Dreams of MVP Track Club realised in Beijing
published: Sunday | September 7, 2008
Bruce James, Contributor
"WE ARE going to prove to those [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]American [COLOR=orange! important]college[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] coaches that we can do it right here in Jamaica, gentlemen," were the prophetic words of Stephen Francis in September, 1999. "Paul, David, Bruce do you believe that as a group we can coach and manage post-[COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]high [COLOR=orange! important]school[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] Jamaican athletes right here in Jamaica and develop them to the point where they are the best in the world?"
"Yes we can!" we replied.
That was the birth of the MVP Track and Field Club on the playing field of the Wolmer's Boys' [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]School[/COLOR][/COLOR] in Kingston, Jamaica.
Fast forward to the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games and the MVP Track and Field Club has grown from one Olympic participant at Sydney in 2000, Brigitte Foster-Hylton, to six Olympic participants in Athens 2004 (Asafa Powell, Michael Frater, Ainsley Waugh, Winston Smith, Foster-Hylton and Sherone Simpson) and now 12 in Beijing (Shelly-Ann Fraser, Simpson, Foster-Hylton, Shericka Williams, Melaine Walker, Powell, Frater, Nesta Carter, Markino Buckley, Germaine Mason (Great Britain), Darrel Brown (Trinidad and Tobago) and Andrew Hinds (Barbados).
André Wellington was also selected for the Jamaican Olympic team as a reserve but did not take to the track.
Incredible performances
Noteworthy, all 12 of our athletes who participated in Beijing made it out of the first round of their respective events.
Impressively, 10 of our athletes made it all the way to finals of their events, except for Brown and Hinds.
Incredibly, eight of our athletes earned Olympic medals, save, and except, for Foster-Hylton, who missed a medal in the 100m hurdles by 2/100th of a second, and Buckley who set two personal records to make it to the final of the men's 400m hurdles.
Then the dream is realised! Five MVP Track and Field Club members earn Olympic gold medals. Twenty-one-year-old Shelly-Ann Fraser wins the 100m, becoming the first Jamaican woman in [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]history[/COLOR][/COLOR] to win this race at the Olympics and the second fastest Jamaican ever.
Melaine Walker breaks the Olympic record and Jamaican national record in the 400m hurdles and becomes the second woman in Jamaica's history to win the Olympic gold medal in this event.
Carter, Frater and Powell along with Usain Bolt (not MVP) combine to win the Olympic [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]gold[/COLOR][/COLOR] in the 4x100m relay and, in the process break, the Olympic and world records.
The dream is reinforced as three MVP Track and Field Club athletes earned silver medals in Beijing. Simpson, third at the Jamaican Olympic trials in the 100m, finishes second at the Olympic Games and adds this silver medal to her 2004 Athens Olympic gold in the 4x100m relay.
Shericka Williams, also third at this year's Jamaican Olympic trials, interestingly enough also improves to second place at the Olympics and becomes the fourth fastest Jamaican woman ever over 400m.
Mason, who lives and trains in Jamaica but represents Great Britain, high jumps his way to the silver medal, giving real meaning to word 'field' in the title of our club.
Williams then becomes the only MVP athlete to earn two medals at the Beijing Olympics when she runs the lead-off leg for the 4x400m relay team that earned a bronze medal in the second fastest time in Jamaica's history.
MVP Track and Field Club had two coaches (Stephen Francis and Paul Francis), two massage therapists (Gavin James and Patrick Watson) and assistant manager (Aundre Edwards) in Beijing for the Olympics.
Coaches' preparation
Evidence of their ability to prepare our athletes for the big event is seen in six of our athletes setting personal records at the Olympics, Frater, Fraser, Buckley, Walker, Williams and Mason.
Coach Stephen 'Franno' Francis showed amazing scope by getting MVP athletes into the finals of 11 Olympic events, 100m (men and women), 200m (women), 400m (women), 100m hurdles (women), 400m hurdles (men and women), high jump (men), 4x100m (men and women) and 4x400m (women). I dare say that this spread of events is unprecedented for any single track club in the world.
Even with these spectacular results we expected more but between injuries, an incomplete baton change in the women's 4x100 metres relay and some of our support staff not being accredited for the Olympics, we earned seven Olympic medals - three gold, three silver and one bronze.
Which means, yes the Maximising Velocity and Power Track and Field Club would have been sixth on the Olympic medal table for track and field out of 205 countries. We thank God for his many blessings! Bruce James is president of the MVP Track and Field Club.
published: Sunday | September 7, 2008
Bruce James, Contributor
"WE ARE going to prove to those [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]American [COLOR=orange! important]college[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] coaches that we can do it right here in Jamaica, gentlemen," were the prophetic words of Stephen Francis in September, 1999. "Paul, David, Bruce do you believe that as a group we can coach and manage post-[COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]high [COLOR=orange! important]school[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] Jamaican athletes right here in Jamaica and develop them to the point where they are the best in the world?"
"Yes we can!" we replied.
That was the birth of the MVP Track and Field Club on the playing field of the Wolmer's Boys' [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]School[/COLOR][/COLOR] in Kingston, Jamaica.
Fast forward to the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games and the MVP Track and Field Club has grown from one Olympic participant at Sydney in 2000, Brigitte Foster-Hylton, to six Olympic participants in Athens 2004 (Asafa Powell, Michael Frater, Ainsley Waugh, Winston Smith, Foster-Hylton and Sherone Simpson) and now 12 in Beijing (Shelly-Ann Fraser, Simpson, Foster-Hylton, Shericka Williams, Melaine Walker, Powell, Frater, Nesta Carter, Markino Buckley, Germaine Mason (Great Britain), Darrel Brown (Trinidad and Tobago) and Andrew Hinds (Barbados).
André Wellington was also selected for the Jamaican Olympic team as a reserve but did not take to the track.
Incredible performances
Noteworthy, all 12 of our athletes who participated in Beijing made it out of the first round of their respective events.
Impressively, 10 of our athletes made it all the way to finals of their events, except for Brown and Hinds.
Incredibly, eight of our athletes earned Olympic medals, save, and except, for Foster-Hylton, who missed a medal in the 100m hurdles by 2/100th of a second, and Buckley who set two personal records to make it to the final of the men's 400m hurdles.
Then the dream is realised! Five MVP Track and Field Club members earn Olympic gold medals. Twenty-one-year-old Shelly-Ann Fraser wins the 100m, becoming the first Jamaican woman in [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]history[/COLOR][/COLOR] to win this race at the Olympics and the second fastest Jamaican ever.
Melaine Walker breaks the Olympic record and Jamaican national record in the 400m hurdles and becomes the second woman in Jamaica's history to win the Olympic gold medal in this event.
Carter, Frater and Powell along with Usain Bolt (not MVP) combine to win the Olympic [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]gold[/COLOR][/COLOR] in the 4x100m relay and, in the process break, the Olympic and world records.
The dream is reinforced as three MVP Track and Field Club athletes earned silver medals in Beijing. Simpson, third at the Jamaican Olympic trials in the 100m, finishes second at the Olympic Games and adds this silver medal to her 2004 Athens Olympic gold in the 4x100m relay.
Shericka Williams, also third at this year's Jamaican Olympic trials, interestingly enough also improves to second place at the Olympics and becomes the fourth fastest Jamaican woman ever over 400m.
Mason, who lives and trains in Jamaica but represents Great Britain, high jumps his way to the silver medal, giving real meaning to word 'field' in the title of our club.
Williams then becomes the only MVP athlete to earn two medals at the Beijing Olympics when she runs the lead-off leg for the 4x400m relay team that earned a bronze medal in the second fastest time in Jamaica's history.
MVP Track and Field Club had two coaches (Stephen Francis and Paul Francis), two massage therapists (Gavin James and Patrick Watson) and assistant manager (Aundre Edwards) in Beijing for the Olympics.
Coaches' preparation
Evidence of their ability to prepare our athletes for the big event is seen in six of our athletes setting personal records at the Olympics, Frater, Fraser, Buckley, Walker, Williams and Mason.
Coach Stephen 'Franno' Francis showed amazing scope by getting MVP athletes into the finals of 11 Olympic events, 100m (men and women), 200m (women), 400m (women), 100m hurdles (women), 400m hurdles (men and women), high jump (men), 4x100m (men and women) and 4x400m (women). I dare say that this spread of events is unprecedented for any single track club in the world.
Even with these spectacular results we expected more but between injuries, an incomplete baton change in the women's 4x100 metres relay and some of our support staff not being accredited for the Olympics, we earned seven Olympic medals - three gold, three silver and one bronze.
Which means, yes the Maximising Velocity and Power Track and Field Club would have been sixth on the Olympic medal table for track and field out of 205 countries. We thank God for his many blessings! Bruce James is president of the MVP Track and Field Club.
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