This was the first time the country has entered more than a single athlete, with skiers Lamine Guèye and Alphonse Gomis both taking part.
[2][3] Following the Sarajevo Games, Guèye retired temporarily from competing professionally and instead took up employment as a model and an actor, in addition to earning a living in the finance sector.
[2] He maintained that he had a hard time explaining the sport to his fellow countrymen, saying "I have to tell the people what snow is, what skis are, I have to tell them what big mountains are.
This consisted of a single run each; Guèye finished in last position with a time of 2:12.84, over 22 seconds behind Patrick Ortlieb of Austria who took the gold medal.
[11] The Super-G competition took place on 16 February, with an improved standing for Guèye, who finished 78th out of the 93 skiers who completed the course with a time of 1:29.18.
This meant that at the 1994 Winter Olympics, Senegal was unable to field a second skier, and Guèye would be limited to competing in a single event.