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Berlin: Excellent Article!! (Sangster)

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  • Berlin: Excellent Article!! (Sangster)

    Source: The Sunday Gleaner
    Officialdom and the athletes

    Published: Sunday | September 6, 2009



    A. W. Sangster, Contributor



    There has been a series of incidents at the recently concluded IAAF World Championships in Berlin which are very disturbing. The continued poor relationship between the Jamaica Amateur Athletic Association (JAAA) and the MVP Club continues, and in the long run the athletes suffer. There is a long history in Jamaican track and field athletics of athletes suffering at the hands of officials through inefficiency, poor administration, injustice, plain vindictiveness and eventual cover-up.

    The following are some examples.
    1968 Mexico Olympics. The games started off on the wrong foot with the national flag being carried by Herbert McDonald, the president of the Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA). Many athletes, including Michael Fray, protested in the stands and did not join the parade. Team captain Clifton Forbes was left to try and settle the upset. The sprint relay team of Forbes, Fray, Miller and Stewart broke the world record in the heats though they did not medal. No recognition came their way from the Machado/Carreras Sports Foundation until this was corrected many years later.

    1976 Montreal Olympics. Michael Fray qualified and was selected to go but head coach Herb McKenley let it be known that if Fray went he would not go. JAAA president Richard Ashenheim surrendered to the ultimatum, arguing that Jamaica's chances of a sprint relay medal were poor. This was very surprising with a team of Quarrie (100 and 200m medallist), Miller, Fray and Bradford.

    1980 Moscow Olympics. The experience of Anthony Davis, who was one of two locally trained athletes to make the team, was documented in a report by a number of athletes at the games when he was bypassed for an ailing Bertland Cameron, who broke down shortly after starting the relay. It was all about the recognition of sponsors. Nothing came of the protest letter signed by several members of the team.

    1984 Los Angeles. After the games the papers were full of the 'Shoe War' at the games in which the women's relay team was changed on the basis of whose sponsor's shoes were being worn. There were many protests at the time, including that of Grace Jackson, and the media called for an enquiry. The Minister of Sport at the time, Ed Bartlett, called for an enquiry and a howl went up about politics interfering in sport. No enquiry was held by either the JAAA or the JOA. One result was an attempt by one of the officials at the LA Games to organise a slate to contest the next JAAA elections. The upstarts were wiped out and the old guard remained.

    2000 Sydney Olympics. The move to replace Peta-Gay Dowdie by Merlene Ottey brought forth placard-bearing protest by Jamaican athletes, which led to the threatened banning of the team by the organisers. We never did hear: was Peta -Gay sick or was she just being 'replaced' by the Merlene Ottey star?

    2008 Beijing Olympics. The issue of the 'camp' surfaced for the first time in recent history and it was the intervention of a leading Jamaican banker which helped to keep the team together. A new name had come on the scene. The athletes of the MVP Club with coach Stephen Francis performed in spectacular fashion, along with Usain Bolt, coached by Glen Mills.


    Before turning to the Berlin IAAF Championships some comment needs to be made on the quite fundamental changes that have taken place in athletics. Essentially, the rules of the game have changed and there is a new operational paradigm. Some of the historical changes are the following.

    The amateur status of athletes: Initially, athletes competed for individual glory and for the country that they represented. Prizes could be awarded but no money was to be paid to the winners in the early days of track and field athletics.

    The move to professionalism meant that winners gained handsome rewards and there were, in some cases gold bars to be won for a series of events. Million-dollar rewards are now in the offing.

    The role of agents, managers and professional coaches: These positions have all come about with the professionalism of the athletes. The complexity of the athletics calendar requires a battery of support persons who organise schedules for athletes, make contact with the various meet directors to get their athletes into a particular event and help to manage their money.

    With the greater knowledge of the science and technology of the sport, the coach's role has also changed dramatically. The coach has been elevated to playing the role of a highly trained individual who is knowledgeable about anatomy and physiology, the care of injuries, the science and technology of each sport, diet, biochemistry and energy, on doping rules and the use of drugs. He or she has also to be a psychiatrist and counsellor and with extensive international connections.

    The role of the sponsors: Sport is a billion-dollar business and the various sporting sponsors - Nike, Adidas, Puma, etc - all wish to have a particular successful athlete in their fold. Many athletes have made a successful career in the world of athletics through sponsorship. In fact, the new reality is that success with sponsorship is critical to survival.

    The world governing bodies. With a great deal at stake in the holding of these international events, the successful planning and organisation is critical. Television stations vie for the right to carry the programme. Sponsors are at hand to support and have their names emblazoned on the sports venues and fields. The world body wants a good show with the best of performers.

    We can now understand the role of the IAAF President Lamine Diack in "persuading" JAAA President Howard Aris and IAAF regional representative Teddy McCook to withdraw the banning of the MVP athletes from the Berlin Games. He read them a multimillion-dollar balance sheet. To quote IAAF general secretary, Pierre Weiss, "We want to assure the quality of the Championships."

    This raises another matter: The pre-event camp and the Athletes Village. An understanding of these two items is important.

    The pre-event camp which stirred the controversy in Berlin is a pre-event place for the athletes to mix and mingle before the village opens. The camp is selected on the basis of bids by cities and towns for the privilege of hosting the national team. The camp was held in the city of Nuremberg.
    Jamaica, which has become more famous in recent times, would be a prime country to have in your town or city. There are, of course, perks to the country whose athletes go to the city. Then there are the questions of the overall suitability of the camp and the facilities available for the last days before the competition, and the national requirement for all athletes to attend the camp.

    There is also the question of these critical days before the event being under the care of the individual coach. This has been the issue raised by Francis, who has been using a site in Italy with first-class facilities for the past several years, which is perfect for him and his athletes. The question that has now to be raised is the statement that Birmingham has been selected by the JAAA for the pre-London Olympics in 2012. Are those facilities ideal, and what have the terms been for the selection?

    The Games Village, which opens some days before the event, is a fully equipped facility provided by the IAAF through its national (German) partner in the games. There is adequate time for mixing and mingling and for relay practice. Francis' athletes were there.

    We return to Berlin and the JAAA performance. The JAAA operation and management at the 2009 IAAF Championships, Berlin. The JAAA performance has left a lot to be desired as far as the athletes were concerned, and Tony Becca in his column in The Gleaner on August 30 described the JAAA leadership in Berlin as being weak and unprofessional.
    Some of the concerns are:

    1. The positive drug test of the five athletes. The long delays in processing the test and the appeal by the JADCO have complicated the matter in the public's minds. The statement by Professor Errol Morrison, the head of JADCO, that it was for the benefit of the athletes that the process was challenged indicates serious flaws in the overall review process. There was a great deal of confusion in the public's minds, and the decision by the JAAA to send the athletes who had this question mark over their drug status was at best unfortunate. It is obvious that the JAAA were clearly hoping that they would have been able to take part in Berlin. The four local athletes were all members of a local track club.

    2. The men's sprint relay team. Relay teams are allowed substitutes and it is clear that the planning for this event left a lot to be desired. It is also clear that the team management obviously hoped that some of the drug-tested group would be able to run. With both Bolt and Powell being rested and the drug-test group not being able to participate, the team for the heats was a shaky second eleven. The stark reality is that had the German team not dropped the baton the Jamaican team would not likely have made the final. Bolt would have been denied his third gold medal!

    3. Steve Mullings missed the medal ceremony. First, we were told that Mullings was ill, and subsequently the story was told that he missed the bus and was late. Which do we believe?

    4. There has been a great deal of controversy on Veronica Campbell-Brown's withdrawing from the sprint relay. There are several issues to consider:

    The team management has the right and authority to assign the team members and the positions and the legs that they will run. Veronica, as a veteran curve runner, had no authority to state that she would only run the anchor leg which had been practised at the camp. The situation had changed with the team members and it was sad that she "walked away". She ended up by accusing the JAAA of being "unprofessional".

    Shelly-Ann Fraser (local of MVP) and Kerron Stewart (overseas university) both were recovering from injury problems and would be better placed in the straights rather than the curve legs (1 and 3).

    Where the JAAA erred is in failing to communicate in sympathetic terms with Veronica in spite of an offer which was made to try and heal the breach. It was again an arrogant take-it-or-leave-it position and, according to Veronica, a decision communicated to her 90 minutes before the race.

    It is to Veronica's credit that she said that the team was doing well and that since she was not going to run the anchor leg she did not want to upset their chances.

    5. The threat to exclude the MVP athletes. The camp issue has already been discussed and, by extension, the question has to be asked: Who would have been hurt by the exclusion of the MVP athletes? Clearly the athletes and, by extension, Jamaica's performance. It is interesting to note the following quite remarkable performances of these athletes.

    Individually: 3 gold, 1 silver and 1 bronze medals.
    In relays having: Members of the teams that won 2 gold and 1 silver medal.

    Winning 50 per cent of the individual medals won by Jamaicans.

    It is also clear that the inner-city communities of Waterhouse with Shelly-Ann Fraser, and Maxfield Avenue with Melaine Walker, would have viewed the elimination of 'their' athlete with great disfavour.

    It is said that an enquiry is to be held on the coach and the athletes. This should be welcomed, provided it is a public enquiry and not some hidden in camera event.

    THE WAY FORWARD
    Jamaica missed out on a glorious opportunity to do Jamaican business and promotion at the games. First, ministers Ed Bartlett and 'Babsy' Grange and tourism mogul John Lynch missed out on the potential for serious promotion of Jamaican products and Destination Jamaica. This was to capitalise on the Bolt phenomenon and the Jamaica performance in coming second in the medals table. It is not too late to capitalise on the Bolt mania and use 'Butch' Stewart's suggestion of asking Usain to be the spokesman in a commercial about Jamaica.

    Second, the JAAA administration, dominated by the KC old boys, has proved itself to be a self-serving organisation with crowds of delegates being accredited as friends and hangers-on to the KC label. In seeking to discredit Stephen Francis, it embarrassed itself and Jamaica, and Francis has in turn viewed their attitude with contempt and simply ignored them. In addition, there have been serious errors listed above. There has to be a way forward.

    1. The JAAA has to recognise that there is a new game in town, as outlined above. The arrogant attitude of not recognising the new paradigm has no constructive future. There needs to be greater flexibility in the national interest on issues such as camp requirements, registration, etc. The JAAA is also due for serious house-cleaning.

    2. Government and the sponsoring private sector have to recognise the significant shift that has occurred in the training of athletes. Seventy per cent of the gold medal-winning athletes were locally trained. This is where the support should now be directed.

    3. There is need for healing and reconciliation of those who have been hurt in Berlin.

    Perhaps the two coaching giants - Francis and Mills - could begin the forward movement as it is clear that new blood and new attitudes are needed.
    So we have come full circle: from Michael Fray in Mexico and Montreal, Peta-Gay Dowdie in Sydney, Anthony Davis in Moscow and Veronica Campbell-Brown in Berlin - the saga continues.

  • #2
    Well laid out...if some of these up and coming folks who call themselves 'Journalist' would just take a page out of his book....

    Comment


    • #3
      This Is Journalism !
      THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

      "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


      "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

      Comment


      • #4
        The dinosaurs and their enablers in and outside (Don1, Karl) of the media will never understand this well written article.

        The embarrassment that is the JAAA continues!
        Karl commenting on Maschaeroni's sending off, "Getting sent off like that is anti-TEAM!
        Terrible decision by the player!":busshead::Laugh&roll::Laugh&roll::eek::La ugh&roll:

        Comment


        • #5
          I cannot get over this piece of Journalism , wow....this old boy network that the writer alluded to , my cousin (KC ole boy) said the same thing its a wolmers vs kc grudge going on , i laughed my ass off.

          Jamaica is too petty & vindicative , ...lol .
          THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

          "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


          "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

          Comment


          • #6
            Imagine if we had actual investigative journalism in Jamaica?

            Too many armchair journalist who sit under the cool of the fan and rely solely on e-mails and phone calls and take the powers that be word as gold without properly vetting it! Why do we have to rely on the foreign media for information. The recent JADCO hearing was open to the public and still no information, just a carboncopy of what has been reported by the BBC!

            Jamaica media house is another black eye on the nation! It's plagued with pi$_$ poor lazy ass journalists. Nobody to report cronyism and nepotism that has turned Jamaica into a banana republic...X betta wi easy before Jamaicans Living Jamaica tell us to shut the fock up.

            Can the disciplinary process and sanction of the athletes be expedited so we can watch this play out in the circus of a court system we have in Jamaica.
            Karl commenting on Maschaeroni's sending off, "Getting sent off like that is anti-TEAM!
            Terrible decision by the player!":busshead::Laugh&roll::Laugh&roll::eek::La ugh&roll:

            Comment


            • #7
              Well Astil Sangster went to a good school! ...and was an athlete to boot.

              ...all the more reason to acknowledge that he made very good points...and to castigate him for totally ignoring the 'sins' of Stephen Francis. I am disappointed that someone who I hold in such high regard should leave out Francis' transgressions thus making his otherwise excellent presentation appear biased.

              As I have said in public and in private only the JAAA can be in charge of our national T&F teams and that fact must be recognised.

              That past and present officials of the JOA and the JAAA have acted in less than professional manner I concur. That one of the offending Jamaicans also hold office at the IAAF level is also worth noting.
              There are two ways change at this level an occur - i) the offending officials leave or are removed; ii) a change of attitude and thinking on the part of the incumbents.

              Sangster is right on the money that the parties need to air and solve the differences as the present cass-cass only delivers, hurt!
              "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

              Comment


              • #8
                What do YOU do in a totalitarian, vindictive environment?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Willi View Post
                  What do YOU do in a totalitarian, vindictive environment?
                  We do not have a totalitarian vindictive environment except in the MVP. It is Francis who speaks of not allowing athletes to perform and seems to have athletes under his thumb.

                  You will have noticed that the JAAA did not stick to its initial move to withdrawing the MVP athletes from the World games? So we know they are not inflexable....even as we recognise they are unprofessional.

                  Just revisit Francis' interviews?
                  He lashed the JAAA. ...going 'down and dirty'.

                  He lashed Glen Mills and Glen's athletes although Glen Mills and his athletes had nothing to do with the camp cass-cass?

                  Francis has damaged Bolt and the other athletes in Glen's stables in manner that cannot be wiped clean.
                  "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Karl,

                    when yuh run a camp where your athletes are told to leave a certain camp or get no IAAF support money that would normally get, what you call that?

                    When prominent JAAA people are overheard IN PUBLICaccusing members of your camp of being on drugs, WHAT DO YOU CALL THAT?

                    The athletes in MVP VOTED to go or not to go to the Nuremburg camp, so go back and verify your biased sources.

                    I am not saying Franno is perfect (far from it), I am saying that he deserves to be left in peace to run his business. We black people are our own worst enemies!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Did you see this:

                      http://disc.yourwebapps.com/discussi...2FCounterpoint

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Glen Mills damaged his own athletes! Shoe me Franno's name in the below articles

                        3,871 views Print This Post Email This Post

                        Yohan Blake pose beside the clock after running his Jamaica junior record in 2007

                        KINGSTON – Four Jamaican athletes, Yohan Blake, Marvin Anderson, Allodin Fothergill and Lansford Spence, are said to have admitted taking banned substances and are now awaiting sanctions from the Jamaica Appeals Tribunal.

                        The Jamaica Anti-Doping Appeals Tribunal met on Wednesday, but while they freed Sheri-Ann Brooks, the fifth athlete implicated, they set aside September 14 to sanction the other four.

                        The Honourable Justice Ransford Langrin, a retired judge of Jamaica’s Court of Appeal, who is the chairman of the Appeals Tribunal, said: “The athletes have agreed they took a banned substance.”

                        He said they are now left to make a decision on the sentence to be imposed.

                        “We have to decide now what is the sanction we apply … and the minimum sanction is reprimand or up to two years of ineligibility,” he said.

                        “All four athletes were found with 4-Methyl-2-hexanamine in their urine samples, which was reported as an adverse analytical finding by the WADA accredited laboratory in Montreal, Canada,” said a JADCO release last month.


                        However, the Jamaica Anti-Doping Disciplinary Panel chaired by Kent Gammon had cleared the athletes, saying: “The Disciplinary Panel unanimously was not persuaded to the standard of proof, bearing in mind the seriousness of the allegations made, that the prohibited substance … namely 4-Methyl-2-hexanamine, has that sufficient degree of nexus in terms of chemical or biological structure vis-a-vis Tuaminoheptane.”

                        But the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission (JADCO) appealed on the grounds that: “This substance is considered by WADA as being of similar chemical structure to tuaminoheptane which is listed as an example of a stimulant in the WADA 2009 prohibited list international standard.”

                        TrackAlerts.com learnt that the athletes admitted taking the banned substance to prevent enduring the drawn out case.

                        They are now hoping the Appeals Tribunal will give them a slap on the wrist with a public warning.

                        Jamaican runners admit banned-substance use
                        Sat Sep 05, 2009 By Associated Press






                        By: Getty Images

                        Marvin Anderson is one of the four Jamaican runners who admitted to taking a banned stimulant in June.


                        KINGSTON, Jamaica -- Four Jamaican runners have acknowledged using a banned substance.

                        Yohan Blake, Lansford Spence, Marvin Anderson and Allodin Fothergill admitted to taking a banned stimulant before Jamaica's National Championships in June. They appeared on Wednesday before an appeals tribunal assembled by Jamaica's Sports Ministry.

                        The runners could be banned up to two years during a sentencing hearing set for Sept. 14.

                        Attorney Lincoln Eatmon said his clients acknowledged guilt to avoid a "lengthy, expensive battle."

                        A disciplinary panel had initially cleared them, but that ruling was appealed by the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission.

                        The tribunal cleared Sheri-Ann Brooks on Thursday because her backup sample was tested without her knowledge.
                        Karl commenting on Maschaeroni's sending off, "Getting sent off like that is anti-TEAM!
                        Terrible decision by the player!":busshead::Laugh&roll::Laugh&roll::eek::La ugh&roll:

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Willi View Post
                          Karl,

                          when yuh run a camp where your athletes are told to leave a certain camp or get no IAAF support money that would normally get, what you call that?

                          When prominent JAAA people are overheard IN PUBLICaccusing members of your camp of being on drugs, WHAT DO YOU CALL THAT?

                          The athletes in MVP VOTED to go or not to go to the Nuremburg camp, so go back and verify your biased sources.

                          I am not saying Franno is perfect (far from it), I am saying that he deserves to be left in peace to run his business. We black people are our own worst enemies!
                          I have said, over and over again that the JAAA administrators were unprofessional. What do you want me to say - kill them?

                          My God, I am not saying, kill Franno.
                          I am recognising his coaching brilliance and that he also was not professional.

                          ...besides, Franno is the one on record saying he decides if his athletes run or do not run.

                          If you were thinking about the JAAA going away...forget it. There shall aways be a national body for the sport and those athletes and any coach who has athletes doing only the dictates of that coach had better get it through skull that it is the national body that has the last word on who represents the country and athletes residence pre-meets (these international country vs country meets).

                          They could bawl blood - It is the national body that will be in charge. What do they want every man or woman for self? Chaos?
                          "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            What do we have now. You just acknowledged that they are unprofessional and in the same token implied there is not a damm things anybody can do about it. We just have to hug up dat!

                            You see now why we have turmoil? You see now why your wishful thinking of upwards and onwards amounts to just empty words unless we make the needed changes!

                            Two roads before us, which one will be our choice...change or status quo?

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Willi View Post
                              No!
                              ...but it would be...and has been condemned to 'file 13'. In the light of one's words saying most about self...that person appears to be not of good character. ...so to me his post is weighed by what it says about the poster.
                              "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                              Comment

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