Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.
Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.
Big up to the many coaches who made personal sacrifices over the decades until now! In addition, I extend heartfelt congratulations to the Jamaican coaches at the Moscow IAAF World Championships. They obviously made good, sensible decisions!
Big up to the many coaches who made personal sacrifices over the decades until now! In addition, I extend heartfelt congratulations to the Jamaican coaches at the Moscow IAAF World Championships. They obviously made good, sensible decisions!
Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.
Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.
Who would have thought in 1910, that what began as six schools competing for the Championship Cup would have evolved into today’s boy & girls championships, which now involves approximately 150 schools.
Champs Did You Know?
The inaugural staging of the sponsored VMBS Boys' Championships was won by the maroon and gold team from Wolmer's High School in 1910.
Wolmer's has taken home the trophy 11 times, the last time in 1956.
The Girls' Championships was initiated by the Games Mistress Association (no longer in operation), which staged its first event in 1957. The girls of Brown's Town, St. Hilda's High, won.
Defending champion Jamaica College (JC) has won the competition a record 20 times and has dominated it since 1998. They pushed Kingston College (KC) to second spot last year.
Munro College was the first rural school to place number 1 back in 1920. They subsequently won the competition 7 more times, the last time in 1948.
The defending champion girls from Clarendon, Vere Technical, have also taken home the trophy 20 times.
Below is an excerpt from the book ‘History of the Inter Secondary School Championship Sports 1910 – 1970’ by: Sir Herbert McDonald
Our story begins at Sabina park at 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, June 29, 1910, when for the time the Inter-Secondary Schools Championship Sports are to be held.
Before this there had been six Inter-Secondary Schools Championships starting in 1904. The first five of these were won by Jamaica College and by Wolmer’s in 1909. But because there had been a certain amount of dissatisfaction over the handicapping, these championships have not been popular and the first Inter-Secondary Schools Championships are now being held.
The competition is divided into three classes:
Class I - Over 16 but under 19
Class II -Under 16
Class III -Under 13
The High jumps and Long Jumps are divided into classes, not according to ages, but according to the height of the competitions. Class 1are boys over 5ft 2in. and Class 2 are boys under this height.
There are also five open events: -
800 Yards
Pole Vault
120-Yard Hurdles
Throwing the Cricket Ball
Standing High Jump
Six teams entered the Championships: - Wolmer’s School, Jamaica College, St. George’s College, Potsdam School, New College, Mandeville Middle Grade School.
There is no take off board for ht Long Jump – only a whit lime line – nether is there a foam landing for ht High Jump, you land on solid “dutty” – though they had mercy on the athletes and a straw mattress was provided fro the Pole Vault.
According to the Gleaner of Thursday June 30, 1910
Wolmer’s School carried its colours to victory yesterday and come out with the championship cup, in the first annual championship sports of the secondary schools in Jamaica. The meeting was held at Sabina Park and was witnessed by a large number of person prominent among whom were, His Excellency and Governor and Lady Olivier, the Hon. J. R. Williams, Cannon Simms and several others.”
The weather was fine, though a trifle warm, but this seemed rather as if it served to stir the boys to keen spirit of rivalry and enthusiasm, all of which went to make the meeting a notable and successful one”
Jamaica College is superior in Class 1 as their senior athletes score 20 out of a possible 30 points for the six events. In the open event these same senior athletes score another six points, giving them a total of 26, 9 more than St. George's and 16 ½ more than Wolmer’s. But JC failed badly in classes 2 and 3. Here they score only .4 of a point in seven events whilst Wormer’s scored 22.
The Jamaica College Magazine of 1910 took the class 2 and 3 boys apart by saying that “the performances of the boys in class 2 and 3 were most discreditable as they only gained 4/10th of a point. 2 point at least aught to have been gained in the long jump. Wolmer’s Boys in class 2 and class 3 were in splendid form and showed good promise of retaining the cup for their school for many years.”
“In the flat races, other than the 880 yards the boys were divided into two or three classes according to age and the first and second in the heats competed in the finals. It was a stiff fight between Wolmer’s, Jamaica College and St. Georges, and at one time the dark blue and white of the ‘J.C.’ Boys came a rather close second. But Wolmer’s maintained its lead to the end winning the Olivier Championship Challenge Cup.” (Note: it was not the Olivier cup).
The hundred-yard (finals) class one was a pretty smart dash and won in 10 1/5th with Manley (J.C,) a close second. Another keenly contested event was the hundred yards finals in class 2. So close was the finish that the referee had to be call upon to decide. The pole jump was excellently good. Lecesne of St. Georges College carrying it off with a jump of nine feet six inches. The long jump for boys over 5foot 2 inches in height was won by J.R. Lewis of St. George’s College. In his first jump which measured 19 feet 6 ¼ inches.
The sports were well covered by the press as in addition to the above account by the Gleaner, here is what the Telegraph and Guardian of Thursday, June 30 1910 had to say: -
The attendance at the Jamaica Schools Championship sports held at Sabina Park yesterday afternoon might not have been quite up to expectations, but in every other department of the meeting – first of its kind to be held in the island – was a decided success, and its future existence is assured.
The Championship sports as Cannon Simms pointed out at the prize distribution are not intended to supplant the inter scholastic school sports which have done so much to improve athletics in the secondary schools of the island. The championship sports are to bring the cream of the boy athletes together, and cannot fail to have a deep and far-reaching influence on the development of athletics in Jamaica. Many of the youngsters who competed yesterday showed such form as to warrant the belief that in the years to come the will be found representing the land of their birth against invaders from over the seas. And it is well that this should be so.
The committee had prepared an ambitious programme yesterday, but everything was got through without a hitch
After a few remarks by Mr. Cowper and Cannon Simms, Lady Olivier distributed the medals and handed over the champion cup to Wolmer’s the winner.
The judges were Capt. Nicholson, Dr. Williams, Mr. Holland and Mr. Tapley, Mr. R. S. Cargil officiated as referee. Members of the committee and other officers of the meeting worked hard for its success and the arrangements which went through under the able guidance of Mr. W. Cowper (Hon. Secretary) without a hitch.
Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.
The remarkable ascent of the Jamaica track dynasty is no accident, as the following in-depth report by National Public Radio demonstrates. The Caribbean nation has developed a successful and well-engineered system for creating phenomenally fast sprinters. It has become an enduring emblem of national pride.
There was a time when the world’s 100-meter men’s champion was the ultimate symbol of virility and masculinity, along with the heavyweight boxing champion. After the start of the modern Olympics in 1896, the duel between the sprint champions became a global spectacle—one that was brilliantly dramatized in the Oscar-winning movie, “Chariots of Fire,” about the men competing in the 1924 Olympic 100-meter sprint.
But, of course, this was a competition between white men.
The whole game changed when Jesse Owens dashed onto the scene at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, winning four gold medals and annoying the hell out of Adolf Hitler, who had grand plans of using the Berlin Olympics to glorify Nazi athletic superiority.
Ever since Owens destroyed the field and became sprint champion—just a year before Joe Louis became heavyweight boxing champion—white society has tried to change the aura surrounding both titles. Boxing in the popular imagination of mainstream society went from a gentleman’s game practiced on Ivy League campuses to a debased and almost inhuman bloodsport inhabited by uneducated thugs. The sprint champion went from an elegant symbol of grace and beauty to an arrogant, drug-enhanced rogue.
But the devaluation of the boxing and sprint titles did not take hold in the black community. In fact, the opposite occurred: the more mainstream society turned its back on the boxing champion and tried to ignore the sprint champion, the more the black community embraced and glamorized both.
So the rise of Jamaica as a dominant force in sprinting has been a wonderful boon to the entire Caribbean—and a devastating blow to the psyches of African Americans, who had long grown accustomed to across-the-board athletic supremacy and who are still somewhat bewildered by Jamaica’s rise.
In the black diaspora, sprinting is king.
From NPR.org
May 4, 2012
When it comes to sprinting, Jamaica reigns supreme.
At the Beijing Olympics in 2008, a Jamaican man — Usain Bolt — and a woman — Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce — took home the golds in the 100-meter race, and at this summer’s London games, they’re hoping to do it again.
If you visit the Caribbean island nation, you’ll hear a lot of explanations for why they’re so good, but let’s start with the obvious: In Jamaica, kids really like to run.
Locksley Anderson is a coach at Mona Preparatory School, a private school in Kingston. His kids get to run on the grass track at Jamaica’s University of Technology, or UTech, at the foot of the scenic Blue Mountains. His runners are as old as 12 and as young as 6.
“They come to school at 3 years old,” Anderson tells NPR’s Robert Siegel. “[At] 3, 4, 5, you see the natural talent. You see how they walk, how they run, and you take it from there.”
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce waves after competing in the 100-meter semifinal at the World Athletics Championships in South Korea last year. Fraser-Pryce won gold at the 2008 Olympics, and is viewed as a hero by the Jamaican children she sometimes shares a track with.
Anderson points to a group of 6- and 7-year-olds who are about to run a 4×100 meter relay. “They are speed,” he says. “Look at them, they are speed.”
It’s not a real 4×100 relay — the track is only 300 meters around. For the 6- and 7-year-olds, he divides it into four legs of 75 meters each. Getting the teams stationed in place around the track looks a bit like herding cats. The kids seem more interested in romping around than competing. Anderson says that for kids this young, running is just about having fun.
Jamaica‘s Heroes
When they’re done, the Mona Prep kids file off the track and call out to the lone figure of a 5-foot-3-inch woman, a superstar, who is sitting on the grass stretching. She is Fraser-Pryce, winner of the 100 meters at the Beijing Olympics. Like Bolt, the men’s gold medalist, and other great Jamaican sprinters of the past, Fraser-Pryce is a hero to Jamaican kids.
“I’m always smiling when I see them because they go like, ‘Shelly-Ann!’ ” she says. “And if I tell them ‘hi’ 10 times, they’ll still say, ‘Shelly-Ann!’ ”
Fraser-Pryce, 25, grew up poor. She’s the daughter of a single mother who worked as a “higgler,” or street vendor. She says she started taking track really seriously when she was 21 and running for Coach Stephen Francis at UTech.
“When I came here at UTech, everybody was saying I was too short and I shouldn’t think about running fast, it’s going to take me a while to run fast,” Fraser-Pryce says. “I had a really bad running posture, like I ran, literally, dropping on my face. Stephen saw all of this and, as a coach, he analyzed and he took a year to actually go through my core needs.”
Top Jamaican sprinters, including Olympic gold medalist Asafa Powell (in blue), practice at Kingston’s National Stadium on one of the country’s few synthetic tracks.
Fraser-Pryce works out with the MVP Track and Field Club — MVP stands for “Maximizing Velocity and Power” — and the UTech track team at one of the country’s few world-class, synthetic tracks — the National Stadium in Kingston.
Her mentor, Stephen Francis, coaches both MVP and the UTech men. Francis is a physically thick man and not a big talker. He sits on a club chair in the track infield barking the occasional instruction via bullhorn (“What to do with you people! Move it!”) when he isn’t absorbed in his stopwatch.
Morning workouts start at 6. The place is pretty empty when the runners arrive and start to warm up. They run multiple sprints in fairly quick succession. Fraser-Pryce runs seven, and some of the other sprinters run nine. It’s incredibly taxing.
The MVP group running at daybreak is an amazing collection of talent. It has three members of the 2008 Olympic gold 4×100 men’s relay team, including Asafa Powell, former world record holder in the 100 meters. It also has former world champion hurdler Brigitte Ann Foster-Hylton.
MVP is just one of Jamaica’s two elite track clubs. Bolt and current 100-meter world champion Yohan Blake run for the rival Racers Track Club.
The Philosopher King Of Jamaican Sprinting
Today’s Jamaican track coaches have reversed a long-standing pattern. It used to be that Jamaican sprinters, who were typically poor, ran to get scholarships at American colleges where facilities and coaching were superior, but the surroundings were foreign. Now, with better coaches, most of the country’s Olympic runners train at home.
Powell says that for him, staying in Jamaica makes a difference. “The atmosphere, the weather, everything is perfect,” he says. “Family, friends — they’re here. I’m comfortable training in Jamaica.”
The change that allowed world-class Jamaican sprinters to actually stay in Jamaica came about, in large part, thanks to 72-year-old Dennis Johnson, the philosopher king of Jamaican sprinting.
Johnson, however, makes no claim to originality for his ideas. He was a world-class sprinter at San Jose State University in California in the 1960s and came home to Jamaica with the wisdom of the school’s fabled track coach, Bud Winter. Winter had previously taught Navy fighter pilots to relax, and that was also his message to sprinters.
“He felt you could compete a lot better if you relaxed and, in the process, he developed a methodology and some drills, and it actually revolutionized the whole thing,” Johnson says.
According to Johnson, people have the wrong idea about speed. He says a relaxed sprinter maintains speed, while the sprinter who’s tight, who’s concentrating too much, can tire fast or lose it at the end.
He asks, Yoda-like: Have you ever seen Usain Bolt come from the back and rush past the rest of the field? Yes? Well that’s not really what you’re seeing.
“What you saw was the other people tiring first,” Johnson says. “Because you cannot increase speed after 6 seconds or 60 meters. It’s a physiological impossibility.”
The illusion of the champion sprinter accelerating past the field is really his consistency and their deceleration.
The best Jamaican coaches are Dennis Johnson’s proteges, or the proteges of his proteges. And while all this coaching, plus motivation, plus hard work might be sufficient to account for Jamaica’s successes, in Kingston, the explanations are just getting started.
Jamaican Speed, According To Science
At Juici Patties, a Jamaican fast food chain on the campus of the University of the West Indies, university researcher Rachael Irving is ordering a breakfast of ackee and salt fish with yams, bananas and a cup of mint tea.
“This is what the Jamaicans usually eat before they start running,” Irving says.
It’s what just about everyone here eats. In Kingston, you hear a lot about yams and green bananas. They’re the nutritional argument for Jamaican success in sprint events.
“It’s [a] carbohydrate, and runners need carbohydrate[s] because that is what produces the glucose that is metabolized to give you the energy that drives the muscle to perform,” Irving says.
Dr. Errol Morrison, an endocrinologist and the president of UTech, says Jamaican kids grow up on a diet that is so helpful, they might as well be taking a daily dose of steroids. And he goes a step further: What good nutrition unlocks in Jamaican athletes, he says, is a gift that is genetically endowed.
“These are athletes of black ancestry,” Morrison says. “They have long limbs; they have little subcutaneous fat, which gives you a lot of reduction in all the drag, you know, in the weight that you have to carry around.”
Then there’s the phenomenon of narrow hips. According to Morrison, Jamaicans are built to lift their knees high when they run.
“Now, in sprinting, the knee lift is the fundamental principle,” he says, “how you lift that knee, extend the leg and your stride length. So not only have you got the long limbs, but we have an angulation of the pelvis so the muscles there that lift the knee have a direct line of sight, as opposed to in the white or the [Asian pelvis] where you’re literally sliding up.”
Jamaican teens and preteens compete in the island’s track championships at the National Stadium in the capital, Kingston.
But if Jamaican sprinters are so genetically well-endowed, does that mean there’s a speed gene, some inherited trait that distinguishes the elite runner from the broader population?
Both Morrison and Irving have collaborated with Yannis Pitsiladis at the University of Glasgow on just that question. Pitsiladis has studied a DNA bank of samples from hundreds of Jamaican and African-American sprinters, not to mention Kenyan middle-distance runners and Ethiopian marathoners. He says he started out hopeful of finding a speed gene.
“We were so convinced by arguments that had been put forward by other scientists, by the media, that these populations like the Jamaicans have the right genes, that we thought it’d be easy enough to just go to the island, collect DNA samples, analyze them, come up with those genes and there’s the end finding,” Pitsiladis says. “Four to five years later, I can tell you that we have been looking at the genes and, in one line, I have to say that we have found no genetic evidence for the phenomenon that we’re observing in Jamaica.”
It’s not that genes play no role; it’s that the genes of elite sprinters just aren’t that different. As for the diet of yams and green bananas, Pitsiladis says: “I know that works very well, and I’ve even co-authored some abstracts with Professor Morrison on this, and I would say that there’s actually even less evidence to defend that argument than there is on the genetics.”
In other words, there are lots of countries where people eat yams or similar tubers, and those countries aren’t all known for their sprinters.
There is, of course, a cynical explanation for the rise of Jamaican sprinting: Some say they’re doping and just masking the drugs better than others. But the country’s suspension record isn’t especially bad.
As for Pitsiladis, there’s one explanation he can offer for the country’s success: Look at how Jamaicans regard sprinting, he says: It’s like a religion.
They’re Good Because They Want To Be
At a primary and middle school track meet in Kingston’s National Stadium, crowds of teens and preteens decked out in school colors blast plastic horns and cheer on their runners and jumpers.
The best of these young athletes are being scouted by high school coaches — the National High School Championships, or Champs, are a huge national event in Jamaica.
While there’s a persuasive kernel of truth to just about every explanation for Jamaican success in sprinting, nothing explains it better than this scene at the National Stadium. Perhaps Jamaicans are the world’s best sprinters because that’s what they really want to be.
Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.
Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.
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