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  • Why Jamaica is now the sprint darling of the world

    Why Jamaica is now the sprint darling of the world

    BY DELANO FRANKLYNs Attorney-at-Law delanofranklyn@gmail.com
    Saturday, August 25, 2012


    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz24Zp7sJ00



    Jamaica is undoubtedly the country that is the pride and joy of the athletic world. To put the historic 12-medal haul by our athletes at the recently concluded London Olympic Games in perspective, it is important for us to be aware of the medal count over the years, as well as the factors which have led to this development.

    Although Jamaica won 5 medals in 1952, and did well thereafter, we were not able to come near that feat again until 1992, some 40 years later, when we won four medals. Since 1992, it has been a steady increase in medal count, except for 2004 when we went down to 6, after the memorable feat of 9 medals in 2000.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz24Zp1Jz00

    Unlike the steady tapering off which took place after 1952, the country has maintained a growing consistency since 1992, culminating in the highest medal count this year. The question can, therefore, be asked, what are the factors which have influenced this development since 2002? I wish to highlight four such possible factors.

    GC Foster College

    The first I believe is the visionary decision taken in 1977 to invite the Cuban Government to construct the GC Foster College of Physical Education and Sport.

    Many will recall that Cuba at the time, and to an extent still is, was a veritable sporting powerhouse, with the likes of Teófilo Stephenson in boxing, and the long striding Alberto Juantorena on the track. These Cuban athletes were home grown and home trained, having been exposed to the technical craft of the coaches who were graduating from institutions in Cuba similar to what later became the GC Foster College in Jamaica.

    Since its inception, 'GC Foster' has produced coaches of all types, and they are now spread far and wide across Jamaica. They are able to spot talents from early and help young aspiring athletes come to the fore. Many of these coaches continue to work, despite very limited resources. Yet, they continue to do what they do best because of the exposure which they received at 'GC Foster'. It is not surprising that some of those persons who are seeking to take credit for what is happening today were in the forefront of the campaign against the establishment of 'GC Foster' in 1980.

    Funds dedicated to sport


    The second reason was the decision taken in 1995 by the Government to have a steady stream of funds dedicated to sport. The Sports Development Foundation (SDF) was established to receive government revenue under the terms of a licence granted, in the first instance, to the Jamaica Lottery Company and, thereafter, to Supreme Ventures Limited. Agreed amounts paid over by Supreme Ventures would be listed as a tax and paid over on a weekly basis to the Commissioner of Inland Revenue.

    The sum collected is now administered by the Culture, Health, Arts, Sport, and Education (CHASE) Fund which was created in 2002. As a result of the collaboration between CHASE and the SDF, nearly $2b has so far been directly contributed to sport.

    Since 1995, the Foundation has constructed some 347 multipurpose courts, constructed or contributed to the construction of 132 playfields, and the seating and lighting of several complexes. The Foundation also established an Athletes' Welfare Fund to assist present and retired persons in need who have represented Jamaica at different levels in sporting activities with medical expenses, wheelchairs, housing modification, training equipment, accommodation, and living expenses during preparation for national representation, competition fees and some form of school related grants.

    Home-based athletes

    The third factor is that we are keeping a lot more of our athletes that came through the high school system here in Jamaica. We have been able to do so because in recent times we have developed home-grown track and field clubs marshalled and superintended by coaches who are some of the best in the world.

    Prior to the establishment of these local clubs, which are attached to some of our finest tertiary institutions, athletes who did well would continue their higher education and track and field involvement by pursuing scholarships in the USA.

    The absorption of the best of Jamaica's track and field talent into the USA system was not by chance. It happened because of two main reasons. In the first instance the USA is Jamaica's largest trading partner and by necessity, the two economies are heavily intertwined. The other reason is that there is a large Jamaican Diaspora in the USA. It was and is, therefore, quite easy for our track and field talent to seek both professional, as well as, sport development in the USA.

    The programme of scholarships to the USA continues, and should not be curtailed because it has helped many athletes in the past, continues to help many current athletes and will be the saviour to many in the future. While this is extremely positive, the fact is that we have lost many of our talented and gifted athletes because of their inability to cope with conditions elsewhere.

    The majority of our current crop of athletes are spared this challenge because we have now fully Jamaicanised our home grown athletic talent and are able to give the guidance required based on our cultural norms, our understanding of the international track and field requirements, and most important, based on the human and psychological peculiarities of our own athletes.

    Performance enhancing drugs


    The fourth reason is that the international drug testing requirements are far more rigorous. There are many among us who feel, to this day, that outstanding former athletes such as Merlene Ottey, Grace Jackson and Juliet Cuthbert were denied gold medals largely because of the 'souped-up' condition of some of their competitors.

    Despite bans and random testing which were carried out by national and international sport organisations, a uniform programme for the testing of athletes was not agreed upon until 1999, when the World Anti Doping Agency (WADA) was established.

    Since then, there has been a major assault by the authorities on the use of performance enhancing drugs. Jamaica, for its part, despite the utterances of Carl Lewis and Dick Pound, has a very strong and proactive anti-doping stance.

    This manifested in the fact that on February 10, 2004 the country signed the Copenhagen Declaration on Anti-Doping in Sport. Later, on May 16, 2005, Jamaica adopted a Policy against Doping in Sport. In the same year the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission (JADCO) was formed to carry out the country's anti-doping programme, in accordance with the dictates of WADA's Code.

    On July 31, 2008 the country adopted the Anti-Doping in Sport Act, giving JADCO the right to, among other things, promote a drug-free environment for sport and provide athletes and athlete support personnel with protection of their right to participate in drug-free sport, and thus promote health, fairness and equality for all participants in sports.

    Jamaica's size

    No other country of Jamaica's size, with a population of less than three million, has been as successful in the last 10 years, as Jamaica at the Olympic Games. In fact, the performances of our athletes in the last two Olympics have made Jamaica the sprint capital of the world, an accolade that formerly belonged to the USA.

    This is an amazing feat when one considers that the USA has a population of over 300 million and incomparable financial and human resources that are used to facilitate their track and field programme.


    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz24ZoY3ccQ
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    The Fifth Point....

    The fifth point, and one which the writer didn’t mention, is the influence on Jamaican male sprinters of a beleaguered sprinting star named Asafa Powell.

    Following Donald Quarrie in the 1970s and very early 1980s, we had few male sprinters who succeeded -- Raymond Stewart, Michael Green, and one or two others. And none of these guys won individual Olympic Games medals of any color (Stewart’s 1984 Olympic Games silver was a 4x100-meter relay medal).

    Then along came Asafa Powell shortly after the turn of the century, and the rest, as the saying goes, is history.

    Comment


    • #3
      fact check...other than the relays, asafa has an individual olympic medal?

      Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

      Comment


      • #4
        Thanks. very good point. I had to 'educate' a youth here who was dissing Asafa (uninformed really). Young kid, my brethren's son...wants to be a sprinter..14 yo....apparently beating his age group by distance and older boys too...also good footballer...held his own yesterday with the big boys (us)....linked him with a local coach...tell him go school in Ja...

        Comment


        • #5
          Many often forget his contribution. But that is usually the case when you fail to show up at the big meets. It is a shame that his team failed in provide him the proper support for someone with his issues.

          Comment


          • #6
            You mean his injuries.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: other than the relays...

              Originally posted by Gamma View Post
              fact check...other than the relays, asafa has an individual olympic medal?
              Gamma, of course I’m aware that Asafa Powell does not have an individual Olympic Games medal. In fact, he does not have any global gold medal whatsoever (junior or senior), although he has two individual IAAF World Championships bronze. He didn’t even come up through the regional system (Carifta, Pan Am Games, CAC Games) and his biggest individual medal, as far as I’m aware, is the Commonwealth Games 100-meter gold that he won in 2006.

              This doesn’t in any way lessen Asafa’s early influence on young Jamaican sprinters!

              Bolt is the greatest sprinter in history, with the global hardware to show, but I suspect that one would be hard pressed to argue that he has influenced young Jamaican sprinters more than Asafa has done! In fact, Bolt was no doubt influenced in some way by the MVP star! Those world records that Asafa set, starting in 2005, undoubtedly re-awakened the interest of a population that up to then had depended on our female sprinters for consistent international sprint visibility.

              In addition, his repeated defeat of top sprinters such as Maurice Green, Tim Montgomery, etc. from 2004 onwards surely made a huge impact on the Jamaican track and field community!

              By the way, I’ve always bemoaned the fact that Asafa didn’t double (100 and 200 meters) like so many sprinters have done. Of course I’m also aware of Asafa’s history, and why he doesn’t do this.

              Comment


              • #8
                It was a fact check. Because reading your post, the way you stated your premise implies that he has one. It was not intended to diminish the immense role he payed by singlehandedly singlehandedly being our standard bearer for many years.

                Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

                Comment


                • #9
                  Issues!! HE even admits that

                  Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    You are absolutely right!

                    Originally posted by Gamma View Post
                    Issues!! HE even admits that
                    You are absolutely right, Gamma.

                    For example, injuries were certainly not the causes of his failure to medal in 2003 (IAAF World Championships) or at the 2004 and 2008 Olympics. Also, no matter how much I admire him, Asafa’s third place finish behind Derrick Atkins at the 2007 IAAF World Championships is absolutely inexcusable!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Karl View Post
                      Why Jamaica is now the sprint darling of the world

                      BY DELANO FRANKLYNs Attorney-at-Law delanofranklyn@gmail.com
                      Saturday, August 25, 2012


                      Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz24Zp7sJ00



                      Jamaica is undoubtedly the country that is the pride and joy of the athletic world. To put the historic 12-medal haul by our athletes at the recently concluded London Olympic Games in perspective, it is important for us to be aware of the medal count over the years, as well as the factors which have led to this development.

                      Although Jamaica won 5 medals in 1952, and did well thereafter, we were not able to come near that feat again until 1992, some 40 years later, when we won four medals. Since 1992, it has been a steady increase in medal count, except for 2004 when we went down to 6, after the memorable feat of 9 medals in 2000.



                      Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz24Zp1Jz00

                      Unlike the steady tapering off which took place after 1952, the country has maintained a growing consistency since 1992, culminating in the highest medal count this year. The question can, therefore, be asked, what are the factors which have influenced this development since 2002? I wish to highlight four such possible factors.

                      GC Foster College

                      The first I believe is the visionary decision taken in 1977 to invite the Cuban Government to construct the GC Foster College of Physical Education and Sport.

                      Many will recall that Cuba at the time, and to an extent still is, was a veritable sporting powerhouse, with the likes of Teófilo Stephenson in boxing, and the long striding Alberto Juantorena on the track. These Cuban athletes were home grown and home trained, having been exposed to the technical craft of the coaches who were graduating from institutions in Cuba similar to what later became the GC Foster College in Jamaica.

                      Since its inception, 'GC Foster' has produced coaches of all types, and they are now spread far and wide across Jamaica. They are able to spot talents from early and help young aspiring athletes come to the fore. Many of these coaches continue to work, despite very limited resources. Yet, they continue to do what they do best because of the exposure which they received at 'GC Foster'. It is not surprising that some of those persons who are seeking to take credit for what is happening today were in the forefront of the campaign against the establishment of 'GC Foster' in 1980.

                      Funds dedicated to sport


                      The second reason was the decision taken in 1995 by the Government to have a steady stream of funds dedicated to sport. The Sports Development Foundation (SDF) was established to receive government revenue under the terms of a licence granted, in the first instance, to the Jamaica Lottery Company and, thereafter, to Supreme Ventures Limited. Agreed amounts paid over by Supreme Ventures would be listed as a tax and paid over on a weekly basis to the Commissioner of Inland Revenue.

                      The sum collected is now administered by the Culture, Health, Arts, Sport, and Education (CHASE) Fund which was created in 2002. As a result of the collaboration between CHASE and the SDF, nearly $2b has so far been directly contributed to sport.

                      Since 1995, the Foundation has constructed some 347 multipurpose courts, constructed or contributed to the construction of 132 playfields, and the seating and lighting of several complexes. The Foundation also established an Athletes' Welfare Fund to assist present and retired persons in need who have represented Jamaica at different levels in sporting activities with medical expenses, wheelchairs, housing modification, training equipment, accommodation, and living expenses during preparation for national representation, competition fees and some form of school related grants.

                      Home-based athletes

                      The third factor is that we are keeping a lot more of our athletes that came through the high school system here in Jamaica. We have been able to do so because in recent times we have developed home-grown track and field clubs marshalled and superintended by coaches who are some of the best in the world.

                      Prior to the establishment of these local clubs, which are attached to some of our finest tertiary institutions, athletes who did well would continue their higher education and track and field involvement by pursuing scholarships in the USA.

                      The absorption of the best of Jamaica's track and field talent into the USA system was not by chance. It happened because of two main reasons. In the first instance the USA is Jamaica's largest trading partner and by necessity, the two economies are heavily intertwined. The other reason is that there is a large Jamaican Diaspora in the USA. It was and is, therefore, quite easy for our track and field talent to seek both professional, as well as, sport development in the USA.

                      The programme of scholarships to the USA continues, and should not be curtailed because it has helped many athletes in the past, continues to help many current athletes and will be the saviour to many in the future. While this is extremely positive, the fact is that we have lost many of our talented and gifted athletes because of their inability to cope with conditions elsewhere.

                      The majority of our current crop of athletes are spared this challenge because we have now fully Jamaicanised our home grown athletic talent and are able to give the guidance required based on our cultural norms, our understanding of the international track and field requirements, and most important, based on the human and psychological peculiarities of our own athletes.

                      Performance enhancing drugs


                      The fourth reason is that the international drug testing requirements are far more rigorous. There are many among us who feel, to this day, that outstanding former athletes such as Merlene Ottey, Grace Jackson and Juliet Cuthbert were denied gold medals largely because of the 'souped-up' condition of some of their competitors.

                      Despite bans and random testing which were carried out by national and international sport organisations, a uniform programme for the testing of athletes was not agreed upon until 1999, when the World Anti Doping Agency (WADA) was established.

                      Since then, there has been a major assault by the authorities on the use of performance enhancing drugs. Jamaica, for its part, despite the utterances of Carl Lewis and Dick Pound, has a very strong and proactive anti-doping stance.

                      This manifested in the fact that on February 10, 2004 the country signed the Copenhagen Declaration on Anti-Doping in Sport. Later, on May 16, 2005, Jamaica adopted a Policy against Doping in Sport. In the same year the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission (JADCO) was formed to carry out the country's anti-doping programme, in accordance with the dictates of WADA's Code.

                      On July 31, 2008 the country adopted the Anti-Doping in Sport Act, giving JADCO the right to, among other things, promote a drug-free environment for sport and provide athletes and athlete support personnel with protection of their right to participate in drug-free sport, and thus promote health, fairness and equality for all participants in sports.

                      Jamaica's size

                      No other country of Jamaica's size, with a population of less than three million, has been as successful in the last 10 years, as Jamaica at the Olympic Games. In fact, the performances of our athletes in the last two Olympics have made Jamaica the sprint capital of the world, an accolade that formerly belonged to the USA.

                      This is an amazing feat when one considers that the USA has a population of over 300 million and incomparable financial and human resources that are used to facilitate their track and field programme.


                      Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz24ZoY3ccQ
                      The real reason why Jamaica is now the sprint capital of the world and the the 2nd best is because a disgruntled Jamaican born coach name Trevor Grayham gave WDA a sample of the clear steroid drug that the Americans were using otherwise we would be collecting Bronze medals. http://usgovinfo.about.com/b/2006/08...es-to-jail.htm
                      The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Bolt tweeted to Asafa to get well soon because he is the foundation of the current success. Go check it for yourselves @usainstleobolt

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          he had shoulder surgery 3 months before Beijing Olys.

                          2007 was straight panic

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            no sah, all wid drugs Bolt woulda buss dem up!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              This not really a good article.

                              Jam had most of these attributes long time, but just now exploding cause we have skilled pro training camps which keep the top talent. Franno and Mills nuh drop from sky!

                              Comment

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