Sport statistician Carnegie dead at 69
ANDREW HANCEL, Observer staff reporter
Thursday, July 12, 2007
CARNEGIE... veteran sports journalist and columnist
Renowned sports historian, educator and administrator Jimmy Carnegie died peacefully Tuesday evening at a nursing home in Kingston. He was 69.
Carnegie, an outstanding alumni of Jamaica College, had been ailing with Parkinson's Disease for several years leading up to his passing at 7:00 pm.
After leaving JC, Carnegie returned to his alma mater to teach and later became vice-principal. He also served as headmaster at GC Foster College of Physical Education and Sports.
However, it was as a sports journalist and columnist with the Daily Gleaner and the defunct Daily News that Carnegie achieved most acclaim, carving himself a niche particularly for his expertise in track & field.
Carnegie had an unquenchable thirst for history and statistics, which became synonymous with his writing style. He was constantly sought after as a consultant in the general sporting arena.
Veteran journalist and close friend Tony Becca told the Observer Carnegie would be irreplaceable and "was everything that a man should be".
"I really know Jimmy through his journalism from the early days of Foggy Burrowes' Sports Life Magazine back in the late '50s," Becca said.
"Over the years we became very, very close. He was just a tremendous guy. A man who loves sports, dedicated his life for sports, has a passion for sports and on top of that he was a very, very nice person," added Becca.
"Today you can go to the Internet and find anything that you want in a minute. But that doesn't detract from the fact that Jimmy in his time was the best," added Becca, who saw his friend as a 'walking statistician'.
On the national front, Carnegie volunteered for the Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA), the former Carreras Foundation's selection committee, and until his passing, the RJR Sports Foundation and the National Sports Council, chaired by former prime minister, PJ Patterson.
The RJR Communications Group, in an issued release, thanked Carnegie for his service, while expressing regret at his passing.
Earlier this year, Carnegie was lauded for his contribution to Patrick Robinson's recently published book, Jamaican Athletes: A Model for the World at the launch of the publication at the Terra Nova Hotel.
The year 1999 was special for Carnegie, following the previous historic year, which saw him, along with veteran track & field analyst Hubert Lawrence and publisher/politician Mike Henry, authoring the text, Reggae Road to Soccer Glory: (The Great Jamaican Series), after Jamaica's historic qualification for the FIFA World Cup.
In 1999, Carnegie received the Carlton Alexander Award, and in the same year, he wrote an historical piece, titled Jamaica: A century of sport, that was published in the Gleaner on July 27, 1999, which chronicled the respective sporting disciplines that brought glory to Jamaica.
And Garfield Myers, the Observer's Editor-at-Large for the
South Central Bureau, noted that: "Carnegie was totally dedicated to Jamaica's sports men and women. He had a passion for keeping records and for documenting the performances of Jamaica's sports men and women. The entire sporting fraternity will miss that. His was the kind of contribution that is not easily replicated," said Myers, himself a veteran journalist.
ANDREW HANCEL, Observer staff reporter
Thursday, July 12, 2007
CARNEGIE... veteran sports journalist and columnist
Renowned sports historian, educator and administrator Jimmy Carnegie died peacefully Tuesday evening at a nursing home in Kingston. He was 69.
Carnegie, an outstanding alumni of Jamaica College, had been ailing with Parkinson's Disease for several years leading up to his passing at 7:00 pm.
After leaving JC, Carnegie returned to his alma mater to teach and later became vice-principal. He also served as headmaster at GC Foster College of Physical Education and Sports.
However, it was as a sports journalist and columnist with the Daily Gleaner and the defunct Daily News that Carnegie achieved most acclaim, carving himself a niche particularly for his expertise in track & field.
Carnegie had an unquenchable thirst for history and statistics, which became synonymous with his writing style. He was constantly sought after as a consultant in the general sporting arena.
Veteran journalist and close friend Tony Becca told the Observer Carnegie would be irreplaceable and "was everything that a man should be".
"I really know Jimmy through his journalism from the early days of Foggy Burrowes' Sports Life Magazine back in the late '50s," Becca said.
"Over the years we became very, very close. He was just a tremendous guy. A man who loves sports, dedicated his life for sports, has a passion for sports and on top of that he was a very, very nice person," added Becca.
"Today you can go to the Internet and find anything that you want in a minute. But that doesn't detract from the fact that Jimmy in his time was the best," added Becca, who saw his friend as a 'walking statistician'.
On the national front, Carnegie volunteered for the Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA), the former Carreras Foundation's selection committee, and until his passing, the RJR Sports Foundation and the National Sports Council, chaired by former prime minister, PJ Patterson.
The RJR Communications Group, in an issued release, thanked Carnegie for his service, while expressing regret at his passing.
Earlier this year, Carnegie was lauded for his contribution to Patrick Robinson's recently published book, Jamaican Athletes: A Model for the World at the launch of the publication at the Terra Nova Hotel.
The year 1999 was special for Carnegie, following the previous historic year, which saw him, along with veteran track & field analyst Hubert Lawrence and publisher/politician Mike Henry, authoring the text, Reggae Road to Soccer Glory: (The Great Jamaican Series), after Jamaica's historic qualification for the FIFA World Cup.
In 1999, Carnegie received the Carlton Alexander Award, and in the same year, he wrote an historical piece, titled Jamaica: A century of sport, that was published in the Gleaner on July 27, 1999, which chronicled the respective sporting disciplines that brought glory to Jamaica.
And Garfield Myers, the Observer's Editor-at-Large for the
South Central Bureau, noted that: "Carnegie was totally dedicated to Jamaica's sports men and women. He had a passion for keeping records and for documenting the performances of Jamaica's sports men and women. The entire sporting fraternity will miss that. His was the kind of contribution that is not easily replicated," said Myers, himself a veteran journalist.
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