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Joanna Manning-Cooper, the former head of public relations and media at London 2012, has been appointed to the new role of communications and marketing director for the England Rugby World Cup 2015.

The new position sees Manning-Cooper, who left London 2012 last month, become part of the England Rugby 2015 leadership team where she will be responsible for the ticketing and volunteering campaigns, promoting the tournament.

She will also be responsible for managing and implementing the England 2015 brand, media relations, running the press office and coordinating press operations.

"With less than 1,000 days to go to the tournament we are strengthening our senior team and Joanna has been appointed following a competitive recruitment process for this important new role within the England Rugby 2015 leadership team," said England Rugby 2015 chief executive Debbie Jevans.

"Joanna did an exceptional job for London 2012, and her skills and experience in major sporting events will be a great asset as we promote Rugby World Cup 2015 to the world."

Manning-Cooper has 20 years of integrated communications and media experience while her six-and-a-half years at London 2012 saw her assume responsibility for the global PR and media activity to promote the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

Prior to London 2012, she was director of global communications for the Financial Times.

Manning-Cooper becomes the latest London 2012 staff member to move to take a senior role at England Rugby 2015.

Jevans herself served as the London 2012 director of sport while former London 2012 head of sport operations Neil Snowball was appointed rugby operations director in November last year.

London 2012 chief executive Paul Deighton was also appointed to the England Rugby World Cup 2015 Board last month.

Manning-Cooper is set to take up her new role on Wednesday (January 9).

By Tom Degun

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

AZIM BASSARATH, president of the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board (TTCB), has condemned the airing of a pair of photos, posted by TT batsman Darren Bravo on his Twitter account, on a television newscast on Thursday night.

The photos showed dilapidated portions of the Sir Frank Worrell Development Centre, Balmain, Couva, where the national cricket team held a pre-Caribbean T20 camp.

Bassarath was speaking on Friday evening at the Couva venue, during the joint staging of the TTCB/National Gas Company (NGC)-sponsored Cricket Academy Graduation, and the Board’s end-of-year get-together.

“Many of you may have seen a recent television clip showing this Centre in a negative light,” said Bassarath. “After ten years of usage, after contributing for ten years to the development of every national cricketer, some of those who benefitted feel better to criticise.

“We’re aware that maintenance work is sorely needed and late last year, I publicly stated that we were spending $1 million to refurbish our Balmain facility,” the TT cricket head continued. “We have started this work at the Alloy Lequay Administration Centre but the television station failed to report this.

“Also on the positive side, our Minister of Sport (Anil Roberts) publicly announced his understanding of the need for maintenance work and pledged his full support to have the Balmain facility, including this, the Sir Frank Worrell Development Centre, fully refurbished and brought up to a standard to accommodate regional and international cricket.”

Bassarath stressed, “Minister Roberts, we are grateful for your support and look forward to working with you in the best interest of cricket.

“What we need is positive collaboration between the State, the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board and the private sector.”

Bassarath, on the other side of the coin, expressed his gratitude towards his administrative staff and the clubs throughout the country for maintaining a high level of excellence.

Turning his attention towards the sponsors, the TTCB boss noted, “thanks to NGC, BGTT, the Sports Company of Trinidad and Tobago, Digicel, Atlantic LNG, Powergen and the West Indies Cricket Board, all the development sponsors. Our game is alive and well and growing.”

Also speaking at the event were Kumar Rampat, the Board’s technical development officer; and Janet Elias, corporate communications manager at NGC.

A total of 17 players featured in the Academy, with 13 collecting plaques and cheques valued at $500 for 100-percent attendance records – Jeremy Solozano, Jovan Ali, Khary Pierre, Nicholas Pooran, Vikash Mohan, Isaiah Rajah, Nyron Motilal, Ewart Nicholson, Vishal Naipaul, Philton Williams, Andy Gobin, Adrian Cooper and Mark Deyal. Clinton Changar and Anthony Simmons were rewarded with plaques for a minimum of 85 percent attendance, while the other participants in the Academy were Tevin Robinson and Brian Christmas.

Members of the Trinidad and Tobago T20 cricket team were in attendance, along with current TTCB officials Patrick Rampersad, Ann Browne-John and chief executive officer Suruj Ragoonath.

And three former TTCB presidents were also at the event — Alloy Lequay, Ellis Lewis and Deryck Murray.



Other Awards –

Most Improved Inductee: Vishal Naipaul

Inductee with Best Journal: Andy Gobin

Most Research in a Journal: Isaiah Rajah

Most Outstanding Bowler: Khary Pierre

Most Outstanding Batsman: Ewart

Nicholson

Person who best embodies Spirit of

Academy: Jeremy Solozano

Most Outstanding Participant:

Vikash Mohan

By Joel Bailey

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

If it's going to take an entire generation to turn this problem around, then the time to start serious remedial work is now.

I really hope parents everywhere got Larry Romany's message of two Saturdays ago. Speaking at the annual awards ceremony of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee, the outgoing TTOC president warned about the long-term consequences of the prevailing low levels of participation in sport and recreation among the youth of the nation.

"A lot of people have celebrated the success of the Olympic team over the last four months, but nobody can tell the story of the Olympic movement better than the TTOC," he said in the keynote address at the National Academy for the Performing Arts.

"I am here to tell you that we are not at all satisfied. We are not satisfied for several reasons. We don't see a sustainable pathway at present for the development of sport in Trinidad, primarily because the young people of T&T are no longer interested in participating in sport.

"This is not a simple solution, this is a generational problem and we have to work assiduously at trying to solve the problem," continued. "This means that we have to target kids in primary schools, and in secondary schools and try to give them back that passion, that love they need in order for them to participate."

So who will rekindle that passion, that love? It's easy to point fingers at everyone and everything else, to get tied up in long-winded discussions about the changing world, societal ills and which political party wicked and which political you go die for.

But, jump high or jump low, if the biological mothers and fathers of children aren't prepared to be parents in the real sense, if they aren't willing to make the effort and sacrifice to provide healthy, positive, uplifting opportunities for their own offspring, then we are in real, real trouble.

This is not about Olympic gold, World Cup finals or Test hundreds. It's about nation-building, it's about health and wellness through physical recreation, it's about developing social skills, team-building, selflessness, playing by the rules and a whole host of other life lessons that a culture of sport facilitates.

Yes, there are innumerable obstacles in the way, ranging from widespread crime, violence and the dangers of letting your children just run off to the neighbourhood park or savannah, to an increasingly burdensome (physically and mentally) academic workload in an increasingly competitive environment for places at prestige secondary schools or scholarships to attend prestige tertiary institutions.

Add to that the pressures of work and the toll that the daily morning and evening grind of traffic takes on you, and it's easy to understand why so many will see getting their children involved in sport as an unnecessary hassle and prefer to have them at home playing with their phones, watching DVDs or whiling away the hours on Facebook. Understandable, yes. Acceptable, no.

More and more we are seeing the consequences of this sedentary lifestyle yet we fail to appreciate the catastrophic consequences.

The health complications associated with poor diet (how many parents were in the grocery or supermarket yesterday morning stocking up on cheap, unhealthy snacks ahead of the new school term as directed by their darling fat children?) and lack of physical exercise are well documented. Still, so many mothers and fathers seem to have no problem with their roly-poly youngsters stuffing their faces as they sit around or are driven around while they get heavier and fatter.

Getting them involved in sport is not about making it big and raking in the millions at the very pinnacle of specific disciplines. That will always be only a tiny, tiny fraction of the sporting population. If nothing else, it is a quality of life issue, of inculcating a culture of health and wellness at the most impressionable period of their lives so that they have a better chance of avoiding the myriad debilitating complications that are now increasingly manifest in what is fast becoming an epidemic of non-communicable diseases.

Sometimes we opt for the excuse that our son or daughter doesn't like sport, isn't athletically inclined or may get hurt in the process. Of course precautions have to be taken in anything you do, but isn't life about coping with adversity and overcoming setbacks along the way?

As for not liking sport or having two left feet, I have been privileged to see the value of encouragement and opportunity to play sport.

There were at least two occasions last year – the Indian Premier League final involving Sunil Narine's Kolkata Knight Riders and Dwayne Bravo's Chennai Super Kings and the World T20 final matching the West Indies against hosts Sri Lanka – when some parents and even some officials were less than keen on attending sessions of our community coaching academy at the Aranjuez Savannah on those Sunday mornings.

Yet the children came out in their numbers, eager and enthusiastic as ever and completely oblivious to the concerns of adults who wanted to go home and watch cricket on TV.

As Romany elaborated when I interviewed him on Sporting Edition on TV 6 last Friday, we should be making every effort to give our children the chance to enjoy themselves – because that's what it's supposed to be, enjoyment – by being involved in sporting or recreational activity of some kind.

If so many children in this country are no longer interested in playing sport, the blame lies with us, not them.

By Fazeer Mohammed

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

The Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) and Emirates have announced a new global partnership in which the Dubai-based airline will become the Official Airline of the ATP World Tour, as well as the new title sponsor of the ATP Rankings.

As part of the five-year agreement, Emirates becomes an Official Platinum Partner of the ATP World Tour, as well as the season-ending Barclays ATP World Tour Finals, through until 2017.

South African Airways had previously been the Tour's official airline, an agreement that began in 2006 and renewed in 2008.

"We're delighted to welcome Emirates as the Official Airline of the ATP World Tour," said Brad Drewett, the executive chairman and President of the ATP. 

"It's fantastic news for men's professional tennis that a brand of Emirates' global stature has pledged their support to the ATP World Tour for the next five years," 

"This long-term commitment from Emirates is a testament to the world-class entertainment that is enjoyed by millions of fans across the world on the ATP World Tour."

It is the latest deal Emirates have signed with a major sport.

They are already a sponsor of FIFA and Premier League Arsenal and last year signed up to become a partner of the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.

"This tie-up with the ATP World Tour and Rankings is a perfect addition to our existing portfolio of global sports sponsorships," said Sir Maurice Flanagan, the executive vice-chairman of Emirates Airline and Group. 

"It will allow us to share in the sporting passions of our customers and bring them closer to the players.

"We see it as a natural extension of our current presence at high profile tennis events including sponsorship of several ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events, the Emirates Airline US Open Series and being an official partner of the US Open.

"Through our global network and carefully selected sports sponsorships, Emirates successfully unites and engages fans and we look forward to working with the ATP to maximise on the consumer experiential and digital media opportunities this sponsorship presents to us."

With a heavy focus on activation around the ATP Rankings, Emirates will also become the presenting sponsor of the ATP World Tour number one trophy ceremonies and the ATP Newcomer of the Year award, presented annually at the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals.
By Duncan Mackay
Source: www.insidethegamez.biz

CASTRIES, St Lucia -- The call for papers for the Sport in Black and White Conference and Youth in Action week to be held in Saint Lucia between June 10-23 is now open.

The Sport in Black and White Conference has been designated as the third Sport and the Global South Conference.

Call for papers:

• The societal impact of sport for development and community sport programmes.

• The strategic development and structure of sports organizations and mechanisms for delivery.

• Sport for development governance at the governmental and organizational level .

• Issues relating to capacity building and delivery of women focused sports for development and community sport programmes.

• Innovation in sports for development programmes and community sport.

• Sports tourism and its economic impact on local communities.

• Analyzing the effectiveness of sports, physical education and body culture educational programmes.

• Combating discrimination through sports for development and community sports programmes

Papers will be considered for Impumulelo: Journal of Sport and the Global South. Consideration will also be given to produce an edited book from the best papers presented at the conference.

The conference is co-sponsored by the Sacred Sports Foundation and The Center for the Study of Sport and Leisure in Society at the Academy of International Sport, George Mason University.

The actual conference will take place between June 10-14, 2013. Deadline for paper and panel submissions is March 1, 2013.

Source: www.caribbeannewsnow.com

I was not surprised at George Bovell's admission that he should not have been the winner of the Sports Personality of the Year award. I had interviewed Bovell for a book and came away with the impression that he was an extraordinary young man. My sentiments were confirmed with his donation to Rodney Wilkes, our first Olympic medallist.

The Sports Personality of the Year award should have gone to Keshorn Walcott who won gold in the javelin. The Olympic Games are the Mt Everest of Olympic sports and to win the gold there says something. An athlete cannot climb any higher and we should know how difficult it is for countries our size to win Olympic gold.

It took us 36 years to get our second gold. In descending order, the World Championships come next, but although of high quality competition, they suffer in comparison with the Olympics because they do not have Olympian prestige and are held biennially. Next are the Pan American and Commonwealth Games, which make up the Big Four in which Trinbago athletes compete regularly.

Before the advent of the World Championships and the professionalization  of track and field in the early 1980s, the Pan Am Games were of a higher standard than the Commonwealth Games because Olympic winners and world record holders participated in track events, the very events in which Trinidad and Tobago was strong. At that time the United States was cock-of-the-walk in the sprints. There is not much to separate both games today. The CAC Games are below the Big Four in quality, regional in scope, and cannot be used as a marker for Olympian success although a few of their athletes have advanced to Olympic medal status.

Bovell had a very successful season after finishing seventh in the 50m freestyle at the Olympics. That's the meet that counts. Any meets coming after the Olympic Games may be important for self-gratification. All meets are not created equal. The World Championships at which Bovell won bronze in the 100 IM would add minimal to his ranking because it was done in the short course pool. The Olympics take place in the long course pool.

Records set in short course events are analogous to those set at indoor track meets which do not count outdoors at the Olympic Games. There were great indoor runners who could not even make an Olympic team. All that said, does not detract from Bovell being a world-class swimmer, the first Trinbagonian in his discipline to medal at the Olympics, and a competitor of great intestinal fortitude. Witness his swimming with an injured shoulder in Athens and winning a medal in the 200 IM, moving from the 200 IM to compete in the 50m because of injury, and reaching an Olympic final after his horrific accident in 2011.

My rankings in order of merit for the Sports Personality award are: Keshorn Walcott; Lalonde Gordon, two bronzes in the 400m and 1600m relay; the 100m and 400m relay teams which both won bronze medals; Njisane Phillip, fourth in the match sprint: this young man stands on the cusp of becoming our first Olympic medallist in cycling; Jehue Gordon and Kelly-Ann Baptiste for fifth place, both having finished sixth in the 400m hurdles and 100m respectively; George Bovell, sixth in the 50m free style; and Richard Thompson, seventh in the 100m.

A note: Keshorn is the second man in this hemisphere to win gold in the javelin but the fourth to bring home gold. Two Cuban women, Maria Colon and Osleidys Menendez, won Olympic gold in 1980 and 2004 respectively. The foreign press does not always get it right. Let me shamelessly promote my new book, Black Meteors: The Caribbean in International Track and Field where all this information can be found.

I share Fazeer Mohammed's enthusiasm for Keshorn's future, and also agree with Ismael Lopez Mastrapa's (Keshorn's coach) intention to take his charge abroad (Cuba and Europe) to train.

All the best for the New Year.

By Basil Ince

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

Paul Deighton has admitted that even he was surprised by the power of the Olympics after officially leaving his role as chief executive at London 2012 to take up his new position with the Government.

The 56-year-old former Goldman Sachs banker ended his seven-year spell as chief executive of the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) yesterday and is due to begin his new role as Commercial Secretary to the Treasury on Thursday (January 3).

Deighton was appointed to the junior Ministry position by British Prime Minister David Cameron in September following his highly-acclaimed stewardship of London 2012 and was made a Lord so he could take up the position.

As the main money man behind London 2012, Deighton helped to spearhead the plans to raise £2 billion ($3 billion/€2.5 billion) from the private sector to stage the Games.

But Deighton, who received a knighthood in the Queen's New Years Honours List, admitted that the best memory he will take away from time at London 2012 was the sheer appeal and magic of the Olympics to so many people. 

"The thing that surprised me most was, from the beginning, people told me about the notional appeal of the Olympic Games, its ability to inspire people," he told insidethegames shortly before leaving his role at London 2012. 

"I understood that intellectually at the beginning but it was only since we began our journey through these seven years that I realised just how powerful it really is and just how much support for the project and what we were trying to do, we garnered by opening up to as many people as we possibly could at the earliest possible stage.

"There are the traditional ways of getting people involved, the success of our Games Makers obviously, people buying tickets, the Torch Relay.

"I remember the first morning of the Torch Relay in Cornwall going around the corner in the first town, and seeing tens of thousands of people on the street.

"For me, just the power of that and really understanding it was the biggest surprise to me and all the things I would have done differently are really all about capturing and magnifying and taking advantage of that emotional power on many more occasions because you just have a wonderful magic dust in your hands for seven years and you can sprinkle it in a way that just produces extraordinary results."

Deighton's first role will be to undertake an assessment of the Government's ability to deliver major infrastructure projects.

A National Infrastructure Plan: update 2012 report, published last month, said that the Government will strengthen the mandate of infrastructure UK and, working with an enhanced Major Projects Authority, will assess Whitehall's ability to deliver infrastructure.

The assessment is due to be completed by March 20, the date of the next budget, and Deighton will work closely with Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude and the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, in compiling his report.

Now that Deighton has left Sebastian Coe will combine his role as chairman of London 2012 with leading LOCOG in the final few months before it is officially wound up and will be assisted by the remaining directors at finance, legal, communications and human resources.

There are two more London 2012 Board meetings due to be held, with the last one in May.
By Duncan Mackay

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Peter Ueberroth has been honoured for his commitment to the Olympic and Paralympic Movement by the United States Olympic Foundation (USOF) as he received the prestigious William E. Simon Award.

The 75-year-old from Illinois, who previously served as the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) chairman from 2004-2008, is perhaps best known in the Olympic Movement for his role as President of the Los Angeles 1984 Organising Committee.

Under Ueberroth's leadership, Los Angeles 1984 became the first privately funded Olympic Games which resulted in a surplus of $238 million (£147 million/€181 million).

That money continues to support youth sports across the United States.

Ueberroth, who also served as the Major League Baseball (MLB) Commissioner from 1984 to 1989, takes the award after it was first shared by Daniel Doctoroff and Patrick Ryan in 2010 and given to Henry Kissinger in 2011.

It is named after William E. Simon who was USOC President from 1981 to 1985 and served as US Secretary of the Treasury for three years under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.

Ueberroth received the award at the annual USOF Luncheon and Awards Ceremony in New York.

The Ceremony also saw Ann Cody and Pat Summitt honoured as the pair shared the George M. Steinbrenner III Sport Leadership Award.

Cody has been a tireless advocate for the Paralympic Movement and helped the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) establish a policy on gender equity.

The former Paralympic track and field champion serves on the IPC's Governing Board and on the USOC's Paralympic Advisory Committee.

Summitt coached the Tennessee Lady Vols from 1974-2012 where she won eight national championships and 32 combined Southeastern Conference titles.

She ended her career at the helm of the UT women's basketball team with a 1,098-208 overall record.

Summitt brought that same standard of excellence to USA Basketball, having been a member of the team that won the Olympic gold medals at Montreal in 1976. 

The USOF itself was established after Los Angeles 1984 to benefit Olympic, Paralympic and amateur sports in the United States.

Its objective is to support the USOC and its member organisations.

By Tom Degun

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

The year 2012 was all about London, but now the Olympic Movement's focus is about to shift - to Istanbul, Madrid and Tokyo.

In less than a week's time, next Monday (January 7), this trio of combatants in the battle for the right to host the 2020 Olympics and Paralympics must submit Candidature Files giving an in-depth description of their respective projects to the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

Two months' later, in March, the IOC's Evaluation Commission, headed by Britain's Sir Craig Reedie, a former chairman of the British Olympic Association (BOA), will visit the three cities to inspect their plans.

Finally, on September 7, in the elegant Argentinian capital of Buenos Aires, location for the 125th IOC Session, the winner will be selected by IOC members.

What may sensibly be said about the race at eight months' distance from this all-important denouement?

Well, following the withdrawal of Rome and the IOC's decision not to admit Baku and Doha into the final phase of the contest, we have been left with the shortest Summer Games shortlist I have known since I began writing about the Movement more than a decade ago.

This has left the sense of excitement surrounding the race lagging well below the levels associated with the high-octane 2012 and 2016 contests.

In this respect, the present tussle has more in common with the 2008 race, decided in Moscow in 2001, when just about everyone was convinced - rightly - that Beijing would win.

The paucity of survivors does not mean that the 2020 contest is a foregone conclusion, however.

When I consulted the odds in preparing this article, it was noticeable that every company I could see had Tokyo as warm, though not red-hot, favourite.

Odds on the Japanese capital ranged from 5-11 to 8-11, compared with a range of 7-4 to 3-1 for Istanbul, and of 3-1 to 19-2 for Madrid.

While I would not quibble, at this point, with Tokyo's status as favourite, however, I do think the present range of odds probably underestimates Istanbul's chance - particularly now that UEFA boss Michel Platini appears to have ended Turkey's hopes of staging more than the odd match of the Euro 2020 football tournament.

What do the three contenders need to do to maximise their prospects of crying tears of joy, rather than grief, in Argentina?

For Madrid, the priority must be to convince IOC members that the deep economic and fiscal problems dogging Spain would not interfere with the terrifically demanding business of preparing for the Games.

While some might be surprised that Madrid is the outsider, particularly given its experience of running in the last two races - finishing a close-up third behind London and a distant second to Rio de Janeiro - it is hard at the moment not to conclude that the 2020 contest has simply come at the wrong time for the Spanish capital.

This is a pity since Spain's sporting stock – as epitomised by Rafa Nadal, Fernando Alonso and its football teams - has never been higher.

The city, moreover, seems admirably equipped in many ways to host a successful Summer Games.

But if Spain's deep-seated economic problems are beyond the power of the current bid team to influence in any significant way, and if they have lost the formidable services of Juan Antonio Samaranch, the late former IOC President, there is nonetheless one critical thing decision-makers could do to improve the prospects of this, or more likely another future Madrid bid.

This is to provide a truly compelling articulation of why the IOC ought to take its flagship product back to Spain a mere 28 years after Madrid's arch-rival Barcelona hosted the Games - and put itself firmly on the international map in the process.

Constructing a compelling narrative should, by contrast, be the least of Istanbul's problems.

A uniquely picturesque city in a stunning geographical location at the crossroads of two continents, it effortlessly ticks most of the boxes for a winning Olympic story-line.


Furthermore, there is less and less reason to doubt that Turkey's fast-developing economy could cope with the demands of hosting the Games, although a successful staging of a tournament of the scale and stature of the European football championship would have underlined its readiness.

Istanbul would be an adventurous choice, but the IOC has repeatedly shown itself willing to plump for the adventurous choice in recent times - and has yet to have its fingers burnt as a consequence.

Where I think the Turkish city will have to work hardest if it is to cruise up onto Tokyo's shoulder over the next eight months is in persuading the IOC of its capacity to execute some of the more mundane tasks that are indispensable to a successful Games.

Traffic management would be one area where I would require robust assurances; security would be another.

Tokyo, I think, has successfully established itself as the safe choice for the IOC in a volatile world.

If Istanbul fails to perform to its potential, that might yet be enough.

More likely, though, the Japanese bid will need to move up a couple of gears to avoid being overtaken.

That means persuading a majority of IOC members - who gave their last big prize, the 2018 Winter Games, to another Asian city, Pyeongchang - that Tokyo is not merely a safe choice, but an enticing one as well.

After a slow start, I have a hunch that this 2020 contest is destined soon to burst into life.

David Owen worked for 20 years for the Financial Times in the United States, Canada, France and the UK. He ended his FT career as sports editor after the 2006 World Cup and is now freelancing, including covering the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the 2010 World Cup and London 2012.

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

T&T top swimmer, George Bovell III has described 2012 as his best year ever in the sport, but not just based on his stellar performances in the pool. The 29-year-old Bovell III, a four-time Olympian and 2004 Athens Greece Olympics bronze medal winner in the men’s 200m individual medley, was speaking on his return home on Christmas Eve at a reception held in his honour by the Ministry of Sport and the Sport Company of T&T (SporTT) at the VIP Lounge, Piarco International Airport on Monday night.
Those in attendance included Bovell III’s coach and Minister of Sport Anil Roberts, SporTT chairman and former Olympic swimmer Sebastian Paddington, special advisor to the Minister of Sport Caryl Kellar, senior manager/executive manager Corporate Services Adrian Raymond, senior manager Corporate Communications Nyssa Pierre, and the parents of the history-making local swimmer George Bovell II and Barbara Bovell.
The reception was held to celebrate Bovell III’s recent achievement of a first ever swimming medal—bronze—for T&T at a FINA World Short Course Championship when he clocked 51.66 seconds for third behind USA’s Ryan Lochte (51.21) and Australian Kenneth To (51.38) at the Sinan Erdem Arena, Istanbul, Turkey. A former NCAA swimming champion with Auburn University, Bovell III also missed out on a medal in the men’s 50m freestyle final when he raced home in 21.03 seconds for fourth spot, well short of his 20.82 national record sat during the Short Course World Cup in Sweden on October 14.
Russian Vladimir Morozov won in 20.55 seconds to beat Olympic champion France’s Florent Manaudou (20.88) and USA’s Anthony Ervin (20.99), Bovell’s main rival in the event on the World Cup circuit. Prior to the World Championship, Bovell, who was seventh in the men’s 50m freestyle final at the London Olympics, had won 16 medals during the FINA/ARENA Swimming World Cup series, comprising seven gold and nine silver while establishing new national records in the 50m freestyle (20.82 in Stockholm, Sweden) on October 14 and in the 100m IM (51.20) in Berlin, Germany, six days later while he captured gold (100m IM) and silver (50m freestyle) at the Vladimir Salnikov Cup in Russia on Friday and Saturday.
All this after he was knocked briefly unconscious when he was involved in an early morning vehicular accident near the Manzanilla Secondary School on August 10, last year. In his brief moment at the podium, Bovell who spent 38 hours travelling from St Petersburg, Russia, to be with family and friends for the Christmas holidays said, “This year, looking back on it, I started off in a very bad way.” “I started off with seven weeks of the season of doing nothing. I was very frail. I had been in bed and faced with the possibility of doing brain surgery and having a stroke and to bounce back and finish this year off with a World Championship medal, the number-two time in the world and the fourth time in the world, I think.
“As long as I live it’s something I am actually more proud of, more than my Olympic medal or my world record, just because of my sheer will and just the way I started off this year. “Because it takes you about four or five months to get back to where you were and three more months to get ready for the Olympics and then to keep pushing through this whole season I think it was great.” Regarding the up and downs of his career and races in which he has come very close to being among the medals in previous World Championships and Olympic Games, Bovell said, “I must say I cannot believe it.”
He noted, “I have been fourth at the World Championship so many times, maybe two or three times, and also fifth, and I have come so close so many times and its cruel when it happens because you look back and wonder what you could have done different to make up the one, two, three and four hundredths of a second you miss a medal by because you want it so badly and you are so close, yet so far.” “To have that feeling over and over in my career and knowing that final in Turkey was actually my ninth at a World Championship was tough. “You can imagine going into the final the pressure I was under, to come in nine times in a final and not get a medal. “I said to myself: ‘you know how bad that would be.’ “You know that would give you the feeling of not being able to sleep at night if that happens, right.”
He admitted, “There was definite pressure on me, so I had to come in and keep it cool and unfortunately that is how it goes in sport sometimes, you have ups and downs.” Reflecting on his performances in Turkey during the December 12 to 16 World Championship, Bovell III, a double gold and silver Pan American Games medallist, said he wasn’t able to replicate some of his top times from the World Cup and thought it was due to the fact that he took on too much. “I was dealing with 12 hours of jet lag to come back and train for four/five weeks later and then go back to Europe for some more and to put in perspective it was very frustrating with my 50m freestyle time,“ explained Bovell III, who presented his World Championship bronze medal to his coach of 11 years, Minister of Sport Anil Roberts, as a gift. “My best time from the World Cup would have came second and the time was repeating over and over would have been third and my rival Anthony Ervin (USA) stole that medal from me. So you can imagine how that felt.
“In the 100m IM I knew it was not going to be easy and I knew I had to dig deep. To tell you the truth it hurt so bad and I knew I had to put so much energy into it. “I remember walking down the stairs and being relieved that it was over and I had so much physical pains, headaches, and my legs wanted to give out when I was coming down the stairs.  “And to put it in perspective, it had been a long season for me and to know that I had posted a time in Berlin, Germany, that would have actually won the event.  “But it keeps me hungry for next time because you know you had it and you got a glimpse and next time and finally T&T had won a medal.
With regards to the high expectations on him, the soft-spoken Bovell said, “People in T&T seem to expect gold medals all the time, but we are just 1 million people and we are up against one billion in China toiling hard; Russians, who have very hard lives and know swimming is their only way out; Germans, and other big countries with lots of money; and here we are, small T&T on the big stage competing against the world and consistently beating them and being on medal podiums. “My coach Minister Roberts gave you the details of how it went down and overall I am very happy and proud to represent T&T and very grateful for the opportunity to continue to do so and I hope to continue to do it in the future.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

He isn’t called Super Dupa E for nothing.

Double Olympic Bronze medalist Emmanuel Callender has earned that nickname and has more than a handful of medals to prove it.
The two-time Central American and Caribbean (200 and 100 metres) champion and 2011 Pan American Bronze medalist had reason to celebrate again in August when he, along with fellow sprinters Richard Thompson, Keston Bledman and Marc Burns, captured Bronze in the 4x100 metres relay at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.
A graduate of Curepe Junior Secondary, Callender spends his free time mentoring students at schools throughout Trinidad, highlighting the importance of getting a sound education and staying on the straight and narrow.
The ambitious sprinter says it’s important to him to be a positive role model for the nation’s youth.
In a recent chat with METRO, Callender said he recently traded the sunshine for the bitter cold that is New York City’s winter to take his training routine to the next level.
And while he will miss out on having a Trini Christmas this year, the Arouca resident says it’s a sacrifice he has to make.
However, he did tell us that he wouldn’t mind if “a generous person” sends him some Christmas goodies!
What do you think of when you hear the word Christmas?
When I hear the word Christmas I think of the birth of Jesus Christ and the good things He has done for me.  It’s also a season for giving not only material things but love.
It’s a time for bonding and togetherness for families. A time for coming together to clean, cook and paint, just to name a few--All for the greater good.
How early do you start your Christmas preparations?
My mom and sisters usually start in September or November.
Do you have a family Christmas tradition?
Yes I do. We keep a family get together by each family member where everyone contributes.
What is nice about it is if you don’t have anything to give, you can still come.
Have your views on Christmas changed from when you were a child?
Yes, as a child I used to think about getting presents but now I more think about giving.
I liked cleaning around Christmas time for it brought a sense of relaxation and great satisfaction after all the work is done. I think a lot of that has been lost with some youths today.
Who does the Christmas cooking in your family? My mother and my sisters.
What is your favourite Christmas dish?
Red beans, stew chicken, bake chicken, callaloo, potato salad, fresh salad, vegetable rice and baked potato.
What would be your ideal 2012 Christmas present? It would be for love and peace throughout Trinidad and Tobago.
What is your wish for T&T for the New Year? For love and peace in Trinidad and Tobago and that we all find it through Christ.
Source: www.metro.co.tt

JERRY MOE, coach of top local football club Caledonia AIA, has declared that his team’s focus will be on the 2012/2013 Pro League crown.

Caledonia have never claimed the local league title, but this season they successfully defended the First Citizens Cup and are currently on course to retain the FA Trophy.

Moe, speaking after Caledonia AIA’s 5-2 drubbing of Central FC in a Pro League Round One Match Day Seven at the Hasely Crawford Stadium, Mucurapo on Friday, noted, (our) main focus this season is to try and win the League.

“Once we take it one game at a time, I think we have a good chance to win the League, even though we have a game in hand,” he added. “Army (Defence Force) probably will have points on the board (but) we just have to take care of business.”

Defence Force have a three-point lead over AIA (16 to AIA’s 13), but Caledonia have a game on hand.

Caledonia welcomed five Trinidad and Tobago players to their team last week — midfielders Densill Theobald, Ataullah Guerra, Keyon Edwards, as well as defender Aubrey David and striker Jamal Gay.

And, in Friday’s game, they went ahead 4-0 in the first-half through goals from Kareem Joseph, Radanfah Abu Bakr, Cornelius Stewart and Guerra, before Nuru Muhammad completed the scoring in the dying minutes.

Asked if was it deliberate to attack from the onset, especially with the returning TT players, Moe admitted, “no, not necessarily.”

“We rested the national players for the FA game on Wednesday (a 1-0 win over Joe Public), so they were fresh (on Friday). The players on national duties (will) be coming back on a high because they did well in the (Caribbean Cup). It really was not a plan but the outcome was to win the game. Fortunately we scored four goals in the first-half.”

Central FC scored twice in the second-half, through debutant Rundell Winchester and Tyrone Charles and Moe stressed, “we (were) very sloppy in the second- half. I thought we could have done a lot better, seeing we had a four-nil lead.

“I think the guys played the score, instead of trying to play the game. The focus was a little bit off.”

For the New Year, Moe said, “we’ve got a game on the fourth of January against North East Stars and then after that we’ve got a FA (quarter-final) on the ninth against Stokely Vale so that’s the immediate future right now.”

In the absence of English-born coach Graham Rix, the coaching duties for Central FC fell to assistant Kevin Jeffrey, as well as the team’s managing director Brent Sancho.

Questioned about Rix, Sancho responded, “he went away on December 15th. His flight was booked to go back on the 15th. The dates changed in the League but he had to go.

“We had him permanently booked. So it’s nothing untoward or so.” Central FC’s defending was poor in the first-half and Sancho minced no words, stating “that’s been our major problem.”

He continued, “defensively we’ve been shambolic. To be fair, we’ve lost our starting centre-half in (Corneal) Thomas and we have one or two other injuries and (the players) are now coming back. We’re struggling defensively, absolutely struggling.

“We will add (some new players), there will be a lot of new faces. We’re changing the demographic of the team so we’re not overly concerned. We’re just happy that the window is open and we can bring players in.”

With regards to Winchester’s performance, Sancho said, “we knew he’s a gem. When we saw him and we went after him feverishly, since we saw him three months ago. I went over to Tobago, spoke to his parents and got him over here. He’s a major signing.

“We also have his other (Stokely Vale) team-mate as well (Omar Charles). We’re looking forward to these two doing positive things for the team.”

Their lone TT player, goalkeeper Marvin Phillip, returned to the starting line-up and Sancho commented, “I think he did very well. Marvin has been a stone for us and I think he should be challenging for the number one shirt.

“It’s been positives coming forward. We’re really looking to the second-half of the season, where we’re now putting together the team we always wanted to put together,” concluded Sancho.

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) president Larry Romany believes a drop off in sport participation in the nation's school could result in T&T failing to medal at the 2020 and 2024 Olympic Games .

During his keynote address at the TTOC 18th annual award ceremony at the National Academy for the Performing Arts (NAPA), Port of Spain last Saturday evening Romany voiced concerns about the issue pointing to a need to arrest the decline in participation levels among the school population .

Romany said that the TTOC is collaborating with the Ministry of Education, and has started an initiative to measure the obesity of every child in primary schools. The data from the project, being conducted by the project is being conducted by the TTOC and the data from the project will be analyzed by John Hopkins University.

"If we want to sustain podium success the problem cant be swept under the table.When people talk about the issues facing sport there is a lot of misdiagnosis but that happens when you look at flawed information. The wrong people can confuse the issue . Its generational and will require acceptance that it will take 15 to 20 years to solve the problem but the issues must be addressed now "

Meanwhile the TTOC's sport administration course will continue in 2013. Last year the TTOC certified 150 young people who successful completed the IOC certification course.

Six courses were held last year. The TTOC's plan is to conduct the same number this year. The first course starts on Tuesday 8 January.

" Thats another priority. Education and building the human resource capacity within the national sport organisations that are affilated to the TTOC. We have also extended the course to community clubs and sport organisations." said Romany.

London 2012 Olympic champion Jade Jones says she has now set her sights on gold at the 2013 World Taekwondo Championships in Puebla, Mexico despite struggling to regain motivation following her stunning win at ExCeL.

The 19-year-old from Wales proved one of the stars of the Games as she won Britain's first ever taekwondo Olympic gold medal in the women's 57 kg category by defeating China's Hou Yuzhuo 6-4.

The victory earned Jones celebrity status and even though she admits it has been hard to juggle her lifestyle with training, she wants to win gold at the World Championships, which take place from June 17 until 23, after taking silver at the 2011 edition of the event.

"I haven't been as motivated as I used to be," she said.

"It's that hunger that made me win the Olympics so I need to get that back.

"Next year though I expect it will come back, especially as I want to become world champion for the first time."

Jones, who has now returned to full training at the GB Academy in Newton Heath, was one of the many London 2012 stars to be rewarded in the Queen's New Year Honour's list as she was made a Member of the British Empire (MBE) and she said the accolade has helped her round off a perfect year.

"I was quite shocked when I heard the news," said Jones, who was also voted BBC Wales Sports Personality of the Year.

"I certainly didn't expect it but it rounds off a perfect year.

"To have an MBE at 19 is just amazing.

"Maybe if I win another Olympics I can become a Dame!

"I always hoped 2012 would be this good but I never imagined how it would turn out.

"It has just kept getting better and better.

"Just when you think nothing else can happen, something comes along like this MBE."

GB Performance Director Gary Hall has saluted Jones' award.

"This is a great honour for Jade but also for the staff that have contributed to her success," he said.

"And it is great for taekwondo to be recognised again.

"Sarah Stevenson won an MBE last year and hopefully there will be a few more recognised in the years to come."

By Tom Degun

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Olympic gold medallist Keshorn Walcott, named the Junior Sportsman of the Year and the Sportsman of the year, was gifted with the javelin he used to achieve his history-making achievement in London back in August.

At Saturday evening's Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) 18th annual awards ceremony at the National Academy for the Performing Arts (NAPA), Port of Spain, the 19-year-old Walcott added two further accolades to his four awards (Male Athlete of the Year, Sport Performance of the Year, Breakthrough Athlete of the Year and Consistent Performer of the Year) on the previous night at the Ministry of Sport Spirit of Sports Awards (SOSA).

But the most sentimental "award" was when outgoing TTOC president Larry Romany made the special presentation towards the end of the ceremony.

Romany and TTOC officials had tracked down the javelin after Walcott had made the request, and latched onto it before the start of the Paralympic Games.

Romany said Walcott's gold medal performance was a wish come true for him and TTOC officials, as he got to witness the national anthem being played on the Olympic stage.

"Keshorn (Walcott) has been given so many accolades since he came back with the gold medal. We can't give Keshorn (Walcott) $1 million or a house, but one of the things I thought is that we would  do something that would mean something to him as his win meant to us," Romany said before calling out TTOC vice president Annette Knott with the javelin that Romany then presented to the four-time Carifta champion.

"If he (Walcott) is the sportsman that I think he is, he will cherish this until he dies because this is worth more than any money or any amount of gold or anything in the world for him, and I hope really and truly that he appreciates it," Romany said.

Walcott, who expressed surprise and chuckled on viewing the javelin said, "I'd like to say this is a great pleasure to have received this. (I) Always wanted it but didn't know I would receive (it). It is the actually the only javelin I touched during the Olympics, I didn't use any other one, so it is really a touching moment for me I'd like to say from me to you thanks a lot," he said.

After the ceremony, Walcott said this year had been tremendous from beginning to end.

"It is really an honour and a great feeling of pride to know that I just received these awards, also the ones last night (Friday). Really special," Walcott related.

Walcott said he had not made any concrete New Year's resolution yet, but that he hoped to be healthy and alive in 2013 and take life step by step, focusing on peaking for World Championships in Russia in August.

Asked how his whirlwind year had changed his life, Walcott replied: " The biggest thing I have changed, and it may not be a big thing for most people but it is for me, is I tend to sleep a lot, but now I have been here and there all the time, there has been less time to rest. So I'll be catching up on that."

The Toco-born athlete fired himself into prominence this year after winning the javelin event at the World Junior Track and Field Championships in Spain, before following up with gold at the Olympic Games in London, England for this country's second ever gold medal at the quadrennial Games. He was also the youngest to win the event, and the first reigning World Junior champion to do so.

Walcott's Cuban-born coach Ismael Lopez Mastrapa was named the Sports Personality of the Year, an award his wife Michelle Stoute Lopez collected on his behalf, while fellow Olympian Kelly Ann Baptiste copped the Sportswoman of the Year.

Cyclist Jodi Goodridge walked away with the Junior Sportswoman of the Year accolade, and The Harvard Club collected the Alexander B Chapman award for outstanding contribution to Sport and Olympism.

The feature address was presented by TTOC president Larry Romany, who mentioned that he would be stepping down from the post next year at the end of his second and final four-year term.

Also attending the function were President George Maxwell Richards and his wife Jean Ramjohn-Richards, Minister of Education Tim Gopeesingh, Leader of the Opposition Dr Keith Rowley, this country's first Olympic gold medallist Hasely Crawford and former long-serving TTOC president Alex B Chapman.

By Mark Pouchet

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

Outgoing Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) president Larry Romany believes current low participation levels in sport can jeopardise this country's future Olympic performances.

Romany was delivering the keynote address at the TTOC 18th annual award ceremony at the National Academy for the Performing Arts (NAPA), Port of Spain on Saturday evening.

Romany acknowledged T&T's historic Olympic medal haul and performance in London back in August. But the former cycling coach is concerned about the direction sport was taking in this country.

"A lot of people have celebrated the success of the Olympic team over the last four months, but nobody can tell the story of the Olympic movement better than the TTOC," he said. " I am here to tell you that we are not at all satisfied. We are not satisfied for several reasons. We don't see a sustainable pathway at present for the development of sport in Trinidad, primarily because the young people of T&T are no longer interested in participating in sport.

"This is not a simple solution, this is a generational problem and we have to work assiduously at trying to solve the problem. This means that we have to target kids in primary schools, and in secondary schools and try to give them back that passion, that love they need in order for them to participate."

He continued: "We see the success for Keshorn (Walcott), we the success for (Richard) Thompson, Njisane (Phillip), Jehue (Gordon) and we see Lalonde (Gordon) and we say everything is good. But everything is not good in paradise."

Romany said most people see sport as the finished product with the athletes on the medal podium, and are not interested in the values and background athletes possess to attain success.

He said of some 125,000 kids in primary schools in T&T, the TTOC estimated that less than 20 per cent of that figure are interested in participating in sport.

"If less than 20 per cent are interested in participating in sport, it means then that fewer than that actually participate, and therefore we have a problem," he said.

Romany said the public needed to encourage their children to love sport and to understand the role of sport in the lives of children.

"Most people see sport purely as recreation, purely as fitness and health, but we don't really understand that sport is absolutely necessary for us to understand who we  are,  for us to learn the most valuable value of social interaction and understanding, how we get along with one another," he said

Romany believed the TTOC is about celebrating kids and instilling the values of Olympism in children.

Romany said that the TTOC is collaborating with the Ministry of Education, and has started an initiative to measure the obesity of every child in primary schools. The data from the project, being conducted by John Hopkins University, will be analysed, and programmes will be put in.

The TTOC has also educated 150 young people in sport administration and certified them under an IOC programme, and has also targeted and interacted with over 3000 kids over the last year.

Romany, whose completes his second four-year term next year, said he expected to continue to contribute to an improved TTOC in the post of immediate past president.

—Mark Pouchet

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

KESHORN WALCOTT was named as the Sportsman of the Year, and the Junior Sportsman of the Year, at last evening’s Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) 18th annual award ceremony at the National Academy for the Performing Arts (NAPA), Port of Spain.

The 19-year-old Walcott became a household name this year after winning the javelin event at the World Junior Track and Field Championships in Spain, and followed up with gold in the Olympic Games in London, England.

Walcott’s Cuban-born coach Ismael Lopez Mastrapa was adjudged the Sports Personality of the Year, while fellow Olympian Kelly Ann Baptiste copped the Sportswoman of the Year.

Cyclist Jodi Goodridge walked away with the Junior Sportswoman of the Year and The Harvard Club collected the Alexander B Chapman award for outstanding contribution to Sport and Olympism.

The feature address was presented by TTOC president Larry Romany, who mentioned that he would be stepping down from the post next year, at the end of his second and final four-year term.

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

KESHORN WALCOTT was named as the Sportsman of the Year, and the Junior Sportsman of the Year, at last evening’s Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) 18th annual award ceremony at the National Academy for the Performing Arts (NAPA), Port of Spain.

The 19-year-old Walcott created history  this year after winning the javelin event at the World Junior Track and Field Championships in Spain, and followed up with gold in the Olympic Games in London, England.

Walcott’s Cuban-born coach Ismael Lopez Mastrapa was adjudged the Sports Personality of the Year, while fellow Olympian Kelly Ann Baptiste copped the Sportswoman of the Year.

Cyclist Jodi Goodridge took home  the Junior Sportswoman of the Year and The Harvard Club collected the Alexander B Chapman award for outstanding contribution to Sport and Olympism.

TTOC president Larry Romany presented a surprised and visibly moved Walcott with the javelin the teenager used to win his historic London 2012 gold medal .

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When medal-winning athletes return home from the Olympic Games, their fame may be short-lived, but they can look forward to a long life. A new study has found that Olympic medalists live an average of 2.8 years longer than the rest of us, whether they're a gymnast, golfer, runner, or athlete in any other event. The study used data on 15,174 male and female athletes who won medals in Olympic Games since 1896 and found that 30 years after any given Olympics, 8% more medalists were alive than others from their country and birth year. The effect, a second study concluded, wasn't just seen in Olympic athletes who participated in high-endurance or high-intensity events. Researchers found no difference in mortality, for example, between cyclists, rowers, tennis stars, and cricket players. But the factor that did make a difference: whether a sport had high levels of physical contact and collisions. Olympians in sports with higher bodily collision, such as boxing, had an 11% higher mortality risk than those in sports with minimal collisions. Both studies were published online today in BMJ. The researchers hypothesize that medalists could live longer because of their intensive training, exercise levels throughout life, or because their success leads to increased wealth or education levels, but more research will be needed to determine what is at play.

By Sarah C. P. Williams

Source: http://news.sciencemag.org

An independent assessment of the short-term economic impact of last year's rugby union World Cup in New Zealand has indicated that the tournament sustained the equivalent of more than 20,000 jobs for one year.

The analysis, prepared for the New Zealand Ministry of Economic Development by consultants Market Economics (ME) in conjunction with Gravitas and Sapere Research Group, also put the net economic impact of the competition over the 2006-2012 period at around NZ$1.73 billion (£875 million/$1.41 billion/€1.07 billion).

The assessment noted, however, that this economic impact, which is expressed in 2007 New Zealand dollars, would be offset in the longer term by "the repayment of loans used to fund the capital development projects required to deliver the tournament, or future reduced spending by both Government and businesses in response to their spending on [World Cup] related activities".

The country's overall gross domestic product (GDP) was worth more than US$140 billion (£870 million/€106 billion) in 2010; its population is about 4.4 million.

The competition - won by the host All Blacks after a tense final against France at Auckland's Eden Park - attracted more than 133,000 international visitors to New Zealand, nearly twice initial estimates.

Results of the analysis are included in a report – "The Stadium of Four Million" – which details the country's experience of running the tournament.

This included having to move matches away from Christchurch following the earthquake of February 2011.

Producing such a record was a requirement of New Zealand's hosting agreement with the International Rugby Board (IRB).

Lessons learnt while staging rugby union's showpiece event should help as the sports-loving nation prepares to host future international competitions, such as the 2015 cricket World Cup, to be held in Australia and New Zealand, and the Under-20 FIFA World Cup, also in 2015.

The 2015 rugby World Cup is to be held in England.

By David Owen

Source: www.insidethegames.biz