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I’m an accountant and only took up sprinting five years ago… now I’m fastest man in Europe and dreaming of Olympics


MEET the accountant specialising in DASH-FLOW management – as Europe’s fastest man just five years after taking up sprinting aged 26.

Eugene Amo-Dadzie has made the quickest gains ever after finding unexpected assets as an athlete.

Eugene Amo-Dadzie didn’t start competing until five years ago but has already become the fourth-fastest British sprinter in historyCredit: Getty

The Brit is fast-tracking dreams of the Paris 2024 Olympics following his astonishing feat last week in clocking 9.93seconds for the 100metres.

The finance manager, 30, was just 0.06secs off Linford Christie’s 30-year-old national record with that sensational performance in Graz, Austria.

And world-class athletics is so new to him he was THRILLED to be visited by anti-doping officials afterwards as it “validated” his achievement.

Amo-Dadzie told the BBC how a friend’s chance comment in 2018 transformed his life as they came across a race meet after playing football.

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As they watched the 100m, his pal said: “You could put a pair of spikes on and beat these guys. Why haven’t you tried this properly before?”

He joined Woodford Green Athletics Club and inside 12 months reached the British Championships semi-finals, encountering Olympians Adam Gemili and Harry Aikines-Aryeetey.

He won bronze over 60m at this year’s British National Indoor Championships.

And his electric efforts in Austria mean he should make Britain’s team for the World Championships in August.

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Rather than regretting not taking up sprinting seriously as a kid, Amo-Dadzie believes he’s better off with his late arrival into the sport.

He said: “I feel like I came into the sport at the right time. 

“The head that I had on my shoulders at that time has allowed me to navigate this thing in a sensible way.

“I very much enjoy that I have a different story. I still refer to myself as an accountant that happens to operate in the world of track and field.”

To reach the Olympics from such a background might seem like unchartered territory – except of course he’s a chartered accountant!


Source: Athletics - thesun.co.uk


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