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T&T’s Lalonde Gordon bagged bronze in the Men’s 400 metres event at the season-ending Memorial Van Damme Diamond League meeting Belgium yesterday. The Olympic bronze medallist clocked 45.13 seconds to finish behind Belgium twin Kevin and Jonathan Borlee, respectively. The former won in 44.75 while his brother crossed the line in 45.02. Gordon beat Olympic silver medallist Luguelin Santos of Dominican Republic into fourth in 45.31. Sprint icon Usain Bolt and fellow Jamaican Yohan Blake scored contrasting victories. While Bolt coasted to a time of 9.86 seconds to win the 100m, Blake stormed to a 19.54 clocking to capture the 200m.
Running out of lane five, the Olympic champion was away slowly as compatriot Nesta Carter grabbed the early lead. However, Bolt powered through in the last 40 metres to clinch vctory. “I was just happy to be done. I went out there just for the fans,” Bolt said afterward. “From yesterday I told my coach (Glen Mills) that I felt slow and lazy. I felt drained. He told me ‘make sure you go out there and execute right and it should be ok’ and that’s what I did.” Carter finished second in 9.96 seconds with another Jamaican Kemar Bailey Cole placing third in a personal best 9.97 seconds. Veteran St Kitts and Nevis sprinter Kim Collins was fourth in 10.03 seconds, with Nickel Ashmeade fifth in the same time. Blake, meanwhile, looked sharp as he impressively dominated his field in the half-lap.
The 22-year-old, who has not lost a race since taking silver in both sprints at the London Olympics last month, jetted through the curve to enter the stretch in front. He was chased down by fellow Jamaican Jason Young but was hardly challenged in the final 75 metres as he crossed the line well ahead of the field. Young took second in 19.92 seconds while Christophe Lemaitre clocked 20.17 seconds to be third. Olympic bronze medallist Warren Weir was fourth in 20.22.
There was also victory for Jamaican Kaliese Spencer who took care of business in the women’s 400 metres hurdles, clocking 53.69 to beat Perri Shakes-Drayton of Great Britain. Former World champion Ryan Brathwaite of Barbados was a disappointing eighth in the men’s sprint hurdles. CMC
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Rio de Janeiro, the hosts of the next Summer Olympics and Paralympics, have secured another of the major sporting events on the calendar as the Brazilian city was today unveiled here as the location of the 2013 and 2014 Laureus World Sports Awards.

The Laureus World Sports Awards is widely recognised as the premier international sporting honours event on the planet with previous recipients including superstars such as Usain Bolt, Tiger Woods, Roger Federer, Michael Schumacher, Cathy Freeman, Dame Kelly Holmes and Serena Williams.

The 2013 and 2014 Awards will be attended by some of the greatest names in sport and will be broadcast worldwide, giving Rio an early opportunity to showcase itself internationally ahead of the FIFA 2014 World Cup in Brazil, where several matches will be hosted, and the 2016 Olympics and Paralympics.

The announcement was made at Casa Brasil by Laureus World Sports Academy chairman Edwin Moses and Governor of the State of Rio de Janeiro Sérgio Cabral.

This symbolises another passing of the baton from London to Rio after London, the host city of this summer's Olympics and Paralympics, staged the glittering 2012 Laureus World Sports Awards earlier this year.

"The city of Rio de Janeiro is very proud to receive Laureus in 2013 and 2014," said Cabral, in front of an audience at Casa Brasil that included Rio 2016 President Carlos Arthur and Rio's State Secretary of Sport and Leisure Marcia Lins.

"This extraordinary Awards event, that brings together great legends of world sport, will be held for the first time in the southern hemisphere.

"The Laureus World Sports Awards comes to further enhance the extensive calendar of international events that Rio will host in the coming years, like the World Judo Championship, the FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Olympics and Paralympics.

"For us, this agenda goes beyond the sports realm and becomes a great tool for social inclusion.

"With that thought in mind, we created the Rio 2016 programme, which is present in 74 cities of our state and offers 52 sports disciplines, benefiting more than 230,000 children and adolescents.

"Therefore, for Rio's Government, hosting an event like Laureus – which also has social projects involving sport – is paramount for building the social legacy we will leave to our population."

The 2013 and 2014 Ceremonies will take place at the famous Municipal Theatre, a venue that has hosted major events such as the recent United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development and Rio +20.

It was also the venue for the speech of United States President Barack Obama on his visit to Brazil.

"I am thrilled that the 2013 and 2014 Laureus Awards is to be staged in Rio de Janeiro," said Moses, the double 400 metre hurdles Olympic champion.

"Brazil is one of the most exciting and flamboyant nations on Earth and Rio will become the centre of the sporting world over the next few years as it builds up to the 2014 FIFA World Cup and 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

"I know sport is a passion for everyone in Brazil and it is great for Laureus that we are able to go to Rio for the Awards and be part of the celebrations there."

Award winners are ultimately selected by the 47 members of the Laureus World Sports Academy which include sporting greats such as Franz Beckenbauer, Sebastian Coe, Nadia Comaneci, Michael Johnson and Baroness Tanni Grey Thompson.

Following the London 2012 Olympics and Paralympics, the athletes and teams who starred at the Games such as Bolt, Michael Phelps, Jessica Ennis, David Weir and the US basketball "Dream Team" are likely to be leading contenders for the prestigious 2013 awards.

"Everyone in Brazil is hoping that the next few years are very special for our country and I am delighted that we at Laureus can be part of that," said Brazil's double Formula One World champion and Laureus World Sports Academy member Emerson Fittipaldi.

"I know that everyone who comes to the Awards will get a flavour of the excitement to come.

"But, of course, Laureus is much more than an Awards Ceremony.

"As our Patron Nelson Mandela has said 'sport has the power to change the world and change people's lives' and we will be sending a message from Rio around the world to show how sport can make a difference to the lives of every one of us."

The 2012 awards in London saw Serbian tennis star Novak Djokovic and Kenyan long-distance runner Vivian Cheruiyot take the Sportsman and Sportswoman of the Year prizes respectively with Barcelona FC taking the team prize.

Rory McIlroy received the breakthrough award, Darren Clarke the comeback accolade, Oscar Pistorius the disability trophy and Kelly Slater the action sportsperson prize.

In addition, there was a lifetime achievement prize for Laureus World Sports Academy member Sir Bobby Robson.

Contact the writer of this story at tom.degun@insidethegames.biz

By Tom Degun at Casa Brasil in London

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Trinidad and Tobago Olympic gold medalist at the 2012 Summer Olympics Keshorn Walcott paid a visit to the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee.

He is the youngest-ever Olympic champion in javelin throw and the second non-European to ever win the Olympic gold setting a new North, Central American and Caribbean Junior record.

Keshorn Walcott is also the three-time winner in the Under-20 javelin throw at the CARIFTA Games, setting a new North, Central American and Caribbean Junior record in 2012.

London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe will lead the GREAT Britain campaign, promoting the country as a great place to visit, study, work, invest and conduct business following the Olympics and Paralympics, it has been revealed.

The campaign, launched by Prime Minister David Cameron last year, is designed to use the success of London 2012 to flaunt Britain's capabilities, to enhance its reputation abroad and to maximise the economic potential the Games has produced.

Alongside Great Britain's fantastic medal collection, the Games have provided a platform for the country to rejuvenate its investment potential on all levels.

"Hosting an Olympic and Paralympic Games gives you a fantastic opportunity to rebrand the country," said Hugh Robertson, Minister for Sport and the Olympics, here today when he addressed the Global Sports Business Summit.

"It can completely alter at a stroke the way in which the rest of the world looks at you.

"We are now the repository of how to make it work.

"It makes sense for Seb, as the most recognisable face of the Games, to front the post-Olympic campaign."
It is the second major role Coe has agreed to take on after London 2012 following his appointment last month by the Prime Minister David Cameron as his Olympics legacy ambassador.

Coe will advise the Prime Minister on how best to secure the long-term benefits of hosting the Games, particularly focusing on the economic and business benefits from putting on such a successful Olympics.

There appears to be a desire that Britain will use the Games as a starting point and not a finishing point to drive forward the country's international perceptions, while helping to deliver a long-term boost to trade and tourism. 

"We will go back to the same markets we used pre-Games to launch the campaign," Robertson added.

"In terms of sporting events we have a lot of potential.

"We have learnt a lot of new skills and have an export experience to offer the rest of the world.

"It is a complicated business to succeed in hosting a big event.

"For us one of the strongest points of our success is our cross-party relationships.

"You cannot deliver an event of this size without cross-party support.

"If this isn't present, then the tone drops and you lose public support."

The GREAT Britain campaign supports the marketing and public mediation efforts of UK Trade & Investment (UKTI), Visit Britain, a national tourism agency focused on the enhancing Britain's visit economy, as well as the British Council, the Foreign Office and other Government departments overseas.

The three-year campaign will run throughout the rest of 2012 and 2013 and has already featured in major capital cities including New York, Los Angeles, Melbourne, Delhi, Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Vancouver and Toronto, as well as the next Olympic and Paralympic host, Rio de Janeiro.

By Lauren Mattera at Lancaster House in London

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

If you were in a seemingly endless saga of being obliged to take a test to prove your ability, randomly over five years, more than 500 times, to disprove accusations of cheating would you eventually stop taking the test, even if it meant admitting to a measure of guilt or misconduct by default? If your statements of innocence, backed by your successful completion of every single test never proved enough to permanently silence the accusations, would you eventually just stop trying? As ridiculous as the above presented scenario seems, it appears that this is what Lance Armstrong has had to endure in his recent past and on August 20, 2012, he finally decided he had had enough and decided to not move proceed with the arbitration process of the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA). On the USADA’s Web site they state, “…as a result (Armstrong) has received a lifetime period of ineligibility and disqualification of all competitive results from August 1, 1998 through the present, as the result of his anti-doping rule violations stemming from his involvement in the United States Postal Service (USPS) Cycling Team Doping Conspiracy (USPS Conspiracy).”
Interestingly enough, it is not stated anywhere, a single time that Armstrong failed a doping test. Their accusations seem to be based strictly on witness statements, some of whom have already been stripped of titles for the same misconduct. Yet, it would appear that whatever has been said by these witnesses is compelling enough to surpass the 500+ certified lab tests, all of which came up negative of any signs of doping. Just based on the USADA’s above indicated Web site posting, there seems to be many questions that need to be clarified but the US Federal Court, sanctions the USADA arbitration process, stating that it satisfies the requirements of due process. Yet, publications on sites like Forbes, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and the International Cycling Union (to name a few), leave the reader questioning otherwise. The articles really force a reader to consider whether Armstrong is in fact trying to save face by avoiding the complete removal of any and all doubt by the public through the full revelation of this supposed “evidence” or just feels that he has done everything that he can do to prove his innocence, but none of it seems to be good enough. This article is not to take one side or the other, but for the reader to consider some of the stated flaws with this “due process” before going with the headliners of what could easily be considered one of the greatest doping scandals ever.
Question of objectivity: The odds of passing over 500 doping tests, done randomly, in or out of competition, at any time of the day or night, by different labs. Question of credibility: Witness accounts include submissions by already convincingly convicted athletes of doping practices (including Floyd Landis who was stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title). That investigation was eventually dropped February 3, 2012, likely due to a lack of evidence to solidly placed any charges. Questionable support by the International Cycling Union (UCI): The UCI released a statement with reference to the disciplinary proceedings against six persons, which directly calls to question the USADA’s own “respect for the rules and for the principles of due process.” (Switzerland International Cycling Union) The UCI is currently awaiting a “reasoned decision” before supporting the USADA’s decision to strip Armstrong of his Tour de France titles.
These are just three observations against the USADA’s due process that brings the decision against Armstrong to significant question, which lends itself to question the many other convictions that have already been passed. The cost incurred to take on any legal battle quickly adds up. If this authority has not been following the rules of due process, how many poor verdicts have fallen through the cracks? It is a scary thought but an intriguing time for the world of cycling.
Asha De Freitas-Moseley is a certified athletic trainer with the National Athletic Trainers’ Association of the USA. Athletic training is practiced by athletic trainers, healthcare professionals who collaborate with physicians to optimise activity and participation of patients and clients. Athletic training encompasses the prevention, diagnosis, and intervention of emergency, acute, and chronic medical conditions involving impairment, functional limitations, and disabilities (www.nata.org).
By Asha DeFreitas-Moseley
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

2012 Olympic gold medallist, Keshorn Walcott has signed with Triangle Sports Management, Inc.

Triangle Sports is based in Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.

The 19-year-old Trinidad and Tobago athlete shocked the entire Olympic stadium and men's javelin field by becoming only the second non-European athlete to win the event at the Olympic Games.

Walcott will embark on his professional career, collaborating with Triangle Sports Management. He will attempt to win his first World Championship title, next year in Moscow, Russia.

"Keshorn is an exemplary and exceptionally talented athlete, adding another facet to the Triangle Sports family. His youth, combined with desire, are formidable opponents in any competition, and I am looking forward to big things from this young man. A 'Quiet Storm' is brewing," said Treshell Herndon, president of Triangle Sports Management.

In a press release, Triangle Sports Management was described as "a representation agency focusing on the personal growth and career development of professional athletes and coaches".

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

The Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation (TTFF) has issued a statement about last Thursday's Top 50 Sporting Legends Awards Ceremony.

In a press release, yesterday, the TTFF said it "wishes to advise, that in being the governing body for football in this country, it received notification of the decision by the Organising and Selection Committee for the Top 50 Sporting Legends Awards Ceremony last week that the 2006 Trinidad and Tobago World Cup Team would be honoured for its achievements.

"The TTFF further wishes to state that it was notified by the Organising Committee of such and that a decision was taken that the captain of the team Dwight Yorke would receive the award on the team's behalf. At no time was there any discussion over which members should or should not be invited to the Dinner. At no point was there any further advice or discussion on all 24 members of the team being invited.

"Fellow national captain Russell Latapy," the release continued, "was invited due to his selection as one of the legends in football (apart from the 2006 World Cup team) and Shaka Hislop was invited on a personal level by a member of the Organising Committee.

"The TTFF regrets all misinterpretations."

In the press release, the TTFF also announced the cancellation of a training camp in Florida for the national men's under-20 team.

"The T&T team has qualified for the final round of Caribbean Under 20 qualification for the 2013 FIFA Under 20 World Cup, but the TTFF has regrettably been forced to put on hold all preparations of the Men's Under 20 and Under 17 teams due to a lack of funding."

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

Leading athletes back call for rules to be changed, while South African officials claim rivals cheated with mid-contest switch.

The row sparked by Oscar Pistorius, the poster boy for the Paralympic movement, when he claimed he was unfairly beaten in the 200m T43/44 final deepened on Wednesday night as he returned to competition.

As other leading athletes backed his call for the rules to be changed, South African officials wrote to the world governing body to suggest some of his rivals were cheating by switching blades mid-competition.
Pistorius returned to the Olympic Stadium for the first time since his shock defeat, winning his heat to qualify for Thursday's 100m final alongside the Brazilian who beat him in the 200m and Britain's Jonnie Peacock, who recorded the fastest time.
Afterwards Jerome Singleton, the American who beat Pistorius in the 100m at last year's world championships, said he and other single leg amputees shared concerns over the way the maximum allowable height of double amputees was calculated.
April Holmes, the US Paralympic gold medallist who holds the world record in the 100m, 200m and 400m in the T44 class for single leg amputees, also weighed into the row in support of Pistorius.
"It takes a great leader to stand up and tell somebody that they do not think what is happening is correct. We and our governing bodies have been in constant discussion with the IPC trying to make sure that the sport moves forward. We want to be accepted for our athletic ability and not our prosthetic devices," said Holmes.
"We all train hard. At the end of the day, we all understand there is a rule issue. So we are truly thankful that the IPC has agreed to sit down and discuss it. We welcome that scientists are looking at what is an appropriate height for athletes with missing legs and what are the appropriate things to make the playing field level."
Singleton said that a group of single leg amputees, who fear that double leg amputees are gaining an unfair advantage by switching between longer blades for the 200m and shorter blades for the 100m, had brought the issue to the attention of the IPC in March.
"We all came together, the single leg amputees, and expressed our opinion about their formula. We want them to re-evaluate their formula," said Singleton.
"Just re-evaluate the formula, make sure you've got a good idea of the height for an amputee and make sure you've got a small area of variance."
The intervention of the South African Paralympic Committee further raised the stakes in a row that threatens to overshadow Pistorius's attempts to win more medals at a Games he had hoped to dominate.
Although Pistorius has since attempted to calm the row by apologising for the timing of his outburst after being beaten in the 200m for the first time in nine years, he has refused to withdraw his claims that the Brazilian won "unfairly" by racing on unnaturally high blades.
Now, the South African Parlaympic Committee has asked the world governing body to investigate whether Pistorius's rivals changed the height of their blades between the heats and the finals, which is against the rules.
The IPC said it had investigated the claims by immediately asking coaches whether their athletes had switched their blades. "They asked the IPC to urgently investigate allegations that a number of T43 athletes were running on different-sized prosthesis for semi-finals and finals and different events," said the IPC director of communications, Craig Spence.
"When we put the allegation to the coaches about different-sized running blades, there was a look of shock because it's difficult to do. There is no evidence they were competing on different-sized running blades."
But he admitted the IPC did not record the height of the competing athletes before each race. It simply measures whether they are beneath the maximum height permitted under the formula it uses to calculate the allowable length of prosthetic blades.
Responding to claims that some athletes had switched to different prosthetics between different races, he said that it was not allowed under IPC rules and that technical officials had on Wednesday been on the look out for variations in the call room before the race and "found nothing suspicious".
Spence said unless new evidence was presented, the matter was closed.
However, the IPC has agreed to meet with the South African Paralympic Committee and Pistorius after the Games to discuss the issue.
Oliveira switched to his new Ossur blades, 4cm higher than his old pair but 3.5cm shorter than the maximum allowed, three weeks before the Paralympics. He said he was disappointed with Pistorius for taking the shine off his victory.
Pistorius races at a height of 184cm because he continues to use blades that are sanctioned for non-disabled competition, despite the fact that he could wear prosthetics that extended his height to 193cm under the IPC rules.
The IPC said it wrote to all participating countries and athletes in April to ask if they had any concerns regarding wheelchairs or prosthesis but received no response.
But the South African Paralympic Committee said in its letter that Pistorius had raised the issue several times informally with the IPC since the world championships in New Zealand last year.
He first raised the issue at the world athletics championships in January last year, complained informally again in March and sent a Twitter message to Spence in mid-July, after the American Blake Leeper equalled his 100m record.
Leeper, who won bronze in the 200m, was the other athlete mentioned by Pistorius in his post race rant on Sunday. It is believed that Pistorius sent a message to Spence asking for the length of Bleeker's blades to be looked into. Spence passed the message on to IPC officials, who found there to be no issue.
Canadian sprinter Alister McQueen said it was incumbent on the IPC to look at the issue, while stressing the double amputees were operating within the rules.
"Oscar, I've talked to him. He got caught up in the heat of the moment. What he is saying is true. There's just so much emotion it didn't come out the way he wanted it to. Look at the races," said McQueen.
"They are running 200m, they have to go a longer distance and they can wear higher prosthetics. They're running the 100m, they need a faster turnover and need to come out of the blocks better, they wear lower prosthetics."
By Owen Gibson
Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Key London 2012 official Debbie Jevans will turn her attention to the delivery of the 2015 Rugby World Cup in England after being announced as the new chief executive officer of the organising body for the tournament.

Jevans, currently director of sport at the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG), will succeed Paul Vaughan in October after England Rugby 2015 announced on Wednesday that he had stepped down as chief executive by mutual consent.

England Rugby 2015 chairman Andy Cosslett said: “This is an exciting appointment for ER 2015. Debbie is hugely respected across sport and rugby will benefit from her experience in leading large teams to deliver major sporting events to a global audience. Armed with this knowledge and pedigree across many facets of multi-sport events we are delighted Debbie has decided to join us. Her London Olympic and Paralympic Games’ experience will be vital as we look forward to hosting the Rugby World Cup.”

Jevans added: “I have spent the last decade planning and delivering the world’s two largest sporting events. This has been an extraordinary journey and I am looking forward to putting my experience and expertise into delivering an exceptional Rugby World Cup in 2015. As a passionate sports fan the next decade is a great one for the UK and we have an amazing opportunity to bring rugby and the values of sport to more fans across the country than ever before. I look forward to starting my new role next month. In the meantime my focus is on continuing to deliver a great Paralympic Games.”

Vaughan was appointed to lead England’s preparations for the World Cup in January 2011, having served as the Rugby Football Union’s (RFU) business operations director for the past decade. Commenting on Vaughan’s departure, Cosslett said: “Paul has been at the heart of the RFU for the past 11 years, most recently here as CEO of ER 2015, where he has laid some very strong foundations. We are grateful to him for all the hard work he and his team have put in to enable ER 2015 to be ready for the next phase. Preparations have been continuing at a good pace, the planning is completely on schedule and stakeholders are comfortable. With just over three years to go, now is a good time to add a fresh injection of experience to take us up to the next level.”

Jevans, currently director of sport at the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG), will succeed Paul Vaughan in October after England Rugby 2015 announced on Wednesday that he had stepped down as chief executive by mutual consent.

England Rugby 2015 chairman Andy Cosslett said: “This is an exciting appointment for ER 2015. Debbie is hugely respected across sport and rugby will benefit from her experience in leading large teams to deliver major sporting events to a global audience. Armed with this knowledge and pedigree across many facets of multi-sport events we are delighted Debbie has decided to join us. Her London Olympic and Paralympic Games’ experience will be vital as we look forward to hosting the Rugby World Cup.”

Jevans added: “I have spent the last decade planning and delivering the world’s two largest sporting events. This has been an extraordinary journey and I am looking forward to putting my experience and expertise into delivering an exceptional Rugby World Cup in 2015. As a passionate sports fan the next decade is a great one for the UK and we have an amazing opportunity to bring rugby and the values of sport to more fans across the country than ever before. I look forward to starting my new role next month. In the meantime my focus is on continuing to deliver a great Paralympic Games.”

Vaughan was appointed to lead England’s preparations for the World Cup in January 2011, having served as the Rugby Football Union’s (RFU) business operations director for the past decade. Commenting on Vaughan’s departure, Cosslett said: “Paul has been at the heart of the RFU for the past 11 years, most recently here as CEO of ER 2015, where he has laid some very strong foundations. We are grateful to him for all the hard work he and his team have put in to enable ER 2015 to be ready for the next phase. Preparations have been continuing at a good pace, the planning is completely on schedule and stakeholders are comfortable. With just over three years to go, now is a good time to add a fresh injection of experience to take us up to the next level.”

By Matt Cutler

Source: www.sportbusiness.com

“Omnia Res Dignitate”, the Harvard Club’s motto, that means “All Things with Dignity” but may be rendered in free translation as “Dignity in All Things”, was composed by one of the founding club members, Pat Massy, back in 1943, and at the time most aptly expressed the vision and aspirations of fellow founding members.

On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of T&T’s Independence, the 69-year-old club was awarded the Hummingbird Medal of Merit (Silver) in the sphere of community service, and members who turned up at the club on Friday could not have felt any more pride than they did on that day.

It is important to note that the club was never a “cricket club” or even a “sports club”, since from its inception the vision was broader and the award that was received by vice-president Andy Palmer on behalf of the club was accepted with the pride and dignity that the club has espoused over the years.

Served by past presidents Michael Lee Lung, Ralph Boland, Cecil Kelsick, George Hislop, Oliver Camps and at present Brigadier General Carl Alfonso, the club in that time has established many firsts.

The Harvard Club was the first organisation to own a clubhouse, the first to host an in-house calypso competition, the first to have a resident steelband, the fist male-only club to accept female members, but most significantly, the first club to introduce sporting clinics, and to date it is the only organisation to run clinics in five different sporting disciplines.

The cricket nets were built in 1965, almost exclusively by members, namely Ken Roberts, Frankie Pierre, Carl Sankar, Earl Murray, Andre Sanchez, Steve Weekes, Ollie Camps and Alec Clarke. Over the last 47 years the Harvard Youth Clinics have produced thousands of well adjusted citizens and some of the country’s most outstanding sport personalities. The clinics began with cricket, the first of its kind in Trinidad and Tobago, and over time have expanded to include football – 1976; hockey – 1984; tennis – 1987, and rugby – 2001. The best known personalities are Brian Lara and Shaka Hislop. However, numerous other national athletes including young track stars Richard Thompson and Jehue Gordon; cricketer Dwayne Bravo; footballer Stokeley Mason, and others in various disciplines were nurtured in one way or another.

The true measure of the clinics’ influence is the thousands of young healthy citizens (in mind and body) that have been moulded and delivered to the ranks of communities throughout T&T.

Cricket: Average 250 youths a year for 47 years consecutively. Football: Average 325 youths a year for 35 years consecutively. Hockey: Average 50 youths for eight years.

Basketball: Average 60 youths for six years. Rugby: Average 75 youths for 11 years consecutively.

By Joan Rampersad

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

EVERY so often, countries, like individuals, are blessed with opportunities of one type or another. It is not uncommon to find that if these opportunities are taken, the path – for countries as for individuals - can lead to greatness.

Keshorn Walcott’s gold medal victory in the javelin throw at the London 2012 Olympics, in my view, is an example of such an opportunity. Can this international sporting achievement by a nineteen-year. old youth help address some of the social and economic challenges facing Trinidad and Tobago at this point in time? I think that it can.

First, I believe that an examination of what it takes to get to the Olympics will reveal important lessons in sacrifice and discipline for young people and their guardians, especially for those who see no hope other than in deviant behaviour. Second, I believe that there is a close correlation between sports and good health, which if explored can deliver significant benefits. Third, victories like that of Keshorn’s possess a business dimension which offer opportunities for those who can exploit them. Fourth, other Caribbean countries like Jamaica and the Dominican Republic did even better than Trinidad and Tobago in the Olympics. Are there some untapped synergies in regional collaboration in sport waiting to be explored?

Let us begin with the lessons that might be passed on. Preparing for the Olympics would have meant many hours of hard work, sacrifices and discipline for Keshorn Walcott and our other Olympians. This must be clearly demonstrated to the young ones. The Ministry of Education and organisations such as Parent Teacher Associations should draw on this. Schools must be properly equipped with coaches and facilities and parents must be supportive.The building of confidence and self-esteem must have been an important dimension of Keshorn’s victory. As I understand it, the lack of self-esteem contributes in no small way to poor performance and also to a tendency towards anti-social behavior, including criminal behavior, in our schools and in our country. I believe that we can use this country’s success at the Olympics to educate and motivate our young people in wholesome endeavours which go way beyond purely sporting activities.

The second area in which the current euphoria over sport might be used is in health education, not only in schools but also in the wider community. Poor eating and lifestyle choices lead to financial and other burdens on families and communities and ultimately on the government’s purse. Can the current environment be used to promote mass individual involvement in physical activity of a sporting nature in villages across Trinidad and Tobago? The all too frequent observance of expensive night lighting of vacant savannahs on evenings is a phenomenon that should be corrected. Can the relevant local government bodies and sporting clubs make better use of these expensive facilities for education and training that is likely to bring relief to overburdened health centres? I think so. The Ministries of Sport and Health undoubtedly have important roles but so too do individuals and community groups. The cry for diversification of this economy seems to be growing louder as finding new hydrocarbon resources become more difficult and costly. In this context, mention is often made of such areas as sports and health tourism as niche markets that this country might wish to promote as part of an overall diversification strategy. Is this a good time to capitalise on this excitement, so that all sporting businesses, large and small, would be identified and energised into a force for the development of sports-related businesses? Existing businesses include sports companies, stores, consultants, medics, teachers and ancillary sporting activities. While the Ministries of Trade and Tourism and their agencies have been active in some areas, efforts must be sustained long enough for sufficient businesses to catch the fire, so to speak. In this context, it is important that the young Olympians be exposed to the business opportunities that arise from their recent performances. They must be guided in capitalising on them.

Finally, the Caribbean taken as a whole has done better than many regions of the world at the Olympics. Just look at the statistics on various websites such as http://www.medalspercapita.com.While we are aware of our islands’ isolationist tendencies, must these prevent us from identifying and exploiting synergies through the sharing of sporting facilities? There is no reason why some territories might not provide world class, cost-sharing facilities that can be the training ground for sufficient states in the region and maybe further afield. What about the sharing of coaches or the hosting of sporting events of a manageable scale across the region?

The success of Keshorn Walcott and other local athletes at the London Olympics, has pointed us to existing possibilities and the heights to which we, citizens of a small country, can aspire. This lesson is not new but the truth is that we have not fully grasped the opportunities that have arisen, in a way that would have propelled us to a new level of development. As we embark on the next 50 years of nationhood, let’s hope it is going to be different this time around.

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe has said here today that Prime Minister David Cameron has made "a very good appointment" in bringing Paul Deighton into the Treasury as part of yesterday's Government reshuffle.

Deighton (pictured above, right), the London 2012 chief executive who was valued at £95 million ($150 million/€120 million) by the Sunday Times Rich List, will assume an unpaid ministerial role as Commercial Secretary to the Treasury with responsibility for getting the economy moving.

That is a daunting task, with Britain currently battling its way out of a double dip recession, but the 56-year-old has taken huge credit for the success of this summer's Olympics and Paralympics.

Because Cameron can only name members of his cabinet from those with a seat in Parliament, Deighton, who has an economics degree from Cambridge University, has also been appointed to the House of Lords so that he can take up his post.

He will replace the outgoing Commercial Secretary Lord Sassoon.

"From a personal perspective I am very, very pleased for Paul," Coe (pictured above, left) said today.

"For someone who believes passionately in a better Government and considers Paul a close personal friend I am very pleased for him.

"It is a very good appointment for someone who believes passionately in getting talented people into positions where they are able to influence the direction of a nation.

"He is an extraordinarily talented person – one of the most talented I have worked alongside.

"He has a crucial range of assets now.

"This is someone who came from an overtly commercial background with probably limited interaction with the public sector.

"He has now been in a complex multi stakeholder landscape for the last seven years.

"Those skills will come together in a really exceptional way in his new post in Government."

Before he takes up the new role, Deighton will make a Parliamentary appearance, alongside Coe, in front of the Home Affairs Select Committee next Tuesday (September 11) to give evidence on the shambles caused by the G4S recruitment debacle on the eve of the Games.

He will begin his role when his contract with London 2012 ends in January, and the former Goldman Sachs investment banker will focus particularly on Chancellor George Osborne's Transport Infrastructure Plan.

Improving the transport and broadband networks will be a key part of his brief.

Cameron also announced yesterday that Jeremy Hunt, the Culture, Media and Sports Minister, would take on the health brief in place of Andrew Lansley, who had faced intense criticism and pressure over NHS reforms.

Hunt himself has endured a difficult few months after being entangled in the Leveson Inquiry after details of his relationship with Rupert Murdoch's media empire emerged this summer.

He was replaced by Maria Miller, who comes into the role without much previous experience in the world of sport.

Coe himself, who has previously served in Parliament as a Conservative member, is to take on a part-time legacy role after the Games.

The London 2012 chairman added that he thought that too much was being made of politicians being booed by the crowds during the Paralympics.

Osborne was booed as he presented medals at the Olympic Stadium on Monday night, while over at the Aquatics Centre Cameron received a similar reception when he took part in a victory ceremony for British double gold medallist Ellie Simmonds.

By contrast, London Mayor Boris Johnson received a rousing reception in the Aquatics Centre moments after Cameron was subjected to booing.

"It comes with the landscape," said Coe.

"That sort of thing does not just take place in an Olympic or Paralympic stadium, it takes place at cup finals.

"Most politicians are big enough to know that it comes with the territory

"I do not think we should read too much into it."

By David Gold at the Main Press Centre on the Olympic Park in London

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

The Olympics is over, our athletes have returned home and T&T has doubled its gold medal count. Congratulations to Keshorn Walcott on a unique and truly outstanding achievement. A number of our athletes won bronze medals and these medals plus an unprecedented number of finalists made this one of the best Olympic Games ever for T&T. Now imagine you were at the Olympics and you won a medal which medal would you be happiest with. Clearly the answer is the gold medal because it represents the undisputed winner. Now what about silver and bronze? Which of the two medals would make you feel happier to have won? Studies in behavioral science suggest that bronze medalists are happier than silver medalists. If this conclusion surprises you the answer lies in a concept called “counterfactual thinking” or simply put “what might have been.”
Last week this concept was used to assess where T&T might have been after 50 years of independence had we done some of the things that other countries with circumstances similar to ours had done during the same period. In the context of the Olympics the counterfactual (“if only”) is felt more by the silver medalist than by the bronze medalist. The comedian Jerry Seinfield probably provides the best explanation in the following lines: “You win the bronze — you think, ‘Well, at least I got something.’ But when you win that silver it’s like, ‘Congratulations, you almost won. Of all the losers, you came in first of that group. You’re the number one loser. No one lost ahead of you!” Another scenario commonly used to explain the point is the question of being late. Do you prefer to be an hour late or five minutes? The closer you get to your intended target the easier it is for “what if” to enter the equation and these “what if” and “if only” questions creates a sense of regret. That regret will obviously impact your sense of happiness and well being. All of this may be good information, but this is a business supplement so you may be wondering what is the point of this discussion. Understanding the emotions associated with counterfactual thinking goes a long way towards forging an understanding of why people make the investment decisions that they do and further go on to repeat those choices over and over again even if it results in poor investment outcomes.
Feel Good
Terrance Odean, professor of finance at the University of California’s Haas School of Business, gave the following example:
“Suppose you sell a stock for $100, trading later for $120. If you buy it back, you’re going to regret it because it’s now more expensive. On the other hand, if it’s trading at $80, now you feel good because you timed it right. Investors choose what they buy and sell to some extent to manage their own emotions.” The key take away here is the investment choice is not about the hard and cold reality of trying to generate a return from the investment, often times the choice is about providing comfort to frayed emotions and this “baggage” can lead to sub optimal investment decisions. In the above example let’s assume that the stock was sold at $100 for a profit. When the stock falls to $80 the investor is pleased with the fact that they got the timing right having sold at a profit.
The investor would be inclined to re-purchase the stock at $80 even though the stock may have fallen from $100 to $80 because there were negative fundamental news about the stock in question. In such circumstances it is possible that the stock will continue to fall thus creating a loss position and eroding the earlier gain which made the investor so happy and contented. The emotion resulted in a sub-optimal investment decision. If the same stock had moved from $100 to $120 after the investor sold at $100 the investor now enters the counterfactual scenario where the “what if” and “if only” comes into the picture. Even though a profit was made on the sale at $100 there is the second guessing associated with the missed $20 of gains. The company in question may have reported good results and the fundamental valuation improved significantly to the point where analysts are now estimating a target price of $150. Yet despite that rationale the investor filled with regret at missing out on the $20 will ignore the potential $30 that is on the table and may be less inclined to re-purchase the stock. Once again the emotion resulted in a sub-optimal investment decision.
Professional Approach
Part of the job of a professional investor is to sidestep these emotions and focus on the quality of the company’s earnings at a point in time and the prospects for the company going forward. The value of the investment professional is to overcome the clouded mindset that emanates from counterfactual emotions. There is a concept known as dollar cost averaging. Every investor has heard the term before and it involves making steady dollar value investments over time (eg monthly) regardless of the market conditions. The investor purchases $100 worth of stock when it is priced at $2 per share and will purchase the same dollar value of stock if the share price rises to $10 per share and will continue to buy $100 worth of stock even when the price falls to $5 per share. This concept is remarkably simple, every investment professional speaks to their clients about this approach and almost every client concludes that this process is so simple that they can follow it for themselves without the need for an investment advisor. The reality is that very few investors maintain the discipline that is required for dollar cost averaging and few take the time to understand why.
Here again the counterfactuals come into play as investors are less likely to add to a holding whose price has gone up. The reason is due to the “regret” that comes from not buying more when the stock was cheaper. Having missed out the tendency is to ignore the “winner” because these stocks equate to the “silver medal.” The investor seeking to practice dollar cost averaging is more likely to pile into the stock that has fallen in price. This “loser” creates another counterfactual thought process that seeks to offset the “pain” of losing. It is the “bronze medal” effect. The investor would rationalise that if they buy more of the losing stock now then if the price goes up they can recoup their current losses and then some. The end result is that instead of consistently purchasing $100 worth of stock every month the investor’s actions will be skewed towards buying less when the stock price is rising and more when the stock price is falling. This downward price bias means that the investor is more likely to make purchases at increasingly lower prices thus creating a higher break even price as the losses on the stock mount. Continuously buying shares when the stock price is falling is often referred to as “trying to catch a falling knife.” If you ever attempted to do that in real life you should appreciate that there is a better than average risk of being cut in the process.
The emotional baggage associated with the investment decision will often lead the investor to conclude that dollar cost averaging does not work and investing on the whole is too much of a risky process. The perceived safety (and feeling of contentment) of a bank deposit awaits even though one is unlikely to achieve their investment objectives with a portfolio that consists entirely of such low-risk investments.  The reality is that investors would be no better off giving preference to losers over winners all other things being equal. Staying the course regardless of the market circumstances is often the key to a successful investment outcome. Investors need to be aware that counterfactual thinking can negatively impact your investment performance. Recognise the reality that the second place finisher can be made to feel worse than the third place purely on the basis of “what if” and “if only”. The emotions become clouded when you invest your money for yourself. Your investment adviser is the person who has to keep the counterfactual at bay by focusing on what is factual.
Ian Narine is a broker registered with the SEC.
By Ian Narine
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Trinidad & Tobago Olympic Sailor Andrew Lewis made a courtesy call to the Olympic House on Abercromby Street Port of Spain.

He became the first Trinidad and Tobago sailor in 48 years to compete at the Olympics since the Barrow brothers Rawle & Cordell.

London Mayor Boris Johnson today thanked his Team London Ambassadors and the Games Makers for the "invaluable" job they have done to welcome the world to the 2012 Olympics and Paralympics.

Johnson (pictured centre) met with a group of volunteers today at the North Greenwich Arena - better known as the O2 but rebranded for the duration of the Games - where he said that the Team London Ambassadors and London 2012 Games Makers had been the cornerstone of a successful event.

"Our fantastic volunteers are one of the greatest success stories of this remarkable summer and deserve as many plaudits as our heroic athletes for their efforts in making London 2012 the best Games in history," he said.

"As we enter the final few days of the Paralympics, I want to thank each and every one of them for helping to welcome the world to London and offering invaluable assistance to our Olympic visitors.

"They can all be hugely proud of the way their positive energy has swept through London over the past few weeks."

Since the first of the Mayor's 8,000 Team London Ambassadors took to the streets on July 9, the volunteers have amassed more than 200,000 working hours and dealt with tens of thousands of queries every day.

An ongoing survey is taking place to gauge the reactions of visitors to the 43 Ambassador Pods across London.

Early indications show overwhelming support for the volunteers, with 99 per cent of those surveyed saying Ambassadors were polite and friendly and a good way to welcome visitors to the city.

In addition to the Mayor's Ambassadors, up to 70,000 Games Makers have provided eight million volunteer hours over the summer of 2012 to help make the Games happen.

Games Makers went through more than one million hours of training in preparation and are doing around 800 different roles, while London 2012 received a quarter of a million applications and interviewed 100,000 at selection centres across the United Kingdom.

"The support from our Games Makers has been invaluable in helping us stage such a successful Olympic and Paralympic Games," said London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe.

"Their enthusiasm and dedication has been endless and I'm not surprised that the athletes and spectators have recognised just how fantastic they have been. I'd like to personally thank all our Games Makers and I hope they will have memories which will last them a long time."

As a thank you for their work during the Games, every Team London Ambassador and 9,000 Games Makers have been invited to attend Our Greatest Team parade, which will take place in central London on Monday (September 10).

The 9,000 Games Makers have been selected in a random ballot after all 70,000 were sent an email and asked to reply to be entered into the ballot.

Meanwhile, Games Makers who were unsuccessful in the ballot are being urged to line the streets in their Games Maker uniforms.

By Tom Degun at the Main Press Centre on the Olympic Park in London

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

IAN BROWN yesterday thanked God and the Defence Force truck driver for surviving the Charlotteville accident which left him with an injury to his head and a right arm that is broken in two places.

“I thank God that the driver pulled to left rather than on to the right because had he pulled the other way, everybody would be dead. I am praying to God that everybody recovers,” said Brown in an interview at the Surgical Ward, Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex (EWMSC) Mt Hope yesterday.

The driver of the truck, Lance Corporal Nicholas Marcelle has been praised for preventing the truck which was proceeding on the Windward Main Road from Charlotteville, from careening off a precipice in an area known among Tobagonians as Bark Hill. At the time, he was transporting members of the TT Defence Force Ruby team who were in the sister-isle for a ruby game.

Brown, 23, is a civilian and member of the Rugby team. He works as a cook at a primary school in Cascade.

Describing what happened on Sunday, Brown who was sitting in the back of the truck said the truck was going “kind of fast.”

“If you on a normal road that is how you would normally drive but you don’t drive down a hill going like that. I think he (Marcelle) lost balance with the corners. While we were going down we saw a car coming up with some speed. Marcelle tried to apply brakes but lost control,” Brown said.

“Had he gone over to the right hand side, I don’t know...everybody would have been dead,”

Brown said as he thanked Marcelle for doing his best. He is feeling much better than when he was first taken to the hospital although there is still pain in the arm. Brown has lacerations on the right side of his face and his right eye is swollen shut. There is a bandage around his head.

Reflecting on the reason he is alive today, Brown links this to his family and mother being a “prayerful person.” He remembers that after the accident occurred, his coach told him: “Brown you know you have to stay alive. And I am like, ‘yes, I know. I will make it.’ I will survive.”

Twenty-three persons were injured — 17 soldiers, two sailors and four civilians. Quick work by the National Security Operations Centre, Tobago Emergency Management Agency, Fire Service and Scarborough Hospital, resulted in the injured being triaged and prepared for air evacuation or transported to the Scarborough General Hospital for priority care.

Up to yesterday, five persons were warded at the Port-of-Spain General Hospital including civilian Andell Francis who was at the Intensive Care Unit. At the EWMSC, two persons were still warded — a soldier and Brown. One soldier is at the ICU of Westshore Medical. A female Coast Guard sailor who was warded at the Scarborough Hospital has been discharged. She received stitches on the hip and right foot and had cosmetic surgery on her eyelid. Contrary to earlier reports, she did not have a fractured leg. According to a source, there was no issue of alcohol being a factor in the accident since Marcelle was on duty and the designated driver.

Civil Military Affairs Officer Major Al Alexander said the investigation into the accident is ongoing.

By LARA PICKFORD-GORDON

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

FIFA President Sepp Blatter has no intention of standing down before his final term of office is completed – and still believes UEFA boss Michel Platini is his most likely successor despite the pair drifting apart in recent months.

The 76-year-old Swiss took charge of FIFA in 1998 but has had to endure a succession of scandals and investigations and continual concern over his autocratic leadership style.

However, Blatter (pictured top) rarely gives ground and insists he will not leave football's world governing body until his current reform programme is put in place and he has seen out his final term, which ends in 2015.

"I want to be able to complete my work which has not been as bad as it is made out to be in some sectors of the media and in certain parts of the world," said Blatter, who is also a member of the International Olympic Committee.

"If I do not succeed in putting the FIFA organisation back in good order, I will have failed.

"But I am certain I will succeed."

In an interview with AFP, Blatter said he could not understand why he was given such a bad name in some countries including England and Germany, saying he was too often "misunderstood".

"Football incites great passions, football can be crazy," he said.

"But I must say we now have this Anglo-Germano alliance which is not at all natural if you go by world history.

"Great Britain and Germany have never been allies."

Turning to the question of his own successor, Blatter said that he still believed Platini, once his key adviser, was the best option despite strong disagreements over a number of issues, not least goalline technology.

But the Frenchman, warned Blatter, would find himself having to deal with far more thorny issues if and when he does make the switch from UEFA to FIFA.

"He was my disciple," Blatter said of Platini.

"But I think that when he makes the move from the [UEFA] confederation to the [FIFA] Presidency, he will have to view football from another dimension.

"It is very much easier to lead UEFA, which is a wealthy organisation, which has everything.

"He is in a comfy armchair there.

"In any case the last time we spoke about this he told me that he would not be the same kind of President than I have been.

"But each President has his own style."

By Andrew Warshaw

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

While there was much cheer and excitement at Trinidad Hilton Ballroom last Thursday night as the "50 Greatest Legends of Sport 1962-2012" were honoured at a gala dinner, perhaps the most poignant moment was the award for late boxer Jizelle Salandy.

Salandy died in a car accident on January 4, 2009 at age 21, while the holder of eight world titles. Her posthumous award was received by her former manager, Trinidad and Tobago Boxing Board of Control (TTBBC) special adviser Boxu Potts.

When interviewed by the Express after the event, Potts, normally feisty and evocative, was subdued and reflective about the accolade.

"It is always emotional when I have to deal with anything with Jizelle Salandy," Potts explained. "Sometimes I feel pain, sometimes I feel angry, and in a greater part I feel proud of the achievements that we've had together.

"Collecting this award tonight means a lot to me, and I hope it does say something to the youth of Trinidad and Tobago, who she always wanted to inspire."

Potts described the celebratory function as "inspiring" for young sportsmen and women.

"I hope those [athletes] to come will tear a page from this book and recognise that greatness doesn't come by simply playing the game," said Potts. "It comes by dedicated hard work, and you must be dedicated, as Jizelle Salandy was."

Potts added: "A lot of people come up to me in the street and ask me 'Boxu, when will we get another Jizelle Salandy?' The answer is: 'If there will be anybody else who will be able to take a troubled child, a challenged child and work with them to mentor them and develop them as I did with Jizelle Salandy'."

He noted that Salandy was "very proud…very humble," whenever she was honoured and he revealed that he oftentimes told Salandy she could become T&T's greatest-ever sporting hero if she followed the "script" of an athlete's life.

"Encumbrance did come along," said Potts. "And I want to say to the youths of Trinidad and Tobago that when you attain greatness, be very careful of your 'hangers on'. Bad company will take you and never bring you back.

"A lot of people will come and encourage you, as they encouraged her: 'this is your time, don't bother with Boxu, he's old'. But age brings wisdom, age brings experience, and that is what I brought to the table that assisted her in attaining her goals."

Potts said Salandy would have been honoured to be named as one of T&T's 50 greatest legends.

"She always said that whatever she did was always for her country and her people," a sober Potts said. "And I think that is one of the greatest assets that she had, in that she was a 'people's champion', and not her (own) champion."

By Kern De Freitas

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

Kirt Sinnette has never looked so angered.

He had just been knocked out— two minutes, 30 seconds into the fourth round of his fight for the World Boxing Council (WBC) International light-heavyweight belt against Ugandan Joey Vegas to be exact.

The Woodbrook Youth Facility went silent as the stockily built African landed a solid punch which put Sinnette, first into the ropes, and then hard to the canvas.

Sinnette fought a rather queer fight on Sunday night. He appeared well in control for the first two rounds, controlling range and the opponent with a long jab. Then in the third round, Sinnette stopped doing what was working, and all his early work was negated by being knocked down in the third and fourth rounds, before the fight was stopped.

By the third round, Sinnette's jab had become lazy and sometimes disappeared altogether. Then, bang! Vegas was allowed to get closer, the only position from which he could hurt the Trinidadian, and landed a flush punch to the head that sent Sinnette to the canvas.

It was Vegas' first major punch landed. Sinnette (22-2) recovered and resumed working as he had done in the two earlier rounds. But by the fourth, the African had become emboldened and Sinnette gun shy and hesitant to throw the jab. His confidence up, Vegas (14-6) threw a flurry of punches, putting Sinnette on wobbly legs and sent him to the canvas again. Seeing enough, Guyanese referee Eion Jardine ended the fight. But the usually gentle giant Sinnette was not pleased.

"I disagreed with Jardine's decision to stop that fight. I was never given a standing eight count," Sinnette declared angrily afterwards. "I don't know if I will ever get a rematch....I fed up...."

Sensing the local man's anguish, members of his entourage asked the media to be kind to Sinnette, a fighter who has always been kind to the media. And everyone obliged.

"He hot right now. Ease him up nah. He cah talk right now," they said.

Meanwhile, after saying a few hours earlier that it was almost a done deal, and that Sinnette would be challenging for Chad Dawson's world title on the condition that he won (over Vegas) and a $3 million purse could be raised, sometimes promoter, sometimes boxing special adviser Boxu Potts was already looking past the local fighter, and angling for a title defence between Vegas and locally-based Guyanese Shawn Corbin.

Earlier on the night, former mini-flyweight world champion Ria Ramnarine (14-6) returned to the ring after a year's absence with a businesslike unanimous decision over Guyanese Stephanie George (5-9), although it could be disputed that Ramnarine did not win all six rounds as one judge suggested.

Also on the card, Trinidad and Tobago lightweight Prince Lee Isadore won a first round knockout over a very poor Cassius Mathews. Fleeing from "licks", the Guyanese appeared to fall heavily to the canvas from a slip rather that a punch, but was in no mood to take any more punches on the night. Jamila Jones also won a six-round unanimous decision over Tiana Soca Saney.

Earlier, a four-fight amateur card between from Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana ended 2-2.

Guyanese Joel Williamson won on points over T&T's Joey Ramoutar; while Travis Hubbard gave Guyana another win when he beat Akmal Stroude.

Shaquille Gabriel won the title of best amateur fighter of the night when he beat Jamal Thomas to give T&T a first win on the night, and 2012 Olympic hopeful Michael Alexander outclassed highly-rated Guyanese Imran Khan to knot up the tie. And probably the most exciting fight on the night lasted just a round when T&T mixed martial arts fighter Dwayne Hinds scored an impressive knockout over Canadian Scott Hutchinson. Hinds rushed the visitor early in the round and so pummeled his opponent that the Canadian had no control of his body and was wobbling all over the ring at the end.

By Ian Prescott

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

I attended the Toyota championship division rugby match between Harvard Club and Royalians, at the Queen’s Park Savannah, on Saturday.  Rain earlier in the day made the Savannah water soaked and muddy. It meant wet feet and sneakers, plus a handful of supporters, but little else. If sport at the grassroots level depended and relied on promises and expectations, the brutal reality is that sport in T&T will come to a halt. The Toyota rugby championship is only one example. It’s the same story in every sport in T&T. The air is rare at the Olympic level. An Olympic medal is the pinnacle achievement: Once an Olympian always an Olympian. But the truth of the matter is that sport is only a blink here in T&T and Olympic success distorts attention from the day to day truth. There are countries around the world—Qatar and Singapore come readily to mind—where sport is front, back and centre of their national vision and master plan 2030. Here in T&T vision “anything” is a political curse word—the consequences of using no sane person wants to bear, especially in a land where talking is more cherished than doing.
That T&T is in need of an integrated sport ecosystem, world class systems, and facilities should not be a point up for debate. But the big ticket items aren’t the solution. Our sportsmen and women and national teams need the basic foundation that will provide them with the tools to perform at the highest level. They need individuals and organisations dedicated to helping them maximise their potential.
In the absence of well-structured sport and community clubs and integrated long term athlete development pathway how can we possibly talent identify, develop and prepare world class sportsmen and women? Are we building the capacity of our local coaches? Are we providing our coaches with world class training opportunities to improve their knowledge and expertise? Are we building the capacity of our sport administrators, managers and national sport organisations and governing bodies? Local coaches and administrators are expected to stay abreast of the latest coaching and sport administration and management principles. Coaches have to stay up to date with the latest technical methods of their sport, as well as introduce within the training of local sportsmen and women, the use of physiology, nutrition, psychology and video technology.
Forget the pappyshow, the extent of the work that is required can be observed at the grassroots level. In the absence of genuine ethical partnership between the local sport stakeholders, decision makers and thought leaders, we are “spinning top in mud.” It bears repeating again and again and again. There is an urgent need for an integrated and practical programme aimed at developing proficiency in the areas of sport sciences, talent identification, athlete development, coaching, grass roots sport development and ethical aspects of coaching and sport management. In the absence of a solid foundation, all we are doing is building a house on shifting sand.
T&T came away with a record medal haul at the London 2012 Olympic Games—success that hopefully provides a narrative that will inspire a new generation of young Trinbagonians to become active through sport.
The TTOC’s commitment to the Olympic Games, the Olympic movement and empowering youth through sports is unshakeable. The history of the Olympic Games and Olympism suggest that the Olympic Games and the Olympic movement will outlive those of us currently involved. Why waste the moment or opportunity and focus on the wrong priorities or questions? On Sunday members of the Defence Force rugby team were involved in a vehicular accident in Tobago. Best wishes to all the injured players for a full recovery. Everyday we are reminded how fragile life is. For those of you who are interested, the TTOC sport administration courses resume in mid September.
Call 625 1285 for registration information.
By Brian Lewis
Source: www.guardian.co.tt