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dic.24.2009

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) extends Christmas Greetings to the national community,in particular sport stakeholders.

It is the time of the year when the day-to -day worries and concerns are put aside to share and enjoy the company of family and friends.

We urge everyone to be aware of the need to be careful .Remember don't drink and drive.Make healthy lifestyle choices.

And spare a thought for those less fortunate.

Have an enjoyable Christmas.

Michael Romany
President
TTOC

 
dic.24.2009

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) extends Christmas Greetings to the national community,in particular sport stakeholders.

It is the time of the year when the day-to -day worries and concerns are put aside to share and enjoy the company of family and friends.

We urge everyone to be aware of the need to be careful .Remember don't drink and drive.Make healthy lifestyle choices.

And spare a thought for those less fortunate.

Have an enjoyable Christmas.

Michael Romany
President
TTOC

dic.31.2009

By WALTER ALIBEY - www.newsday.co.tt

ATHLETES Josanne Lucas and Renny Quow, were named as the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee’s (TTOC) Sportswoman and Sportsman of the Year respectively at a gala ceremony at the Cascadia Hotel, St Ann’s on Tuesday.

Lucas had been the frontrunner for the award after her bronze medal performance at the IAAF World Championship in Berlin, Germany last August in a new national record of 53:20 seconds.

This achievement followed her run at the Grande Premio Brasil Caixa Meet in May in 55:24 seconds.

On Tuesday night Lucas received the award from the TTOC’s president Larry Romany. Lucas said afterwards that her intention was to better her performances in the coming year.

Meanwhile Quow was not present to receive his award but his father Rupert Quow made the trek up to the podium to receive the award from the Olympic Committee chief.

Like Lucas, Quow had been the first choice for the TTOC’s top award after his gutsy run from sixth position in the final of the 400 metres at the World Championships, to finish third for the bronze medal.

The Junior Central American and Caribbean (CAC) and National 400 metre champion in 2006 also became the seventh Trinidad and Tobago quarter miler to have joined the sub-45 club by clocking 44.89 seconds for a second place finish in the 400 metres at a Barcelona, Spain 2008 Track and Field Meet.

Meanwhile Trinidad and Tobago’s cricket captain Daren Ganga also received recognition for his inspirational leadership role in guiding the TT cricketers to the final of the Airtel Twenty/20 Champions League in India a few months ago. The text-book style batsman was presented with the Alexander B Chapman Award for “outstanding contribution to sport and Olympism, particularly in the promotion of Olympic ideals”. The award also recognised achievements or contributions in any sport by a person or individuals acting jointly or an organisation, group or team which epitomises all or any of the following fundamental principles of Olympism as found in the Olympic Charter.

Ganga led the local cricketers to a series of eye-opening performances in only their debut at the Indian championship.

The TT cricketers were beaten in the final by New South Wales Blues but received the lion’s share of individual trophies and awards.

Meanwhile talented junior 400 metres hurdler Jehue Gordon also walked away with the award for the Junior Sportsman of the Year crown while swimmer Kimberlee John-Williams was the obvious choice for the Junior Sportswoman of the Year trophy.

National and Joe Public footballer Kerry Baptiste also received the Sports Personality of the Year award.

The prolific striker scored an amazing 48 goals for his team in the TT Pro League this season to earn himself the award.

 
dic.31.2009

Quarter-miler Renny Quow and 400-metre hurdler Josanne Lucas made it a Tobago one-two on Tuesday, copping the Sportsman and Sportswoman of the Year titles respectively at the 16th Annual Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee Awards Ceremony at the Cascadia Hotel and Conference Centre, St Ann’s.

Lucas became the first woman from T&T to medal in a major World track and field event when she grabbed bronze in her pet event at the World Championships in Athletics in August in Berlin, Germany. At the same Games, Quow, who had also been steadily improving during the 2009 season, also bagged bronze in the one-lap event.

Lucas also twice surpassed the national record in the event during the Championships, where T&T’s more fancied stars failed to shine individually.
And Jehue Gordon, who at 17 twice set a new mark in the men’s 400-metre hurdle event, finishing seconds outside the bronze medal in his first major World Games, was named Junior Sportsman of the Year.

Swimmer Kimberlee John-Williams, who broke several national records and dominated the sport locally, was awarded the Junior Sportswoman of the Year accolade.

UWI Sport and Physical Education Centre director Iva Gloudon is the T&TOC’s IOC Woman in Sport nominee, while Joe Public and national striker Kerry Baptiste, who led his team to four Pro League titles and the FA Trophy, picked up the Sport Personality of the Year award.
The Alexander B Chapman award for ’outstanding contribution to sport and Olympism, particularly in the promotion of Olympic ideals,’ went to Trinidad and Tobago cricket captain Daren Ganga, who led T&T a second straight President’s Cup One-Day tournament title and to the final of the inaugural Airtel Champions League Twenty20 tournament.

During the function, bpTT chairman/CEO Robert Riley, the feature speaker on the night, spoke about the importance of sport in the region, saying it has the power to ’galvanise the people of the region’ better than any other single entity.

Riley used the example of West Indies cricket, and the unity it brought about in the region during its most successful period in the 1980s. He is convinced that success can be achieved once again.

’We got there by talent and chance, Riley said, ’but the opportunities to get there by chance are fast (disappearing).’

’There is no doubt to me that sport can be self-sustaining, but we have to think of it as a business, not (just) social interaction,’ he added while pledging his support to the T&TOC ’particularly in the way of education’.

T&TOC president Larry Romany also gave a stirring address on the ability of sport to put T&T on the map, and earn them the international recognition that would be all but impossible to achieve otherwise.

He cited the 1980’s West Indies, Brian Lara’s achievements, Ato Boldon, Hasely Crawford, George Bovell, Dwight Yorke, the 2006 ’Soca Warriors’ and even T&T’s cricketers at the Airtel tournament.

’No planned public relations effort,’ Romany pointed out, ’would be able to replicate this global awareness without spending millions of dollars, and even then, you are not sure...there’s no cost/benefit analysis that can be done on this.’

Romany also made a fervent plea for stakeholders such as parents of athletes, communities, leaders, and Government, to put their best foot forward and contribute towards T&T’s future sporting successes.
 
Kern De Freitas - www.trinidadexpress.com

 
ene.01.2010

Dear Friends,

Today signals the beginning of a New Year, 2010 and a new decade!

First of all, on behalf of the Executive of the TTOC, I wish to thank you all for your support during 2009, especially during the difficult period when the Caribbean Games was cancelled. It is during times like these that the values of sport and true camaraderie emerges and the sporting fraternity in Trinidad & Tobago are living exemplars of this.

As we look forward to 2010 we must continue to strive to deliver our sacred mandate, to the population of this, our great country by:
  • Creating opportunities for all citizens, especially our youth, to experience the joys of participation.
  • Using sport as a tool/agent for change in our society.
  • Instilling in our youth, the values of fairplay, respect for rules and discipline through the sporting experiences that we create.
  • Establishing a developmental pathway for the gifted and talented youth in our society that would allow them to maximize their full potential at all levels.
  • Ensuring at all times, that the above is done in harmony and unity and “for the good of the game”.
Please remember that we have been entrusted with a great responsibility, the nurturing and development of the human embodiment of spirit and this is especially evident in the leaders in our society that have emerged through the hallowed corridors of Sport. Lest we be accused of neglecting our duty by those that have gone before us and that have painstakingly carved this path for us, let us pick up the mantle and approach our future, Sport’s future, with commitment, diligence and love.

On behalf of the TTOC I wish to thank all who attended and shared with us at the 2009 Awards Function. It was truly a wonderful experience to once again “knock glasses” and celebrate with those involved and interested in making Sport the difference it can be in our society.

Best Regards & God’s Blessings

Michael Larry Romany
President
TTOC

 
ene.01.2010

Yesterday T&T cricket captain Daren Ganga was presented with the T&T Olympic Committee’s (TTOC) Alexander B Chapman award for his outstanding contribution to Sport and Olympism in 2009 by the TTOC president Larry Romany at the Hyatt Hotel in Port-of-Spain.

The award was announced at the TTOC’s 16th Annual awards ceremony at Cascadia Hotel last Tuesday. However, Ganga was unable to attend because of duties with the South team in the Digicel Gerry Gomez Cricket Classic.

Ganga said he was delighted to receive the prestigious award as it recognised his all round contribution both on and off the field.

Romany pointed out that the Chapman award is the major honour presented by the TTOC.
“It is given to the individual who by their deeds and words best represents the Olympic ideals, vision and philosophy of the joy found in effort, the educational value of good example and respect for fundamental ethical principles. The vision and mission of Olympism is to place sport at the harmonious development of mankind with a view of promoting a peaceful and just world concerned with human dignity. Daren’s leadership has been inspirational. He has performed with the bat. He is studying law. He has started a foundation to help those less fortunate .He is a deserving winner.” Romany said.

Ganga was the TTOC’s 2008 Sports Personality of the year.

 
ene.01.2010

As a young person growing up in T&T I always found that national pride, unity and a love for country eluded many of us as a people. I always envied the way the Jamaicans defended their country and their heritage, similarly the Bajans and many of the other smaller islands.

It was this that drove my strong belief and passion for delivering the Caribbean Games to Trinidad & Tobago.

I believed that once the Games started it would engender a spirit of National Pride in all those connected with the Games. Athletes, Officials, Volunteers, Spectators and Govt. officials.

Preparing for Caribbean Games taught us a lot of valuable lessons the main one being that Sport still has a lot of work to do before it is accepted as an integral part in the development of young people in Trinidad & Tobago.
 
Why you ask? For the next 5 minutes I will attempt to provide you with a rationale for such a statement.

Historically, the only time that I have seen T&T as a nation exhibit National Pride and Unity was in conjunction with a sporting accomplishment.
1976 Olympic Games in Montreal Hasley Crawford won the Gold medal in the 100yard dash. For a minimum level of investment in one athlete, the twin island Republic of T&T got Global publicity that would have been impossible to plan and much less pay for. The population came out in their thousands to see Hasley on his return to TT and his performance motivated then and continues to motivate young people now to strive for excellence in whatever they do.

At that time, many promises were made about ensuring the development of Sport as the Hasely’s success was shrouded by a euphoria that everybody wanted to replicate.

The Strike Squad. Who could forget that.

Nov. 19th 1989 is etched in the minds and hearts of all TT. The images of RED and the massive show of national pride was second to none.
Our soccer team made us feel that we could conquer the world.

1980 – 1989 West Indies played 83 test matches. They won 44 lost 8 and drew 31.

Even though we celebrated their successes as a region nothing impacted more on TT than when Brian Lara broke the World Record for the largest score in a Test Innings in 1994.

375 against England in Antigua.
 
He turned the cricketing world on its head but more than that Trinbagonians took to the streets honking horns waving flags etc. There was a massive show of pride and unity. Everybody came out at Woodford Square to catch a glimpse of the Prince of Port of Spain. A title that has remained with him to date.

1989 to 2001 Dwight Yorke played for Aston Villa and Manchester United.

1996 to 2004 Ato Boldon was a four-time Olympic medal winner. Only 2 other men in history, Frankie Fredericks and Carl Lewis, have won as many Olympic individual event sprint medals. There are certain iconic moments in one’s life that we remember everything about that moment. Ato’s run in Atlanta and Hasely’s run in Montreal.

During the 90’s Ato Boldon, Brian Lara and Dwight Yorke as individuals, did more to promote T&T than anything else during that time, at a minimal cost to the country and motivated a significant number of young people to emulate their efforts in a positive manner.

Travelling during that time anywhere in the world you were identified as coming from the country with the above men.

2004 George Bovell won the first Olympic Medal in swimming. Everybody wanted to put a congratulatory advertisement. For weeks after the Olympics George was sought after for photo ops speeches etc.

2006 Soca Warriors qualified for the World Cup in Germany. Once again people took to the streets and partied all night to celebrate this success. It was the single largest sporting event supported by corporate T&T.

The thing that has stood out in my mind was the first game against Sweden when we sang the National Anthem in the stadium. 12000 Trinbagonians sang proud and at the end tears were flowing from all our eyes. This campaign was the single largest show of national pride and unity in T&T’s history. The effect on our young people was staggering.

2008 Richard Thompson and the 4X100m Men’s Relay team won 2 silver medals at the Beijing Olympics that once again brought people into the streets. Celebrations went on for weeks after returning home. Again this has had a significant impact on our young people and its effects will be felt and seen in our performances in Track & Field over the next decade.

2009 had tremendous performances from Renny Quow and Jose-Ann Lucas both of whom medalled at the IAAF World Championships in Berlin. Once again everyone was glued to their TVs. Trinidad & Tobago was once again applauded on Global TV.
 
Our most recent success came from our T&T Cricket Team at the Airtel T20 Championship in India where we finished 2nd. The T&T Team was the toast of India, over 1 billion People.

Over 30M people watched each game with a staggering 100M viewing the final live and half a billion people seeing it after as a packaged item. Once again T&T was being viewed and applauded on the World stage through Sport.

No planned PR effort would be able to replicate this level of global awareness for a country, without spending 100s of millions of dollars and even then we could not guarantee the outcome.

What does this all mean?

One thing is for sure. We owe them all an immeasurable debt of gratitude for what they have contributed to this nation and its International Profile.
 
But what of their Legacy? Just Memories? Or is there a real long lasting legacy?

There is no cost benefit analysis that can be done on this!

We are talking about young people who understood the values of passion, commitment, dedication, and pride, all of the Olympic ideals, while at the same time flying our flag high.

After all these successes, in the midst of the euphoria many promises were made on developing and establishing a sustainable pathway for Sport. But the execution of those plans have been woefully inadequate and ineffective to say the least.

But Why?? We cannot dismiss the fact that the GOTT has spent millions on sport over the last 2 decades.

The Public has clearly demonstrated its support whenever we have sporting successes and there is a fervent desire that we continue to produce sporting excellence. This is clearly articulated throughout the media by Govt officials sporting aficionados, arm chair critics etc. We are very critical of our failures in sport and so we should be else how are we to change.

In short Trinbagonians want to be successful at all sport all of the time because we like that feeling that says “we are special”.

But the irony is that to be successful in sport we must first develop a sporting mentality, a passion for sport, not as a spectator but as a participant.

In order to develop a sporting mentality we would need to have a proper physical education system implemented in ALL schools both Primary and Secondary that allows for participation by all kids during the day and not after school.

It must be mandatory!
 
In order to develop and execute a proper physical education system in schools, we must first develop an appreciation for the importance of physical education and recreation in early childhood development. This is not solely the responsibility of the school system, Parents have a major responsibility here. Parents need to educate themselves on the learning pathway of a child in order to recognize the importance that physical activity plays in their development.
The GOTT also needs to ensure that there is congruence in the programs and policies that govern the Ministries of Sport, Education, Social & Community Development and Health.

ALL of the above is sadly lacking!
 
And therein lays the problem. The understanding of what is necessary for success.

If you look honestly at these ministries, ALL are having significant challenges. The problem is that there is always serious fallout whenever they fail.
Nobody can deny that we are a Country in Social Crisis!

Once again I wish to urge the powers that be, Parents, Communities, Leaders and most of all the GOTT to rethink their strategies for development. To move to strategies that are more all encompassing and that integrate throughout all aspects of society.

Finally I will end by reading read an excerpt from an editorial.....................

ALL four ministries are interdependent. None will be successful without the success of the other.
 
Ladies and Gentlemen, if we do not invest seriously in the development of the mind body and spirit of our youth, they will never see the National Pride in our Flag, whether it costs 2$ or 2M$, and the words together we aspire, together we achieve will be just words of a rhetorical statement that adorn a pretty logo on a Blazer!

ene.03.2010

Quartermiler Renny Quow and hurdler Josanne Lucas each collected a second  major  honour for 2009 when the National Association of Athletic Administration (NAAA) named them, their top awards at its annual presentation ceremony held at the Crowne Plaza Hotel on Wrightson Road, Port-of-Spain last evening.
The Tobagonian duo had already been named  the T&T Olympic Committee  Sportsman and Sportswoman of the year on Tuesday 29 December.

Quow, 22, set a personal best in the 400m (44.53 seconds) during the semifinal round of the World Championships in Berlin, Germany. It was the second fastest time in 2009 and the second fastest in T&T history. He later earned a bronze medal in the final in 45.02 seconds, establishing himself as the first T&T quartermiler in the 26-year history of the championships to secure a podium finish.
Lucas, 25, became T&T’s first female athlete to medal at a senior global meet when she got bronze in the 400 metres hurdles bronze in 53.20 seconds (a new national record) at the World Championships. It was the third fastest time of the year and the 17th fastest of all time. She ended her season in September with another bronze, at the VTB Bank World Athletic finals in Thessaloniki (Greece), clocking 54.31 seconds.

Middle Distance Runner Jehue Gordon, 17, was named Junior Male Athlete of the Year, adding to his Junior Sportsman of the Year award at the TTOC’s ceremony . When he qualified for the 400m Hurdles finals at the aforementioned World Championships he became the youngest ever finalist of any Men’s sprint event in the championships’ history.
The Queen’s Royal College student upper Sixth student, also the youngest person to ever be ranked in the top ten in the world (8th) in the 400m Hurdles. The award for Junior Woman Athlete of the year was shared between Hileen James and Ashley Smith. Olympic gold medallist Hasely Crawford and Ato Boldon, five time Olympic medallist, were in attendance as well as the Tobago House of Assembly’s Orville London ,the Minister of Sport and Youth Affairs Gary Hunt and TTOC secretary general Brian Lewis

In his address, Hunt said that Quow and Lucas had continued the proud sporting legacy of the sister island. He also spoke about the Ministry’s vision for the future and revealed that the Ministry was on the verge of starting a “new, exciting and innovative project entitled ‘The Way—Pathways to Sporting Excellence’,” which he described as “a systematic and long term approach to the development of sport in T&T designed to create an environment where athletes, coaches, administrators and sport professionals can acheive their optimum potential.”
 
Lewis in his brief remarks said that the achievements  of  T&T sportsmen and women  during the first decade of the 21st century while laudable of  greater significance and import was that it was done  with honesty and  integrity." At no time did the TTOC have any doubt or concern  about T&T athletes failing  drug tests."

 
ene.14.2010

Thursday 14 January-Port.of.Spain
 
Repeated Efforts to contact Haiti Olympic Committee colleagues yesterday have been described as 'futile" by Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC) president Larry Romany.
 
"I tried to contact Jean Edouard [Baker] the Haiti NOC president and Alain[ Jean Pierre] secretary general but had no luck. We are worried.The TTOC would like to offer assistance but figuring out where and how is frustrating. This is such a sad situation for our freinds and colleagues in Haiti. Sport is the universal language and everyone involved in international and regional sport would have competed with and interacted with Haitian counterparts. I am calling on the respective Olympic Sport Organisations to come together and contribute in whatever way we can."
 
Romany said it is at times such as this that the citizens of T&T should reflect and contemplate the long suffering circumstances of Haiti.
" It is always easy to get complacent .We (T&T) should not continue to take our good fortune for granted.As we reach out to our Haitian brothers and sisters let us also heed  the realties of natural disasters and consider our national preparedness to deal with such misfortune."

 
 
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ene.16.2010

Teenager Monifa Sealy became the first local golfer to benefit from the Ministry of Sport and Youth Affairs’ Elite Athletes Assistance Programme (EAAP) when she received $100,000 in funding yesterday. Sealy, 17, was a member of the two player T&T team that placed sixth at the Women’s Tournament of the Copa Americas Golf Championship in Argentina on the weekend. Martine De Gannes was the other player. The distribution of funds for the 16 athletes was done in a small ceremony by Minister of Sport and Youth Affairs, Gary Hunt at his Abercromby Street, Port-of-Spain office. In addition to Sealy, 11 track and field athletes, swimmer Christian Homer and cyclists, Azikiwe Kellar, Ako Kellar and Elisha Greene were all among the recipients of funding from the EAAP which totalled $1,880,000.

The 11 track and field athletes included World Track and Field Championship 400 metres women’s hurdles bronze medallist, Josanne Lucas, 17-year-old Jehue Gordon, a fourth placed finisher in the men’s 400 metres hurdles in Germany; Emmanuel Callender, Reyare Thomas, Ayanna Hutchinson, Charisse Bacchus, Aaron Armstrong, Ayanna Alexander, Keston Bledman, Pilar Mc Shine and Sasha Springer. In his address, Hunt stated that with golf now being recognised as an Olympic sport the MSYA saw the need to expand its funding via the EAAP to the sport locally and added that his Ministry was also looking at adding non-Olympic sports and team sports to the funding. Reflecting on the impact of the EAAP so far Hunt said he was confident that it was having a direct effect of the success of the T&T athletes to date.

However, the Minister was also quick to remind the athletes that the system of evaluation for the EAAP has been revised and upgraded. “The athletes now have to be tested by a specific team of official to ascertain their progress.” Larry Romany, president of the T&T Olympic Committee, said that the EAAP was a special programme that many athletes take for granted, but it was still a pleasure for any organisation to give funding to athletes towards their goals in life. Romany also asked national sporting bodies to follow the path of the National Association of Athletic Administration (NAAA) which he says has a clear pathway from primary school, secondary school, clubs and national teams to the international level.
 

 
ene.21.2010

History will be made for the evolving sport of Taekwondo in Trinidad and Tobago when top International Olympic Committee Coach, Master Patrice Remarck, along with Olympian and World Heavyweight Champion, Modibo Daba Keita, visit our country from January 21st through 27th.

Master Patrice Remarck, one of the most highly sought martial arts instructors in the world, is a 6th DAN black belt with over 30 years of competition and teaching experience in Taekwondo. Remarck has achieved international recognition of athletic excellence at the highest level of competition as an Olympian and World Champion. Master Remarck’s creative and innovative style of coaching integrates scientific theory with practice, an approach that emerges as one of the best in the United States and throughout the world.

Modibo Daba Keita has over the years trained under the guidance of Master Remarck and in 2007 he became the Heavyweight world Taekwondo Champion in Beijing (+84 kg division), in 2008 he competed at the Summer Olympics (+80 kg class) and in 2009 he regained the Heavyweight World Champion title in Copenhagen, Denmark.

The Trinidad & Tobago Taekwondo Association is excited at the fact that both Remarck and Modibo Daba Keita are here to conduct a camp for Taekwondo coaches and all athletes desirous of representing our country in 2010. 

Mr. Anthony Ferguson, President of the Trinidad & Tobago Taekwondo Association, extends a warm welcome and his personal thanks to Master Remarck and Mr. Daba Keita. “We are extremely privileged to welcome these highly acclaimed Taekwondo icons to our shores. Having them here in our midst, sharing their experience and guiding our coaches and athletes, will no doubt be instrumental in carrying the sport of Taekwondo further along the road to success

 
ene.27.2010

 
National Under-20 and 23 coach Zoran Vranes has resumed preparations of the T&T Olympic team with two sessions per week at the Larry Gomes Stadium geared towards the Central American and Caribbean Games (CAC) in Puerto Rico in July.

 

“We have training two times per week now and there are a few new players in the squad now who I’m looking at and trying to give the opportunity for them to excel. We have to keep the programme going. Since we came back from Bermuda I have had a chance to see a few new players and we are trying to see how they fit in,” he said.

 

Vranes also commented on Paul’s move to USF, saying “Well he’s gone yes and he will do the best he can I’m sure. We spoke and he knows very well that he is an important part of the team and I think they understand that he has to be available to us as well and he said to me that he wants to keep on playing at every opportunity so that’s something good and we will try to make sure everything goes well,” Vranes concluded.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

 
ene.27.2010

Planning for Rugby Sevens' debut at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janerio started in earnest Tuesday as International Rugby Board (IRB) President Bernard Lapasset and his team travelled to Lausanne for meetings with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF).

The meetings, the first between the organisations since the IOC overwhelmingly voted Rugby Sevens into the Olympic Games last October at the 121st Session in Copenhagen, will kick-start the formal collaborative process as the sport prepares for 2016.

Lapasset and his team will use the preliminary meetings as a constructive platform to discuss all aspects of Olympic Games inclusion.

"I am delighted to be in Lausanne today to begin working in close collaboration with the IOC on our journey towards the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio. Our campaign for inclusion was an opportunity for us to explain why Rugby is good for the Games and the Games good for Rugby," said Lapasset.

"Today we start giving life to this vision and look forward to providing guidance in the coming years to our National Unions [Federations] on leveraging this opportunity while also welcoming new nations into the Rugby Family. Rugby is about successful partnerships and teamwork and we will bring the same commitment to our work with the Olympic Family."

IOC Sports Director Christophe Dubi said: "Success in Rugby requires all the players on a team to work in close collaboration towards a common goal and it is the same for sports that are a part of the Olympic Programme. We are delighted to have President Lapasset, Secretary General Mike Miller and the IRB team with us in Lausanne and we are sure that the spirit of collaboration evident in the meetings will guide us to a very successful Games for the Olympic Movement and Rugby Sevens in Rio in 2016."

ASOIF Director Andrew Ryan said: "The Olympic Federations are very excited about having the IRB as a member of our group and expect it to be an important contributor in many areas beyond the Games alone."

The popularity of Rugby Sevens has further accelerated since the IOC decision with increased attendance and broadcast figures achieved for the opening rounds of the 2009/10 IRB Sevens World Series. Emerging Rugby nations Brazil, Germany and Russia are also in the race to host Rugby World Cup Sevens 2013, all keen to showcase a sport that works so well on television and has such widespread international appeal for spectators.

While Rugby Sevens continues to reach out to new audiences around the world, the IRB is currently in the process of conducting a major overhaul of its Sevens Strategic Plan, a process that will provide the blueprint for growth across all areas as the sport prepares for its Olympic Games debut.

"The IRB Sevens Strategic Plan underpinned the unprecedented growth of men's and women's Rugby Sevens, culminating in the global Rugby family realising its Olympic dream," said Lapasset.

"With that major strategic goal achieved, the current five year contractual cycle of the IRB Sevens World Series entering its penultimate year and collaboration with the IOC under way, it is now the appropriate time to move to the next phase of strategic planning considering all aspects of Rugby Sevens’ development around the world."

"This process has the purpose of delivering the framework for Rugby Sevens at all levels to continue to flourish and reach out to new markets, new communities and new male and female players of all ages, while ensuring that all our Unions have access to a development and tournament pathway that optimises the effects of Olympic Games inclusion."


 
ene.28.2010

Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC) president Larry Romany will deliver the feature address at the Trinidad and Tobago Rugby Football Union(TTRFU) 2009 Prize Giving function which will be held this evening at Trotters Restaurant,Sweet Briar Road ,Port.of.Spain from 6pm.
The TTRFU will announce the 2009 Men,Women and Youth Rugby players of the year in addition to distributing prizes won in the respective TTRFU competitions including the Toyota Championship.
 
With the inclusion of rugby sevens on the 2016 Olympic programme and T&T's qualification for the Central America and Caribbean(CAC) Games  Rugby competition. The national Olympic chief is expected to call on the local rugby fraternity to make a concerted effort to get serious and take the standard of  T&T rugby to a higher level.
 
Romany  has also accepted an invitation  to deliver the feature address at  Grenada's National Sport Awards function which will be held on Saturday and will travel to the Spice Island on Friday.
 
In other TTOC news. The National Olympic Committee will re locate to the corner of New and Abercomby Street in Port.of.Spain from Monday 1st February.According to TTOC officials the move is  due to an expansion in the number of programmes and workshops that will be conducted by the organisation.
 

 
ene.31.2010

Effective Monday ( 2nd February)The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC) will be at the corner of New and Abercromby Street,Port.of.Spain.

Previously located at 63 Dundonald Street. The TTOC Executive Committee following a strategic review agreed that due to the increase in staffing levels and development of new programmes ,workshops and seminars aimed at promoting Olympism and fostering the sustainable development of the T&T Olympic movement. Expansion of office and parking space was required. The TTOC will now be able to conduct workshops and seminars via video and teleconference.

The TTOC Executive is confident that the needs and expectations of stakeholders will be more effectively and efficiently met with the relocation and restructuring of the TTOC administrative and day-to-day management infrastructure.

The National Olympic Committee is also pleased to confirm that its 2009-2012 Strategic Plan can be viewed at www.ttoc.org

Larry Romany, TTOC president, affirmed that the move represents a new phase in the evolution and advancement of the TTOC .
" The change management process began under my predecessor [Douglas Camacho] .I accepted the challenge to continue the modernisation mandate.Technology,innovation,transparency and accountability are the elements driving the TTOC.We operate in a fast paced world. How we think and act must reflect the realities if the TTOC is to remain relevant and legitimate to the youth of the nation.The values, principles and ethos of Olympism are timeless.How we communicate and deliver those values , principles and aims is ever changing.We have to be proactive and anticipate the challenges . The restructuring and move are in furtherance of our strategic objectives." said Romany

 
 
feb.03.2010

TRINIDAD AND Tobago hammer throw ace Candice Scott has retired from the track and field arena due to persistent knee injuries.

The 29-year-old has been plagued by injuries on both of her knees throughout her career, but she has given up hope of a full recovery, after missing the majority of the 2009 track and field season.

In a recent television interview, Scott revealed her intention to pursue a career in coaching, as well as develop her knowledge in aqua therapy— which she used as part of her rehabilitation.

The Barataria resident, who began her athletic career as a CARIFTA gold medallist in shot put, took up hammer throwing while at the University of Florida, where she obtained a BSC in Recreational Therapy in 2005.

Scott was the first woman from the English-speaking Caribbean to compete in the hammer throw at the Olympics. She became the second female athlete from Trinidad and Tobago to qualify for an Olympic final when she posted a throw of 68.27 metres in the qualifying round of the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece to take the 12th and last spot in the final.

Her personal best throw was 71.45 metres, set in May 15 2005 at Marietta, Georgia, United States.

Scott’s accomplishments:

2002 - British Commonwealth Games, Manchester, England - Shot Put (8th, 15.35 m); Hammer Throw (5th, 60.93 m).

2003 - Pan American Games, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic - Hammer Throw (3rd, 69.06 m).

2003 - World Championships, Paris, France - Hammer Throw (9th, 67.73 m).

2004 - Olympics, Athens, Greece - Hammer Throw (Final, 9th, 69.94 m).

2005 - Central American and Caribbean Championships, Nassau, Bahamas - Hammer Throw (1st, 67.44 m); Shot Put (5th, 16.43 m).

2005 - World Championships, Helsinki, Finland - Hammer Throw (8th, 66.55 m).

2007 - Pan American Games, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - Hammer Throw (9th, 62.21 m).

2008 - Central American and Caribbean Championships, Cali, Colombia - Hammer Throw (1st, 69.26 m).

2008 - Olympics, Beijing, China - Hammer Throw (40th, 63.03 m).

Source: www.newsday.co.tt


feb.08.2010

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) vision is to create an annual sport sponsorship conference that will expose T&T Sport to cutting edge world class sport marketing and sponsorship practices, strategies and discussions. Described as a must attend event for National Sport Organisations, athletes, coaches, sport administrators, parents and sponsors. The Inaugural T&T Sponsorship Forum and Workshop 2010 will held on February 26th, 27th and 28th, 2010.

The National Olympic Committee will bring German Sports Marketing Expert Christopher Weck for the forum and workshop. Weck has significant experience and a successful sport marketing track record in Germany.
The event is collaboration between the TTOC and IOC Olympic Solidarity Department.

A marketing specialist from Deutsche Sport-Marketing GmbH, the marketing agency of the German National Olympic Committee.Weck comes highly recommended by the IOC Television and Marketing Services department.
The German NOC is acknowledged to have one of the best sponsorship programmes among IOC member National Olympic Committees .

According to TTOC officials the original intention was to focus on TTOC affilated sport organisations. But the response has been overwhelming and as such, the TTOC has had to review its plan.

The workshop will now be expanded to all local sport stakeholders but space will still be limited and on a first come first serve basis.
To register email contact@ ttoc.org or call the TTOC Office- 625-1285


feb.08.2010

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) vision is to create an annual sport sponsorship conference that will expose T&T Sport to cutting edge world class sport marketing and sponsorship practices, strategies and discussions. Described as a must attend event for National Sport Organisations, athletes, coaches, sport administrators, parents and sponsors. The Inaugural T&T Sponsorship Forum and Workshop 2010 will held on February 26th, 27th and 28th, 2010.

The National Olympic Committee will bring German Sports Marketing Expert Christopher Weck for the forum and workshop. Weck has significant experience and a successful sport marketing track record in Germany.
The event is collaboration between the TTOC and IOC Olympic Solidarity Department.

A marketing specialist from Deutsche Sport-Marketing GmbH, the marketing agency of the German National Olympic Committee.Weck comes highly recommended by the IOC Television and Marketing Services department.
The German NOC is acknowledged to have one of the best sponsorship programmes among IOC member National Olympic Committees .

According to TTOC officials the original intention was to focus on TTOC affilated sport organisations. But the response has been overwhelming and as such, the TTOC has had to review its plan.

The workshop will now be expanded to all local sport stakeholders but space will still be limited and on a first come first serve basis.
To register email contact@ ttoc.org or call the TTOC Office- 625-1285

 
feb.10.2010

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — A team of nearly three dozen scientists assembled by the International Olympic Committee will conduct more than 2,000 doping tests on athletes competing at the Vancouver Games. But I.O.C. officials say athletes who cheat still might get away with it — at least for a while.

“No system is foolproof,” Arne Ljungqvist, the chairman of the committee’s medical commission, said at a news conference on Tuesday, adding that it would be naïve to think that every athlete who doped would be caught.


“History tells that, after all, there are people who try to take a chance,” he said. “We have seen it in every Games. Whether we will be seeing it here again, who knows. I am sure that we are getting the Games cleaner and cleaner for every edition.

Ljungqvist said that the antidoping system in place here had a valuable safety net: the rule allowing the I.O.C. to retest athletes’ blood and urine samples — and then sanction athletes — for up to eight years. That rule was used at the Beijing Games. Nearly two months after those Summer Games, a group of athletes’ blood samples were retested for the blood-booster CERA, a drug for which scientists did not have a validated test during those Olympics.


That retroactive testing caught six athletes, including a gold medalist in track and field and a silver medalist in road cycling who subsequently had their medals stripped from them.


“Surely we have been given all the necessary tools to fight doping in Vancouver,” Ljungqvist said. “I am confident that cheats here may be identified sooner or later.

Through Monday, scientists here have conducted 220 tests on athletes at the Games, but also at their training sites, said Christiane Ayotte, the director of the Vancouver laboratory. No positives tests have been found, she said.

She said that 1,600 urine tests and from 400 to 500 blood tests would be done on athletes in all sports. Some of the more complicated analyses could take up to 72 hours to complete, she said. .

Scientists are testing for the normal list of doping products, including steroids, EPO and human growth hormone, but would also be looking for newer drugs that have not hit the market yet. “All the new methods are in place,” she said. .

The data collected in the testing would also be sent to international federations that have biological passport programs. Those programs monitor certain markers in their athletes’ blood and chart them over time. Any variation of those markers could indicate doping.

Positive tests relating to abnormal blood profiles could take months, Ayotte said. Those profiles could also lead to further testing on the athlete involved.

 
feb.10.2010

Your Excellency, Premier Campbell, Mayor Robertson, Dear Colleagues, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Welcome to the 122nd Session of the International Olympic Committee. We are just days away from the start of the XXI Olympic Winter Games,

But let me first start by remembering the victims of the terrorist attacks in Angola where the bus of the Togolese football team came under fire. And in Pakistan where many sports fans were killed during a volleyball match,

And of course the people of Haiti are in our thoughts as they and the world community come to terms with the devastation in the wake of the earthquake last month. I will not let them down and the sports movement will help to rebuild the sports facilities in Haiti,

Ladies and gentlemen,

Over the course of 16 days, we will see the world’s best athletes competing in some of the world’s finest venues. ,

Rusty Goepel, John Furlong and the team at VANOC have done everything possible to ensure successful Games. Thank you so much for your dedication. I would also like to pay tribute to a man who, seven years ago in Prague, gave us a vision of these Games: Jack Poole. ,

I also want to thank Michael Chambers and Marcel Aubut, the President and the President-Elect of the Canadian Olympic Committee, and René Fasel, the Chairman of the IOC Coordination Commission, for their hard work,

We appreciate the great support we have received from the public authorities of Canada, the Province of British Columbia, the cities of Vancouver, Whistler and Richmond, and the Four Host First Nations. ,

And, of course, we are indebted to the thousands of Olympic volunteers and to the people of Canada, who have truly welcomed us with glowing hearts. ,

Hosting the Games is always a complex and challenging undertaking. VANOC and its partners rose to the challenge without compromising the original vision for these Games,

That vision has established new standards for environmental sustainability and legacy planning. Everything that has been done to prepare for these Games was done with the athletes, the environment and the legacy in mind. The lessons learned here are a blueprint for future Games.

Our time in Canada is a good start to a momentous year for the International Olympic Committee. I hope all of you will be able to join us again in August at the first Youth Olympic Games in Singapore. The Youth Games, which combine sport, education and culture, will be a landmark event in our efforts to share the Olympic values and the joy of sport with young people. ,

Of course, tonight, our focus is on the Olympic Winter Games. More than 2,500 athletes from 82 National Olympic Committees have gathered here to pursue their dreams before 10,000 media representatives, 250,000 spectators and a global television audience of about 3 billion people.

The Games are a global celebration of sport. But we must never forget that the Games are not an end in themselves. They are a means to an end. They exist to promote the Olympic values, especially among young people. Every ,

Olympic athlete, including those who never get to the medal podium, can be a role model for all of us. ,

The vast majority of athletes take that responsibility quite seriously. They know that there are no shortcuts to success. They inspire us with their dedication. They fill us with awe with their ability. We owe it to them to do everything we can to ensure that the competition is fair and free of doping. We will do our part,

I am pleased that tonight’s programme celebrates the Olympic flag and all that it represents. I am particularly happy because it has been given by my country, Belgium, in 1920. Those interlocking rings are one of the world’s most recognisable symbols. But unlike most symbols or brands, it doesn’t represent a product or a corporation. Its power is the power of enduring, universal values. That is why we are all here. ,

And soon, those values will come to life on the ice and snow in Vancouver and Whistler. ,

Thank you.