WATCH: Bayanda Walaza dedicates Olympic silver medal to his mother

Olympic silver medalist Bayanda Walaza and his mother Tholiwe share an embrace. Picture: Michael Sherman / IOL Sport

Olympic silver medalist Bayanda Walaza and his mother Tholiwe share an embrace. Picture: Michael Sherman / IOL Sport

Published Aug 15, 2024

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Following Bayanda Walazaā€™s silver-medal winning performance at the Paris Olympics, the teenager on Thursday dedicated his silver medal to his mother.

Walaza lost his father in a tragic incident at the age of 10, and his mother Tholiwe was tasked with raising her young son on her own.

ā€œI really appreciate my mom a lot. I dedicate this win to her,ā€ said Walaza.

Walaza was given a heroā€™s welcome when he returned to Curro Hazeldean High School in Pretoria, following his exploits in Paris.

Bright future

Meanwhile, Walazaā€™s coach predicted that the young sprinter will go on to dominate athletics for years to come.

Itā€™s no surprise, that at the age of 18 and having served a crucial part of SAā€™s 4x100m relay team that lofty expectations have already surfaced.

Walaza was part of the menā€™s 4x100m relay team alongside Akani Simbine, Shaun Maswanganyi and Bradley Nkoana.

It was a stunning race, in which Team SA finished second behind Canada while the much-fancied USA outfit fumbled a changeover before being disqualified.

Walazaā€™s coach Thabo Matebedi, or ā€˜coach Tā€™, sung the praises of his rising star.

ā€œHeā€™s a brave young man. He has a lot of potential. He can go far. We havenā€™t seen the best of the young man. Thereā€™s still a lot he needs to improve on. I believe he will dominate, and be one of the best athletes in the world,ā€ said Matebedi.

Meanwhile, Walaza said his time in Paris would be something he never forgets.

ā€œIt feels kinda great. Being one of the people who got a silver medal for South Africa, I will cherish it,ā€ said Walaza.

After the school assembly in which Walaza was honoured, there was a line of pupils still waiting to congratulate the athlete. It was also interesting to see that Walaza was eager to pass his prized-possession silver medal around for anyone who wanted to feel it, or hang it from their neck briefly.

Walaza explained why he wanted to share his medal with everyone.

ā€œIf you give something to feel something, you give them motivation. You want to give them something to cherish. Some people canā€™t do athletics, but it can still push them to do more in what theyā€™re good at.ā€

As for the Olympic experience itself, Walaza said he went through a multitude of emotions.

ā€œI went through the emotions because there was a point where I was shaking. Then I saw messages of good luck from everyone at the school, that made me think - these people are behind me, so why should I be scared? Iā€™m carrying this whole school behind me, so let me just go there and do what I do best.

ā€œThe final was great as everything went as planned. The changeovers were smooth, my start was the best. I thought if I die, let me die after the baton is out of my hand. I just pushed, everyone pushed. It was the greatest moment ever.ā€

ā€” Michael Sherman (@Golfhackno1) August 15, 2024

Long distance runner, Walazaā€™s school mate and best friend Lutho Timati, explained what the sprinter is like away from the limelight.

ā€œBayanda is a crazy guy. Heā€™s one guy that would not allow people to be negative around him. He actually takes everything for a joke, because his personality is different from all of us. His performance at the Olympics inspires me and everyone else at the school. People that didnā€™t do athletics have now started to come to the training field because of his impact.ā€