play videoEugene Amo-Dadzie
The 2023 World Athletics Championship will see UK-based Ghanaian accountant and sprinter, Eugene Amo-Dadzie, make his debut on the track at age 31.
Amo-Dadzie's trajectory is intriguing. He abounded his talent and ambition of becoming a sprinter to work a 9-5 job only to go back to in his 30s.
If the saying 'what is meant to be, will be' was a person, then that is literally Euguene Amo-Dadzie who describes his journey as 'rare and unique'.
"There is an element of my journey that doesn’t really make sense. It’s not very logical. It’s very rare, very unique. I want people to look at it, be inspired by it, and know that it’s never too late,” he told TheGuardian.
He had a remarkable start in his formative years where he could run 11.3sec for 100m, but Amo-Dadzie's growth as an athlete did not follow the pattern of many others as he became more focused on books along the line, completed university, and became a senior accountant.
According to him, he used to watch championships on TV with a sense of regret that 'I could have done it'. But he did not consider hitting the tracks until his close friend triggered him and abused him with 'you wasted your talent'.
“I used to sit at home and watch championships thinking: ‘if I’d trained I could have made it’,” he says. “I was content to be the guy that could have done it. That was my story for years. One fateful day it all changed when I was literally playing football adjacent to an athletics track. My really good friends, who I went to school with, knew I was quick. For years, they would say to me: ‘you wasted your talent’. I just took the abuse, it was what it was. But that fateful day, God flicked a switch in my head."