Athletics and Study Are This Law Student’s Olympic Bookends

July 31, 2024 By Jane Kelly, jak4g@virginia.edu Jane Kelly, jak4g@virginia.edu

“Olympian” and “law student” are labels not often applied to the same person.

That is, unless you are Ashley Anumba, a decorated discus thrower and University of Virginia School of Law student who planned to take a gap year from her studies to train for her Olympic competition representing Nigeria.

It didn’t exactly happen. The 2023-24 law school year had barely begun when a familiar itch returned. “I needed something to keep my brain stimulated, given that I was going to be out of school,” she said a few weeks ago after a day of pre-Games training with her team in Germany.

She needs both pieces, athletics and study, Anumba said, to feel whole. In fact, she had competed for UVA during her first two years of law school.

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“It’s a symbiotic relationship, if you want to put it at that. I need to get my mind off of certain activities that would otherwise take over my life,” she said. “I think people find that crazy because both of these activities are insane alone. But together, it’s like, this is a different beast. I love my life.”

So, as she trained for the Games she also served as one of just eight fellows in UVA’s Designing Democracy Project.

“She reached out at the beginning of her training to ask if she could participate on the project,” said Bertrall Ross, UVA’s Justice Thurgood Marshall Distinguished Professor of Law. “I was initially a bit skeptical about whether she would be able to commit the time to the project, but she far exceeded my expectations.”

Over the course of the school year, Anumba worked on a report detailing the effects of polarization on democracy in the United States. “Her report offered substantial insights on how media constructs and reinforces polarized views of politics, and provided a starting point for how we might think about mitigating media’s divisive role in our politics,” Ross said.

Let the Games Begin

To date, Anumba’s best overall throw was 61.98 meters at the July 2023 Nigerian Championships. Though she was born in the United States, she’s elected to compete for the sub-Saharan African nation where her parents are from.

The discus throw was one of the events at the ancient Olympics. The metal discus weighs just over 2 pounds in the women’s competition; Anumba’s proving ground is inside a 2.7-yard ring.

Anumba winding up a discus throw
Anumba is coming off a gold medal win for Nigeria at the 2024 African Athletics Championships in Cameroon. (Photo by Matt Riley, University Communications)

“What I do, and what a lot of throwers do, (is) enter through the front of the ring, take a deep breath and just calm themselves. Like, they take on a different face to get ready to throw,” she said. Then they step to the back of the ring, wind up and take 2½ revolutions to build centrifugal power before releasing the discus.

Anumba is coming off a June 21 gold medal win at the 2024 African Athletics Championships in Cameroon, where Nigerian women took first, second and third. 

She said she switched her pre-game mentality there. Throughout the competition, the 25-year-old audibly talked to herself to pump herself up.

“I don’t fully remember what I was saying, but I was kind of just going through my cues – ‘All you need to do is this and that and you can be an African champion if you do this,’” she recounted. “The mind is a powerful thing, for sure.”

Anumba steps onto the world stage Friday for the discus preliminaries; if things go well, she will advance to Monday’s finals.

Her UVA triumph will come next spring, when she graduates from the Law School.

Media Contact

Jane Kelly

University News Senior Associate Office of University Communications