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In a determined effort to rekindle and further elevate the sport of cycling in Trinidad and Tobago, this country’s Olympic Men’s Sprint fourth place, Njisane Phillip, is currently planning to host a major and historic international cycling meet come April 2013.

The young rider revealed yesterday, that he is still in the preparatory stages for this event, which is expected to boast a list of successful Olympians, world renowned athletes and calibre of local cycling icons.

Unofficially scheduled for April 19-21, racing is expected to pedal off at the Arima Velodrome, Skinner’s Park (San Fernando) and the Palo Seco Velodrome over the three-day period. Phillip has dubbed the event, the “Njisane Three-Day Cycling Festival” and is determined to host the inaugural event on an annual basis.

Seasoned global campaigners confirmed thus far are 2012 Olympic Men’s Sprint silver medallist Gregory Bauge of France, Malaysian cycling sensation and Olympian Josiah NG and one of New Zealand’s Olympic Team Sprint members, Ethan Mitchell.

The 21-year-old Siparia native also mentioned that a strong contingent of female Olympians will hopefully be on-hand to give their local counterparts some stiff competition on race-day. These global female riders have not yet confirmed their participation, but are already aware of the meet.

A detailed list of confirmed global competitors will be produced by Phillip within the coming weeks. All local riders are also invited to participate in this intriguing tourney.

The multiple national champion is very excited by this initiative and has also thrown his hat in to proudly represent the red, white and black at the event.

Phillip and his promotional team have approximated the overall cost of the meet to be $2.3 million. This cost is expected to cover the airline tickets, accommodation and other miscellaneous necessities for the comfortable hosting of these foreign riders.

The Beacon rider is kindly asking the Government and corporate TT to help offset some of these costs to make the meet more inclusive and to global standards.

“I’m just asking for some sponsors to come on board and help out financially for this historic meet. This is going to be a first for Trinidad and Tobago. To the hopeful (interested) major sponsors, we’re going to have special booths set up at every location for our gold package sponsors — where they can promote and educate everyone on their products and services. Similar to cricket in the Oval (Queen’s Park), I’d like to get a real show for this event,” he explained.

The 2012 Colorado Springs Sprint champion also declared that this event is destined to broaden the cultural and sport tourism image of TT. He has included in his programme of events a number of soca acts, rhythm sections and other locally-based cultural displays. These acts will be on show during and throughout the races at the three locations, all in an effort to boost this nation’s sport tourism and warmly welcome the visiting athletes.

“I want to openly ask the Government of Trinidad and Tobago to help us be as hospitable as we can to these foreign riders. After the three-day event, I’d really like to take them on a tour of Trinidad and Tobago. They would already be getting a taste of Trinidad at the event, but I’d really want them to visit Tobago. I want them to get the best of both worlds. This would do much for our sport tourism and for the visiting athletes. I’m really pushing for this, if we get one day at least in Tobago, that would be great,” he added.

Phillip concluded, “This is needed to boost the levels of cycling in this country. The hype has somewhat calmed down after the Olympics. I want to bring it back. Just like track and field, football and cricket, I’d like for cycling to be recognised as a major sport here.”

By Jonathan Ramnanansingh

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

Usain Bolt and Allyson Felix were today named the Male and Female World Athletes of the Year for 2012.

Bolt, who won the award for the fourth time, and Felix, a first-time winner, received their trophies and $100,000 (£62,000/€77,000) prize at the Athletes of the Year Awards Ceremony in the Grand Ballroom of the Pullman Skipper Hotel during the International Association of Athletics Federation's (IAAF) Centenary celebrations in Barcelona.

The awards were hosted by International Athletic Foundation (IAF) Honorary President Prince Albert II of Monaco and IAF and IAAF President Lamine Diack, who presented the trophies to the Female and Male winners respectively.

Bolt, 26, World Athlete of the Year in 2008, 2009 and 2011, successfully defended both his 100m and 200m titles at the Olympic Games in London, clocking 9.63sec and 19.32 respectively, both the fastest times in the world this year.

He concluded his Olympic appearance by anchoring a Jamaican quartet to a 36.84 world record in the 4x100m relay.

He won six out of seven competitions in the 100m, and three of four in the 200m.

There was a double celebration for the Bolt camp as his coach Glen Mills was presented with the Coaching Lifetime Achievement award by IAAF vice-president Sergey Bubka.

Felix, 27, following world 200m titles in 2005, 2007 and 2009, won the Olympic 200m title in London and was part of the gold medal-winning 4x100m and 4x400m relay teams to become the first woman since 1988 to win three gold medals at a single Olympic Games.

The victorious 4x100m relay quartet in London clocked a 40.82 world record - for which they received the Female Performance of the Year award from the legendary 400m hurdler Ed Moses.

Felix's 21.69 victory in the 200m at the US Olympic Trials was the fastest in the world this year and made her the fourth fastest woman in history.

David Rudisha of Kenya, who won the Olympic 800m title in a world record of 1min 40.91sec, received the Male Performance of the Year award from New Zealand's Peter Snell, who won the Olympic title in 1960 and 1964.

The IAAF Inspirational award was presented to Olympic 110m hurdles champion Aries Merritt by Kenya's Kip Keino.

Trinidad and Tobago's surprise winner of the Olympic javelin title, Keshorn Walcott, received the Male Rising Star award from Jan Zelezny, and the Female Rising Star award was presented to Antonique Strachan of the Bahamas by France's Marie-José Pérec.

The World Journalist award was presented to Kenya's Elias Makori by double Olympic champion Sebastian Coe, the chairman of London 2012 who is a vice-president of the IAAF.

Male Master Athlete of the Year was Rob Lida of the United States, presented by Qatar's Dahlan Al Hamad, while the IAAF's senior vice-president Robert Hersch, from the US, presented Australia's Lynn Ventris with the Female Master Athlete of the Year award.

By Mike Rowbottom

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

BARCELONA (Reuters) - Keshorn Walcott sprung one of the biggest surprises of the London Olympics when he took gold for Trinidad and Tobago in the javelin in August and the 19-year-old says it has changed his life "in a huge way".

Crowned junior world champion in Barcelona less than a month earlier, Walcott won gold with a personal best of 84.58 metres to become the youngest winner of an Olympic javelin title.

"First of all I can't walk the road normal," Walcott said at a news conference at the IAAF centenary celebrations in Barcelona, where he was named rising star of the year on Saturday.

"When I got back home the country was in a mess, there were people all over the place, there was a big celebration for my victory so I was proud of myself and I was proud of the people and I know the people were proud of me," he added.

"My life has changed because now I know there's a lot of expectations on my shoulders.

"I have to work hard and do everything a little bit more, it's a bit of pressure."

Walcott, who named cricketing great and compatriot Brian Lara as his inspiration, is starting to reap the rewards of his rapid rise and said he had recently signed a sponsorship contract with sporting goods maker Nike.

He also received a bonus of $200,000 from the authorities in his native Trinidad for winning the Olympic title which he said he was planning to invest wisely.

His success in London in an event not traditionally associated with the Caribbean islands would hopefully inspire more young people to take up javelin and other throwing disciplines, he added.

"Hopefully there will be more field athletes coming out of the Caribbean and we've already seen an improvement," Walcott, wearing a t-shirt with the badge of his favourite soccer club Barcelona, told reporters.

"I always expected to get a medal but I wasn't expecting it so soon.

"I hope I am not going to be an exception and it opens the door to others."

TRACK FOCUS

Walcott, who admitted after his triumph in London he was surprised even to be in the final, said he used to play cricket before focusing on the javelin and that his experience as a medium-pace bowler helped him with his throwing technique.

His immediate priority was to prepare well for the 2013 season, when he will be bidding to add the senior world title in Moscow in August to his curriculum , he added.

"I haven't started anything like school so I am just focused on track at the moment.

"First of all it's important to be healthy going into next season and I'm going to work towards the world championships in Russia."

(Editing by Alison Wildey)

By Iain Rogers

Source: uk.eurosport.yahoo.com

National sport organisations (NSOs) are more often than not in the public spotlight. In the modern era of social media with its immediacy and interaction, the harsh reality is that sport leaders have little or almost no margin for error. Word and news get around in nanoseconds.
Even if it’s the wrong information or deliberately malicious information the bottomline is that news, views, opinions and judgments are circulated in the blink of an eye.
Fair or not is not the issue nor is it important. It is part of the modern landscape that sport is volunteer and membership based. That it is not, public or private sector in construct or operation, is neither here nor there.
Once you offer yourself up for election as an executive committee or board member of an NSO that’s the reality.
Public scrutiny—critical analysis of decisions made, actions or thoughts expressed—is part and parcel of the daily existence of sport leadership.
The days of bluff and bluster are over. The demands and expectations of stakeholders are high. It is therefore essential that NSOs and sport leaders keep on the straight road that is good governance. To deviate will result in failure. There is no hiding. Any success will only be temporary. Many have tried and have fallen by the way side or on their own sword.
Why is the straight road of good governance principles, a critical success factor if local sport is to sustainably develop? The answer is simple, sport leaders cannot survive if they are divisive and cater to special interest groups.
The modern environment demands that sport leaders see past narrow self-interest and leadership as their ticket to fame and glory.
There is a perception that leaders are experts at throwing around trite buzzwords that are meant to distract from their flawed decision making. That they prefer an entourage of yes-men and yes-women. That there is a fear of disagreements and the preference is not to seek and obtain input but rather approval.
How important is it for good governance of an NSO that no important perspective goes unheard? If the leadership of an NSO does not encourage and insist on different perspectives and options in its deliberations. Problems and crises are not far away.
It is important that persons elected to the executive committee be able to speak freely and reflect and comment on what other members of the executive committee, sub committees and stakeholders say.
It’s very hard for an NSO to overcome mistrust of its executive committee. Frustration is sure to set in as personal relationships and preferences influence policy and strategy.
Don’t misunderstand the point being made. I am not proposing that the mere presence of differing views guarantees good governance. What I am suggesting is that good governance principles do not discourage debate and that opposing perspectives facilitate good governance because it allows the broader implications of decision making to be considered and deliberated upon.
There are those who espouse that a characteristic of strong leadership is the willpower to suppress disagreement and discourage the open exchange of ideas while on the other hand the individual, who seeks consensus or the views of others, is a weak leader.
Contrast this with the view that it is a self-confident leader, who allows his or her opinions to be challenged. Effective leadership cannot be built in an environment of yes-men and yes-women.
How can an NSO ensure that its leaders do not make hasty decisions and neglect important considerations, and that there is a process that includes opposing points of view and different options before making important decisions?
The straight road of good governance structure and process can enhance decision making and minimise the chances of failure.
Editor’s note: Brian Lewis is the Honorary Secretary General of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee http// www. ttoc.org. The views expressed are not necessarily those of the TTOC.
-Brian Lewis
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Rainbow Sports and Culture Club captured the T&T Rugby Football Union (TTRFU) National U-17 Sevens rugby title, following its 67-0 drubbing of Caribs, in the Championship final, on Saturday.

Rainbow, the TTRFU U-17 boys’ league champion, went into the match, which was staged at the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port-of-Spain, unbeaten.
Stag Trinidad Northern, the league’s runner-up, did not participate because of a shortage of players.
In the Women’s division, Royalians capped a great year as it added the national seven’s title to their knockout and league titles.
The three-team women’s sevens tournament was competitive and entertaining with Police taking second while Caribs finished third.
President and founder of Rainbow, Rudolph Jack, congratulated his players on a disciplined and committed performance.
“We have worked very hard over the last three years with these youngsters. We have focused on the basics on and off the field. Winning both the U-17 league title and now the national sevens is a huge boost for Rainbow and the Trainline (Marabella) community as it shows the youngsters that honest effort has its rewards,” said Jack.
He continued, “It is all well and good for us to preach the message that sport can make a positive difference but success and winning raises the positive self esteem. The challenge is always sustaining the effort.”
Commenting on the day’s activities, TTRFU president Leslie Figaro admitted that the decision to stage the national U-17 and Women’s sevens championship as a stand alone from the men’s championship was made at short notice. Nevertheless, he deemed it a success.
“The importance of the U-17s as a key element of the TTRFU’s development programme is very high.
Sevens rugby is now an Olympic event. We have to raise the profile of sevens rugby among the youths, both male and female. The opportunity presented itself for us (TTRFU) to stage a separate championship. Based on the positive response of the clubs and players.
A separate championship may well be a permanent feature. “There are a number of things to consider but my initial reaction is very positive. Congrats to all the clubs. Special acknowledgment to Rainbow and Royalians,” added Figaro.
The national Men’s seven-a-side rugby championship will be held this Saturday at the same venue.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Rainbow Sports and Cultural Club from Trainline , Marabella captured the Trinidad and Tobago Rugby Football Union (TTRFU) National Under-17 seven-a-side rugby title when they defeated Caribs Rugby Club Under-17s 67-0 in the championship final .

Rainbow, the TTRFU Under-17 league champions, played unbeaten on Saturday at the Queens Park Savannah. Six clubs fielded teams, however Under-17 League runners-up Stag Trinidad Northern did not participate due to the unavailability of many of their players.

In the women's division, Royalians capped a great year by adding the national sevens title to their knockout and League titles.

The three-team women's sevens was competitive and entertaining, with Police finishing second and Caribs women in third place.

Rudolph Jack, Rainbow president and club founder, congratulated his players on a disciplined and committed performance.

"We have worked very hard over the last three years with these youngsters. We have focused on the basics on and off the field. Winning both the under 17 league title and now the national sevens is a huge boost for Rainbow and the Trainline community as it shows the youngsters that honest effort has its rewards," said Jack.

Commenting on the day's activities, TTRFU president Leslie Figaro admitted that the decision to stage the national under-17 and women's sevens championship separate from the men's championship was made at short notice . He however deemed it a success.

"The importance of the Under-17s as a key element of the TTRFU's development programme is very high. Sevens rugby is now an Olympic event. We have to raise the profile of sevens rugby among the youths both male and female. Based on the positive response of the clubs and players, a separate championship may well be a permanent feature. There are a number of things to consider but my initial reaction is very positive," added Figaro

The national men's seven-a-side championship will be held on Saturday at the Queens Park Savannah.

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

THE STATE plans to introduce a new National Anti-Doping Organisation and to make local athletes formally subject to compulsory drug testing in order to police the use of drugs in local sport.

Newsday understands that a bill, entitled the Anti-Doping in Sport Bill 2012, is to be tabled in Parliament, once it is approved by the Cabinet sub-committee in charge of scrutinising proposed legislation, the Legislation Review Committee.

The bill is one of several bills on the Government’s legislative agenda for the upcoming months.

Sport Minister Anil Roberts made a presentation on the bill to the LRC at a meeting of that body held at Cabildo Chambers on October 31.

It is understood that the bill will provide for the establishment of a National Anti-Doping Organisation which would be in charge of implementing several international regulations on the issue.

The bill will propose that this country formally adopt the World Anti-Doping Code and the UNESCO Convention on Anti-Doping in Sport. The World Anti-Doping Code applies to private sport organisations, but the UNESCO Convention on Anti-Doping in Sport makes that code part of international law.

The new bill would entrench this law into local laws and give the new State organisation, the National Anti-Doping Organisation, specific power to compel tests here. The new legislation would establish a centralised public body in charge of drug testing and of keeping records.

The move comes after a record-setting performance this year at the London Olympics in several sports including athletics, a sport long dogged by doping scandals.

Currently, athletes are subject to drug testing at individual meets on the basis of membership of private sporting bodies and contractual requirements.

At the LRC meeting of October 31, items on the Government’s legislative agenda were also discussed.

Only recently TT sprinter Semoy Hackett was tested positive for a second time for the use of a banned stimulant Methylhexaneamine while competing for the Louisiana State University (LSU) at the NCAA Team Championship.

Newsday understand that the drug was on a list of banned substances during the 2011/2012 athletic season. The result of the test means that other members of the LSU team have had to vacate their championship.

The 100 and 200 metres sprint queen was also tested for using a banned substance at the Sagicor National Track and Field Championship at the Hasely Crawford Stadium and was penalised by the World governing body- IAAF.

Sport Minister Anil Roberts did not return calls or respond to queries last week.



WORLD ANTI-DOPING CODE



ARTICLE 2: ANTI-DOPING AND RULE VIOLATIONS



2.1.1. It is each Athlete’s personal duty to ensure that no Prohibited Substance enters his or her body. Athletes are responsible for any Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers found to be present in their Samples. Accordingly, it is not necessary that intent, fault, negligence or knowing Use on the Athlete’s part be demonstrated in order to establish



ARTICLE 5: TESTING



5.1. Subject to the jurisdictional limitations for In-Competition Testing in Article 15.1, each National Anti-Doping Organisation shall have Testing jurisdiction over all Athletes who are present in that National Anti-Doping Organisation’s country or who are nationals, residents, license-holders or members of sport organisations of that country.... All Athletes must comply with any request for Testing by any Anti-Doping Organisation with Testing jurisdiction.

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

The scenes in the sporting world change so fast, it is hard to remember yesterday far less yesteryear. Take the week past.

The men's and women's hockey teams went through World League qualifying in Tacarigua; and at the same time, the Soca Warrior footballers were playing in Tobago and making it to the Finals of the Caribbean Cup. In Bangladesh, Kieran Powell was scoring two separate centuries in the same match; Tino Best was getting five wickets in a Test for the first time and West Indies were going 1-0 up in the two-match series. Simultaneously, India were having their way with England at Ahmedabad, New Zealand were succumbing to Sri Lanka and the Czech Republic's tennis players were relieving the Spanish men of the Davis Cup.

Dear reader, by the end of the month, no, by the end of this week, how much of the details of those events will you remember?

It is as if the pace of these days is designed to produce amnesia. But forgetfulness can be harmful and counterproductive. Really, there are some things we cannot afford to forget, lest the problems keep recurring.

So let me bring back to mind one detail. In fact, it is news that may have escaped you all together. It was the retirement—at age 26—of cyclist Christopher Sellier.

Remember him? Well just a year or so before Njisane Phillip announced himself as a senior rider, Sellier won gold, silver and bronze in the keirin, team sprint and match sprint at the Pan American Cycling Championships in Uruguay.

He and the rest of the team got a VIP welcome at Piarco International Airport when they came home.

In 2010, at the Pan Am Championships again, Sellier set Mexico alight with a new Pan Am and Trinidad and Tobago record in the kilometre time trial—one minute, 00.995 seconds to take the gold. The national coach at the time, the abruptly fired American Olympic medallist Erin Hartwell, described the ride as "world class". Sellier was also part of a team sprint trio including Phillip and Azikiwe Kellar that got bronze at that meet with another new Pan Am Champs mark.

So what in just two years has happened to move Sellier from a VIP (Very Important Person) to an NIP (Not Important Person)?

According to him, it was no help.

"I've been doing this (cycling) for 10 years now, and since funding has been lacking, it's about time to call it quits. It's a waste of time training in Trinidad. I've been wasting my time for two years now."

"Very discouraging" and "demotivating," was how he described the last 24 months.

"It's only so much I can do training in Trinidad. By the time you leave Trinidad, all the good form that you have doesn't mean anything. The tracks (abroad) are completely different."

True, nowadays, form on the concrete track at the Arima Velodrome can hardly help a man gauge how he will do in competition on a 250 track at a World Cup or a regional championship. To be attuned to international conditions and competition, some level of preparation would have to take place overseas. But to be overseas takes money; money, money, money.

The obvious question in my mind, was why would an athlete with such proven credentials not be funded? What about the Elite Athletes programme?

So I asked Sellier. He said he got funding in 2009 ($250,000). But nothing since then.

Why not? He couldn't say. Maybe there is a reasonable explanation for this; one not given to him.

But this is not the first time that money had been a problem for this cyclist.

Looking through my files, I came across this in a piece I wrote back in 2008 on Sellier: "Two years ago (2006), he was on the verge of quitting cycling.

'I just wasn't getting any kind of financial support,' he explains. 'I just couldn't keep putting my dad under that pressure to just keep buying stuff for me. Not getting any kind of help whatsoever really just... It's not helpful.'"

There was a happy ending to that story at the time. Things are different now.

So, given the complaints that are aired from time to time by sportsmen and women about the lack of, or slow disbursement of funds by the Ministry of Sport/Sports Company, perhaps full disclosure is now necessary.

In the interest of transparency, it is time that an annual list of athletes in all disciplines who are in the Elite Athletes programme should be published. It would be clearer then how and on whom public funds are being spent. There would be less room then for idle speculation and suspicion that everyone is not being dealt a fair hand.

It is true that success or failure in any endeavour is down to the individual. But it is also true that help at the right time can make a difference as to how well a person succeeds.

Sellier's plight in cycling is not unique. Before him there was one Mario Joseph. And for those suffering amnesia here, Joseph won a Pan American Games kierin bronze medal in Winnipeg, Canada in 1999. He was still a raw product, succeeding through sheer speed, strength and will power. But less than a year later, he was virtually lost to cycling. He did not have a financial benefactor to prop him up either.

So for every Njisane Phillip that comes through, there is a Christopher Sellier or a Mario Joseph who is lost to local sport. This place is too small to be so careless with its talent.

If, as the politicians often say, sport is a vehicle to project T&T to the world and provide opportunities to the youths; then the authorities must prove true to their words. There must be less lip service.

It is simply costing too many when we forget. Or worse, ignore.

By Garth Wattley

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

EPHRAIM SERRETTE, president of the National Association of Athletic Administration (NAAA), has come out in support of the new National Anti-Doping Organisation which will make local athletes subject themselves to mandatory drug testing.

The Anti-Doping in Sport Bill 2012 is expected to be laid in Parliament soon, upon its approval by the Cabinet sub-committee in charge of scrutinising proposed legislation, the Legislation Review Committee.

The bill will propose that Trinidad and Tobago formally adopt the World Anti-Doping Code and the UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation) Convention on Anti-Doping in Sport.

On Saturday, it was revealed that TT Olympic sprinter Semoy Hackett was tested positive for a second time for the use of a banned stimulant Methylhexaneamine while competing for the Louisiana State University (LSU) at the 2012 NCAA Team Championship.

In a brief interview yesterday, Serrette said the NAAA facilitates mandatory testing at all championships and he will be fully supportive of the Anti-Doping Bill.

Serrette, a former national sprinter, noted that the NAAA will also go beyond the call to set aside funding for athlete testing. “We just cannot condone having drug cheats in the sport. We see it as wrong and we will support that bill” Serrette explained.

And NAAA secretary Allan Baboolal pointed out, “the NAAA don’t have any news officially from the NCAA neither the LSU. We have written them a letter asking for an explanation or some type of information.”

“We have not have that, and that’s all that we could say at the moment,” he added.

The LSU women’s track and field team will have to vacate the team title it won at the 2012 NCAA Outdoor Championship.

According to the release by LSU, methylhexaneamine is commonly found in over-the-counter nutritional supplements, but is one of the substances that has been banned by the NCAA.

“It’s unfortunate the team will be required to vacate the NCAA Championship due to the actions of one individual, but we will certainly comply with the NCAA’s instructions in this matter,” LSU track and field coach Dennis Shaver was quoted as saying.

LSU’s vice chancellor and Director of Athletics Joe Alleva stated, “while we are disappointed as a University, we respect the decision of the NCAA in this matter.” Hackett, who was tested positive during the NCAA championships apologised for letting her team down.

“I’ve been informed I tested positive for a banned stimulant at the NCAA Championships last year, which has resulted in the LSU team vacating the NCAA Championship,” Hackett said.

“I want to express my apologies to my coaches, my teammates, LSU and our fans. Although this was unintentional, I’m deeply sorry this will have such a negative impact on my team and LSU.”

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

The World Anti-Doping Agency plans to double the length of bans handed out to athletes found guilty of serious doping offences from two to four years.

If the draft proposal is passed, the bans would come into force from 2015.

Athletes are currently suspended for two years for a first major doping offence and banned for life if they test positive again.

"There is a strong desire to strengthen the sanction articles in the code," said Wada president John Fahey.

"This second draft has done that, doubling the length of suspension for serious offenders and widening the scope for anti-doping organisations to impose lifetime bans."

Fahey also revealed that Wada's funding would be frozen for a second successive year at approximately $28m (£17.5m).

"This freeze is not ideal for the fight against doping in sport," he added.

The four-year bans would be handed out for serious doping offences such as use of anabolic steroids, human growth hormone, masking agents and trafficking.

The British Olympic Association has welcomed the move and spokesman Darly Seibel said: "There has been broad consensus that a two-year sanction for a serious first-time doping offence was insufficient and did not send the right message as a deterrent to those who might consider breaking the rules.

"By strengthening the sanction, Wada is moving in the right direction."

However, there are no plans for a specific rule to ban offenders from the Olympics.

A former International Olympic Committee rule, introduced in 2008, prohibited athletes from competing at the next Games if they had been suspended for six months or longer.

However, that rule was judged to be non-compliant with the Wada Code in 2011 by sport's highest court, the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

That ruling in turn led to the British Olympic Association being forced to overturn its own Olympic ban on drug cheats, such as sprinter Dwain Chambers and cyclist David Millar.

"The rationale is if more four-year sanctions are delivered, then there won't be any need for [the IOC rule] because the athletes will be missing the next Olympics," added Wada spokesman Terence O'Rorke.

The proposed ruling will undergo further review up until March 2013 before a final draft is sent for ratification at the world anti-doping conference in Johannesburg in November of that year.

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

VARUN MAHARAJH of Degree Madonna Wheelers was named as the President’s Cup Winner for 2012 by the Trinidad and Tobago Cycling Federation (TTCF) on Saturday evening.

The Federation held their presentation of awards, for the years 2010, 2011 and 2012, at the VIP Lounge, Hasely Crawford Stadium, Mucurapo.

Maharajh was also named as the Most Outstanding Elite cyclist of the year, while his club Degree Madonna was adjudged as the Most Outstanding Club.

Another Madonna rider, Roger Smart, took the Most Outstanding Masters 40-49 rider.

TTCF president Rowena Williams, in a brief address, offered apologies for the absence of award ceremonies in 2010 and 2011.

“We will ensure that, in the future, annual awards will be held for our national champions,” Williams said.

On the other side of the coin, she noted, “as president of the (TTCF), over the past two years, I have seen a renewed interest and revival of the sport in all areas of Trinidad and Tobago. “It is my wish that the support provided by both the Minister of Sport Anil Roberts and his team, together with the Sport Company of Trinidad and Tobago, will continue so that, in the future, we will achieve greater success in international competitions, both at the junior and elite levels.”

She later highlighted the outstanding performances of 2012, including Njisane Phillip’s gold medal performance at the Elite Pan Am Championships in Argentina and his fourth-place finish at the London Olympic Games; Quincy Alexander’s gold medal feat in Argentina; the TT junior male and female sprint teams’ gold medal conquests and Jodi Goodridge’s bronze medal achievement at the Junior Pan Am Championships in Guatemala; and the bronze medal performances of Keianna Lester and Akil Campbell at the Junior Caribbean Championships in the Dominican Republic.

HONOUR ROLL -

Most Outstanding 2010 -

Junior Ladies: Tinelle Campbell (Rigtech Sonics)

Senior Ladies (Track): Denese Francis (Arima Wheelers)

Senior Ladies (Road): Aurelia Constantine (Degree Madonna)

Tinymites: Akil Campbell (Rigtech Sonics)

Juveniles: Justin Roberts (Parkside Cycle Club)

Juniors: Varun Maharajh (Degree Madonna)

Elite: Christopher Sellier (Team Beacon)

Masters 40-49: Roger Smart (Degree Madonna)

Masters 50-59: Courtney Mark (Corkie’s Casual)

Masters 60-and-over: Ronald Peters (Degree Madonna)

President’s Cup Winner: Christopher Sellier (Team Beacon)

Most Outstanding Club: Degree Madonna





Most Outstanding 2011 -

Junior Ladies: Keianna Lester (Bike Smith)

Senior Ladies: Aziza Browne (Arima Wheelers)

Tinymites: Sei Daniel (Arima Wheelers)

Juveniles: Akil Campbell (Rigtech Sonics)

Juniors: Kwesi Browne (Arima Wheelers)

Elite: Njisane Phillip (Team Beacon)

Masters 40-49: Roger Smart (Degree Madonna)

Masters 50-59: Kenny Young (Team Trek)

Masters 60-and-over: Ronald Peters (Degree Madonna)

President’s Cup Winner: Njisane Phillip (Team Beacon)

Most Outstanding Club: Arima Wheelers



Most Outstanding 2012 -

Tinymite Ladies: Dominique Lovell

(Arima Wheelers)

Juvenile Ladies: Keianna Lester (Bike Smith)

Junior Ladies: Jodi Goodridge (Arima Wheelers)

Senior Ladies: Denese Francis (Arima Wheelers)

Tinymites: Ramon Belmontes (Petrotrin)

Juveniles: Akil Campbell (Rigtech Sonics)

Juniors: Justin Roberts (Parkside)

Elite: Varun Maharajh (Degree Madonna)

Masters 40-49: Roger Smart (Degree Madonna)

Masters 50-59: Clyde Pollonais (Southclaine Cycle Club)

Masters 60-and-over: Pat Nelson (Team Trek)

President’s Cup Winner: Varun Maharajh (Degree Madonna)

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

A cloud is again hanging over Trinidad and Tobago sprinter Semoy Hackett after her school, Louisiana State University (LSU) had to vacate their 2012 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championship title due to the sprinter's positive drug test.

LSU reported on their website on Friday that the team have forfeited their title, because NCAA rules state that "any team that competes with an ineligible athlete is required to forfeit participation in the championship of its respective sport".

The substance, the stimulant Methylhexaneamine that is commonly found in over-the-counter nutritional supplements, is the same one that saw her banned for six months from September 16 last year to March 19 2012 after a positive test at last year's National Track and Field Championships on August 13.

"I've been informed I tested positive for a banned stimulant at the NCAA Championships last year, which has resulted in the LSU team vacating the NCAA Championship," Hackett was quoted as saying by the LSU website. "I want to express my apologies to my coaches, my teammates, LSU and our fans. Although this was unintentional, I'm deeply sorry this will have such a negative impact on my team and LSU."

Asked yesterday about the matter, National Association of Athletics Administrations (NAAA) president, Ephraim Serrette told the Sunday Express that the Association is still trying to clarify the details surrounding Hackett's positive test.

"We just emailed the school," Serrette stated. "We have no information as yet (to go on)."

Serrette said the NAAA will issue a statement once they have full details on the matter.

The issue left LSU's head track and field coach, Dennis Shaver "disappointed".

"It's unfortunate the team will be required to vacate the NCAA Championship due to the actions of one individual, but we will certainly comply with the NCAA's instructions in this matter," Shaver said. "We support the policies that the NCAA has set to promote fair competition.

"This is disappointing news for the LSU Track and Field programme, but our hard work and pursuit of excellence will continue on and off the track."

By Kern DeFreitas

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

November 18 - Australian Commonwealth Games Association (ACGA) President Sam Coffa has warned that the country must start preparing immediately if they are to top the medal table at their home Commonwealth Games in Gold Coast in 2018.
The blunt message delivered at a special "GOLD" Forum on Gold Coast 2018 which was attended by more than 70 senior representatives from Commonwealth Games sports, Sports Institutes and the Australian Sports Commission.

Australia has topped the medal table in 12 of the 19 Commonwealth Games since the inaugural Empire Games in 1930.

But Coffa, who was played a key role in bringing the 2018 Commonwealth Games to the Gold Coast, told the Forum that past performance is no guarantee of future success.

"The trend we are seeing is more Commonwealth nations winning medals of all colours as the overall standard of competition gets tougher," the ACGA President told the Forum.

"Even in sports where Australia has traditionally produced significant numbers of medallists, that dominance is being slowly chipped away.

"We saw that at the recent Olympics and the Commonwealth Games will be no different.

"It is important that Australia does well at a home Games but to achieve that we will need to work harder and smarter to stay on top.

"Preparations for 2018 need to start now."

Athletes such as swimming superstar Ian Thorpe have helped Australia become one of the dominant forces at the Olympics and Commonwealth Games over the past decade but the country's stock has fallen in recent years, particular when they finished tenth on the medal table at the London 2012 Olympics with just seven golds.

But as well as targeting medal success at Gold Coast 2018, ACGA chief executive Perry Crosswhite said the success of the next Commonwealth Games in Australia will be judged on several factors.

"For the ACGA, the definition of what makes a successful home Games is about more than just medals," he said.

"It is also about the lasting legacy it creates for Australian sport.

"Sporting infrastructure and giving our young athletes a taste of major competition are the most obvious examples.

"But we are also saying to sports that we should be emerging from Gold Coast 2018 with more trained and experienced coaches, administrators and technical officials.

"That will ensure that the investment made in these Games - and in the Australian team - generates the maximum benefit for the longer term development of sport in Australia."

By Tom Degun

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

November 18 -The bidding process for the 2022 World Cup burst into fresh controversy today after allegations by the Sunday Times newspaper that Qatar officials considered offering $1 million (£630,000/€785,000) to the son of Amos Adamu, a member of the FIFA Executive Committee that handed the tournament to the tiny Gulf state.

Qatar, which was embroiled in unsubstantiated claims of corruption during its successful bid to stage the tournament, has consistently denied any suggestion of foul play accusing those who tried to undermine its bid of a smear campaign.

But the Sunday Times, which published the original evidence in late 2010 that led to the suspensions of almost a third of FIFA's top brass - including Amos Adamu - claims it now has a new file that has been sent to FIFA who, in turn, has passed the information to Michael Garcia, appointed earlier this year as one of two independent chairmen of FIFA's revamped Ethics Committee.

According to the newspaper, Samson Adamu was invited to sponsor a high-profile "African Legends" gala dinner during the 2010 World Cup finals in South Africa.

The report quotes Qatar 2022 officials as having confirmed that discussions took place but insisting that they "later backed out of the deal after considering the 'relevant FIFA rules'".

The paper said it had passed the file to FIFA and that a spokesman had confirmed the relevant information had been "immediately forwarded" to Garcia.

"It will be for Michael Garcia to analyse the documents and decide on any potential next steps," said a spokesman.

FIFA's decision to hold the 2018 and 2022 World Cup ballots at the same time was an unmitigated disaster and was partly responsible for the two-year reform process, initiated by FIFA President Sepp Blatter, that is expected to be approved at the FIFA Congress in May next year.

Even before the Sunday Times revelations, Theo Zwanziger, the German member of the FIFA Executive Committee, suggested that Garcia examine issues arising from the 2018 and 2022 World Cup vote as part of any fresh investigation into the joint ballots.

Qatar saw off competition from the United States, Australia, South Korea and Japan to win the right to stage the 2022 World Cup but FIFA have already decided that future hosts will be selected by the organisation's full 209 nation membership rather than by an elite few.

World Cup bidders are banned from offering any incentives to voting FIFA members or their relatives.

But in a strongly worded statement released to media organisations, including insidethegames, Qatar's 2022 supreme committee categorically denied they had done anything wrong, accusing the Sunday Times of being "malicious and reckless".

"We refute absolutely the allegations," a statement said.

"The article is presented in a manner that suggests an 'offer' was made to a certain individual by the Qatar 2022 Bid Committee.

"The truth is that our Bid Committee, after careful consideration, opted not to sign any agreement with the individual concerned and had no part whatsoever in the 'African Legends Dinner' event, financially or otherwise.

"It is correct that such a project was the subject of discussions, that preliminary communications were exchanged and that a draft agreement came into existence.

"However, upon due consideration being given to all the circumstances of this particular case – and especially to the relevant FIFA rules relating to the obligations of bid committees – a decision was taken by the Qatar 2022 Bid Committee NOT to pursue any involvement in the African Legends Dinner.

"No agreement was signed or otherwise concluded and absolutely no payments of any kind were made.

"No member of the Bid Committee attended the aforementioned dinner.

"All of the above was made unequivocally clear in writing to the Sunday Times before publication.

"The way that the Sunday Times has acted today is both malicious and reckless in the extreme.

"We have maintained close contact with FIFA on this matter and are confident that any documents received by FIFA from the Sunday Times will merely highlight the truth, as outlined above.

"The Qatar 2022 Bid Committee operated to the highest standards of integrity during the bidding process for the 2018/2022 FIFA World Cups, strictly adhering to all FIFA rules and regulations for bidding nations."
By Andrew Warshaw
Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Larry Romany said on Friday that it is very important for the Secondary Schools Cricket League (SSCL) to continue to liaise with the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board (TTCB), adding that "it is important to understand that cricket needs to maintain its relevance in the society and to maintain relevance with the sponsors".

Romany, president of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC), made the statement during the feature address at the SSCL's 50th Anniversary Dinner and Awards Ceremony, at the Cascadia Hotel in St Ann's.

"It is no mystery to us that the most important aspect of the development of any sport takes place in the secondary schools system, so there must be an integrated system whereby the TTCB must have a say in what goes on at the secondary school level because at the end of the day teams are selected based on performance. And that performance comes about as a result of our development years."

Romany said understanding the pathways to success is very important to the development of sport at all levels, and that administrators need to employ long-term athlete development strategies.

"You all are the bastions of the doors that create opportunities, and you'll stand at the door and say come through. But are you inviting them to come through a closed door or are you inviting them to come through an open door? And when you open that door, is there emptiness on the other side or are there people waiting to nurture what you expect out of them at the end of the day? Expectation is only realised when you put something in and you plan for the outcome.

"If you are waiting at the end to get players to play on the national team and then go on to the West Indies team, and you have no input into what goes on at the earlier levels, then it's really a throw of the dice."

Romany said the development of cricket is not playing cricket, and competition does not create good cricketers or good sportsmen, though it is an important measure. He added that participation and evaluation are needed to understand what has happened in the past, and what we need to move forward.

"When you listen to conversations regarding sports you always hear people talking about who has potential, but in reality, how that potential is executed is determined by how we educate ourselves to execute that.

"We have a country full of knowledge. If we integrate that knowledge we're going to learn a lot and we'll be able to produce much better cricketers at the end of the day."

Romany said that while we have produced great cricketers in the past, success should not be measured by the number of great players since these players would have been great anyway.

"Great people come here to leave a legacy, they come here to live out their destiny so that others may understand what greatness means.

"We talk a lot about the great cricketers that have passed but we have had plenty teams in the last 50 years and you can't tell me 50 people alone were great. The real trick is how do we take all the cricketers and make them good cricketers. How do we take every athlete that's aspiring to be a national cricketer and give him every opportunity to be that cricketer."

By Donstan Bonn

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

November 17 - International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge has cancelled a planned trip here to attend the debrief on London 2012, where a transfer of knowledge will take place between them and organisers of Rio 2016.

Rogge's doctors have advised him not to take such a long flight following his hip replacement surgery in September.

Rogge will instead remain in Lausanne to oversee the clear-up of the IOC's headquarters after they had to evacuate it on Monday (November 12) following a burst water pipe which flooded the building. 

Besides Rio, the four day debriefing will see key staff from London 2012 sharing their knowledge and experiences with representatives from Sochi 2014, Rio 2016, Pyeongchang 2018 and the three candidate cities for 2020, Istanbul, Madrid and Tokyo. 

It is part of the Olympic Games Knowledge Management, which was created in the build-up to Sydney 2000.

The debriefing, which is taking place in the Barra district of Rio where most of the venues for 2016 are located, will look at all of the principal areas of organising the Games and will give the various participants an opportunity to exchange ideas with each other after having had time to digest the results of London 2012.

Earlier this week a technology-specific debriefing was held and will be followed by an event looking at the Paralympic Games.

"One of the main roles that the IOC plays in helping to organise the Games is providing the Organising Committees and their partners with access to the latest knowledge and experiences from the Olympics," said Gilbert Felli, the IOC's Olympic Games Executive Director.

"We do this throughout the year with our Olympic Games Knowledge Management Programme but the Official Games debriefing, along with the observer and secondee programmes at Games time, are invaluable to the host cities.

"They allow them to get the latest experience and lessons from the people who have just done the job, and this immediate knowledge transfer is consistently praised by the cities as being very beneficial to their planning."

More than 500 people, including London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe and Rio 2016 President Carlos Nuzman, are expected to attend the event, which is due to officially begin tomorrow morning with a session on "Vision Development and Implementation".

The debrief is due to cover a number of different areas, including culture, media operations, ceremonies, the Olympic Torch Relay, sport, National Olympic Committee and International Federation services, workforce, venues, and commercial programmes. 

The debrief is being held less than two months after Rio 2016 sacked nine employees for illegally downloading files from London 2012 during the Olympics when they were on secondment. 

Both sides claim that the incident has not soured relations between them and will not affect this week's meetings.
By Duncan Mackay at the Windsor Barra Hotel in Rio de Janeiro
Source: www.insidethegames.biz

After Keshorn Walcott was celebrated and showered with gifts for becoming the world's youngest ever Olympic javelin throw gold medallist in London this year, his coach, Ismael Lopez Mastrapa was quietly rewarded for his part in Walcott's success.

Minister of Sport Anil Roberts revealed yesterday that Mastrapa received a total of $350,000 from the Sport Company and the Ministry of Sport for his hard work with T&T's second Olympic champion. The Minister was responding to a question about rewarding coaches and other support staff of successful athletes while addressing corporate interests about the benefits of investing in sport at the Trinidad Union Club in Nicholas Towers, Port of Spain.

Of that sum, the Cuban-born field coach got $100,000 for helping Walcott to javelin victory at the World Junior Championships, and a further $250,000 for helping the athlete bring home Olympic gold.

"For the first time in the history of Trinidad and Tobago, a coach, Mr Mastrapa of Cuba, has been rewarded…for his success in coaching young Keshorn Walcott," Roberts said.

"…Ninety-five per cent of the credit goes to (Mastrapa) as a coach, with all due respect to the administrators and the media who reported on it and so on."

He added: "You all have been the first to find out about it because unlike other politicians, this Minister does not need to get in the papers. I try to stay out."

Roberts pointed to his pedigree as a successful swim coach, the highlight of which has been assisting George Bovell to Olympic bronze in 2004, and again to the Olympic 50-metre freestyle final in London this year.

"…So I make sure to recognise the contribution of coaches, and we must understand that," he explained. "The beauty of it, the teachers and the coaches in this country are the ones who are going to save us. Not jail, locking up people and video cameras."

But when asked about rewarding athletes who have not won medals—a topic that had been a hotbed of debate in the aftermath of the Olympics—Roberts, in his trademark style, went from philosophical to chastising in a mere moment.

"Recognition is for winners," the Minister stressed. "Life is competitive. And if you want to be like the marathon runner to come last and ask us to recognise you, that not happening. There is elite sport, and elite sport means win. If you coach a football team and you get $75,000 a month, win, or be gone."

He continued: "If you're not the best of the best, go and train hard and then come back a next time. You will get a shake hand."

During his speech, Roberts urged corporations to support local sport, athletes and clubs, and invited them to take advantage of the 150 per cent tax breaks—up to a maximum $3 million—for corporate support of non-governmental organisations, particularly sporting bodies.

He also emphasised that the Government, and in particular the Ministry of Sport is looking at ways of increasing the viability of sport tourism in Trinidad and Tobago.

He pointed out that they are currently looking at ways to bring in further sporting revenue, which will be used for many things, including maintenance and upkeep of facilities, such as the new cycling velodrome, aquatic centre and tennis facility currently under construction to the tune of roughly $770 million. These projects are expected to be completed late next year.

But Roberts also emphasised that corporate T&T will have to play a big role in helping to exploit local sport and sport tourism as a business.

"We understand that," Roberts said, "and we will be counting on the resources, expertise and brain of the corporate sector."

By Kern De Freitas

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

The All Blacks are determined to play a style of game only the fittest and most skilled would contemplate.

At times this season the All Blacks have produced rugby few teams could contemplate or execute.

It is both weighty and thrilling, though some observers will sniff and bore people about the growing giddiness of test rugby.

Let them sup their own sourness. It might not always come off, but there is a compelling attraction about the All Blacks if they click.

They are not the Harlem Globetrotters of world rugby but they are delivering a message about their enjoyment and how their skills are one of the many ways the sport can be played.

On a top day, France might emulate the All Black style. Even the Wallabies, if they retrieved all their men from the casualty ward and Robbie Deans released the handbrake, have a similar game in them. But not all the time; not as a planned strategic style.

There is no right way to play rugby. That is half its appeal. Teams have to adjust their plans according to their players and the conditions in which they play the sport.

Style is important but results are the final arbiter. Just ask Deans that as his beleaguered Wallabies creak and groan across Europe.

Tap into Rob Howley's mind and see what he wants from Wales against Samoa after four defeats on the bounce.

Hansen has a vision about the way his side should play with the type of player whose skills are honed during the Super rugby series. In his mind he has a wishlist about the All Blacks' performances at the 2015 World Cup in England. He does not know if his first season with the All Blacks would encourage other sides to emulate their style or change their methods.

The All Blacks have many naturally talented athletes who all work hard to be multi-skilled.

"We are an extremely aerobically fit side and to play at that pace and intensity is difficult, too. You have to ask yourself, have you got the athletes to do that?" said Hansen.

"Some of the things we are doing I guess people will copy because that is natural. Our job is to stay in front.

"We have not perfected our game, we have just started."

It was a slow process. They had only played 12 tests this year and it might take a few more seasons to nail it, but the All Black selectors had seen enough to know they should persevere with their ideas.

They wanted to have a side who used all 15 men and got some serious impact from the bench. They saw that as one of their strengths.

"Asking myself and ourselves when is the perfect time to be able to nail this, I don't think there is one," Hansen said.

It was more important to understand their aims and their players and to match that to performance.

The coaches had to be smart and patient to work out performance levels and demands. Nothing had deterred Hansen so far from his goal.

High-risk rugby did mean some errors, but that provoked questions.

"Were the errors the result of our gameplan or were they the result of us not nailing it properly and understanding and delivering it properly yet - I think it is the latter."

There are so many variables in rugby that affect plans. Rush and push defences drew different responses, momentum from the pack produced quality ball but at other times, like the second test against Ireland, that was "atrocious" and affected the All Black plans.

Lessons always came from difficult patches, just as players talked about picking up on their mistakes.

"We are confident that the basic type of game we want to play suits us. We are confident we have the athletes to play the game we want to play and we are confident we are fit enough to play at a pace that asks questions of other people," said Hansen.

Players had to learn how to motivate themselves even if they knew they would win. They had to work on improving every personal performance as well as being prompted by teams they feared.

The coaching staff had to be flexible, they had to learn from all sorts of scenarios.

"We work on a simple philosophy that Saturday is the day we have to have the petrol in the tank. So we work back from that and so far that has been a pretty good philosophy and the way to think."

Recovery had been as important as preparation this season.

Players could not avoid talk, pictures or headlines suggesting inevitable victories, but they had to ask themselves if they had prepared properly and planned for the unexpected.

Brisbane was a classic case of a lack of deep graft.

"We got something we did not expect coming at us and it became a bit of a problem for a while," Hansen mentioned. "That was through lack of mental preparation."

If players said they did not fear a side then it was important they use pride in their personal performance as motivation.

"Someone is always going to watch you play and it might be the last time you play," Hansen warned. "There is a responsibility to play well for the All Blacks and know that your time in the jersey is seen to be productive and actually improve it."

www.nzherald.co.nz

French Olympic Committee (CNOSF) President Denis Masseglia (pictured) has admitted that Paris are still undecided on a bid for the 2024 Olympics and Paralympics and that they will not simply proceed with one to mark the 100 year anniversary of the last Games in the city.


The French capital has been unsuccessful in three previous bids to host the Games in 1992, 2008 and 2012, with the latter bid marking a spectacular failure for Paris as they were beaten by London in the final round of International Olympic Committee (IOC) voting by just four votes despite having been heavy favourites.


France's misery was compounded last summer when Annecy were crushed in their bid to host the 2018 Winter Games as they received just seven votes, losing out to eventual winners Pyeongchang.

It was considered widely to be one of the worst Olympic bids in history and led to a wide ranging review in France.

But France's continued attempts to host the Games have drawn sympathy from the IOC and it is expected that they would be formidable contenders if they launched a 2024 bid, especially with the year marking the 100 year anniversary of the 1924 Olympics in Paris.


But Masseglia explained that it was not so simple.

While there is a groundswell of support for a potential bid from Paris within the IOC history proves that members do not back a campaign just because it is of historical significance.

Athens, for example, lost out on a bid for the 1996 Olympics and Paralympics to Atlanta even though those Games marked the centenary of the Modern Games in the Greek capital.

"We have Olympic ambitions," Masseglia told insidethegames.

"We like the Games and we have the will to serve the Olympic Movement.

"But we have bid several times in recent years through Paris and Annecy and we have lost.

"Now we have to reflect on why we lost and we are currently looking carefully into the reasons why we were defeated in our previous bids.

"With 2024, the centenary of Paris is not a good enough reason to bid.

"It is a good opportunity but it is not enough of a reason on its own to launch a bid."

The CNOSF President also said that the current 2020 bid race would have a bearing on a Paris bid.

Istanbul, Madrid and Tokyo are all currently bidding for 2020 and Masseglia feels that the IOC may be unlikely to stage two Summer Games in a row in Europe if either Istanbul or Madrid is awarded the Games.

"Europe has had the Games many times in recent years and the IOC may want to take the Olympics to other parts of the world," he said.

"We had Athens in 2004, we had London in 2012 and we have two European cities for the 2020 Games in Madrid and Istanbul.

"So we will see after the 2020 Games are awarded what we will do."

Masseglia added that the French will also be looking out for the other potential 2024 bidders, where the race to host the Games could be one of the strongest in history.

America are likely to bid after the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) resolved their revenue sharing dispute with the IOC this year while any African bid to bring the Olympics and Paralympics to the continent for the first time ever is also likely to be very strong.

"We need to look carefully at the geopolitical aspects of the candidates for both the 2022 Winter Games and 2024 Summer Games," said Masseglia.

"We know that Africa have never organised the Games so far and that is a factor.

"Another factor is that the United States wants to come back because the relationship between the IOC and USOC is now strong again.

"There is also a lot that will depend on the IOC members because some of them will change in the coming years and it is important for us to get a good feeling from all the members.

"Maybe the IOC will prefer to take the Games to new countries but maybe they will want to take it to us.

"For our part, we must know what conditions we need to provide to hope for success.

"Not to succeed, but to hope to succeed.

"So there are a lot of situations that mean it is not yet clear what decision we will take.

"We would love to organise the Games and to serve the Movement but when and how; I don't know.

"It is too early now at this time to say anything definitely about this."

By Tom Degun

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

A new nationwide talent identification programme has been launched by GB Taekwondo to find fresh talent in time for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

In conjunction with UK Sport and the English Institute of Sport, the scheme called Fighting Chance: Battle4Brazil, is aimed at high achieving 16 to 26-year-old male and female combat athletes from all kick based martial arts who believe they are capable of successfully transferring to taekwondo.

The sport has enjoyed an increased profile after the London 2012 Olympic Games with one gold and one bronze medal achieved, which added to the bronze won four years ago in Beijing

Jade Jones and Lutalo Muhammad, the gold and bronze medallists from London 2012, and Sarah Stevenson, who had claimed bronze at Beijing 2008, all helped launched the new initiative.

It aims to build on the original Fighting Chance scheme launched three years to discover new talent and which received 1,000 applications.


These included several from ITF Taekwondo, a more traditional form of the sport which is not as widely practiced internationally as the format that appears in the Olympics and is administered by the World Taekwondo Federation. 

Among those who made the switch as a result of Fighting Chance was Muhammad. 

GB Taekwondo officials believe that the recent rule changes increasing points scored for kicks to the head will further enhance the opportunity for talent transfer from other martial arts.

"The original Fighting Chance talent identification campaign in 2009 was very successful for athletes to complement the talented juniors we were already developing," said Gary Hall, the GB Taekwondo performance director.

"The new Fighting Chance: Battle4Brazil campaign should help us build on the successes we have had so far and reach wider audiences.

"The success we achieved in London was incredible but we are not resting on our laurels, there is more talent out there to discover."

Since 2007, the UK Talent Team has worked with 20 Olympic and Paralympic sports and more than 100 world class coaches to find new talent with more than 7,000 athletes being assessed. 

These projects have resulted in over 100 athletes selected by sports into the world class system with 293 international appearances made and a total of 102 international medals won.

Twelve of these athletes went onto represent Team GB at London 2012, the most successful of which was rower Helen Glover, who was part of the crew which won Britain's first gold medal of the Games.

"The London 2012 Games saw great success for British athletes and there was notable impact on the medals won from talent ID athletes who have come through our campaigns," said Ian Yates from the UK Talent Team.

"The talent initiatives have a proven track record in discovering untapped sporting potential and we are now focussing on continuing to impact on British success through to Rio in 2016.

"It is fantastic that taekwondo will be involved in our first initiative post London 2012."

Jones, who won the Olympic gold medal in the women's -57 kilogram category after switching from ITF Taekwondo five years ago, believes that the sport is on the verge of a boom in Britain following London 2012. 

"I've had a lot of feedback since the summer's Olympic Games that more and more people are looking to get into WTF Taekwondo," she said.

"It is a fantastic sport and certainly has attributes which appeal to other combat athletes.

"My experience at London 2012 was incredible and I'm so happy that the sport is receiving more interest but I want to see this grow and continue in the lead up to 2016.

"Fighting Chance: Battle4Brazil is a great programme to help that happen."

Muhammad is pleased that he made the switch. 

"It is exciting to see the increase in popularity that taekwondo has gained since our success this summer," he said.

"London was an incredible experience for me and I would encourage others who think they could transfer their skills to WTF Taekwondo to apply for Fighting Chance as they too could experience the thrill of an Olympic Games in 2016."

Applications are due to close on January 14, 2013.
By Duncan Mackay
Source: www.insidethegames.biz