all boils down to us being together and having the chemistry and the kind of bond that we had. It really played a role in us finishing with this time”.
Benjamin Azamati despite running a season best of 9.97s to break the 100m National record failed to make the semi final of the 100m at the Multisport event. The west Texas A&M student run a time of 10.13 seconds which saw him finish fourth behind Australian Rohan Browning and Jamaican Yohan Blake .
He told Joy Sports lack of competitions in the crucial months ahead of the Olympics was telling.
“I will say that I have not competed in about two months prior to the Olympic games, so I will say I was not in race shape because the others had raced two weeks prior to the games and all.
"So, my reaction was slow and all that and I think that amounted to that. I could say that this is one of the poorest races I have ran in the whole of this season but as you know it is an experience, I just have to learn and build up on that”.
Azamati heads back to West Texas with the hope of making it back on the big stage via the 2022 World Athletics Championships, the 2023 African Games or the 2024 Olympic Games to be staged in France.
Latest Stories
-
Boakye Agyarko marks Easter Sunday with a call for Godly leadership ahead of nationwide campaign tour
36 minutes -
Pepsi withdraws as UK festival sponsor after Kanye West backlash
39 minutes -
Pope Leo calls for global leaders to choose peace in his first Easter Mass
47 minutes -
Kpando MP highlights progress on road projects
1 hour -
Government secures $92m for Engineering and Agriculture University
1 hour -
Several Ghana-bound vegetable trucks detained in Nigeria
2 hours -
Black Sherif questions Wendy Shay’s absence in “Artiste of the Year” talks ahead of TGMA 2026
3 hours -
Government confirms arrival of 100 new buses to ease transport challenges
4 hours -
$600m tomato imports undermining Ghana’s economy — Chamber of Agribusiness
5 hours -
Rainstorm wreaks havoc: Faulty transformers, feeder failures leave parts of 3 regions without power
5 hours -
CUTS International calls for urgent competition law amid sachet water price hikes
6 hours -
‘I never did this advert’, AI clones hijack Ghanaian identities for profit
6 hours -
25-year-old woman battles trauma after surviving deadly Nkwanta attack
6 hours -
Vice President honoured at Tortsogbeza as South Tongu leaders highlight development needs
6 hours -
Kwahu Business Forum 2026: Corporate citizenship, sustaining African businesses take centre stage with KGL as the case study
8 hours