2023 African Games: Pan-African Spectacle
The delayed 2023 African Games kicked off with a colorful opening ceremony in Ghana's capital, Accra.
Athletes from 52 nations are competing in Ghana at the African Games. The three-week event also doubles as qualifying for the 2024 Paris Olympics.
The delayed 2023 African Games kicked off this week, with the official opening ceremony in Ghana's capital, Accra.
The games, formerly called the All-African Games, are held every four years, the year before the Olympics. This year, 52 countries are competing, making it an actual pan-African sporting event.
Some 5,000 athletes will battle it out to win medals and break records in 30 disciplines, an increase from the 2019 African Games, which offered 26 sports. The 2015 Games had 22 disciplines.
Events are being held in Accra, Cape Coast and Kumasi, Ghana's second-largest city.
Table tennis was the first event to launch, with Egypt clinching the gold medal in both the men's and women's singles events, while the football competition kicked off.
The 30 disciplines include eight Olympic qualifying events, 15 non-qualifying and seven demonstration sports that showcase emerging trends and disciplines.
The Olympic qualifying events are swimming, athletics, badminton, cycling, tennis, table tennis, wrestling and triathlon.
Demonstration sports include eSports, mixed martial arts, sambo and scrabble, promising what the African Union calls a "glimpse into the future of sports entertainment."
Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa are the most successful countries. All of them were in the top three gold medal winners in the past six games. One has to go back to 1987, when Egypt, Tunisia and Nigeria won the most gold medals, to find another country in the top three.
Most popular athletes will be absent because the delayed 2023 games are now taking place so close to the Paris Olympics in July.
The 13th African Games wraps up on March 23, 2024.