Background
Cooman grew up in Suriname in a family together with four sisters and one brother.
Cooman grew up in Suriname in a family together with four sisters and one brother.
When she was eight, the family moved to Rotterdam in the Netherlands. She started to play soccer and soon got the nickname "Mission Pele". At sixteen, she was discovered to be a very good sprinter during a sporting event at school.
Thus she began a career in athletics.
Three months later, she competed in the European Junior Championships in Utrecht and finished seventh in the 100 m sprint. After graduating secondary school she turned professional with Henk Kraaijenhof as trainer.
Her world record lasted until February 1992 and still stands as national record. Cooman took part twice in the Summer Olympics for the Netherlands: in 1988 in the 100 metres and 4 × 100 m relay and in 1992 in 100 metres.
In 1995, Cooman ended her career as a professional athlete.
Since 1997 the Nelli Cooman Games are organised in the city of Stadskanaal. At first these games were only for youth-category competitors but they grew to be a national A-status KNAU (Royal Dutch Track and Field Union) event. Cooman is the "honorary chairwoman" of this event.
Dutch singer Gerard Cox wrote a song about Nelli Cooman to a tune by Stevie Wonder.