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The lack of commitment to sports in Barbados is exemplified in a dilapidated National Stadium.

Charles Griffith
Charles Griffith, Minister of Youth, Sports and Community Empowerment 

Two voting events caught the interest last week. First the election of a Barbados Cricket Association (BCA) and the announcement Olympian Obadele Thompson has thrown his hat in the ring to challenge for president of the Barbados Olympic Association.

It was reported Conde Riley was returned as president with 75 votes to narrowly fend off Calvin Hope 72 votes and Senator Gregory Nicholls 37 votes. A grand total of 184 votes were gathered between the three candidates. From all research the BCA registers a membership of close to three thousand members. At a time cricket is struggling to maintain its position as the preeminent sport in Barbados, less than 200 members showed the interest to vote for a president of the BCA.

Oba: A ruler of any of several African peoples of western Nigeria 
—used as a form of address

Mariam Webster

The other related news was 2000 Olympian Obadele Thompson’s announcement to challenge for a director’s seat at the Barbados Olympic Association (BOA). What makes his decision interesting is the fact he lives in the United States of America. How does it reflect on the local talent Thompson feels compelled to contribute to the development of sports in Barbados via Zoom? In defense, we live in a Digital Age.

For many years the blogmaster has been encouraging sitting and former sports administrators to speak out on the challenges affecting local sports associations. As if analogous to what happens in the political sphere with the so called political directorate closing ranks, so too similar occurs with local sporting officials. There is the common occurrence of the same faces rotating every year through the different positions. Also a common occurrence is the poor governance resulting in non performance.

The blogmaster grew up in an era Barbados – a tiny island -represented itself proudly on the regional and international arena. We dominated volleyball on the regional front and were not too far behind Jamaica and Trinidad in netball. In football we held our own against Trinidad and Jamaica and international touring teams feared playing the Barbados cricket team. Table tennis, draughts, cycling, horse racing and several ‘minor’ sports we were competitive outside of Barbados. In recent years there has been a precipitous decline in the performance of local sports while other countries in our peer group have leapfrogged us. The question is why.

National Stadium
National Stadium

The simple answer is without a smart plan and adequate resources, we will continue on a path to nowhere. There is no national sports program although promised by successive ministers of sport. The lack of commitment to sports in Barbados is exemplified in a dilapidated National Stadium. It is difficult to believe a renaissance in sporting fortune is possible anytime soon. The failing economic fortunes of Barbados guarantees that the big ticket interest like education, housing and health priorities will attract the bulk of the national budget. Then there is declining interest by an apathetic and cynical public to become to volunteer which is required at the grassroots level especially to breath life into sporting activity. It is true to say community practitioners like Hamilton Lashley et al are a dying breed.

There is the saying we are what we eat. Our non performing national sports culture reflects the type of society we have become. It is doing the little things that make the big works happen. A small island 21×14 cannot afford to grow an impersonal culture. The group that stands to lose the most is the youth. We are are not building a better society if we continue to block pathways that give our youth hope. We need bold leadership to emerge from all areas of society, political, non governmental/civic.


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101 responses to “Sports needs an Oba”


  1. “At a time cricket is struggling to maintain its position as the preeminent sport in Barbados, less than 200 members showed the interest to vote for a president of the BCA.”

    @ David

    What did you expect?
    And, I’ll bet many of the members weren’t ‘financial,’ and therefore couldn’t vote, which is usually the norm.

    By now you should have also been aware that, more often than not, many members of these sports organizations in Barbados, prefer to be involve impressive displays of ceremonial grandeur.
    In other words, they tend to be more closely associated with official ceremonies and formal events.

    ‘Pomp and pageantry.’

    Every Olympics, the Barbados Olympics Association (BOA), has a ‘large entourage of officials’ accompanying athletes to the Games.
    But, the returns, relative to medals, are poor……and therefore questions the capabilities of those officials, athletic administrators, coaches etc.

    Barbados football ⚽️ also comes to mind.
    Randy Harris has been President of the Barbados Football Association (BFA), since 2012, after three (3) consecutive terms.
    Other than his personal accomplishments of being elected vice-president of CONCACAF, 1st vice president of the Caribbean Football Union (CFU) and subsequently president, football in Barbados isn’t going anywhere under Harris’ presidency.

    The domestic tournaments continue to be poor, while the national team continues to struggle at the regional and international levels.

    But, Harris seems to have established himself as the Bajan Austin ‘Jack’ Warner.


  2. @Artax

    Was it late Minister of Education who despite the weight of a government ministry refused to step down as Barbados Football Association? If the association was performing well one might have understood but like you said, there were sweets to be had. In the process these so-called volunteers continue to shortchange our youth.


  3. “There is no national sports program although promised by successive ministers of sport.”

    @ David

    In MY OPINION, formulating a ‘national sports program’ is a task beyond any sports minister.

    Such an endeavour should be a COLLABORATIVE EFFORT involving ‘government,’ the national sports organizations, other stakeholders and special interests groups.

    This is an arrangement that could be facilitated (provide the environment necessary for the process to occur)……
    …… and coordinated (integrating the various plans through mutual discussion, exchange of ideas etc), by the National Sports Council (NSC).

    The resulting program could be reviewed by the Minister, and taken through the Parliamentary process by him/her.

    Unfortunately, however, ‘politicians’ have infiltrated many of these sporting bodies.
    Although people have rights of freedom of expression and to take part in the conduct of public affairs or freely associate with any political party of their choice……
    …… a problem ARISES when they are UNABLE to SEPARATE political posturing, biases and relationships from sports administration.

    For example, in George Street, Hammie Lah was instrumental in organizing the David Thompson Memorial Football Classic Tournament, while Randy Harris, on the eve of BFA elections, was involved in organising the LIME Pelican Challenge for Roebuck Street.

    There is president of a particular Association who calls the ‘call-in-programme’ infrequently, to support the BLP.

    I believe sports should be apolitical and neutral.
    But, in reality, it is intricately enmeshed within the larger socio-political context in which all sporting activities operate.


  4. @Artax

    Politics will always be present. What must be also present are like minded individuals in enough numbers to ensure the mandate of the associations are carried out.

  5. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David and @Artax, both of you have spoken clear truisms of our current situation so I merely add the pragmatic.

    re BCA: I am fairly sure @David that the numbers you noted were not dramatically different over the last many years. Yes there were times when high publicity brought out more members (e.g. when the late Stephen A and later Joel Garner were vying for presidency) to the AGMs but in the main what you said about “recycling of posts” was true … even going back to when Capt. Short was BCA Pres for it seemed forever and a day !!

    I focus on BCA as I more familiar there so I know that the current president has been a board member in some capacity for now well over 25 years. Realistically, as a counter point to your thesis, he can say that he has been involved in exciting developments and growth during that time (and indeed big disappointments too: BCL dying comes to mind).

    I say all that to simply note that many have sat for a long time in positions (at BCA and other orgs: like late Lisle Austin at BOA) but that NEVER stopped development and exciting changes!

    Alas, change is a constant in life and whereas there was a time for the BCL or the Christ Church or St. Peter Football League, current life dynamics have seen such community based orgs fade away.

    As you asked: ‘WHY is that’, and what you didn’t’ ask, ‘have the replacements been suitable ‘, is the bothersome question!

    BTW, I smiled at your remark that: “In football we held our own against Trinidad and Jamaica…”. Fah trute!

    Brother, I don’t think we did that EVER since about before mid 1980s: T&T always tended to beat us since then… even when we played relatively well. I was quite an avid football fan too back in that era and travelled to watch the team of ‘Cracker’ and ‘Gas’ and Jerry Goddard and all that, so I recall that we invariably got beaten by those two teams.

    Basically the same happened in hockey: we performed creditably but T&T always seemed to be a goal better!

    But anyhow although administrators recycled endlessly, every once and a while there would be a ‘revolution’ (for example when the Conrad Hunter regime was expected to be a wonderful long term period of development and when Stephen took over after his death) so if Oba’s new quest is such a wonderful possible change then more power to him!


  6. @Dee Word

    The state was that we held our own, compare to recent years of what is a precipitous decline. No excuses are necessary.


  7. Look Boss…
    The problem with Sport in BBD is quite obvious, and can therefore be EASILY solved.

    The Problem:
    Too many incompetent persons in influential positions, who are there because it affords them the opportunities to gain ‘favors’ that their (in)competences would NOT be able to achieve in any other areas.

    In short, there are too many parasites, and too few performers.

    The Solution:
    Apply the usual parasite cleanse.

    Cranberry juice:
    Identify each individual Sport Administrator, starting at the very top, and PUBLICLY (on BU) request that they answer specific questions related to their areas of responsibility, and respond to issues raised therefrom.
    Those that refuse to respond would be appropriately noted and dealt with…

    Jalapeno Peppers
    Detailed PUBLIC account to be given for all results achieved after sports events, or in the absence of any meaningful organisation of the sport.
    Again this to be a PUBLIC process.

    Papaya Seeds
    Publish the annual financial statements of EACH and EVERY sport organisation, and highlight those that are unavailable or in disarray. And make these subject to PUBLIC scrutiny and comment.

    …after these initial treatments we would not even need any epazote or horseradish…..

  8. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    And none made. There is no dispute re the “precipitous decline”.

    It shockingly amazing – even accepting the much larger population size – that Jamaica men and women make it to the World Cup and we can’t even get to a CONCACAF final round!

    Things dread in sports with much more dreadfulness ahead!


  9. “I was quite an avid football fan too back in that era and travelled to watch the team of ‘Cracker’ and ‘Gas’ and Jerry Goddard and all that……”

    @ de pendantic Dribbler

    Similarly, during the mid 1980s, I was an avid football fan as well.
    Blackspurs was my home team.
    Football progressively went to the stage that we used to call it ‘kick up,’ and eventually lost interest in the game.

    Another popular game of that era was basketball 🏀.

    I remember the YMCA having standing room only, when teams such as Lumber Company Lakers and Double H Senators played.
    If the game continued to near midnight, we would wait by the exit to see as much of it as we could, before running off to Lower Green to catch the ‘last bus.’

    Nowadays, the crowds at basketball have dwindled significantly.

    Times have changed.

    Cable television sports channels bring games, live, to our living rooms.
    There are more people at ‘Bubba’s’ or any other popular sports bar, watching US basketball, baseball or their version of football.

    The Barbados Amateur Basketball Association (BABA), is essentially competing with the USA’s NBA for ‘spectator support.’

    I remember Saturday afternoons as a youngster, listening to ‘Sports Roundup’ on Reddifusion and hearing UK football scores.

    World Cup soccer, as well as the various leagues played in the UK, Europe and South America, can also be viewed ‘live’ both in homes and sports bars.

    I’m amazed at Barbadians’ ability to rattle off statistics of footballers from Manchester United, Manchester City, Liverpool, Chelsea etc.
    Or, from Brazil, Germany, France, Italy, Argentina and Netherlands.
    They wear and display the teams’ jerseys and paraphernalia with pride.

    I remember hearing one guy telling another, ‘I playing you tomorrow,’ only to find out afterwards, the former supports Liverpool, while the latter, Manchester City.
    These guys also argue with each other as though they are personally associated with the teams they support.

    How has such ‘outside influences’ and cable TV affected local sports?


  10. @Artax

    Barbadians always supported foreign teams, South Africa had the late King Dyall has one of its biggest fans. What it did not do was supplant support for local teams and better run associations.


  11. @Artax

    Have you observed the same poor management/governance has visited the credit unions? We have a societal rot that has take root – the question then is why are good men and women not steeping up?


  12. Obadele Thompson did not seem to manage the affairs of Marion Jones beyond that required by an ignorant Christian, which he was, is?

    To have the former Jones and multiple world records holder to be so destroyed, even as her competitors were no less culpable, on the altar of religious zealoustry tells this writer that he’s an asshole. Of the Bajan variety.

    That Jones dominated her sport and he was always on the fringes at the highest level wreaks of an irrational equalization between a giant and an ant. Thompson being the ant, of course.

    That this same lilipochian could be encouraged to now generalize his religious foolishness within a sport where technology is constanly extending human performace and where athletes will give anything to get an edge weeeee should be concerned about this man’s victimization of Jones, a woman close to him, within circumstances where all other actors went without any punishment at all.

    Maybe Jones was led to believe that other gold medals will be won in the afterlife.

    Further, that Jones was severely punished when the large corporations, including medical or biochemistry firms, behind people like Jones, could not be subjected to the fuckeries to which this idiot crucified Jones.

    We see Obadelle Thompson as a monumental asshole!

    And will always.


  13. There is no real need to disparage Oba, Pacha…
    He would just be another cog in the wheel of mediocrity.

    The problem is SYSTEMIC, and the REAL leaders who need to come forward are NOT big-name people with their swollen egos, but the currently inert practical ORGANIZATIONAL MANAGEMENT PERFORMERS.

    People who can get shit done….and who have demonstrated that they can..
    Persons of the ‘Hammie La’ ilk..for instance.

    When we create a system that MEASURES performance, tat takes action against parasites, and that rewards RESULTS, then we will see the REAL performers emerge …and the parasites fleeing… (pun attempted 🙂 )

    This is your well documented “guillotine’ approach at work…


  14. @Bush Tea

    Was the blog about Oba?


  15. “Have you observed the same poor management/governance has visited the credit unions?”

    @ David

    Not only credit unions, but simple associations such a schools’ PTAs as well.

    I remember attending a PTA meeting at my son’s nursery school.
    The outgoing committee read their reports, before announcing the elections for a new committee would be held during the next meeting.

    I observed a guy, dressed in ‘collar and tie,’ who I later found out was an insurance salesman, whom I assumed, from his behaviour, wanted to become the next PTA president, and to ‘hand pick’ a committee, consisting a specific caliber of parent, based primarily on how they were dressed, which he used as an indication they ‘had good jobs.’

    Before the meeting concluded, my assumptions were confirmed.
    He went around talking to women who wore skirts suits and men in ‘collar and tie.’
    The ‘group’ met after the meeting.

    At the next meeting, the guy managed somehow to be elected as president, and his ‘chosen few’ nominated and elected as well.

    However, their tenure was poor. They saw themselves as being elite…… ‘a cut above the rest,’… …….whose only job was to collect money at functions, while the other parents should ‘do all the dirty work.’

    With that type of attitude, cooperation eventually became slow forthcoming.

    There were similar occurrences at the primary school PTA.
    Where parents who were perceived to ‘have good jobs,’ forced themselves upfront to be recognized.

    Some may view my example as silly. But, it’s a ‘status thing’ in Barbados.


  16. Barbados sent 3 athletes to 2023 World Athletics Championships and 2 were knocked out in the first round of competition.


  17. In short…
    Place full of brass…


  18. David, please check your spam.


  19. Nothing in spam Artax.


  20. @ David

    Thanks. I thought I posted a contribution.

    Do you ever wonder why sports such as horse racing, polo, equestrian sports, yachting, surfing, motor and go-kart racing, seem not to be significantly hindered by organisational or developmental difficulties?


  21. The players involved do it for the love of the sport and not aggrandizement.

  22. William Skinner Avatar

    Truly amazing that we only tend to highlight the failures. In recent months our athletes have performed creditably in many disciplines. At no time in our sporting history, have we seen accomplishments in such a broad number of disciplines from car racing to swimming and squash. Quite an impressive number of young sports persons are getting full college scholarships at overseas universities. How many are aware that we have one of the top junior golfers in the world ? How many know that we are producing some very talented kick boxers( not sure about the professional name) ? Road tennis is finally getting the profile it needs; and a number of former young athletes are pursuing studies in sports management and related disciplines.

  23. William Skinner Avatar

    I meant surfing not swimming.

  24. William Skinner Avatar

    King Dyall supported England and to some extent Australia.

  25. William Skinner Avatar

    The problem has always been transitioning from community/national based sporting activities to the international. Where there is no vision people perish. We also had class and economic discrimination. However, in many instances very poor sportspeople still made their mark in disciplines such as water polo. We also had a few who achieved similar distinction in squash. Horse racing to a somewhat limited degree also broke down some racial/economic barriers.


  26. “Barbadians always supported foreign teams, South Africa had the late King Dyall has one of its biggest fans.”

    @ David

    Yes, I’m aware “Barbadians always supported foreign teams.”

    I’m a basketball fan, used to play the game and remembered, during the early 1980s on Saturday evenings, when CBC used to televise NBA Basketball games.
    Denver Nuggets was my favourite team, while David ‘Sky Walker’ Thompson was my favourite player.
    That was the era of basketballers such as Darrell Dawkins, George McGinnis, Julius ‘Dr. J’ Erving, Karl ‘The Mail Man’ Malone, Dennis Johnson, Marques Johnson, Kevin McHale, Larry Bird, Isiah Thomas, Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
    We would discuss the games at school on Monday mornings.
    Yet, the YMCA used to be full every Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays for basketball games.

    CBC also ‘showed’ UK football on Sundays and local football games still attracted fans, especially on Saturdays and Sundays.

    Do you remember when Barbados had excellent volleyball 🏐 teams and the national teams won several regional tournaments?

    What about netball? Barbados has some very good netballers.
    Nowadays, our national teams are beaten ‘left, right and centre.’

    There was a time when cricket was played on any vacant lot large enough for a pitch, schools’ pastures or in the gap.
    Cricket in Barbados and the region has become so poor that the WI team is being insulted by former Indian cricketers.
    Even the ‘lingo’ has changed. We are now referring to ‘batsmen’ as ‘batters.’

    As I ‘said,’ TIMES HAVE CHANGED.

    Crowds attending local sports have progressively dwindled over the years.

    The younger generation is more into sports such as baseball and US football, European soccer etc.
    And, who does not have a mobile phone to watch games, have the internet in their homes or can go to one of the many shops or sports bars.

    You’ll see more people, collectively, in bars watching Italian football, than at a local 1st division game.


  27. @Artax

    The consensus seems to be that there are too many distractions for the youth with the advent of the internet. That said, until we get a national sports development program implemented to be able to maximize from a dwindling pool of talent we will continue to flounder. Sports must be embraced by the establishment as a constructive avenue for creating opportunities for our youth.


  28. Sada williams sets a new national record in the women’s 400 metres at the World Athletics Championships.

    https://www.nationnews.com/2023/08/21/sada-sets-national-records-reaches-another-world-championships-final/


  29. “That said, until we get a national sports development program implemented to be able to maximize from a dwindling pool of talent we will continue to flounder.”

    @ David

    Exactly!

    But, as I mentioned previously, developing a comprehensive sports program should be a collaborative effort involving ‘government,’ (through the sports ministry), various sports organizations, stakeholders and special interests groups.

    Bushie, in his August 20, 2023 at 10:35 AM contribution, offered several suggestions, including the following:

    “Identify each individual Sport Administrator, starting at the very top, and PUBLICLY (on BU) request that they answer specific questions related to their areas of responsibility, and respond to issues raised therefrom.
    Those that refuse to respond would be appropriately noted and dealt with…”

    That’s a start.


  30. DID THE KENYANS HAVE A FANCY PROGRAM WHEN THEY WON NUMEROUS MEDALS IN LONG DISTANCE EVENTS


  31. Assuming the Kenyans did not have a ‘fancy sports policy,’ does this mean other countries shouldn’t develop their own? Do you know if sporting environments in Barbados and Kenya are similar? That what works for Kenya, will work for Barbados? Do Kenyans still dominate long distant events?


  32. Dr. GP, I suggest you read the following articles. {a} ‘Sports policy in Kenya: deconstruction of colonial and post-colonial conditions,’ by Kipchumbo Byron & Jepkorir Rose Chepyator-Thompson (March 2015). {2} ‘Establish national sports policy to guide Kenyan sport for the long term,’ by Peter Gacherm (June 2023). Also, read about Kenya National Sports Council.


  33. Congratulations to Sade Williams. Her dedication to her sport is to be admired and emulated. It should not go unnoticed her finishing touches is coming from Jamaica.

  34. Waiting for the confirmation of jokedom Avatar
    Waiting for the confirmation of jokedom

    If national honors and a money are not awarded to Sada this year then this will confirm what I have always suspected — everything on the island is a joke. It does not matter what they say or how they spin it – one big joke.
    Waiting for the confirmation

  35. William Skinner Avatar

    Ms. Williams has once again proven that we abound with talent in several areas, but our inability to harness and develop that talent is our biggest problem.
    Sports like everything else, has been the victim of political and social marginalization.
    We continue, in several sectors, to sacrifice true development ,on the altar of political expediency and political hero worship bordering on cultism.
    Congrats to her and all those associated with her development.


  36. Rubbish! Come on, my friend. There hasn’t been a time when athletes were not rewarded by both the public and private sectors for exceptional performances in their respective sports. Seems as though some of us are preoccupying ourselves with ‘looking under every rock, hoping to find a scam.’


  37. The issue of a small island developing world class talent and performance is complicated. Barbados has always produced talented athletes but it takes more. You need support structures and unfortunately what is required to produce world class athletes calls for significantly more.

    A related point is that creating avenues via sporting activity for youth to unleash their talents is an achievement on its own without them having to reach world class standard.

    Another point to note,many Barbadian athletes have entered the US collegiate ranks for example and elected to pursue educational/professional opportunities.

    It maybe we can understand our limitations as a country, nurture the talent and allow that talent to be realized by co-opting support from Jamaica, Cuba, Bahamas and other countries that have developed a fit for purpose support structure.


  38. Sada Williams it was reported is receiving support from government and the BOA.


  39. I join you in offering congratulations to Sada Williams as well, David. Based on reports, seems as though the international sports media are impressed with her development and performances. There also several YouTube videos highlighting her achievements, even from local school sports.


  40. Jamaica’s men are currently competing in the long junp final. They are currently positioned in first, second and fourth place.

    There’s barely a sport in the world in which Jamaicans are not competitive in.

    Jamaicans are a hungry and a proud group of people. They also believe in having a healthy body and eating a healthy food.

    We Bajans have a lot to learn from these people.


  41. Jamaica is also a country located 30 minutes from the USA.

  42. William Skinner Avatar

    @TLSN
    Hundreds of Jamaicans in the Diaspora return home to watch their high school sports meeting every year. That shows the level of interest. Also wherever Jamaicans are competing, they find themselves there in the hundreds. There is also a highly developed primary school program. There is absolutely nothing that they have achieved that we cannot. Remember also that Trinidad and Tobago produced quite a number of world class athletes.


  43. @ William Skinner,

    I know that you have always had a positive outlook. Where some would see a half empty glass; you would see a glass half full.

    However, you cannot say argue that Bajans can achieve in the same way as our Jamaican cousins. They were born hungry and have the mindset that food is a scarce resource. Compare that to Barbados where on every street corner you will find the obese and the soon to be mass binging on junk food.

    Here is what your friend said,

    “Do you ever wonder why sports such as horse racing, polo, equestrian sports, yachting, surfing, motor and go-kart racing, seem not to be significantly hindered by organisational or developmental difficulties?”

    Your governments over the years have systematically donated NIS funds into the pockets of white minorities. This has given their sportsmen and women the incentive to perform at a high level on the world stage.

    I know that black bajans excel in body building competitions. All credit to them. However, I find it disgraceful that consecutive governments have continued to deprive black young bajans the opportunities to excel in sports.

    Not so long I stated that black bajans are merely 3rd class citizens. I stand by with what I said.


  44. Lord have mercy. What a race! A Jamaican girl has just won Jamaica’s first gold in a field packed with serious high class talent in the 100m hurdles.

    Our government is focused only on our backward tourist industry. Unable to see that the sport’s industry is huge.

    Barbados is missing out on this huge sporting festival in Hungary.


  45. Where is the evidence to substantiate your claim that ‘governments DONATES NIS funds to white minorities, thereby giving them the incentive to perform at a high level?’ It ‘harrows me with fear and wonder’ that an individual would ‘stoop so low’ to use and purposely misrepresent my comments, as the basis to advance his/her malicious agenda.

  46. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David, you contrast two important points and seemingly create a very distinct difference when there isn’t and i dont think has ever been one!

    When you say that:
    “… creating avenues via sporting activity for youth to unleash their talents is an achievement on its own without them having to reach world class standard” THAT’S absolutely correct.

    So in my view it’s a follow-on RATHER THAN different “Another point” that “many Barbadian athletes have entered the US collegiate ranks for example and elected to pursue educational/professional opportunities.”

    The path to professional training/careers is very well established via athletic scholarship at universities WITHIN the US systems certainly. For every student/athelete who becomes a professional star they are thousands who merely look back at their collegiate life with joy and become weekend warriors as above average players in some sport as happy teachers, coaches, administrators, insurance agents or whatever !

    Just making the point that we shouldn’t expect every one of our ‘top athletes’ to become professional stars either … yet, I suspect your counter argument is that more of them should … and that they dont get the support resources to make that a reality!

    Looking at Jamaica, TnT and particularly The Bahamas it’s reasonable to expect that and much more from our sports resources to move a top talent to the professional ranks … we (parents, officials) all have failed miserably there.

    However, we absolutely have succeeded in getting many of our young athletes excellent educations and great experiences to forge their successful lives.

    No excuses. Just being pragmatic.

  47. William Skinner Avatar

    @ TLSN
    Sports dominated by the white minority always had impressive corporate sponsorship. One just have to go through some old race books.
    In terms of lending money out of the NIS to promote minority sports, I once heard COW
    Williams on Brasstacks, literally demanding that government give him money to spend on some pavilion.
    In terms of dietary habits , I think Jamaicans are very much into ground provisions and very heavy local breakfast meals.
    As you said sports have never been seen as a revenue earner.
    Quite frankly, we are not serious about the culture industries either as revenue.


  48. @Dee Word

    The simple point is that the crème de la crème of our talent are the ones who usually accept athletic scholarships, it therefore makes the job of creating a world class stable of athletes a challenge. Jamaica on the other hand has the benefit of accessing resources on the mainland AND the social underclass that exists which powers a hunger for success by any mean necessary. In Barbados there is a different dynamic.


  49. A simple example, top class athletes need top class competition. A school can enter a group of athletes in a meet somewhere in Florida, fly in and fly out on a weekend during school time.

  50. Trouble In Mind Avatar

    The Bible says
    Be transformed
    by the renewing of your mind!

    Easy easy easy easy!
    Don’t get in my way!

    Trouble in mind, i’m blue
    But i won’t be blue always,
    ’cause the sun’s gonna shine
    In my backdoor some day.
    I’m all alone at midnight
    And my lamp is burnin’ low
    Ain’t never had so much
    Trouble in my life before.
    Trouble in mind, that’s true
    I have almost lost my mind,
    Life ain’t worth livin,
    Sometimes i feel like dyin’.
    Goin’ down to the river
    Gonna take my ol’ rockin’ chair
    And if the blues don’t leave me
    I’ll rock away from there.

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