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  • MVP-Racers Rift Widens

    Is there something brewing between MVP and Racers, the top two track-and-field clubs in Jamaica?

    It is a fact that the two senior coaches of those two clubs, Stephen Francis and Glen Mills, have had a less-than-cordial relationship in the last few years. The reasons behind this strain in the relationship between Jamaica's two most decorated track coaches differ, based on who you talk to, but there is no doubt that the two former friends are not likely to be on each other's Christmas list.

    This frosty relationship doesn't necessarily reflect itself among the elite athletes of both groups. That, however, is not necessarily true of the younger recruits. I have spoken to athletes from both sides, and they concur that clubbites from one side do not tend to socialise with athletes from the other.

    All of this low-key tension between the two clubs was known to the track and field diehards, but the public, at large, got an inkling into the acrimony that exists between the two sides when MVP sent out a tersely worded release to the media on Wednesday. Since May, no fewer than half a dozen athletes from MVP have switched allegiance and are now conditioned by Mills of Racers. All this naturally set tongues wagging. Speculation was rife as to what could be behind this mass exodus.

    MVP's release Wednesday stated, in part, that: " ... Some of our former athletes have advised us that the other track club pays them cash monthly, in addition to providing them with accommodation in apartments off campus, among other enticements."

    MVP clearly thinks that only cash could make any athlete go elsewhere, and the release spelt out a long list of things that MVP provides for its athletes. The question was asked in the release, "So why would any up-and-coming student/athlete leave such an arrangement?"

    Dead giveaway

    The question was both rhetorical and sarcastic. Note how the MVP president said "the other track club" when referring to Racers. Not referring to Racers by name is a dead giveaway that the two clubs have simmering tension. My sources at Racers, however, gave a different perspective. Based on what I was told, it wasn't money that sparked the defection from MVP. It was a combination of different things, chief among them an intolerance for Francis, who they claim "must have lost his calling and was more suited to being an army drill instructor than a track and field coach".

    My source went on: "The style of Stephen is one reason (behind the athletes leaving), but different athletes also had their own individual reasons. One of those athletes that left decided to move on after they wanted him to run while the athlete was injured. Some of them left because they just were not happy with their progress over the past season. And in one case, one athlete had a bad injury and was not happy with how the club dealt with it."

    None of that, I must add, was I able to confirm with the MVP. My calls to my contact in the MVP went unanswered yesterday morning, when this article was submitted. I asked my source about the accusation of Racers bribing MVP athletes with cash, a claim which Mills rubbished in a statement issued last night. My source's response was that unlike MVP, Racers doesn't have ready accommodation for their athletes the way MVP has UTech. So, yes, it is true that one or two of the athletes that come to Racers are assisted financially with things like accommodation, plus all the needs that athletes have. It's not a case of Racers paying them, it's a question of them being assisted financially.

    From my perspective, what is at play here is nothing more than the jostling that takes place in other professional set-ups. The greater the level of success for these clubs at the international level, the greater the likelihood for there to be conflict, as they compete for the best recruits.

    Not all conflicts, however, are unhealthy. If the process is managed properly, it's all for the good of the athletes and, ultimately, the country. If managed badly, however, the friction between Racers and MVP could get ugly. My hope is that good sense will prevail.

    @ http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/2...cleisure3.html

  • #2
    Racers Track Club Dismisses MVP's Claims

    The Racers Track Club has rubbished claims made by MVP Track Club president, Bruce James, who suggested in a release earlier this week that athletes were leaving his club and moving to Racers because they were being enticed by monetary gain.

    Several developing athletes such as national 400m hurdles junior record holder Ristananna Tracey have already made the switch from the University of Technology-based MVP, and are now under the guidance of the coaching staff at the University of the West Indies-based Racers set-up.

    Kimmari Roach, Peter Matthews and Darion Bent have also crossed the road to the neighbouring Racers Track Club.

    “Unlike another track club in Jamaica, MVP does not pay our developmental athletes cash. Some of our former athletes have advised us that the other club pays them cash monthly in addition to providing them with accommodation in apartments off campus among other enticements,” James had said in statement to the media.

    However, Racers Track Club, through a release of their own, which had President and head coach Glen Mills as the contact person, quelled any suggestion around its recruitment practices, stating clearly that while they in fact do not attract athletes with money, they do their best to offer full support to its membership; monetary and otherwise.

    “A clear distinction must be made between athlete recruitment and athlete support. Racers Track Club maintains a restrained policy of recruitment and an active policy of support,” the release stated.

    “Do we use the offer of money to attract athletes to join our club? The answer is categorically No. The names of several athletes were cited in the articles in support of the allegations made. In fact, all of the athletes mentioned approached Racers on their own initiative seeking membership… None of these athletes expressed a major concern with money. They all expressed a desire to get an opportunity to train in a supportive, communicative and participatory environment.

    “Do we seek to support our athletes financially? The answer is unequivocally Yes. We do try to assist our athlete members to keep body and soul together in the hard times before they become celebrities and before they excite the attention of potential sponsors,” the release continued.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Skeng D View Post
      Is there something brewing between MVP and Racers, the top two track-and-field clubs in Jamaica?

      It is a fact that the two senior coaches of those two clubs, Stephen Francis and Glen Mills, have had a less-than-cordial relationship in the last few years. The reasons behind this strain in the relationship between Jamaica's two most decorated track coaches differ, based on who you talk to, but there is no doubt that the two former friends are not likely to be on each other's Christmas list.

      This frosty relationship doesn't necessarily reflect itself among the elite athletes of both groups. That, however, is not necessarily true of the younger recruits. I have spoken to athletes from both sides, and they concur that clubbites from one side do not tend to socialise with athletes from the other.

      All of this low-key tension between the two clubs was known to the track and field diehards, but the public, at large, got an inkling into the acrimony that exists between the two sides when MVP sent out a tersely worded release to the media on Wednesday. Since May, no fewer than half a dozen athletes from MVP have switched allegiance and are now conditioned by Mills of Racers. All this naturally set tongues wagging. Speculation was rife as to what could be behind this mass exodus.

      MVP's release Wednesday stated, in part, that: " ... Some of our former athletes have advised us that the other track club pays them cash monthly, in addition to providing them with accommodation in apartments off campus, among other enticements."

      MVP clearly thinks that only cash could make any athlete go elsewhere, and the release spelt out a long list of things that MVP provides for its athletes. The question was asked in the release, "So why would any up-and-coming student/athlete leave such an arrangement?"

      Dead giveaway

      The question was both rhetorical and sarcastic. Note how the MVP president said "the other track club" when referring to Racers. Not referring to Racers by name is a dead giveaway that the two clubs have simmering tension. My sources at Racers, however, gave a different perspective. Based on what I was told, it wasn't money that sparked the defection from MVP. It was a combination of different things, chief among them an intolerance for Francis, who they claim "must have lost his calling and was more suited to being an army drill instructor than a track and field coach".

      My source went on: "The style of Stephen is one reason (behind the athletes leaving), but different athletes also had their own individual reasons. One of those athletes that left decided to move on after they wanted him to run while the athlete was injured. Some of them left because they just were not happy with their progress over the past season. And in one case, one athlete had a bad injury and was not happy with how the club dealt with it."

      None of that, I must add, was I able to confirm with the MVP. My calls to my contact in the MVP went unanswered yesterday morning, when this article was submitted. I asked my source about the accusation of Racers bribing MVP athletes with cash, a claim which Mills rubbished in a statement issued last night. My source's response was that unlike MVP, Racers doesn't have ready accommodation for their athletes the way MVP has UTech. So, yes, it is true that one or two of the athletes that come to Racers are assisted financially with things like accommodation, plus all the needs that athletes have. It's not a case of Racers paying them, it's a question of them being assisted financially.

      From my perspective, what is at play here is nothing more than the jostling that takes place in other professional set-ups. The greater the level of success for these clubs at the international level, the greater the likelihood for there to be conflict, as they compete for the best recruits.

      Not all conflicts, however, are unhealthy. If the process is managed properly, it's all for the good of the athletes and, ultimately, the country. If managed badly, however, the friction between Racers and MVP could get ugly. My hope is that good sense will prevail.

      @ http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/2...cleisure3.html
      The Army Drill Instructor approach sounds like Big Franno. SAF once said that if Francis stopped shouting at you then it means that he has given up on you. He means well but if you don't like that style then it can be offensive.
      The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

      Comment


      • #4
        I hope this does not get out of hand. There is enough talent around to support two professional track clubs, or three or four in fact.
        "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

        Comment


        • #5
          Our divisive nature shing thru?

          Comment


          • #6
            Sad to say it but it look so.

            We have this tendency in our culture to believe that for one to rise then another necessarily has to fall.
            "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

            Comment


            • #7
              Ever heard the saying that you catch more flies with honey than you do with ...it?

              If Francis's only style is to shout and threaten then he is the one who may need to change
              Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
              Che Guevara.

              Comment


              • #8
                People were bound to leave. Have heard a couple top athletes complaining about Franno and his communication style and that they don't know how much longer they can deal with him.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Before I read this article....the athletes are friends (mostly anyways) but yes there have been simmering tensions for the past few years.

                  In 2009 Francis said in an interview that while his club has suspected of using PEDs, Jamaica had appointed a drug tainted coach (Mills) as head coach to the World Championships- this was after some members of Racers including Blake had tested positive for a stimulant at Trials.

                  cant recall if it was 2008 or 2009 when there was a rumour that Antiguan Daniel Bailey who trains with Mills had tested positive at a global championships, there were strong rumours that this started in the MVP camp and people at Track House at UTech said they got calls from a certain female MVP athlete to expect a bigger name Racers athlete to test positive too.

                  Mills and some Racers people are not shy to point out chinks in the MVP camp over the past few years either and if they think they can get certain things in your head they will try to point you in certain directions.
                  Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
                  Che Guevara.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Success can't pass our throats, we can't handle it, what a shame.

                    Claude ready to bust out?

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Sickko View Post
                      In 2009 Francis said in an interview that while his club has suspected of using PEDs, Jamaica had appointed a drug tainted coach (Mills) as head coach to the World Championships- this was after some members of Racers including Blake had tested positive for a stimulant at Trials.

                      That I recall.
                      Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                      - Langston Hughes

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Th article was in a Swedish newspaper that Bailey was doped and there were threats of lawsuits against the newspaper.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          And you are saying Swedish newspaper people dont talk to anyone who speaks English and come from Jamaica?

                          Also this Swedish paper that ran the story is not what people would call a 'paper of record' and we see this kind of rash behavior all over the world, especially in England, France etc where tabloids are a law unto themselves.
                          Last edited by Sickko; October 1, 2011, 03:31 PM.
                          Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
                          Che Guevara.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I said what I said, plain for all to see. Nothing more or less. Dont tell me what I am saying in addition, as that is pure falsehood.

                            Comment

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