
Akani Simbine opens up on major championship glory
Reading Time: 3min | Sun. 11.05.25. | 13:15
Having won in Botswana in 9.90, and followed that with 9.99 in Xiamen and 9.98 in Shanghai/Keqiao, Simbine has dipped under 10 seconds for 100m in each of the past 11 years
After anchoring South Africa to men’s 4x100m silver at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, former African record holder Akani Simbine returned to relay action at the World Athletics Relays Guangzhou 25 this weekend, where he is joined by two of his teammates from that final in Paris – Bradley Nkoana and Bayanda Walaza.
Follow Our WhatsApp Channel For More News
Simbine led his team to qualification for the Tokyo World Championships in September, where he intends to make another statement following that medal-winning performance in Paris.
He believes relays are all about placing every runner in the right place depending on their different strengths.
“You can have the fastest guys in the world at that time running, but if you don't get the stick around, and you don't have the guys in their best positions running, then it's not going to work out,” Simbine told World Athletics ahead of the Saturday, 10 May races in Guangzhou.
It worked out very well in Paris, where world U20 100m and 200m champion Walaza ran the first leg, Shaun Maswanganyi the second, Nkoana the third, and Simbine the anchor to clock an African record of 37.57 and secure silver, just 0.07 behind champions Canada.
“It's the camaraderie and everybody just wanting to be part of the team and starting to believe in a relay culture in South Africa,” explains Simbine, “because before that, we didn't have a relay culture – it was always just ‘show up and run’. Now people are actually believing in getting medals and the importance of getting medals from the World Championships or the Olympics, and making it a priority. That's a big thing for us now.”
After two consecutive Olympic fourth-place finishes in the individual 100m, plus a fifth place in 2016 and one fourth- and two fifth-place 100m finishes at the World Championships, it was Simbine’s first global major medal.
“South Africa went crazy and went nuts for the medal,” he says with a smile. “I think it was also a big thing because of me getting a medal at a major championship – I was able to get a medal, but South Africa was also able to get a medal. That was a great thing. South Africa just loves relays now – it's a big thing for the sport.”
Since then, Simbine has added a first major international individual medal to his CV as he claimed 60m bronze at the World Indoor Championships in Nanjing in March. He is also unbeaten outdoors so far this year, following his season opener in Botswana with Diamond League wins in Xiamen and Shanghai/Keqiao.
Having won in Botswana in 9.90, and followed that with 9.99 in Xiamen and 9.98 in Shanghai/Keqiao, Simbine has dipped under 10 seconds for 100m in each of the past 11 years.
And the 31-year-old believes that the medal in Paris was just the start.
“It’s bringing a lot of momentum, the winning momentum,” he says. “It's not like I didn't have confidence, but I have more confidence in myself. I'm also at a place where I'm very content. I'm not making getting a medal my sole purpose – it's more about perfecting the craft of running, perfecting the craft of sprinting, and trying to make it as best as I can.”
By World Athletics




.jpg)









.jpg)
