Botswana at the 2012 Summer Olympics explained

Noc:BOT
Nocname:Botswana National Olympic Committee
Games:Summer Olympics
Year:2012
Location:London
Competitors:4
Sports:2
Flagbearer:Amantle Montsho (opening)
Oteng Oteng (closing)
Rank:69
Gold:0
Silver:1
Bronze:0
Appearances:auto
App Begin Year:1980

Botswana competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom, from 27 July to 12 August 2012. This was the nation's ninth appearance at the Olympics.

Botswana National Olympic Committee sent the nation's smallest delegation in its Olympic history. Four athletes from Botswana were selected to the team, competing only in athletics and boxing. Track star and sole female athlete Amantle Montsho, reigning World champion who was considered a pre-Olympic favourite, became a strong contender to win Botswana's first Olympic medal; however, she missed out of the medal standings in the women's 400 metres, finishing only in fourth place. Montsho was also appointed by the committee to be Botswana's flag bearer at the opening ceremony.

Despite being the nation's smallest delegation, Botswana left London with its first ever Olympic medal, when track runner Nijel Amos finished second in the men's 800 metres.[1]

Medalists

See main article: 2012 Summer Olympics medal table.

Athletics

See main article: Athletics at the 2012 Summer Olympics. Three track and field athletes from Botswana participated at the London games after having achieved qualifying standards in their respective events (up to a maximum of 3 athletes in each event at the 'A' Standard, and 1 at the 'B' Standard).[2] Track runner Isaac Makwala, competing in the men's 400 metres, did not advance into the semi-finals after finishing fourth in the heats. Amantle Montsho, Botswana's only female athlete and 2011 world champion, was favored to win Botswana's first ever medal in the women's 400 metres, but finished in a disappointing fourth place. Her results became arbitrary, whether her coach's failure to obtain a VISA to the Olympics might have been a contributing factor.[3] 2012 world junior champion and another Olympic hopeful Nijel Amos, however, qualified successfully in the early rounds of the men's 800 metres, and ended the nation's medal drought by obtaining his silver in the final event.[1]

Men
AthleteEventHeatSemifinalFinal
ResultRankResultRankResultRank
Isaac Makwala400 m45.674Did not advance
Nijel Amos800 m1:45.901 Q1:44.542 Q1:41.73
Women
Key

Boxing

See main article: Boxing at the 2012 Summer Olympics. Boxer Oteng Oteng qualified for the Olympic games after winning the 2012 African Boxing Olympic Qualification Tournament in the flyweight category.[4] Before the games, he was also the 2011 African champion in the same category. Unfortunately, Oteng lost to Puerto Rico's Jeyvier Cintrón in the first round match with a controversial move. By deliberating the final results, both Oteng and his coach felt surprised with the outcome after two even rounds and the last round, thought to be dominated by Oteng, was awarded instead to his opponent Cintrón by just a two-point difference.[5]

Men

Notes and References

  1. News: Kenya's Rudisha Storms to Gold in 800 meters . RIA Novosti . 9 August 2012 . 9 August 2012.
  2. Web site: iaaf.org – Top Lists. IAAF. 4 June 2011.
  3. Web site: Montsho's coach blasts BNOC . 2020-07-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160305010100/http://www.mmegi.bw/index.php?sid=8&aid=553&dir=2012%2FAugust%2FFriday17 . 2016-03-05 . dead .
  4. Web site: Final African Olympic Quota Places revealed. 5 May 2012. AIBA. 5 May 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20150322065056/http://aiba.org/en-US/news/ozqsp/newsId/4729/news.aspx. 22 March 2015. dead.
  5. http://www.mmegi.bw/index.php?sid=8&aid=104&dir=2012/July/Tuesday31 Shock decision as Oteng bows out