logo
Eva Okaro relishing trailblazer status ahead of World Championships

Eva Okaro relishing trailblazer status ahead of World Championships

Okaro became the first black British swimmer to compete in the pool at an Olympic Games at the age of just 17 in Paris last summer when she was part of the women's 4 x 100m freestyle relay team which reached the final.
Now 18, she is heading for the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore delighted to be inspiring other young swimmers.
Sprint Queens 👑👑
Scarlett Humphrey (S11) takes the Multi-classification British title by a single point, with Eva Okaro setting a big lifetime best to win the Women's 50m Freestyle A Final secure ➕ secure her Singapore world champs team place 👉https://t.co/s3f2mj2W1x pic.twitter.com/gbUd5IFoR4
— Aquatics GB (@Aquatics_GB) April 17, 2025
Okaro, who won the 50m freestyle and 50m butterfly at the Aquatics GB Swimming Championships in April, said: 'I think it's a privilege to be in this role and I like to be a role model to especially young girls of any ethnicity, any colour, it doesn't matter.
'But it's just nice to know that I'm not in this alone as well because they don't just look up to me, but they encourage me and want to see me do well and I think that's also a big thing, just knowing that there are people behind me and people that I don't even know that just believe in me.
'That helps a lot with my confidence and being able to perform.'
Asked if she was aware anecdotally of youngsters who had been encouraged by her rise to prominence, Okaro added: 'I've had a few messages before and I've been stopped a couple of times by little girls who are basically just telling me that they keep swimming because of me, which is really nice.'
Okaro, who still trains with her twin sister Izabella, is scheduled to compete in the 50m and 100m freestyle and 50m butterfly in Singapore, although is yet to make a decision on whether to take part in all three after missing a week and a half of training while she sat her A-levels.
Whatever happens at the World Championships, she will be heading for the United States later this year to continue her athletic and academic careers at the University of Texas, glad her exams are out of the way.
She said: 'It's definitely made me feel more relaxed, 100 per cent, because little things like even homework or turning up to lessons and waking up at 7.30am for breakfast, stuff like that, I don't have to do that anymore so I can solely be focused on swimming.
'That's definitely something I've got in my locker now and it's just made it a lot easier for me.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boxing legend Ricky Hatton to be honoured with the freedom of London
Boxing legend Ricky Hatton to be honoured with the freedom of London

Metro

time15 minutes ago

  • Metro

Boxing legend Ricky Hatton to be honoured with the freedom of London

Boxing legend Ricky Hatton has been awarded the freedom of London – and the occasion will be marked with a special boxing match. It's not long since the boxer announced his surprise comeback 13 years since his last professional bout, as he returns to the ring to face Eisa Aldah in Dubai on December 2. But before he returns to the ring, Ricky will be given a major boost as he is granted the freedom of the city of London – despite being from Manchester and spending most of his career in the north west. The event, on October 8, will be marked by the Lord Mayor's Charity Boxing Match, where firefighters from both the London and New York fire brigades will duke it out at the Guildhall. Ricky isn't the only boxer being honoured: former British and Commonwealth champion Michael Watson, and boxing promoter Barry Hearn, are also being awarded the freedom of the city. And they'll even see The Lord Mayor, Alderman Alastair King step into the ring for a special bout against a surprise opponent from New York. Ricky said: 'I'm absolutely chuffed to bits to be given the Freedom of the City of London – it's a real honour and something I never imagined happening to me. 'London's always held a special place in my heart and been the location for many of my fights, most memorably when I won the WBU light welterweight world title at Wembley conference centre against Tony Pep, so to be recognised like this means a lot. 'I'm really looking forward to the Lord Mayor's boxing night at the Guildhall – it'll be a great night for a great cause, and I can't wait to be part of it.' The black-tie charity event will raise money to support firefighters and members of the UK fire services. Ricky Hatton has an enviable record, having won 45 of his 48 professional matches during his 15-year career. He won world titles at welterweight and light-welterweight, with two of his three losses coming against fellow greats Floyd Mayweather Jr and Manny Pacquiao. He hasn't fought since losing a comeback bout with Vyacheslav Senchenko in November 2012, the year he retired. Since his retirement, Ricky has been busy training other fighters in his gym in Manchester. More Trending And it seems boxing runs in the family as hiss 24-year-old son Campbell has also entered professional boxing, winning 14 of his 16 fights so far. But he will return to the ring later this year, two months after turning 47, in a thrilling comeback for boxing fans. Speaking earlier this month, Ricky said: I can't wait, I'm really looking forward to it.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: London's US Embassy owes £15,600,000 in congestion charges MORE: The 'best' restaurant in the US is officially coming to London MORE: Trump's three word reaction to newly-resurfaced photos of him and Epstein

Eilish McColgan backing Glasgow Games to be success with a year to go
Eilish McColgan backing Glasgow Games to be success with a year to go

The Herald Scotland

time37 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Eilish McColgan backing Glasgow Games to be success with a year to go

Back on terra firma, Finnie took her place at Kelvingrove alongside dignitaries, Games competitors both past and present, a gaggle of photographers and reporters, and an even larger phalanx of PR folk and media management types, the latter surely one of Scotland's growth industries. Tourists and passers-by curiously poked their heads in from time to time, too, wondering what all the fuss was about. The trick, of course, is to ensure there are still similar levels of intrigue by the time these watered-down, largely unloved and unwanted Games get underway in 12 months' time. Glasgow has taken the hit - if not financially - by agreeing belatedly to take on the burden of hosting, sparing the Commonwealth Games from likely extinction after Victoria, Australia backed out of the arrangement and agreed to pay £100m just to wash its hands of it. The hope is, of course, that Glasgow can recapture some of the magic of its 2014 predecessor when the sun shone and the event went on to become a Scottish medal-laden success story. The presence of Usain Bolt undoubtedly helped, too and how the organisers could do with similar magic dust from somewhere with fewer events and no free-to-watch road events to draw in the general public. They have done well to bring on board Eilish McColgan as one of their ambassadors. The athlete is not just the reigning 10,000m Commonwealth champion from 2022 but a refreshingly outspoken figure who will happily put her voice out there to lend her support. McColgan was cagey about definitely committing to defending that title having made the career transition to primarily road racing but the Dundonian believes the cream of British athletics will get behind these Games and help to make it a triumph. 'Obviously I've not qualified and I don't have a crystal ball so I don't know what the future holds but I'll definitely be making it high on my agenda to try and be here as an athlete and compete,' she said. 'My main ambitions now are certainly on the road. But I think for me it's hard to turn down an opportunity to race in Glasgow at a home championship. How often do I get to do that? 'I don't think we are ever short of top athletes competing. I keep seeing people saying, 'do you think the top people will show up?' but your Laura Muirs, your Jake Wightmans, your Josh Kerrs, they're there all the time as I think there's something so unique about representing Scotland. 'We're very patriotic, we're a small nation but it's just special. We don't get the chance to do it very often so everyone does turn up. I remember Jake saying when he won the world championships, 'I need to get myself ready now for the Commonwealth Games'. 'You think, 'you've just won the worlds, it's the biggest title there possibly could be'. But for him, it was actually just equally as important that he made sure he got ready for Commie Games. 'Even in the England team, you have KJT [Katarina Johnson-Thompson], who's an Olympic medallist, you'll have Keely Hodgkinson, everyone turns up. I don't know if it is just something unique, you're representing your smaller nation and you don't get the chance to do that very often. 'It showcases something, maybe it's the community side of it, I don't know what it is. But I think the top athletes will be there regardless.' The comparisons with 2014 will be inevitable but not necessarily helpful, with the Scottish public expecting one thing only to be delivered a much smaller facsimile, like the mini model of Stonehenge descending onto the stage in Spinal Tap. McColgan, though, doesn't believe it's an issue. 'I think people are just excited that the Games are coming back to Glasgow. I think Glasgow has done a great job in stepping in at the last minute. There could have been an alternative world where this didn't even happen at all so I think kudos to them for actually putting it on and making it work. 'Yes, it's going to be scaled down but there's still a hell of a lot of events, there's still going to be a a lot of sports taking part where young kids can go along, be inspired and go along to their local club because that really is the knock-on effect. 'The amount of kids that we had joining the Hawks [Hawkhill Harriers in Dundee]... we have a waiting list to this day and it's all come from Glasgow [2014] and it's just spiralled. People often say, 'is there a legacy? how much does it impact?' 'But I think the waiting list at my local club is a great example of that and it's not just Dundee. I'm sure it's in other corners of Scotland as well, clubs all across Scotland. So for me, that's a really important part of it.' A broadcast deal is yet to be agreed but McColgan is confident the BBC or another station will step in to show it in the UK. 'I think it's really important,' she adds. 'I mean you'll have kids from all corners of Scotland, not even just Scotland across the world, that will see athletes from their local town, their local club and think, 'yeah, I want to do that'. 'If it's not on TV, it's not broadcast, then you can't see it and you can't believe in it. And for me that's really important.'

Fears for Emma Raducanu and Carlos Alcaraz partnership as US Open already hit by high-profile withdrawals
Fears for Emma Raducanu and Carlos Alcaraz partnership as US Open already hit by high-profile withdrawals

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Fears for Emma Raducanu and Carlos Alcaraz partnership as US Open already hit by high-profile withdrawals

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) FEARS over Emma Raducanu and Carlos Alcaraz's partnership are on the rise after the US Open was hit by high-profile withdrawals. Raducanu and Alcaraz were among the teams announced for the new format of the mixed doubles event in New York in August. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 4 Carlos Alcaraz and Emma Raducanu have entered the US Open mixed doubles together Credit: Getty 4 The tennis stars posed for an Evian commercial amid rumours of a romance Credit: Getty The pair, who have both won the US Open singles, were then linked romantically but they insisted they are simply just "good friends". Raducanu even watched Alcaraz at Queen's and Wimbledon either side of them teaming up for an Evian commercial. However, several other partnerships have already pulled out of the controversial event. Stefanos Tsitsipas and Paula Badosa initially entered. But they have since removed themselves from the entrant list. That comes amid reports the tennis couple have split up for good. Then Jack Draper and Zheng Qinwen also revoked their entry as they both battle injuries. British No1 Draper admitted at Wimbledon that he "thinks it was me who messaged" his partner - all but revealing it was all done by his agency IMG. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS Other pairings such as Aryna Sabalenka and Grigor Dimitrov, Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud, Jannik Sinner and Emma Navarro and Olga Danilovic and Novak Djokovic remain on the entry list. But there are worries over Raducanu and Alcaraz. Emma Raducanu jokes 'I wouldn't know about heartbreak' after Olivia Rodrigo watches her Wimbledon win Tennis fans are desperate to see 'Radalcaraz' in action together. However, there is a chance they may follow suit and withdraw - to give themselves the best chance of success in the singles. Also, the British-Spanish duo may not actually qualify. Only the top eight pairs by singles ranking are guaranteed to get in. However, US Open chiefs would surely give Raducanu and Alcaraz one of the eight wildcard spots. 4 In total, 25 pairs are now on the entry list - with 16 spots available Credit: US Open Eleven new teams have put their names forward to play in the innovative competition, taking the total entries up to 25 - with 16 getting in. Among them are engaged couple Katie Boulter and Alex De Minaur plus Amanda Anisimova and Holger Rune, veteran Venus Williams and Reilly Opelka and doubles world No1s Katerina Siniakova and Marcelo Arevalo. Siniakova has 11 Grand Slam titles - including all four in women's doubles and the Wimbledon 2025 mixed doubles crown. The Czech doubles specialist blasted the rejigged tournament, which will be staged the week before the singles action gets underway with $1million up for grabs for the winners and a 'fast four' format with shorter sets. Siniakova, who is reliant on a wildcard, said: "When two world No. 1s in doubles don't get into the tournament, there's probably nothing more to say about it. 'I mean, I wouldn't be surprised if I won't get it, actually. I will just keep it like this.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store