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Jovesa Naivalu

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Birth name
  
Jovesa Seuseu Naivalu

Height
  
1.93 m

Name
  
Jovesa Naivalu


Sport
  
Track and Field

Country
  
Fiji

Weight
  
63 kg


Born
  
19 March 1978
Lautoka, Fiji

Event(s)
  
110 metres hurdles, 400 metres hurdles

Personal best(s)
  
110 m hurdles: 13.82 (NR) 400 m hurdles: 51.67 (NR)

Jovesa Seuseu "Jojo" Naivalu (born 19 March 1978) is a Fiji-American athlete. In the sport of athletics, Naivalu is the Fiji national record holder in both the 110 metres hurdles and the 400 metres hurdles. He represented Fiji at the 1996 Summer Olympics and the 1996 World Junior Championships in Athletics in the 110 metres hurdles.

Contents

In the sport of rugby union he represented the United States from 2000–2004 winning 10 caps. He also represented the United States in rugby sevens. During the 2008/09 season he played for Frankfurt SC in the Rugby-Bundesliga in Germany, making 15 appearances for the club.

Biography

Naivalu was born 19 March 1978 in Lautoka, Fiji.

Naivalu moved to the United States in 1986. He competed for Fremont High School in Sunnyvale, California, winning the 110 metres hurdles at the CIF California State Meet in 1995 and 1996. Based on his ability, he was selected to the small Fiji Olympic team that year. The Olympic hurdles are 3" higher than they are in high school. Naivalu finished 6th in his qualifying heat in the 110 metres hurdles. Running hurdles he was used to, a month later he took a bronze medal at the IAAF World Junior Championships in Athletics.

The following year, he set the Fijian National record of 13.82 (+0.3) in the 110 metres hurdles in the qualifying round of the IAAF World Championships. He competed in the 1999 and 2003 (South) Pacific Games, winning the 110 hurdles and finishing second in the 400 metres hurdles, setting the national record 51.67 in the latter in 1999 at Santa Rita, Guam.

He turned down a scholarship to the University of North Carolina.

Rugby

The Fiji Olympic Committee wasn't doling out money to support athletes, so Naivalu followed his brother Saimoni into the world of professional rugby, playing for the San Jose Seahawks. Still making a $300 a game, he had to work security for grocery stores to support himself.

References

Jovesa Naivalu Wikipedia


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