A week after providing one of the upsets of the season to topple defending champions Caribs from the top spot, Harvard recorded a 37-15 win over Stag Trinidad Northern, on Saturday, to put itself in position to win its first ever Rugby Football Union (TTRFU) Toyota Championship title.
The victory was recorded at the President’s Ground, St Ann’s, with Harvard, which suffered a defeat against the same opposition late last season, exacting revenge by claiming victory in both legs of league competition.
With a back and forth nervy first half, Harvard, a team comprising pacey, energetic players turned up the tempo in the second, limiting Northern to just a penalty.
The match took a while to get off the ground, but a try from Rowell Gordon, which was converted by Guyanese international Ryan Hinckson, set alight the weekend’s potential title-decider.
Six minutes after the opener, Northern’s Jerome Maxime replied with a try, which was converted by Justin McLean to level the scores, before taking a lead in the 35th minute, through the bulky Michael Augustus. The kick was subsequently missed by McLean.
With less than a minute remaining in the half, senior national team player Tariq Cheekes touched down to make it even again, before Hinckson again converted to give Harvard a 14-12 lead going into the break.
Coming out with a second half lead, Harvard did everything but folded.
Cheekes scored his second try within five minutes, likewise Gordon 12 minutes later. Both went unconverted by Hinckson. Northern had just a glimpse of a comeback, when McLean scored directly from a penalty in the 62nd minute, but it prompted very little promising forward movement from the St Ann’s-based team, as it remained trailing 24-15.
A well executed try from David Gokool, who confidently ran nearly half the length of the pitch, further swelled Harvard’s lead, which may have been increased if not for an uncharacteristic third consecutive miss from Hinckson.
He, however, made up by converting the sixth try, an insurance item, which was scored by team captain Claudius Butts in the 86th minute, for an easy five points in the end.
Caribs, which suffered a deflating 31-5 loss, remained in the chase with two matches to play after taking a comfortable 25-12 victory over Royalians.
Similar to Harvard, Caribs gained a bonus point by winning with four or more tries.
The two remaining fixtures for Harvard will see it come up against Rainbow and Royalians (both of which it has already defeated this season), while Caribs will need to win its next two matches the Bruno Browne Cup (also a league fixture), against rival Northern, which will be played on October 27, at the Queen’s Park Oval, and a winless, struggling Police.
Police and Rainbow, both out of contention for the title, were in action in the final Championship Division match of the round yesterday.
Standings
Teams P W D L F A B Pts
Harvard 8 7 0 1 404 73 7 35
Caribs 8 7 0 1 470 113 5 33
Northern 8 4 0 4 141 125 4 21
Rainbow 7 3 0 4 131 140 2 14
Royalians 8 2 0 6 162 146 4 12
Police 7 0 0 7 35 578 0 0
By Andrew Gioannetti
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Sports and Recreation Alliance says party conferences basked in Olympic glory but ignored sporting policy.

The body representing the country's biggest sporting organisations has accused politicians of basking in the glory of the Olympics throughout the party conference season while forgetting the promise to use them to build a national sporting legacy.

The Sport and Recreation Alliance (SRA), the umbrella group for 315 sports organisations including UK Athletics, the Football Association and the Rugby Football Union, is beginning a campaign to highlight the role sport can play in improving health, education, community cohesion and the fight against crime.
Calling for a cross-party commission on how to put sport at the heart of policy, the alliance is also preparing to present detailed research to ministers on the benefits to society of taking more physical exercise at all stages of life.
Andy Reed, chair of the SRA, said: "Politicians of all parties have undervalued the contribution of physical activity in making Britain a better place. It just doesn't get treated seriously as a public policy option. But in the face of the success of the Olympics and the Paralympics and all the evidence that we have put together, people have got to start paying attention. The party conference season has demonstrated that the inclination so far has been to enjoy the glory of success without actually concentrating on what made it happen. There was no substantive debate either at the conferences or in their fringes about how we can use the momentum created by the Games.
"We need radical thinking that takes the politics out of sport for the next generation so that we can replicate what we've achieved with the Olympics.
"A cross-party commission, which pins down sports policy in our schools, communities and at elite level for the next 20 years, would help us agree a way forward which all governments could buy into."
Research conducted over six months by the alliance has evaluated the effects of sport in staving off everything from cardiovascular heart disease to mental illness. It found that heart disease, which costs the NHS more than £30bn a year, can be cut by up to 40% if people take more regular exercise. In the field of mental illness the risk of dementia, which costs the NHS £23bn a year, can be reduced by about a third with increases in physical activity.
Similarly, by analysing attendance data in the workplace, the SRA found that physical activity programmes at work can reduce absenteeism by up to 20%. Data also shows that people who take 20 minutes of exercise a day aged 14 are three to four times more likely to participate in sport and recreation aged 31.
Reed added that now was the time to make sure ministers took up the challenge. "We have an unprecedented opportunity to use the galvanising power of the Olympics and Paralympics to make the cultural shift in this country to a genuine joined-up sport and physical activity strategy across all government departments – to ingrain it at the heart of government thinking. "
During the Olympics the government was criticised for failing to plan a post-Games sporting legacy. Lord Moynihan, chairman of the British Olympic Association, said it was "wholly unacceptable" that so many of the UK's top athletes were privately educated and called for an overhaul of school sports policy to redress the balance. David Cameron has said he will ensure that sport becomes a compulsory part of the curriculum in primary schools, though this will not apply to academies as they do not follow the national curriculum. Ministers have also been criticised for allowing the sale of school playing fields. The Department for Culture, Media and Sport insisted the government has made a significant investment in its sporting legacy plan which has included committing £125m a year in lottery and exchequer funding into elite sport over the next four years.
The sport minister, Hugh Robertson, said: "The government is determined to deliver on its commitment to ensure a lasting sporting legacy from London 2012. Physical education is an integral part of the curriculum, we have created a new Olympic-style school sports competition, are investing £1bn in a comprehensive youth and community sports strategy, and are delivering new facilities up and down the country.
"The Department of Health's 'Change 4 Life' campaign is encouraging people of all ages to live healthier lives. This will help people build a 'sporting habit for life', delivering on Seb Coe's promise to 'inspire a generation' with our Games."
By Toby Helm
Source: www.guardian.co.uk

National cyclists, Quincy Alexander and Haseem McLean’s competitive campaign came to an unexpected end yesterday when both athletes failed to advance in the Men’s Flying 200m event at the ongoing International Cycling Union World Cup in Cali, Colombia.

In the qualifying race where only the top-16 advance to the next round, McLean could only manage a 22nd place finish, while Alexander followed closely behind in 23rd position.

McLean clocked 10.972s and Alexander recorded a 11.209s finish. The former’s average speed stood at 65.621 km/h while the latter clocked 64.234 km/h.

Today, Phillip Thiele (Germany) will ride against Valentin Savitskiy (Russia) in the first semi-final while Colombia’s Fabian Puerta and Eric Engler do battle for a finalist spot in the second semi-final.

Yesterday’s racing also saw McLean ousted in the second round of Men’s Keirin competition. After progressing out of the first round repechage, McLean was scheduled to line-up against Marc Schroeder (Germany), Ilya Okunev (Russia), Quentin Lafargue (France), Gennadiy Genus (Ukraine) and Angel Pulgar (Venezuela) in the following stage. Even though the local rider rode valiantly, he was edged at the finish line and had to settle for fourth place.

This ride was keenly contested and judges were forced to view the photo finish to officially separate McLean and the eventual third-place rider.

A bit upset about the judges’ decision, McLean voiced his concern via a social networking site stating: “They say he (third-placed rider) beat me, I don’t think so! But that’s what they say! Sorry Trinidad! Gonna shake it off, got to ride 7/12 now and pick up those valuable world points!”

McLean was scheduled to contest the 7/12 final last night, but up to press time, results were not yet available.

He was expected to go up against Pulgar, Genus, Francesco Ceci (Italy), Saifei Bao (China) and Leandro Botasso (Argentina) in this race. On Thursday, Alexander went down in the opening round of the Men’s 1km Time Trial event. He finished 15th in a time of 1:05.365s.

Although eliminated, the Beacon riders are determined to dust themselves off and continue working toward attaining crucial World Cup points, which would eventually add up and hopefully provide an Olympic berth for either of the riders at the 2016 Summer Games in Brazil.

By JONATHAN RAMNANANSINGH

Sorce: www.newsday.co.tt

Organisers of the recently concluded Tobago International Cycling Classic have heaped praises on the Tobago House of Assembly (THA) for their intervention and timely assistance toward ensuring that this year’s edition of the decorated meet was a resounding success.

Jeffrey Charles, one of the event’s main organisers, lauded the actions of the sister-isle’s governing body for repairing a significant section of the course with just one week prior notice.

Charles revealed that if it were not for the speedy repair work done by the THA, the Classic would have lost the official International Cycling Union (UCI) branding for this year’s event.

“One week prior to the start of the Classic, we were conducting a route check and realised that the road between Bloody Bay and Charlotteville was in a deplorable state and unfit for professional riding. This was a major blow to us (organisers) since the Classic was scheduled to start in seven days. If this was not immediately fixed, the UCI would have immediately withdrawn their sanctioning of the race,” he explained.

Charles continued, “If it were not for the day and night works conducted by the THA in that final week, the Tobago Classic would have not been what it was anticipated to be. The UCI took months to approve the dimensions and course details of the route to ensure it was UCI certified. But, the highly credible work of the THA and its employees made sure that the race remained UCI-sanctioned and up to their required standards. The THA did the impossible in that one week, and to them we are very grateful for their help, they made the Classic what it was billed to be.”

He acknowledged the Division of Infrastructure and Public Utilities for their help and determination toward ensuring the events success. Charles also credited the people of Tobago for lending their support and being keen observers and spectators of the race in its 26th year. “Kudos to all those who came out in support of the event and making it what it was. When the road was being repaired we had no idea that it was actually closed off for a few months prior. While construction was going on in that final week, I kept chatting with the workers and they gave me confirmation that it would surely be ready for race-day. They all worked so hard and the people of Tobago need to be publicly acknowledged,” he added.

The event chairman also stated that THA chief secretary Orville London and several other Tobago officials were priviledged to personally meet and greet the UCI president Pat Mc Quaid, and ESPN vice-president Bernard Stewart, among other dignitaries.

He also hailed the significant impact that Mc Quaid’s presence is expected to have on the sister-isle and the race and is looking forward to a boost in sport tourism.

“I made a courtesy call to the chief secretary (London) so we could have him meet the UCI president and ESPN staff. They enjoyed each other’s presence and were both pleased to be a part of such a major cycling meet in the scenic sister-isle.

We know that the president was very satisfied with the Classic on all counts and this is very big for us,” he concluded.

Charles indicated that upon completion of the race, several foreign riders approached them (organisers) to book a place in next year’s edition of the meet. He proudly accepted their offers and was confident that the 27th annual Tobago Classic (2013) would be an even bigger highlight for Tobago and the global cycling fraternity.

The highly anticipated 60-minute ESPN footage of this year’s Classic should be released sometime in November.

By JONATHAN RAMNANANSINGH

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

Trinidad and Tobago's senior men's team completed a 1-0 victory over Group 5 hosts St Kitts/Nevis, at Warner Park on Friday night, to book their passage to the semifinal round of the Caribbean Cup football tournament, in T&T next month.

A 50th minute goal by Defence Force winger Kevon Carter separated the two teams and pushed T&T to six points from their two games in the series so far.

T&T, with head coach Hutson Charles suspended for the game after being ejected in the 4-1 win over French Guiana, were stretched defensively right up to the final minute as St Kitts/Nevis pressed for the equalising goal.

T&T controlled proceedings in the first half, and should have scored at least two goals before the break.

Densill Theobald marshalled T&T's play from the midfield, but had to go off just before the break due to an ankle sprain. His replacement, Carter, shot home low from close range on an assist by Clyde Leon after he was put through by Jamal Gay.

French Guiana defeated Anguilla 4-1 in the earlier encounter.

T&T will aim for a third win today, against Anguilla, but even failing to do so, they are already guaranteed a semifinal spot.

In the first half on Friday, T&T defender Robert Primus, lurking near the penalty box, saw the ball fall perfectly for him, but he could only direct his effort over bar.

Theobald's absence put some strain on T&T in the second half as the team looked less organised, and at times too eager to simply get the ball away once St Kitts/Nevis found themselves around the T&T penalty box. Goalkeeper Jan Michael Williams was forced to make a good save, low down, in the 49th minute.

And one minute later, Carter netted the winner from close range after a nice piece of work by Leon, who slipped in behind two defenders after meeting Gay's pass.

The final 20 minutes were played under a brisk shower as St Kitts/Nevis pressed a T&T team that were found playing too deep.

Late in the game, Williams came up big with another fine save as T&T rallied out for the three points and a place in the next round, scheduled for T&T from November 14. Their semifinal group will also include Cuba, Suriname and the Group 2 runners-up.

After the win, assistant coach Derek King said he was satisfied with the team's effort.

"It was not the most impressive win, but the guys deserve full marks for effort and fight," King told TTFF Media Officer Shaun Fuentes. "We always knew St Kitts would make it difficult, but in saying that I thought we played too deep at times and we allowed them to believe they had a chance to get back in the game. We had some chances that in games like these you need to put away in order to ease the pressure and finish off teams."

Skipper Williams added: "The game turned out difficult but you could see the attitude of the guys in that they wanted to win it, and they pushed themselves to the limit. That's a good sign for any team that is rebuilding. These kind of games help to build character within a team and I was happy about that. This game was one to decide the group winners, and both teams wanted it on the night. Thankfully, we put in the effort and got through in the end. Now, it's about finishing on a high on Sunday, and going back home to prepare and continue our run in the competition."

 

T&T: 1. Jan Michael Williams, 17. Daneil Cyrus, 20. Seon Power, 5. Carlyle Mitchell, 12. Robert Primus, 2. Clyde Leon, 18. Densill Theobald (11. Kevon Carter, 43' replaced by 14. Willis Plaza 84'), 19. Keon Daniel (Curtis Gonzales, 82'), 7. Hughtun Hector, 15. Jamal Gay, 3. Joevin Jones.

Unused Subs: Marvin Phillip, Kareem Moses, Devorn Jorsling, Sylvester Teesdale

Source: trinidadexpress.com

It's not so much that the Lance Armstrong story was too good to be true. Now it might just be too good to let go.

Even after investigators unveiled a scathing report portraying him as an unrepentant drug cheat, Armstrong continues to confound his public with rivaling images: a rapacious, win-at-all-costs athlete or a hero who came back from cancer.

We've all heard his story before: An up-and-coming cyclist gets stricken with testicular cancer at age 25. He's given less than a 50 percent chance of surviving. Instead, he fights it off and comes back stronger. He wins the Tour de France seven times. Hobnobs with presidents. Dates a rock star and pretty much becomes one himself. Uses his fame and success to raise millions to promote cancer awareness.

Even if it all really is the impossible fairy tale it sounds like—one built on a brittle mountain of drugs, deception and arm-twisting--it's the narrative the world has happily listened to for nearly 15 years.

More than 1,000 pages of finely detailed evidence from the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) are now in the open, supporting its decision to ban Armstrong for life from cycling and order his titles stripped for using performance-enhancing drugs. Yet while other sports stars who have faced drug-induced downfalls—Marion Jones, Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens—fade from memory or become objects of scorn, Armstrong keeps rolling along.

You can see it in social media. Sure, negative comments dot the landscape—people have put an "X'' through the "v'' on their Livestrong wristbands to make it read "Lie strong". But the tributes also keep coming: a few dozen new posts on a Facebook page titled "Lance Armstrong Supporters," either vilify USADA or tell Armstrong they've got his back.

You can see it from the sponsors—Nike is one example—that are sticking with Armstrong. You can see it in the donations to the Lance Armstrong Foundation, which have spiked since August, when Armstrong announced he wouldn't fight the doping charges.

And it also shows in the way Armstrong steadfastly goes about his business. On Thursday, the day after the USADA report came out, he was at his foundation headquarters in Austin, Texas, looking for a place to hang a picture. On Friday, he linked to his Twitter account a shiny new slide show touting the top 15 things his foundation has accomplished since it was founded, 15 years ago this month. Star-studded anniversary celebrations are in the works.

"His whole story kind of falls into the category of, sometimes good people do bad things, or, conversely, sometimes bad people do good things," said Stan Teitelbaum, author of "Athletes Who Indulge Their Dark Side".

''In a way, it's the 'Whatever Syndrome'. There used to be a strong sense of indignation at things like this. How could my hero be this way? But when we the people, we the public, get disillusioned so many times, we shrug our shoulders and we just say, 'Whatever'."

But because of the cause Armstrong represents, the hope he's given and the money he's raised, it could be more than that.

His story, to say nothing of those 84 million yellow Livestrong wristbands he's sold, speak to a larger truth: A good number of the more than 25 million people fighting cancer worldwide look for inspiration to gain the strength to keep going. Armstrong showed them it could be done, while raising more than US$500 million to help their cause.

His critics give him credit for raising the money but say he did a disservice to cancer patients by giving them false hope. One takeaway from the report could be that it really does take more than will, moxie and hard work—which is all Armstrong said he needed—to beat cancer and return better than ever.

"The problem believers are facing now is that the thing that made him remarkable, the thing that made them love him, is that he always won," said Daniel Coyle, author of "Lance Armstrong's War" and "The Secret Race", which he wrote with Tyler Hamilton, a former teammate and witness against Armstrong.

"Now, we're getting an accurate X-ray of how that happened, and people have a choice. They can look at these facts and decide it was too good to be true. Or close their eyes and keep believing."

Gregory De Respino, whose wife, Gail, died of cancer in 2009, is among the legion of Armstrong fans who aren't as interested in USADA's version of the truth. De Respino said he pays virtually no attention to news of the investigation, the testimony or the evidence because, he says, "you don't get anywhere damning people for their past".

"My opinion of him as a man has not changed. His pro career is past and that's where it stays for me," said De Respino, who lives in the New York City area and gives regularly to Livestrong. "He's a cancer survivor and his entire story revolves forward from that. If you want to take one piece of his life and make that the only story, that's your choice. But I think that's one reason he chose not to fight anymore. He's got bigger fish to fry. He's got a foundation that needs his full-time attention."

The fervent support the 41-year-old Armstrong still engenders, in the wake of such damning facts and testimony from nearly a dozen ex-teammates, is a sign of the emotion his story still holds. That's an element missing from the stories of Jones, Bonds, Clemens, Mark McGuire, Sammy Sosa and others who've been tainted by the cloud of performance-enhancing drugs.

None of them overcame what Armstrong did.

That point was driven home in a blog written in August, after Armstrong gave up fighting the sanctions, by Dr. Leonard Lichtenfeld, the deputy chief medical officer for the American Cancer Society. Lichtenfeld watched Armstrong give a passionate presentation to the Texas state Legislature years ago in support of a multibillion-dollar funding bill for cancer research. The legislation passed, with no small credit to Armstrong, Lichtenfeld said.

"I will tell you hands down I have never witnessed anything so powerful as I witnessed that night," Lichtenfeld wrote. "He created a mission that will live long past him, and will survive whatever people choose to make of the events surrounding him. He has taken the message of survivorship to the world with a power that no one else possesses."

Lichtenfeld declined an interview request but said his feelings haven't changed.

Jay Kornegay, race and sports book director at The LVH casino, has watched his industry profit when emotion, at times, trumps logic in decisions made through the prism of sports. He sees how that could happen with Armstrong, even as his story plays to an increasingly savvy and more cynical public.

He guesses the resilience of Armstrong and his brand is as much a sign of steroid fatigue as anything else.

"I think this is just a simple case of people saying, 'We've heard the story before. Everybody does it'," Kornegay said. "He's a great humanitarian who helps so many others, and he continues to do so. So, they say, 'Hey, we're going to give him a mulligan on this one'."

—AP (Eddie Pells)

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

T&T’s George Bovell III made it two straight gold medals, as well as two national records at the FINA/Arena Swimming Short Course World Cup, when he won the men’s 50 metres freestyle final in the Stockholm, Sweden, yesterday.
Following his win in the men’s 100 metres individual medley on Saturday which ended a run of four straight silver medals, the 29-year-old Bovell out-swam his rivals in the freestyle final in 20.82 seconds, beating his conqueror in United Arab Emirates and Qatar, USA’s Anthony Ervin (20.99) and Australian Matthew Target (21.15 seconds), in that order.
Bovell, who was seventh in the event at the London Olympic Games, bettered his 21.06 clocking enroute to silver in Doha, Qatar last week.
The other finishers in the final were Australian Kenneth To (21.47), Finland’s Ari-Pekka Liukkonen (21.53), Sweden’s Stefan Nystrand (21.74), New Zealand’s Cameron Simpson (21.88) and Holland’s Jasper Van Mierlo (21.99).
In the heats, Bovell was the fourth fastest qualifier, after he topped heat six of seven in 21.81 seconds, ahead of Nystrand (21.92), Van Mierlo (21.97), Sweden’s Petter Stymne (22.26), Holland’s Geert Lantink (22.65), Sweeden’s Robin Andreasson (22.75), Finland’s Toni Kurkinen (22.87) and Singapore’s Kai Quan Yeo (22.98).
The top qualifiers were Ervin (21.48), To (21.55) and Liukkonen (21.60), the top three swimmers in heat seven, while Simpson (21.89) was fourth in the same heat. Target won heat five in 21.95 seconds.
Last week in Doha, Bovell sped home in 21.06 seconds, just behind Ervin (21.02) while Australian Kyle Richardson got bronze in 21.54 seconds.
A week earlier, the trio also finished 1-2-3 in Dubai with Ervin winning in 21.18 seconds, followed by Bovell (21.23) and Richardson (21.58).
On Saturday, Bovell, swimming out of lane three, in the eight-man final touched the wall in 51.56 seconds to beat Australians, Kenneth To (51.75) and Kyle Richardson (52.78) into second and third spot respectively for his first gold of the World Cup.
The time by Bovell, bettered his 51.87 clocked while claiming silver behind To (51.58) last week in Doha, Qatar while South Africa’s Darian Townsend got bronze in 52.76 seconds.
Bovell’s swim was also the best performance of the finals’ session, which corresponded to 954 points while To had the second best result of the day, 943 points.
The gold medal did not seem possible for Bovell at the half-way point of the race as he found himself in eight spot with a split of 24.56 seconds while To (23.47), Richardson (23.92) and Townsend (23.98) were in the medal positions.
However, Bovell, a 2004 Olympic bronze medal winner in the 200m individual medley and the third fastest qualifier for the final turned up the heat in the second-half of the race with a 27 seconds race home to end To’s run of two-straight gold medals.
Next up for Bovell is the Moscow, Russia leg of the World Cup October 17-18, followed by Berlin, Germany, October 20-21; Beijing, China, November 2-3; Tokyo, Japan, November 6-7 and Singapore, November 10-11.
By Nigel Simon
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Minister of Sport Anil Roberts has extended his congratulations to ace TT swimmer George Bovell III after he picked up his second gold medal yesterday at the FINA World Cup in Stockholm, Sweden.

The 2004 Olympic bronze medallist won the 100m Individual Medley (IM) in fine style on Saturday with the eighth fastest time ever then returned to the pool yesterday to splash to gold in the 50m freestyle in a scintillating 20.82.

Speaking to Newsday yesterday, Roberts commended the TT athlete who shattered his personal bests and national records in both swims.

“Another fantastic swim with a new national record and personal best. He’s been doing extremely well in the Wold Cup meet and is getting faster with each race. He’s ranking at almost number one in the world in the short course,” a delighted Minister declared.

Prior to the Stockholm meet, Bovell had earned four silver medals at the two previous World Cups and Roberts believes he could have won gold in those tournaments as well.

“He’s been doing extremely well head-to-head with former Olympic gold medallist (and American swimmer) Anthony Ervin and I actually thought he had beaten him in Doha but Ervin used his experience at the end to get the victory,” he said.

Roberts also stressed that Bovell still has a lot to offer on the international circuit despite him coming home empty-handed for the second straight Olympics two months ago. There were some calls for Bovell to retire but Roberts was adamant that the 29-year-old still has the capability to produce the goods.

“He is off to Russia (for the next World Cup) and I hope he can continue that good form but I’m not so sure how much faster he can go though. You always have the critics but it’s an anaerobic event and as long as he can stay motivated he will continue to do well. It’s not an aerobic event and as far as sprinting goes, he has a lot to offer and can keep getting faster. I am very happy for him and Trinidad and Tobago should be proud of him. I look forward to gold in Russia,” he remarked.

By Stephon Nicholas

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

Trinidad and Tobago's George Bovell produced the best performance of the finals when winning the men's 100 metres individual medley gold medal, yesterday, opening day of the two-day FINA/Arena Swimming World Cup 2012 meet, in Stockholm, Sweden.

Bovell has now picked up five medals in three World Cup meets. He had previously earned silver in the 50m freestyle and 100 IM at both the Dubai and Doha World Cup meets.

Yesterday, the 29-year-old four-time Olympian produced a new T&T record and a career-best 51.56 seconds in the 100 IM to beat 20-year-old Australian Kenneth To. The young Australian had earned gold in both Dubai and Doha. Bovell's previous best in the 100 IM was 51.87 seconds, set in Doha when he trailed To in the final. Another Australian, 25-year-old Kyle Richardson was third yesterday in 52.78 seconds, with South African Darian Townsend fourth in 53.04.

Bovell's gold medal performance corresponded to 954 points, and made him the overall best performer in yesterday's finals.

To, who won in Doha in 51.43 seconds, had to be content this time with the silver in 51.75. He produced the second best result of the day, and earned 943 points. The best three performers on day one were Bovell, To and Japanese Daiya Seto, winner of the men's 400 IM in 4:00.85 (934 points).

Earlier in the day, Bovell qualified for the 100 IM final when finishing second to Brazilian Henrique Rodrigues in heat four, which produced three of the four fastest qualifiers for the championship race. To was the overall fastest qualifier when winning heat five in 53.20 seconds. Rodrigues (53.33 ) was overall second best qualifier when beating Bovell (53.49) into second and Swede Simon Sjodin (53.66) into third. The Brazilian finished only sixth in the final.

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

Great Britain's Christopher Jemmings, riding for Rapha Condor, turned what was expected to be a great night for local cycling into an anti-climax when he came home an impressive winner of the Beacon Cycling on the Avenue featured 36-lap event, at Ariapita Avenue, Woodbrook, on Wednesday.

Jemmings came home ahead of teammates Michael Cummings and Christian House for a Rapha Condor 1-2-3, after the British trio lapped the peloton--including Olympian Njisane Phillip and consistent Jamaican Marloe Rodman--four laps from the finish in an excellent display of team riding.

Jemmings and House, along with Rafmon Mecalfab's Jason Perryman, of Barbados, and Andrew Carr of Vita Malt initiated a four-man break on the seventh lap, and went on to open a 25-second lead on the main pack before dropping Carr on lap 12.

Cummings connected with his teammates on the 32nd lap, and the trio successfully distanced themselves from the persistent Perryman while proceeding to lap the main bunch.

House led at the bell, but his exertions took a heavy toll and he could not counter the sprint by Jemmings and Cummings on the final lap.

The trio hit the finish line well clear of Perryman, Canadian Jean Michel Lechance (Vita Malt), Dominican Republic's Augusto Sanchez (Vita Malt), Jamaican Linford Blackwood (Team Trek) and Rafmon's Alexander Gibbon, the only other riders to finish after the main bunch was called out by officials after being lapped.

In the women's four-lap race, Keanna Lester emerged victorious, finishing ahead of Jamaican Dahlia Palmer (Sonics) and Antigua's Tamiko Butler (Rafmon).

Results

Open 36-lap: 1. Christopher Jemmings (Rapha Condor) 2. Michael Cummings (Rapha Condor) 3. Christian House (Rapha Condor)

Open 300m Sprint: 1. Marloe Rodman (Rafmon) 2. Adam Alexander (Team Foundation) 3. Kerron Bramble (Rigtec Sonics)

Ladies 4-lap: 1. Keanna Lester (Bike Smith) 2. Dahlia Palmer (Sonics) 3. Tamiko Butler (Rafmon)

Juniors 4-lap: 1. Hugo Cathy (Great Britain) 2. Kwesi Browne (Arima Wheelers) 3. Urba Bourne (Southampton)

Masters 40+ 4-lap: 1. Roger Smart (Madonna) 2. Curtis Juteram (Team Trek) 3. David Tardieu (Slipstream)

Masters 50+ 4-lap: 1. Cyril Fook (Parkside) 2. Martin Wharwood (Hummingbird) 3. Andy Chambers (Corkie's Casual)

Juveniles 4-lap: 1. Akil Campbell 2. David Moore 3. Aidan Redhead

By Donstan Bonn

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

The USADA on Wednesday released its report on the case against the US Postal team and Armstrong, the seven-time winner of the Tour de France, describing the affair as a “tragedy”. The explosive document included sworn testimony from 26 people, including 11 of Armstrong’s former teammates on US Postal. The USADA said these teammates had admitted their own doping and say that Armstrong doped, encouraged doping and administered doping products on the team. The Agency added that the evidence showed that the team ran the “most sophisticated, professionalised and successful doping program that sport has ever seen”.

Thursday saw USA Cycling hand six-month bans to the five American cyclists who testified against Armstrong after they confessed to using performance enhancing drugs. Tom Danielson, George Hincapie, Levi Leipheimer, Christian Vande Velde and David Zabriskie all agreed to serve six-month suspensions as part of a plea bargain to provide sworn testimony to the USADA.

Nike, which has long sponsored Armstrong and his Livestrong charity, reissued the statement it released in August. That statement was released after Armstrong, who has repeatedly denied doping, was banned for life by the USADA after he announced he would end his fight against its doping charges. Nike said: “We are saddened that Lance Armstrong may no longer be able to participate in certain competitions and his titles appear to be impacted. Lance has stated his innocence and has been unwavering on this position. Nike plans to continue to support Lance and the Lance Armstrong Foundation, a foundation that Lance created to serve cancer survivors.”

Meanwhile, Major League Soccer (MLS) club Sporting Kansas City has said its stadium will continue to bear the name of the Livestrong foundation following the latest developments in the Armstrong case. Sporting KC’s 18,500-seat Livestrong Sporting Park has borne the name of the organisation under an innovative naming rights partnership struck in advance of its opening in June 2011. Livestrong does not pay for the right to associate its name with the venue in a deal that instead sees the club committed to donate US$7.5 million in stadium revenues to the organisation over six years. Livestrong is a branch of the Lance Armstrong Foundation, which was formed in 1997 by the cancer survivor to support those affected by the disease.

Sporting KC chief executive Robb Heineman in August maintained that the deal would remain in place and repeated this statement at the Leaders in Football conference on Thursday. “The reason we created the partnership was for everyone affected by cancer and the 80 million members of Livestrong worldwide,” said Heineman. “That is how we think of the relationship with the brand. The Lance information is less relevant around our partnership. It is really about the 28 million cancer survivors worldwide and what we can do to support them. It is more around the mission with that brand and the relationship we have with the brand. It truly is about helping those afflicted with cancer and the lifestyle they live with every day.”

-Matt Cutler

Source: www.sportbusiness.com

Australia men's and women's Rugby Sevens captains, Ed Jenkins and Rebecca Tavo, were offered a tantalising glimpse into the life of an Olympian when they met up with three-time Olympic medallist, swimmer Melanie Schlanger, ahead of the Gold Coast Sevens.

A resident of the Gold Coast, Schlanger won gold in the 4 x 100m freestyle relay, and silver in both the 4 x 200m freestyle and 4 x 100m medley at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

"Every time I look at these medals it brings back all the memories, so it's something that I'm going to cherish for a long time," said Schlanger.

"It's really exciting that the Sevens is going to be in the next Olympics and they get a chance to chase that dream, and it is a big dream. I really hope that they can experience it," added Schlanger, who was excited to welcome Rugby Sevens athletes into the Australian Olympic family.

"Any time you get to associate yourself with another Olympic sport is exciting and the Rugby Sevens is such an action-packed game that it's going to be really great to be a part of the Olympics, to bring that fun atmosphere to the Games and intermingle that with the other sports as well. It's going to be great.

"Receiving an Olympic medal is something you can't fully describe in words, just that feeling is overwhelming and to sing your national anthem on top of an Olympic dais is the pinnacle of sport, in my opinion,” added Schlanger.

Having helped Australia to victory at the first Rugby World Cup Sevens for women in 2009, Rebecca Tavo is a reigning World Champion. She will soon embark on the first IRB Women's Sevens World Series, which she hopes can act as a key stepping stone on the Road to Rio.

"Just standing here next to Melanie is awesome, I hope to be like her one day and achieve what she has achieved," said Tavo.

"It's definitely a dream and a lot of hard work is going to have to go in between now and Rio because we have such a new and young team. We're going to have to get some good experience and game time in the young girls' legs.”

Jenkins claimed a silver medal at the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi, and is dreaming of going one better in four years’ time.

"It would be huge. Just having seen and touched Mel's medals has made me a bit envious and I'll be doing everything I can to get to Rio," he said.

Schlanger, meanwhile, was looking forward to attending her first Rugby Sevens event, the Gold Coast Sevens on 13-14 October, which is round one of the new HSBC Sevens World Series.

"I'm really excited to see what it's all about and cheer on the Aussies," she said.

Source: irbsevens.com

Sprint champion Usain Bolt is among three Jamaicans shortlisted for the 2012 IAAF World Athlete of the Year award.

The back-to-back Olympic double sprint champion and world record holder is now on course to become the first man to win the prestigious award on four occasions.

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and Yohan Blake are the other Jamaicans among the 20 male and female candidates named by the IAAF.

Pryce successfully defended her 100m title at the London Olympics and finished second in the 200m.

Blake is a double Olympic silver medallist and a recipient of last year's Performance of the Year award.

Selected members of the international press and officials from the IAAF will help to choose three male and female finalists from the shortlist.

However, the Council of the International Athletics Foundation makes the final selection of male and female Athlete of the Year at a special ceremony in Barcelona, Spain, during the IAAF's centenary celebrations on November 24.

Bolt, who won the award in 2008, 2009 and again last year, was again in dominant form this season, winning the 100m and 200m titles at the London Olympics with times of 9.63 and 19.32, respectively.

He also won the 100m title on the lucrative Diamond League circuit and anchored Jamaica to a world record in the Olympic Games 4x100m relay.

Bolt and Moroccan great Hicham El Guerrouj are the only athletes to have won the award on three occasions.

Fraser-Pryce repeated her Beijing 2008 exploits in London, winning the 100m title, while finishing with silver medals in the 200m and 4x100m. She also won the 100m event in the Diamond League to wrap up another successful year.

Blake, who was recognised for his 19.26 200m run in Brussels at last year's awards ceremony in Monaco, claimed silver in the 100m and 200m in London and was also a part of Jamaica's record-breaking 4x100m team.

Grenada's world and Olympic 400m champion Kirani James is also among the athletes shortlisted for the 2012 World Athlete of the Year Award.

James won Grenada's first Olympic medal in London this summer, claiming the men's 400m title in 43.94 seconds—the fastest time for the year. —CMC

Team Beacon will become Trinidad and Tobago's first professional track cycling team to participate at a Track Cycling World Cup event, starting tomorrow in Cali, Colombia.

Promising sprinter Quincy Alexander, the Pan American kilometre time trial champion, Christopher Sellier, the current time trial national record holder, and national keirin champ Haseem McLean make up an impressive local-based team, sponsored by Beacon Insurance and Central Navigation Limited.

The team will be coached by Desmond Dickie, with Robert Farrier serving as manager/coach, and Ronald Dickie, manager. They are all under the umbrella of managing company Drive Phase Sport, which also includes Joseph Roberts (team secretary), Christopher Pitt (mechanic) and Don Gibbon (executive member).

The riders, who will compete in all sprint events—match sprint, keirin and kilometre time trial— left T&T on Monday for Colombia.

The team is concentrating on helping its elite riders prepare for qualification events leading to the 2016 Olympic Games, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It will also focus on helping develop local riders.

Source: trinidadexpress.com

National men’s assistant coach David Camacho and senior team player and junior women’s assistant coach Saleem Ali are representing T&T at a Federation International Volleyball (FIVB) seminar for setters, which began in St John’s, Antigua, on Saturday. A total of 27 participants from the Caribbean are taking part.
The seminar is under the direction of FIVB instructor Tony Westman of Sweden and forms part of the development programme sponsored by Norceca Confederation through the Regional Development Centre in Dominican Republic.
The opening ceremony of the event was attended by Chet Greene president of the Olympic Committee of Antigua and Barbuda and Winston Williams, Minister of Sports.
Wilbur Harrigan, the president of the Volleyball National Federation, was also present in the company of Yoana Mota, vice director of the Regional Development Centre. In addition to T&T, the other participants, who come from countries of the Caribbean Zonal Volleyball Association (CAZOVA) and the Eastern Caribbean Volleyball Association (ECVA) zones, are from Anguilla, Antigua & Barbuda, Aruba, British Virgin Islands, Dominica, Saint Martin, Grenada, Haiti, Jamaica, Montserrat, St Eustatius, St Kitts & Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and Grenadines and Suriname.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Months of preparation will be tested today when T&T open their challenge in the Karbonn Smart Champions League T20 tournament against Yorkshire at the Supersport Park in Centurion, South Africa. With Yorkshire winning their opening match against Uva Next by five wickets yesterday, and only one team from Group B of the qualifiers going through to the main draw, T&T are in a virtual final. If they lose, they are on their way home early.
Yesterday morning T&T received a major boost with the arrival of their five West Indian players in the form of skipper Denesh Ramdin, Darren Bravo, Samuel Badree, Ravi Rampaul and Lendl Simmons. Manager of the team Omar Khan said,“The players on arrival were asked to hug the others in an effort to re-integrate back into the set-up. “They arrived here like a breath of fresh air and were keen to practice with the rest of the team although they were coming off a nine-hour flight from Sri Lanka.”
When the T&T players awoke yesterday morning at the Fire and Ice Hotel at Melrose Arch, they were greeted by thunder, lightning and plenty rain. However, by lunchtime the weather improved enough and they were ready to proceed to the Centurion ground. Just as they were about to leave, tournament organisers informed them that they wanted photos of all the players and this delayed them further.
They eventually took the half hour drive to Centurion for practice and everything went smoothly for the men from the Caribbean. “The players really enjoyed themselves at practice and this is when they are really dangerous. When they are enjoying their cricket they provide excellent performances and we are looking forward to that again.”
Khan said,“It is important that Ravi Rampaul and Samuel Badree continue the good work that they started in Sri Lanka. It’s different conditions here but the guys are professionals and I back them to adjust and give us some match winning performances. “The other guys in the squad are also well prepared for the challenge before them and they have been working a lot on their fielding leading up to this tournament. Fielding is key in this tournament and the guys are looking pretty sharp and this gives us confidence.”
Ramdin also spoke to the players and said he was very happy to be back amongst them. “I am very happy to rejoin you all and I would like to see that support coming from you all, as you had done in the past. We have two important games before us and let’s hit the ground running.” T&T will start as favourites to win this match because the opposition is missing their best batsman in Jonny Bairstow, as well as their best bowler in Tim Bresnan.
In their opening match yesterday, they did not miss the duo, as they easily defeated Sri Lanka’s Uva Next by five wickets to book their opening points. A win for them today will see them through to the main draw and T&T and Uva Next will be knocked out. The first ball will be bowled at 11.30 am T&T time, the second game of a double header. The first clash will see Hampshire CC against Auckland Aces.
Teams:
T&T: Denesh Ramdin (capt), Lendl Simmons, Adrian Barath, Evin Lewis, Jason Mohammed, Darren Bravo, Kevon Cooper, William Perkins, Sherwin Ganga, Rayad Emrit, Ravi Rampaul, Samuel Badree, Yannick Ottley, Shannon Gabriel and Navin Stewart.
Yorkshire Carnegie: Andrew Gale (capt), Moin Ashraf, Gary Ballance, Oliver Hannon-Daly, Dan Hodgson, Phil Jaques, Adam Lyth, David Miller, Steve Patterson, Azeem Rafiq, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Ryan Sidebottom, Iain Wardlaw and Dan Hodgson.
-Vinode Mamchan
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

NJISANE PHILLIP, the London Olympic Games men’s sprint semi-finalist, will feature in the Lion Sprint, one of the main races at today’s Beacon On The Avenue, which will be contested along Ariapita Avenue in Woodbrook.

The Lion Sprint will be a 300-metre event, and the American-based Phillip is expected to participate in his first race since he won the 30-lap event in the Newsday Cycling Classic on September 24, at the King George V Park in St Clair.

The day’s proceedings will get going at 7.30 pm with the route starting and finishing on the Avenue, between More Vino and Mike’s Bikes. The 1.2- kilometre course will see riders head west along the avenue to the Hasely Crawford Stadium, down Fitz Blackman Drive before moving back up on De Verteuil Street to the Avenue.

Another major race today will be the 36-lap international ride with riders vying for a $5,000 jackpot.

A number of foreign cyclists are due to compete today, including Peter Jacques, Christian House, Luke Grizell-Mellor, Chris Jemmings, Michael Cuming and Hugo Cathy (United Kingdom), Jean-Michael Lachance, Augusto Sanchez, Adam Carr and Logan Cornel (United States) and Marloe Rodman (Jamaica).

Newsday is one of the many sponsors for the Beacon Cycling On The Avenue, along with Beacon Insurance, Yoplait, National Lotteries Control Board (NLCB), Mike’s Bikes, Blue Waters, Dimes, Gatorade, Healthy Balance, Flow and Hyundai.

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

The Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation (TTFF) has defended All Sport Promotions chairman Anthony Harford against damming accusations made by Sports Minister Anil Roberts.

Speaking in Parliament last Friday, Roberts accused Harford of providing incomplete and faulty accounts pertaining to $11 million in Government funding issued to the TTFF in 2011. Roberts also accused Harford of paying himself $936,250 by claiming the sum for services rendered by All Sport Promotions. Harford has vehemently denied the accusations, saying that Roberts was not telling the truth.

Yesterday, the TTFF issued a press release in which it fully corroborated Harford's account. In the release, interim TTFF president Lennox Watson asked Roberts to withdraw his accusations against Harford.

"The TTFF wishes to place on record its disappointment with the disparaging remarks made against Mr. Anthony Harford, chairman of All Sport Promotions. The TTFF engaged the services of All Sport in July 2011 with the concurrence of the Ministry of Sport," the release said. "The TTFF further confirms that it received from All Sport a full statement of accounts for the entire allocation of $11 million dollars from the Government, plus an additional $1.3 million earned from sponsors, gate receipts etc. This document was presented on January 16th 2012 to the Ministry of Sport, delivered with a cover note requesting the Ministry to provide any queries, questions or suggestions within three (3) weeks so that the accounts could be audited. The TTFF is satisfied that All Sport has received only the funds agreed and that the company has worked tirelessly to improve the standard of administration of the game, through a professional and dedicated team.

"The TTFF also acknowledges that All Sport has continued to work for the development of the Sport without further payment until the Federation's position has improved. All Sport has funded four (4) camps and travel for the National Teams in the absence of Government or other funding. In the circumstances the TTFF feels the Minister should withdraw his statement."

By Ian Prescott

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

Lennox Watson, the acting president of the T&T Football Federation, has called on Minister of Sport Anil Roberts to withdraw statements he made about Anthony Harford, chairman of All Sport Promotions, during the budget debate in Parliament on October 5. During his budget contribution, Roberts claimed that the Auditor General had found over $6.4 million in financial discrepancies in the accounts managed by the Authorisation Committee of the T&TFF, chaired by Harford. However, Harford, who was accused of taking $936,000 as a payment to himself, said it was completely untrue.
Harford said the T&TFF executive told his company that owing to the departure of its special adviser, Jack Warner, it was strapped for cash, and asked All Sport to lower its fee. As a result, he said, “The fee allocated to All Sport was a mere $50,000 a month, which was way below market standard.” The T&TFF is now supporting Harford’s claims, and Watson has called on Roberts to withdraw his accusations. The T&TFF letter said the federation engaged All Sport in July 2011 with the concurrence of the ministry to set up a marketing and events division to handle a wide range of services, including:
•All sponsorship negotiation
•All match management for all national teams
•Handling a marketing secretariat with appropriate staff
•All camps, travel and issuing appropriate payments
•All Ministry of Sport funding
All Sport agreed to reduce its service fees when told there were no funds available at the time. The revised quote was 50 per cent of the original figure. The T&TFF said it received from All Sport a full statement of accounts for the entire allocation of $11 million from the Government, plus an addition $1.3 million earned from sponsors, gate receipts etc. This document was presented on January 16, 2012 to the Ministry of Sport, delivered with a cover note requesting the ministry to provide any queries, questions or suggestions within three weeks so that the accounts could be audited. The T&TFF said it was satisfied that All Sport had received only the funds agreed, and that the company had worked “tirelessly” to improve the standard of administration of the game through a professional and dedicated team. “In the circumstances,” it said, “the T&TFF feels the minister should withdraw his statement.”
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

T20 champs hailed by cricket world's press

WITH one notable, and understandable, exception, the cricket world's press yesterday welcomed West Indies' victory over Sri Lanka in the ICC World T20 final in Colombo on Sunday.

Reports in newspapers in Sri Lanka reflected disappointment in the host nation which was losing its fourth successive final in ICC World Cups. Elsewhere, the result was seen as a timely boost for West Indies cricket.

There was praise especially for Man-of-the-Match Marlon Samuels and captain Darren Sammy and focus on the team's uninhibited celebrations afterwards.

Every newspaper in the cricket-playing West Indies splashed the triumph over their front pages with pictures of West Indies' team celebrations.

Headlines such as "Never-say-die Windies stun Sri Lanka (Stabroek News, Guyana), "Marlon Samuels switches on power and West Indies surge to triumph" (London Times), "Gangham Style Windies stun Sri Lanka" (Indian Express), "Calypso Kings are back" (Deccan Chronicle, India) and "Calypso in Colombo" (The Independent, London) accompanied reports.

Stephen Brenkley in The Independent, England, wrote that it might be "pushing it a bit to suggest that West Indies erased ten years of pain in a single match last night. But their extraordinary victory…propelled by an equally extraordinary innings from Marlon Samuels, will reignite passion in the Caribbean where supporters had become wearily accustomed to failure, mediocrity, internal bickering and everything that cricket there is supposed not to be about."

Paul Newman and Sambit Lal followed the same theme.

"West Indies, for so long a poor imitation of their illustrious predecessors, brought hope of a long-awaited Caribbean revival with a thrilling victory against all the odds," Newman wrote in the London Daily Mail.

"West Indies cricket has endured such misery in the last two decades that it is impossible to grudge them their joy and certainly no other bunch of cricketers can express it with such panache and style," Lal commented on Cricinfo, the game's biggest website.

Vic Marks, the former England off-spinner, stated in the Guardian that "Sammy's team played with passion, commitment – at one point Chris Gayle sprinted 20 yards at full tilt in an attempt to prevent a second run – and skill".

Chloe Saltau (the Melbourne Age) described the "spontaneous outbreaks of celebratory jiving on the part of the West Indies, who put the fun back into the format that has changed from being frivolous to ultra-scientific".

"They brought calypso to cricket all those years ago. Now they've brought Gangnam style, and it worked wonders for these modern-day West Indies heroes", was how the Johannesburg Star put it .

Samuels' revival after two years serving an ICC suspension for alleged dealings with an Indian bookmaker was widely acknowledged.

"After a decade of promise, the chequered career of Marlon Samuels surged into credit last night with an extraordinary innings of power and nerve that turned the World Twenty20 final on its head and justified the faith placed in his talent and flair," Richard Hobson wrote in the London Times.

"No one celebrates cricket quite like the West Indies, but man of the World Twenty20 final Marlon Samuels must have wondered if he would ever celebrate again," Malcolm Conn stated in the Melbourne Herald-Sun. "It is no wonder then that in one of the most elaborate and unusual team celebrations ever staged after a tournament victory, Samuels was one of the main men."

While most Sri Lankan papers accepted defeat graciously but with disappointment, The Island laid the blame on one man.

Under the headline "Malinga horror brings misery to hosts", it wrote: "The best bowler in the shortest format of the game miserably failed to live up to expectations in the biggest cricketing spectacle Sri Lanka hosted in their history as the host nation choked. Perhaps, the IPL billionaire Lasith Malinga was wearing the wrong blue jersey yesterday".

Malinga, who also wears the blue of his IPL team Mumbai Indians, was taken apart by Samuels, conceding 54 runs from his four overs.

-Tony Cozier

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com