Caribbean champs off to flying start in ‘Worlds’ qualifier

TRINIDAD and Tobago recovered from a sluggish start to trounce Haiti in Cuba yesterday in the opening Group Q match in the third round of NORCECA (North, Central America and the Caribbean) qualifying for the Women’s World Volleyball Championships.

After losing the first set 25-17, the five-time Caribbean champions roared back to prevail 25-3, 25-9, 25-12. Led for the first time in a few years by Kelly Billingy, a fixture on the national team for over a decade, the T&T girls will oppose Curacao at 3 p.m. today and conclude the round-robin phase of the competition against hosts and favourite Cuba at 5 p.m. tomorrow.

The top two teams will clash the following day for a place in the World Championships in Italy in September and the Cubans and T&T, winners of the last four editions of the Caribbean Championships, are expected to be in this showdown.

However the runner-up as well as as the second-placed teams in the other four groups in the third round of NORCECA qualifying will square off for another place from June 2-9 in Trinidad. This country’s men have also reached the third round of qualifying and will be competing against Costa Rica, Panama and hosts Canada from tomorrow for a place in the World Championships in Poland from the end of August.

The second-placed team from this and the other three groups will also get another opportunity to advance as they are scheduled to do battle in either Mexico or Puerto Rico for the final NORCECA spot. No team from the English-speaking Caribbean has ever qualified for the World Championships.

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Last Friday (May 9) I had the good fortune to attend one of the best quality, and most enjoyable, athletics events I have ever been to. A particular highlight of the opening International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) Diamond League meeting of the season was the women's 3,000 metres won by Kenya's Hellen Obiri in one of the fastest races in history.

The large and enthusiastic crowd - both men and women - were on their feet at the end, cheering on the runners in a race that went right down to the finish line.

The fact that this took place in Doha is probably as much a surprise to you as it was to me.

I travelled to Qatar for the very first international athletics meeting held in the country in 1997, an event that did not feature any women, a fact which seems even stranger now than it did then. Back then, the offer of a trip to a country that I had barely heard of seemed a bit of a novelty, the opportunity to visit somewhere I would probably never get the chance to go to again.

The trip had its amusing moments. This included myself and a colleague from Fleet Street trying to find the bar in the Sheraton Hotel, the only good-standard hotel in Qatar at the time and certainly the only place that served alcohol. We had been told by someone who had stayed in the hotel a few months earlier that asking for the bar was a complete "no-no" in this strictly Muslim country and that we should instead seek directions to the "library".

Anyway, after we had arrived and freshened up, we decided to test this out. Off to reception we went. "Can you tell us where the 'library' is, please?" we asked. "Oh yes sir, I know exactly what you are looking for," the smiling gentleman behind the front desk replied. We were clearly all on the same page. Except, when we followed his instructions we couldn't find the "library".

We asked another member of staff and he offered to take us there himself. But my colleague's sense of relief soon evaporated when we were led to a corner of the lobby with a few dogged-ear copies of Miss Marple and Jeffrey Archer novels. This was too much for my friend. "I want a drink!!!!" he screamed at the poor porter who couldn't understand what he had done wrong. The bemused hotel worker replied: "Why didn't you ask for the bar then sir?"

The athletics itself was dull and forgettable. Besides, it felt wrong to be a meeting where there were no women on the track or among the spectators. Among the few women that were present that night was Nawal El Moutawakel, the Moroccan who had made history when she became the first woman from a Muslim country to win an Olympic gold medal when she came first in the 400 metres hurdles at Los Angeles 1984. She vowed then that if Qatar were to be part of the athletics family then it had to be on acceptable terms which did not include discrimination.

El Moutawakel, who in 1998 would be elected as a member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), spent four days after the event unsuccessfully trying to meet Qatar's then Emir, Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani. But a message was passed to one of the Emir's three wives, Sheikha Moza bint Nasser Al Missned. The modern-thinking Al Missned, who had already begun to assume a persona of her own, even as the Emir's other two wives remained virtually invisible, set the wheels in motion for the revolutionary move to allow women to compete.

So it was, that a year later - in what the IAAF had fittingly declared was the "Year of the Woman" - that myself and a group of colleagues travelled back to Doha to see history made. The honour of being the first female allowed to compete in Qatar fell to Finnish javelin thrower Mikaela Ingberg, winner of a bronze medal in the 1995 World Championships.

I remember the occasion like it was yesterday. A few whistles greeted Ingberg but they died quickly in the stiflingly warm air when she stood on the end of the runway. Wearing cycling shorts, a tee-shirt and a bandanna to cover her hair, she had clearly made an effort not to inflame hostility. She was rewarded with polite applause after her victory with a throw of 63.26 metres. Women competed in half-a-dozen events, the most impressive performance coming in the 100m where Jamaica's Beverly McDonald won in a personal best of 10.99sec. All the competitors were respectful of the local dress code.

"Above the amplified metallic voice, quavering and ancient, of the muezzin calling from the mosque, you could almost hear the breaths of astonishment," I wrote in The Guardian. It felt like a seismic moment in Qatar's history but even anyone there that night would have been surprised at the waves of change that have swept over the country since.

The crowd were almost exclusively male. But, fast forward 16 years to last Friday, and not only were women - now dressed in cut-off vests and shorts, as they would be at an event anywhere else in the world - prominent on the track, they were also hard to miss in the stands.

Many of the spectators were expat Kenyans and Ethiopians who work in Doha and had been given special time off to watch their heroes. But there were also a noticeable group of young Arab girls dressed stylishly in western denim - but with their heads covered - who were there to enjoy the athletics and the concert that took place at the end of the event.

There being a "crowd" was something of a novelty in itself to me. Back in 1997 and 1998 there were only a handful of spectators and even as recently as 2008, the last occasion I had attended an athletics meeting in Doha, the crowd was so small as to be embarrassing. I was particularly surprised on that occasion as the Qatari capital was bidding to host the 2016 Olympics and Paralympics and I imagined local officials would have ensured the stadium was full.

The decision to move the Diamond League event from the cavernous Khalifa International Stadium, renovated for the 2006 Asian Games, to the much more intimate 12,000-capacity Qatar SC Stadium has clearly boosted the event, as has a major marketing campaign aimed not only at attracting the locals but also the sizeable immigrant population, like the Kenyans and Ethiopians who ensured a memorable atmosphere.

The failure to get even on the shortlist for the 2016 Olympics and Paralympics led eventually to the Qataris switching their attention to the 2022 FIFA World Cup which they were, of course, controversially awarded. Conspiracy theorists will continue to cast doubt over their successful campaign, while treatment of the workers building the stadium will ensure Qatar remain uncomfortably in the spotlight all the way through the build-up to the tournament.

But, from what I have seen during my visits over the last 17 years, Qatar is a country willing to learn, adapt and embrace change. Before I left Doha last weekend it was announced that it had been awarded the 2018 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships, adding it to a portfolio of events that, besides the World Cup, also includes the 2014 International Aquatics Federation (FINA) World Short Course Swimming Championships, the 2015 Men's World Handball Championship and 2016 Cycling World Road Championships.

Its next target is the 2019 IAAF World Championships, where it faces opposition from Barcelona and Eugene. Doha would have had the event already if it had accepted an offer, in 2011, from the IAAF's ruling Council to award it the Championships after it had just narrowly been pipped by London for 2017. Stung by their disappointment at the time, they turned it down.

The bid this time is likely to be unbeatable. Yes, it will undoubtedly offer financial incentives in terms of prize money and travel that its rivals will be unable to match. But that should not detract from the fact Qatar deserves to be rewarded for the incredible progress it has made in less than half a generation. It has already hosted a successful IAAF World Indoor Championships in 2010 and has consistently proved that it is a valued member of the athletics family - just like El Moutawakel hoped one day it would become.

"I hope I am alive to see women being given credit here," she had told me in Doha at that historic meeting in 1998. "Religion is in the heart, not in the way you look and this athletics breakthrough is a momentous occasion. But we must take things gently and understand the culture we are dealing with."

Back then it seemed inconceivable to believe Qatar would ever be represented by a woman in an Olympics. But, at London 2012, its team included four, including rifle shooter Bahiya Al-Hamad, who carried the country's flag at the Opening Ceremony. At Rio 2016 there are likely to be even more women in the team.

It is not unjustified to believe that if El Moutawakel's determination to ensure that women had a future in sport in Qatar had not reached the ears of Sheikha Moza bint Nasser Al Missned then none of what has happened since then would have occurred, including Qatar being awarded the 2022 World Cup when Al Missned was centre stage at the celebrations. And to think it all began with a javelin throw.

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RASHAD BLENMAN of Guardian Group ran away with the Chancellor Challenge, the third athletic event of the CariFin Games, last Wedneday.

After missing the second stage - the Green Mile - Blenman returned to the Lady Chancellor Hill in St Ann’s to produce a late surge, to overtake John Donaldson of First Citizens and claim the gold medal.

According to Blenman, “even though I was way behind, I know eventually with patience and execution I would pull it off.”

Deodath Harrikissoon of First Citizens and Lee Hay of CITI are unbeaten so far in this four-part athletic series - Harrikissoon in the male walk and Hay as a female runner.

Their victories put them in a good position to take the full series especially if they can maintain winning in the last event. Natasha David of Republic Bank is enjoying her second win in this four-part series.

“My training has been harder this year. I expected more of a challenge but it was not there,” said Deodath Harrikissoon after the race.

One good thing about these three events it allows a participant in the series to gauge their performance, as persons prepare for the culminating event - The CariFin Cross Country which take place on June 8 at the Sevilla Golf Course, Couva.

This is the 23rd edition of the CariFin Games and the main purposes of these games is to promote health and fitness within the financial services sector of the Caribbean, as well as encouraging camaraderie, friendly rivalry, friendship and a platform to showcase athletics and sporting excellence.

The Organising Committee have extended their gratitude to Blue Waters for being “The Official Water” for CariFin Games for their generous support.

The nine teams participating in CariFin Games this year are - CITI, First Citizens, Guardian Group, IBL Bank, Republic Bank, RBC, Sagicor, Scotiabank and Unit Trust Corporation.

For more information about CariFin games, persons can check out www.carifinonline.com or send an e-mail to wayneroberts445@gmail.com, or even call 487-9487.

Carifin Games Chancellor Hill Results (groups in brackets) -

Male Runners - 1. Rashad Blenman (Guardian Group) 14:50.7; 2.John Donaldson (First Citizens) 15.05.1; 3.Jean-Marc De Boulet (Sagicor) 15.35.3.

Female Runners - 1.Lee Hay (CITI) 18:41.1; 2.Susan Russell (RBC Bank) 19:59.6; 3.Simone Balkisissoon (Sagicor) 20:17.8.

Male Walkers - 1.Deodath Harrikissoon (First Citizens) 20.38.7; 2.Clement Jubrajsingh (RBC Bank) 22:42.8; 3.Terrance Worrel (RBL Bank) 23:33.8.

Female Walkers - 1.Natasha David (RBL) 11.01.0; 2.Roxanne James (First Citizens) 11.32.0; 3.Judy Alexander (Sagicor) 25.26.6.

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Following a victorious finale to the HSBC World Sevens Series for New Zealand in London, the All Blacks 7s now turn their attentions to the Commonwealth Games where they have never lost the gold medal

With their 12th World Series title safely in tow, the New Zealand sevens team quickly turned their attention to another Commonwealth Games gold medal today.

Gordon Tietjens' men arrived in Auckland after success in London capped off another stellar season.

Last year, the team captured the overall crown with two tournament wins; this year they improved consistency to be champions in five of the nine events.

Downtime isn't common with these blokes, though.

After enjoying one week off they will resume training in Mt Maunganui, before trials are held in early June, when 20 hopefuls will be trimmed to 14. The players will then travel to Amsterdam, where the squad will train for one week prior to the Games.

A final 12-strong squad will assemble at the athletes' village in Glasgow.

"We've only got a couple of weeks to prepare for that," Tietjens said. "Most of this squad will make the Com Games but we've still got a bit of work to do."

A number of Super Rugby players, including the Blues' utility Lolagi Visinia and midfielder Pita Ahki, are expected to put their hand up to contest a fifth successive gold medal.

"There's a lot of emphasis on the gold medal," he said. "With a view to the Olympics in 2016, that's another reason why players are already expressing an interest to be involved in sevens rugby now."

At the last Commonwealth Games in Delhi, Tietjens had All Blacks Liam Messam, Ben Smith and Hosea Gear at his disposal.

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Jamaica House during this year's Commonwealth Games in Glasgow will be located at the 29 private members club, it has been revealed.

The club, situated in Royal Exchange Square in the heart of Glasgow, will be Jamaica's hospitality and media hub during the Games and is set to host two exclusive media and travel-trade client events, according to the Jamaica Tourist Board.

There will be two giant screens in the two-storey 29 club and special events will be organised around the men's and women's 200 metres finals on Thursday July 31 and the men's and women's 4x100m and 4x400m relay finals on Saturday August 2 at Hampden Park.

Jamaican athletes, including Olympic and world 100m champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, are expected to compete in the track and field events at Glasgow, along with the likes of double world and Olympic sprint relay champion Nesta Carter and 400m hurdler Kaliese Spencer.

Glasgow 2014 organisers are still optimistic Usain Bolt, the six-time Olympic champion and world record holder for the 100m and 200m, will also make an appearance at Hampden Park, with the 27-year-old yet to decide whether to make his Commonwealth Games debut this year.

The Jamaican athletics squad for Glasgow 2014 is due to be announced following the conclusion of the Jamaican National Championships in Kingston, scheduled to take place from June 19 to 22.

At Delhi 2010, Jamaica won seven medals in total, all coming in athletics events with Lerone Clarke taking the men's 100m gold and Trecia Smith claiming the women's triple jump crown.

The Jamaica House Glasgow is being hosted in partnership with UK independent travel group Barrhead Travel.

During the Games, due to take place from July 23 to August 3, non-members of the 29 club can take part in special activities in Royal Exchange Square which will be transformed into a "mini-Jamaica" for everyone to "Get All Right", the Jamaica Tourist Board have revealed.

Jamaica has also teamed up with its tourism partners to give away a number of prizes, including holidays, courtesy of Jewel Resorts, Secrets Resorts & Spas, Sandals Resorts and Virgin Atlantic Airways.

"Jamaica has a long history of involvement in the Commonwealth Games and was host nation in 1966," said Jamaica Tourist Board's regional director for UK and Northern Europe Elizabeth Fox.

"This Jamaica House event will be our reward to those journalists and clients who have supported Jamaica over the years and helped to make our island one of the most popular holiday destinations for Brits to jet off to."

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Trinidad and Tobago’s Lalonde Gordon sent out a stern warning to his Commonwealth Games rivals with a fast run at the International Meeting, in Guadeloupe, on Saturday.

The double Olympic bronze medallist clocked 44.91 seconds for victory in the men’s 400 metres, beating Bahamian Olympic 4x4 gold medallists, Ramon Miller (45.21), Chris Brown (45.23) and Demetrius Pinder (45.59) into second, third and fourth, respectively.

Another T&T runner, Jarrin Solomon was seventh in 46.24 seconds.

The 44.91 run--Gordon’s 2014 400m outdoor opener--earned him seventh spot on this season’s world outdoor performance list, one spot behind his fellow-T&T athlete, Deon Lendore (44.90). The reigning world champion and 2008 Olympic gold medallist, American LaShawn Merritt is the world leader at 44.44.

Michelle-Lee Ahye was also in fine form on Saturday in Guadeloupe. Running into a 1.8 metres per second headwind, the T&T sprinter stopped the clock at 11.17 seconds to strike gold in the women’s 100m, the impressive dash moving her into 11th spot on the 2014 performance list.

American Tori Bowie (11.26) was second, while third spot went to Jamaica’s Schillonie Calvert (11.44).

T&T’s Mikel Thomas finished fourth in the men’s 110m hurdles in 14.01 seconds. American Dominic Berger got home in 13.48 for an easy victory, ahead of 18-year-old French hurdler Wilhem Belocian (13.78), and another Frenchman, 2005 world champion Ladji Doucoure (13.79).

At the Florida State University (FSU) Twilight meet, in Florida, USA, T&T’s Kai Selvon captured the women’s 100m title in 11.29 seconds.

In Virginia, Ade Alleyne-Forte clocked 46.66 for sixth spot in the American Track League men’s 400m.

At the Sun Belt Conference Championships, in Texas, Kashef Daniel cleared the bar at 2.15 metres to equal the T&T men’s high jump record, the effort earning the Arkansas State University student gold. Daniel and Kevin Huggins share the national record. Huggins established the standard back in 2007, while Daniel matched his jump in February this year.

In Pennsylvania, Steve Waithe won the Jim Thorpe Open men’s triple jump event, the Pennsylvania State University student producing a 15.74m effort.

At the Eastern Illinois University (EIU) Last Chance Twilight meet, in Eastern Illinois, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee athlete Durell Busby topped the men’s 110m hurdles field in 13.56 seconds.

In Maryland, Coppin State University’s Haysean Cowie-Clarke emerged victorious in the Coppin State Invitational men’s 100m dash in 10.65 seconds.

Hilenn James triumphed in the Georgia Invitational women’s shot put with a 15.35m throw. She also won the discus, the University of Georgia student landing the implement 51.00m.

At the Oxy Invitational, in California, Magnolia Howell produced a 54.88 seconds run for bronze in the women’s 400m.

Emmanuel Callender finished fifth in the men’s 200m, at the National Training Centre (NTC) Pure Athletics Sprint Elite Meet, in Florida. The T&T sprinter clocked a wind-assisted 21.20 seconds. Callender also competed in the 100m “B” final, finishing sixth in 10.51. And Geronne Black was sixth in the women’s 100m “B” final, getting to the line in 11.58 seconds.

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TRINIDAD and Tobago will tackle Haiti in the opening match in Group Q when the third round of NORCECA (North, Central America and the Caribbean) qualifying for the Women’s World Volleyball Championship serves off in Cuba today.

The contest is scheduled for 3 p.m. and Cuba and Curacao, the other two teams in the group, will square off in the other match of the double header two hours later.

The winner of the tournament will qualify for the World Championships, but the runner-up will have another chance to book tickets to Italy for the tournament, which serves off on September 23.

Qualifying events are also taking place in Canada, Puerto Rico and the United States this week and in Puerto Rico next week and the second-placed teams in all five groups will do battle in a tournament in Trinidad from June 2-9 for another place.

T&T will oppose Curacao tomorrow and conclude their round-robin campaign against regional powerhouses Cuba on Friday.

The top two teams will then square off for a place in the World Championships when the tournament concludes on Saturday.

This country’s women are four-time defending Caribbean champions and are hoping to upset the Cubans with dangerous players like Kelly Billingy and the overseas-based Sinead Jack, last year’s Trinidad and Tobago Volleyball Federation Player of the Year, Channon Thompson, Darlene Ramdin and Krystle Esdelle.

T&T finished runners-up at this hurdle to get a last chance of qualifying  for the World Championships in Japan four years ago, but placed fourth and last in the runners-up tournament.  

No team from the English-speaking Caribbean has ever qualified for the World Championships. But Billingy, who is back as captain after passing the baton a few years ago, feels that history could be created this week and she pointed out that the Cubans “are in a rebuilding stage and we will go into that match quietly confident of our chances.”

Curacao and Haiti are long shots, but Billingy, who has been a member of the national team for well over a decade, stated that they should still be respected.

T&T’s men are also on the verge of history and their third round qualifying tournament will begin on Friday in Canada and will also involve Costa Rica, Panama and the host country.

The winners will advance to the “Worlds” in Poland at the end of August, but the runners-up of this group and the other three will play for another spot in the middle of July in either Mexico or Puerto Rico.

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UK Sport is to stop providing financial support to host the Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF) head office in London, in a decision that will take effect shortly after the body responsible for direction and control of the Commonwealth Games moves to new premises in the UK capital.

The decision to discontinue the £75,000-a-year ($126,300/€92,000) funding after September was taken at a Board meeting of the body, which mainly channels finance to Britain's elite Olympic and Paralympic athletes, on March 18.

UK Sport also decided to inform CGF at once, to provide it with "immediate clarity as it considers its future location".

The CGF, which has six full-time staff based in London, is obliged to move because its lease on offices at a building in Piccadilly owned by EON Productions, the film production company that makes the James Bond movies, is due to expire in July.

It plans to move to a location in Old Street in Shoreditch, and to base itself at offices run by CAN Mezzanine, a company which provides affordable office space exclusively for the social sector.

The move is expected to take place in June so staff are in situ and fully operational by the time the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games open on July 23.

But the organisation's longer-term future in London, its home since it was founded in 1932, is also under question.

Earlier this year, CGF President Prince Tunku Imran dropped controversial plans to relocate the offices to Kuala Lumpur after his initial proposal was criticised.

He has now commissioned an independent report to find out whether the CGF should remain in London or whether it would benefit financially and operationally from relocating.

The CGF is also in the process of selecting a new chief executive to replace Mike Hooper, who is due to step down in August after 14 years in charge.

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Trinidad and Tobago is at a very important period of time in its history. The good and positive aspects of Trinbagonian life are currently over shadowed as what we stand for as a people and a nation is under scrutiny. Our mettle and the courage of our convictions are being tested like never before.

Are we reaping what we sow?

Optimism and positivity has run into the brick wall of despair and fear as the red bullets create havoc.

This is the time for courage, fearlessness and an indomitable will. Sport must stand shoulder to shoulder with all law abiding and right thinking citizens in the effort to overcome the challenges.

Every death at the hands of the lawless and cold hearted is a stab at the heart of our beloved country. We must not succumb to the despair and hopelessness. We must be honest with ourselves. Crime is the symptom not the root cause.

No effort to build a better T&T can succeed without character and integrity.

Money can't buy integrity, peace of mind, genuine love, character, true loyalty and sustainable excellence. Money can’t buy the fierce and indomitable will bravery and courage needed to make a positive difference. Money can’t buy sincere passion and enthusiasm.

Given a choice between money and integrity what should the choice be?

What is the price of our integrity? What matters most? Some people claim that unsatisfied greed is destroying the fabric of our society and that integrity and character are now commodities to be traded.

Law abiding and right thinking citizens live in fear while those who have allowed selfish ambitions to close their minds and hardened their hearts against the best interest of the nation appear to have the advantage.

All who desire to make things better must wash their hands and purify their hearts. The battle is well and truly on. But regardless of how big the lead the criminal element may have at this time.

Fear not. We will not run the race in vain nor will our work be useless. We must press on in faithful service of our country.

We must be fearless in exposing those who do a disservice to the best interest of the country, its future and the youth of the nation.

We must maintain integrity towards the promise made to the youth of the nation and the unborn generation. Nation building has never and will never be easy. The history of mankind provides ample proof that many battles have to be fought, lost and won.

We will hit the bump in the road but we must not be discouraged. Nor must we compromise on our commitment.

To many, it doesn’t matter whether they follow the rules or break them as long as they come out on top. It doesn’t matter what kind of person you are as long as you get the job done. Moving up is more important than the way you move up.

An emphasis on results and money at the expense of character and integrity produces short term benefits and usually creates long term problems.

We will never lose if we emphasise that character and integrity are not negotiable.

Let’s focus on what matters; to be successful not just in what we do, but in who we are.

As much as we all want success and money if it comes at the expense of character and integrity the cost is too high as human life has little or no value.

This column extends deepest condolences to the family, friends and colleagues of Dana Seetahal SC.

Brian Lewis is president of the T&T Olympic Committee. The views expressed are not necessarily those of the Olympic Committee.

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A world class aquatic centre is currently under construction at Balmain, Couva, and this is expected to bring in tremendous revenue for the country.

The idea, a brainchild of Minister of Sport Anil Roberts, is expected to lead the way in terms of sports tourism and as champion olympic swimmer George Bovell III puts it: “There are many big countries with big budgets looking to come to this part of the world to prepare for big games. Here in T&T we have all the natural assets to make us attractive. We have lovely beaches, we have lovely weather and what was missing was a world class swimming facility. Now we have that on track and we are going to put all the elements together to make it work.

“Swimmers the world over can now come to T&T and experience the great weather, beaches and have this brilliant facility to prepare for big games. We have the 2016 Olympics in Brazil coming up and it would be great for athletes to come into T&T and quietly prepare for those games.”

The facility, which is earmarked for completion in May 2015, would be FINA certified and will include a full sized warm-up pool, a main competition pool and a diving pool. There will also be a dry-diving facility for use by children. The children will be able to perfect the art of diving in foam before they take to the water.

The Aquatic Centre is next to the Cycling Velodrome and the Ato Boldon Stadium. It is also within close proximity to the National Cricket Centre (NCC) in Couva, making the area the main hub of sports in the country.

Bovell III, this country’s most decorated swimmer said he has been making an input into the development of the centre and is very excited about it. “I have a construction and engineering background and given the fact that I have swam in the best pools in the world, I have been able to make an input in the development of the centre.”

Bovell III said the pool was promised to him since 2003 and he is greatful that he is still involved in the sport to use it when it’s completed. “Since 2003 I was promised an Olympic size swimming pool and nothing happened. I remember I used to joke and say that it will be called the ‘George Bovell III Memorial Swimming Pool’ and I would never be able to use it.

“I am happy now that we are getting this world class facility in Couva and that I am still involved in the sport, so I can train right here. I must say it speaks to the credibility of the minister of Sports Anil Roberts, in that he can sway the government of the day to build this facility. The Government must also be congratulated for the fact that they are putting their money where their mouth is.”

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On Wednesday and Thursday(14-15 May) at Olympic House, Lance Walker the Michael Johnson Performance(MJP) Centre Director of Performance and Drew Cuffee performance coach will deliver a follow up workshop for the 30 coaches from various national sporting disciplines  who attended the first  Bptt Michael Johnson Performance (MJP)Centre workshop  held  October last year.
Bptt corporate partner and supporter of the TTOC's Olympic Performance programme established the Michael Johnson Performance coach development workshop  to assist the preparation of T&T's Rio 2016 Olympic team.
The focus of the second workshop is to review and evaluate  the effectiveness of the respective  training programmes instituted by the local high performance and elite level coaches following  last year's first workshop .
Local athletes and national teams are in their  preparation phase for the upcoming Commonwealth Games in Glasgow and the Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing .
In the build up to Rio 2016  - the Commonwealth , Youth Olympics, CAC and Pan Am Games- are important events along the Olympic pathway.
The objective of  MJP workshops is aimed at providing local coaches with practical and innovative  high performance insight, information and knowledge into the mental and physical preparation, methods and approaches required in the quest for Olympic and World level success.
Michael Johnson , the four time Olympic champion and winner of nine World championship gold medals founded and established the Michael Johnson Performance centre in 2007.

And so it was in New York City, on or around November 6, the day when International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations, that the Olympic deal of the century so far began to be put together.

At a dinner with NBCUniversal (NBCU) executives, Bach says he floated the idea of a long-term partnership with a broadcaster that had already screened every Summer Games since 1988.

After a further get-together in Sochi, the 2014 Winter Olympic host, the finishing touches were put to a breathtaking $7.7 billion (£4.5 billion/€5.5 billion) deal for US broadcasting rights to the Olympic Games between 2021 and 2032 this week.

The whole process took just six months - and this at the instigation of a man fewer than 60 days into his new job at the time of his bold opening gambit.

If you wanted to quibble, you might say it was overdoing it a bit to claim, as the IOC did, that the agreement ensures the "long-term financial security" of the Olympic Movement.

The panjandrums of this singular world, after all, would grumble and groan if this were the only deal in town, leaving them to scrape by for 12 years on a mere $8 billion (£5 billion/€6 billion).

By agreeing to these terms with Comcast/NBCU, moreover, the IOC is accepting relatively conservative growth from its most lucrative broadcast market far into the future, in a period of dizzying technological change that could do almost anything to global viewing habits and therefore rights values.

As Comcast chairman and chief executive Brian Roberts understatedly acknowledged: "No-one can be quite sure what the world looks like in 2032".

What the deal has done, though - and it is no small thing - is secure far in advance perhaps 20 per cent of the revenue that the Movement would realistically want to have at its disposal over its 12-year span.

And, of course, the terms of this landmark agreement will inevitably colour negotiations on the web of smaller deals that Bach and his chief lieutenants will gradually begin turning their minds to.

As Bach said, bathing in the glow of what he described as a "happy day" for the whole Olympic Movement, "this kind of deal is not only about money".

Particularly since it comes so early in the German's Presidency, and at a time when a period of relatively quick-fire change on several fronts is expected, the agreement raises all manner of questions.

I would like to consider a few of them here:

Will strategic broadcasting deals of this sort of duration become more common?

Well, as people get used to being able to watch what they like, when they like and, increasingly, where they like, you can see that this is likely to have certain consequences.

First, desirable content is likely to become ever more valuable; second, investment in technology is likely to become ever more onerous for media companies.

If these media companies are confident that content which is popular today will continue to be so in a decade or two's time - and the Olympics appears to fall into this category - you can understand why a desire to capture reliable income streams to justify and pay for costly capital investment might make long-term agreements attractive.

Of course, if you are in something for the long haul, you must be sure you are comfortable with your partner.

But the IOC and NBCU have now worked together long enough to know each other warts and all. This is even though Comcast is a relatively recently-arrived owner, having announced its intention to acquire a majority stake in NBCU in late-2009; it now has full ownership.

The nature of this deal and the logic underpinning this sort of strategic partnership in the right circumstances has certainly got me wondering whether the IOC might not even now be quietly engaged on discussions with other trusted partners to gauge whether a long-term contract might be mutually beneficial for them too.

What does this deal tell us about Bach's preferred management style?

In the early stages, Bach's Presidency has been positively collegial, with everyone encouraged to chip in to the Olympic Agenda 2020 reform debate.

This, though, looks to have been decision-making by kitchen cabinet, with the IOC President accompanied at the initial New York dinner by just two senior IOC officials - Christophe De Kepper, director general, and Timo Lumme, managing director, television and marketing services.

"We kept it among the three of us," Bach confided this week.

Indeed, the composition of IOC Commissions, such as the TV Rights and New Media Commission, charged with "preparing and implementing the overall IOC strategy for future broadcast rights negotiations" - which Bach himself will chair - for 2014 was not even announced until last month.

There are perfectly sound reasons, notably to avoid leaks and promote nimble decision-making, for restricting information flow to a favoured few in this way.

But I wonder if this might not lead to a greater tendancy among IOC members and others to take the Presidency's apparent collegiality with more of a pinch of salt.

If it does, it could in turn colour the Olympic Agenda 2020 process as it gears up to make some particularly big calls affecting the Movement's future around the end of the year.

Is the deal likely to have any impact on plans for a new Olympic TV channel?

Not directly; the feasibility study that Bach indicated he expected to have delivered "in the next couple of weeks" will have a more direct bearing.

I would not though be in the slightest bit surprised, if the undertaking gets the green light, to see Comcast somehow involved in bringing it to fruition.

Presumably, after all, one of the chief aims of a dedicated channel would be to get more people watching Olympic-related content in between Games, rather than when Games are on.

In this way, the venture should be complementary to the interests of Olympic rights-holders, if sensibly handled.

Does the deal increase the chances of the United States hosting a Summer Games in the near future?

If your definition of "the near future" embraces the 2020s, then undoubtedly yes.

Mark Lazarus, chairman of the NBC Sports Group, was completely justified in stating this week that "our success with the Games has never been contingent on the location of those Games".

But, seen in the context of the rapprochement between the IOC and the US that has been gathering momentum since October 2009, when President Barack Obama was tempted to Copenhagen for the 2016 host-city vote only for Chicago to be eliminated first, this deal has the feel of a pretty big statement.

United States Olympic Committee (USOC) chairman Larry Probst indicated this week that we should know by the end of 2014 if there will be a US bidder for the 2024 Summer Olympics and Paralympics, the next one available after Tokyo's win in the 2020 contest.

If Bach does not find himself heading to the US in 10 years' time for what may very well be the last Games of his Presidency, then a strong US candidate could be all but unassailable in 2028.

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National cyclist Njisane Phillip showed his sprinting prowess on Friday night, breaking his own track record in the elite men’s flying 200-metre sprint on day five of the National Track Championships at the Arima Velodrome. Njisane, representing the Rigtech Sonics cycling club, previously held the record of 10.707 seconds. He crushed the mark, stopping the clock in 10.640 seconds to win gold. Team Drive Phase Sport cyclist Quincy Alexander had to settle for second place with a time of 10.820 seconds, while Arima Wheelers (AWCC) rider Kwesi Browne came third (11.050).

In the flying 200m junior men, Njisane’s young teammate Akil Campbell continued his stellar form to capture the event. Campbell finished ahead of Sei Daniel (AWCC) and Jerron Loubon (Southhampton) to cop the gold. On the opening night of the championships, Campbell won the junior men’s three km individual pursuit in a new track record. Yesterday, the team sprint, the scratch races (elite, juniors, masters) and keirin events (elite, juniors) were carded to take place from 1 pm.

Results

Flying 200m Elite Men
1 Njisane Phillip (Sonics—10.640 new track record); 2 Quincy Alexander (Team DPS—10.820); 3 Kwesi Browne (AWCC—11.050); 4 Azikiwe Kellar (Testi Cicli—11.180); 5 Justin Roberts (Team DPS—11.225)

Flying 200m Elite Women
1 Aziza Browne (AWCC—13.260); 2 Jodi Goodridge (AWCC—13.406); 3 Denese Francis (AWCC—13.786)

Flying 200m Junior Men
1 Akil Campbell (Sonics—12.139); 2 Sei Daniel (AWCC—12.583); 3 Jerron Loubon (Southampton—12.639)
Elite Men Sprint Overall
1 Njisane Phillip (Sonics); 2 Quincy Alexander (Team DPS); 3 Kwesi Browne (AWCC); 4 Azikiwe Kellar (Testi Cicli); 5 Jude Codrington (Team DPS)

Elite Women—Sprint
Overall Standings
1 Jodi Goodridge (AWCC); 2 Aziza Browne (AWCC); 3 Denese Francis (AWCC)

Junior Men—Sprint
1 Akil Campbell (Sonics); 2 Jerron Loubon (Southampton); 3 Sei Daniel (AWCC)

Junior Women—Sprint
1 Keiana Lester (Bike Smith); 2 Kollyn St George (Slipstream); 3 Joy-Abigail John (AWCC)

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Hasely Crawford, T&T's first Olympic gold medallist warned the senior national women’s volleyball team that there was no shortcut to success as he delivered a motivational speech to the team on Tuesday at the Jean Pierre Sports Complex, Mucurapo.

The Francisco “Panchee|” Cruz coached T&T team, ranked 31st in the world left yesterday, for La Habana, Cuba to compete in the FIVB Women’s World Champion Third Round NORCECA Group Q four-team qualifying series involving the host, Curacao and Haiti from Wednesday until Saturday.

The other Third Round Women qualifying groups are Group P (Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guadeloupe) from May 13 to 19 in Santo Domingo; Group O (USA, Panama, Guatemala, Honduras) from May 13 to 19 in USA; Group S (Canada, Mexico, US Virgin Islands and Jamaica) from May 14 to 20 in Canada and Group R (Puerto Rico, Costa Rica, St Lucia, Barbados) from May 20-26 in Puerto Rico.

At the end of the five round-robin groups, each group winner will qualify to the FIVB World Championship in Italy later this year while the second placed teams in each group advances to the final qualification round in T&T at the Jean Pierre Complex, Mucurapo from June 2 to 9.

Crawford, who won gold in men’s 100m at the 1976 Montreal Olympics, told players that being a great athlete involved hard work, a good diet, plenty rest and listening to your coaches.

He said even when what the coach says may seem to make no sense, it was still important to listen.

He noted that the major sacrifice was being able to put your social life on hold. He promised that with those elements well executed their lives can change forever as his did.

He said, “Wow! You ladies are beautiful with fit bodies, so the temptations will be there to dress up and step out", but he pleaded with them that," with hard work and sacrifice, the world will be their platform to have all sorts of exciting experiences if they choose to make the sacrifices and do the hard work now, not later, but now".

He strongly stressed with fists clenched and eyes closed: “Take your body beyond as I did and you will be successful."

Reflecting on his own sacrifices as an athlete, Crawford pointed that after the hard work, pain and tears, his life has been blessed and wonderful.

He boasted, “Being a disciplined athlete who stayed focused and worked hard brought me all the glory and good things life had to offer, which surpassed even my own expectations.

Taking examples of other top local athletes, Crawford said, “Take example from your peers in sport, who are doing well currently, like Jehue Gordon and Keshorn Walcott.

“Man these "fellas" set for life ", but more importantly check how they have stayed focused and humble.”

Crawford also praised T&T’s Cuban-born coach, Cruz, his current assistant and fellow Cuban Idamis Gato, a" volleyballer" who represented Cuba at The Olympics.

Tournament fixtures



Wednesday: Haiti vs T&T, 3pm; Cuba vs Curacao, 5pm

Thursday: T&T vs Curacao, 3pm; Cuba vs Haiti, 5pm

Friday: Curacao vs Haiti, 3pm; Cuba vs T&T, 7pm

Saturday: Third vs Fourth; 3pm; First vs Second, 5pm

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Outgoing Executive Committee members of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) will no longer be able to vote in the organisation's elections, it has been announced following its 67th Annual General Meeting (AGM).

The removal of automatic voting rights was unanimously backed by national sport organisations and by TTOC Executive Committee members present during the AGM held at Olympic House in Port-of-Spain.

The move means that to be eligible to vote in future, outgoing elected Executive committee members must now be a duly accredited delegate representing a financial and voting member affiliate.

TTOC President Brian Lewis helped to push through the new ruling claiming it will create a more free and fair process for electing officials to the organisation.

Lewis, elected TTOC President in May last year, replacing Larry Romany who had served the maximum two terms, revealed the move to take away voting rights had been made following consultation with Jerome Poivey, head of institutional relations and governance at the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

"The previous position allowed outgoing officers to have an advantage that could be deemed unfair and undemocratic," said Lewis, who reigned as TTOC secretary general after 17 years, to contest the election last May.

"It was discussed with the IOC legal department [and] Jerome Poivey since last year.

"This is my first AGM as President and I wanted to ensure the change was made.

"The TTOC in respect of sport governance and leadership must be above reproach and must set the standard and example for good governance, democracy, equity, transparency and accountability.

"The national sport organisations and the TTOC Executive supported the change and they deserve credit for that.

"My hope is that other national sport organisations will follow."

Lewis defeated Richard Young in last year's Presidential election by 29 votes to 16.

Following those elections he was joined on the current Executive Committee by vice-Presidents David Inglefield and Dr Terry Ali, while Annette Knott, who served as Trinidad and Tobago's Chef de Mission at London 2012, replaced him as secretary general with Diane Henderson as assistant secretary general.

J Tyrone Marcus was elected as TTOC treasurer, with Dr Ian Hypolite, Wendell Constantine and Garvin Warwick as Executive members, Kerston Coombs and Douglas Camacho as trustees and Romany as immediate past President.

The next TTOC elections are due to take place in 2017.

Member national sport organisations also approved the 2013 Annual Report and the audited financial statements during the AGM.

Trinidad and Tobago won four medals at London 2012, including an historic second ever gold when Keshorn Walcott.

He won the javelin competition to follow on from Hasely Crawford, the 100 metres champion at Montreal 1976.

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Machel Cedenio smashed the national junior (under-20) 400 metres record in George Town, Grand Cayman, late on Wednesday, scorching the track in 45.23 seconds to win the Cayman International Invitational men’s one-lap event.

The 18-year-old Trinidad and Tobago athlete finished ahead of American Torrin Lawrence, the runner-up in 45.34, and Jamaican Dane Hyatt (45.70).

Cedenio’s winning time was more than a half-second faster than the previous T&T boys’ under-20 record—the 45.74 run produced by Renny Quow to earn gold at the 2006 World Junior Championships in Beijing, China.

Cedenio, winner  of the 2013 and 2014 Carifta Games boys’ under-20 400m titles, is a big favourite for one-lap gold at the July 22-27 World Junior Championships, in Eugene, Oregon, USA. At the 2012 World Juniors in Barcelona, Spain, Cedenio finished fifth in the 400m final and helped T&T earn bronze in the 4x400m relay.

The 45.23 clocking is big improvement for Cedenio on his previous personal best of 45.93.

The young T&T quartermiler is the 2014 world junior leader, and enjoys a huge cushion on the two athletes who are joint-second on the performance list, Jamaican Nathon Allen and American Michael Cherry. Both Allen and Cherry have clocked 46.11 seconds this season.

Cedenio is also 13th on the overall 2014 world outdoor performance list. Reigning world champion LaShawn Merritt (44.44) of the United States, Grenada’s 2012 Olympic gold medallist Kirani James (44.60) and Dominican Republic’s 2012 Olympic silver medallist Luguelin Santos (44.72) are the top three, while T&T’s Deon Lendore is fourth at 44.90.

Another T&T athlete, Jamaal James returned a time of one minute, 49.75 seconds to seize silver in the Cayman International Invitational men’s 800m event.

James just missed out on gold, Jamaican Jowayne Hibbert earning the top spot with a 1:49.69 clocking. Third spot went to another Jamaican, Ricardo Cunningham (1:50.12).

T&T’s Keston Bledman secured bronze in the men’s 100m dash in 10.29 seconds. Evergreen St Kitts and Nevis sprinter Kim Collins topped the field in 10.22, forcing American Harry Adams (10.24) to settle for second spot.

Romona Modeste finished fifth in the women’s 400m, the T&T athlete getting home in 54.49 seconds.

Novlene Williams-Mills dominated the field with a 50.26 run, finishing well ahead of her fellow-Jamaican Bobby-Gaye Wilkins-Gooden, the silver medallist in 52.93. Canadian Jenna Martin (53.91) and Bahamian Lenece Clarke (54.06) were third and fourth, respectively.

At the Horizon League Outdoor Championships, in Ohio, USA, on Sunday, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee student Durell Busby struck gold in the men’s 110m hurdles. The T&T athlete got to the line in 13.88 seconds.

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Lightweight Michael Alexander has qualified for the Central American and Caribbean Games (CAC) in Vera Cruz, Mexico, scheduled for November.

According to Trinidad and Tobago Amateur Boxing Association (TTABA) press release, Alexander and Stephanie Allen made the recent trip to Tiaman Mexico for the first CAC qualifier. Allen, however, was stopped in  the second round of her bout against the Central American champion from Costa Rica when the referee intervened..

Alexander fought Sparkinson Almonte of the Dominican Republic and lost 2-1, but with the Dominican Republic boxer being the gold medallist, Alexander  was one of the six boxers to qualify for the Games.

Meanwhile, the team selected for the Commonwealth Games, is scheduled to leave for a live-in camp in Cuba which is scheduled to begin on June 1.

Following are the boxers for the camp: Azariah Agard (Heavyweight),  Chimere Taylor  (Middleweight), Andrew Fermin  (Light-heavyweight), Patrice Kalloo  (Flyweight), Aaron Prince  (Middleweight), Stephen Charles  (Welterweight), Michael Alexander  (Lightweight), Shawn Joseph  (Bantamweight), Jean-Paul Cooper (Light welterweight), Justin Parris   (Junior)

In other news, TTABA would be hosting a local referee/judge’s course beginning on Thursday, May 15, which will run for four weeks, two days per week, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5 p.m to 7 p.m.

All those interested must register with us as soon as possible.

The contact numbers are: 736-4715;  686-6280

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US network to pay additional $100m 'signing bonus' for promotion of games from 2015 to 2020 after secret talks with IOC

By the time the 2032 Olympics rolls around, most American athletes will be too young to remember a time when the event wasn’t broadcast on NBC.

The network will pay $7.5bn for exclusive rights to broadcast the Olympics from 2021 through 2032, according to an announcement by the International Olympic Committee on Wednesday. That’s six Olympics games in all. Under the deal, NBC also will pay out a $100m signing “bonus” for promotion of the games from 2015 to 2020.

NBC has had a lock on broadcasting the Olympics in the 21st century. The network’s last deal, signed in 2011, was for $4.4 billion to broadcast every Olympics from 2014 through 2020.

The 2012 London Olympics attracted a record audience and brought NBC an estimated $1bn in advertising revenue, but also copious criticism for broadcasting so many events on taped delay, in an age of live video streaming.

Thomas Bach, the IOC president, said in a statement that the deal "helps to ensure [the Games’] financial security in the long term". He added: "NBC's expertise in sports broadcasting, as well as their passion for the Olympic values, will mean we shall be able continue to offer first-class broadcast coverage of the Olympic Games to the widest possible American audience for many years to come.”

There was no open bidding process for the the deal this time around, and the arrangement was made after secret talks between the IOC and NBC.

The agreement covers the summer Olympics of 2024, 2028 and 2032 and the winter games of 2022, 2026 and 2030. It ranges across all platforms, including free television, subscription TV, internet and mobile rights.

Steve Burke, CEO of NBC Universal, called it "one of the most important days in the history" of the network. By 2032, NBC will have covered a total of 23 editions of the Olympics.

Brian Roberts, the chairman of Comast, NBC's parent company, said in a statement: "Our long-term commitment to and investment in the Olympic movement are a reflection of our belief in the future of broadcast television, as well as our confidence that our partners at the IOC will continue to deliver great Games and that the Olympics will remain the world’s premier sport event.”

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Cliff Williams has been reappointed secretary general of the Antigua and Barbuda Olympic Association (ABOA) it has been announced.

Williams, who is also President of the Antigua and Barbuda Cycling Association, will serve in the role for a four-year tenure up until 2017.

He had been originally appointed to the role in 2010 replacing LeRoy Williams, who had been secretary general of the ABOA for more than two decades up until his retirement in 2009.

"One of my major aims over the next four years is to provide the national federations with more knowledge," said Williams

"Whether it be about seminars, programmes and just how we can rally them to be a little more energised, organised and produce more athletes because without the national federations producing athletes, the work of the NOC (National Olympic Committee) will become sort of null and void as nothing would be there to do."

Williams' re-appointment follows on from the ABOA Annual General Meeting in December which saw the re-election of Senator Paul Greene as the organisation's President after his election rival Neil Cochrane was disqualified from running after it was claimed that he had an ineligible nomination.

Five new members were also elected to the ABOA Executive in December, including Dr Philmore Benjamin, Kelesha Antoine, Joanne Small, Everton Cornelius and Jules Bowen.

The ABOA was formed in 1966 after the dissolution of the West Indies Federation in 1962, and recognised in 1976.

Antigua and Barbuda first competed at the Olympic Games at Montreal in 1976, and has participated in each Games since then, missing only Moscow 1980 by participating in the American-led boycott of those Games.

They have never won a medal.

At London 2012 they sent four athletes to compete in two sports - athletics and swimming.

Their best performances came from sprinters Daniel Bailey, the country's flag carrier in the Opening Ceremony, and Brendan Christian.

Bailey reached the semi-final of the 100 metres, finishing sixth, while Christian made it through to the semi-finals of the 200m, coming fifth.

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Borel dominates at Twilight Games

Cleopatra Borel gave a classy display at the Hasely Crawford Stadium in Port of Spain late yesterday, produ­cing a big 18.83 metre throw to secure gold in the International Twilight Games women’s shot-put event.

Borel was in a competition of her own. The Tri­-

nidad and Tobago field athlete landed the iron ball well past the 18-metre mark with each of her four throws while her clo­sest challenger, Cuban Yaniuvis Lopez, managed a best effort of just 16.64m.

T&T’s Cherisse Murray threw 13.58m to earn bronze.

Borel opened with an 18.24m throw, bettering the 17.75m meet record she had established in 2013. In round two, the 2010 Commonwealth Games silver medallist improved the record to 18.50m. And in the third round, she was even better, landing the shot 18.83m. Borel closed with an 18.55m effort—her second best throw in the competition.

Just before press time last night, T&T’s Richard “Torpedo” Thompson pro­duced a superb run to win the men’s 100-metre dash. The triple Olympic medallist stopped the clock at 10.10 seconds, his fastest run since 2012. The clocking is a new meet record.

Thompson was unchallenged for the top spot, runner-up Adam Harris of Guyana crossing the line in 10.23.

Bronze went to T&T’s Darrel Brown, the form­er world junior champion getting home in 10.31.

There was a meet record, too, in the women’s 100m; American Tawanna Meadows clocking 11.18 seconds for a huge cushion on Barbadian Jade Bailey, the silver medallist in 11.37.

Mikel Thomas was the class of the men’s 110m hurdles field. The T&T athlete successfully defended his title with a 13.47-second run, beating Cuba’s Jhoanis Cardenas (13.61) and Ame­rican Andrew Brunson (13.87) to the line.

There were three victories for Cuba yesterday.

Roberto Perez topped the men’s 200m field in 20.37 seconds. Gilda Agui­lera won the women’s 400m in a meet record time of 52.28 and Jorge Martinez finished strong to grab gold in the men’s 800m in one minute, 47.83 seconds—another meet record.

Jamaal James was well positioned for victory near the end of the two-lap race. Martinez, however, was stronger coming home, moving past the T&T half-miler to claim the top spot.

At press time, Olympic champion Keshorn Walcott was defending his Twilight Games men’s javelin title.

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