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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. David, female surfer, Chelsea Tauch, has been ‘performing at a high level on the world stage’ for over 10 years. The international media refers to her as the ‘Barbadian surfing sensation.’ Perhaps someone may be willing to present information to BU, detailing the ‘donations’ she received from NIS that contributed to her success. We must bear in mind there is significant difference between ‘donating’ and ‘lending money out of the NIS.’


  2. @Artax

    You must learn to ignore stuff.




  3. Jamaicans praising Bajan Sada Williams.

  4. William Skinner Avatar

    We should be embarrassed that others have to tell the whole world what we ought to know. Where is our pride or are we just going to continue bragging about literacy levels,


  5. IT IS NOT AS EASY AS SOME PRESUME OR HAVE NEVER BEEN IN THAT POSITION..

    JAMAICA HAS A POPULATION OF 10 TIMES BARBADOS 3 MILLION VS CLOSE TO 300,000..

    JAMAICA HAS HILLS AND MOUNTAINS ALL OVER THE ISLAND, BARBADOS IS RELATIVELY FLAT SO THEIR ATHLETES HAVE AN ADVANTAGE IN DEVELOPING STRENGTH AND ENDURANCE FROM BIRTH.

    MOST OF THE ATHLETES IN MY TIME DIDN’T DO ANY REAL FORM OF STRENGTH TRAINING UNTIL LATE IN THEIR HIGH SCHOOL DAYS OR AFTER IF ANY.

    I LEFT ON AN 4 YEAR FULL ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIP TO AN US UNIVERSITY AND WAS FIRST TIME I SAW PROPER FACILITIES INCLUDING GYM JUST FOR ATHLETES INCLUDING TRACK AND FIELD, AMERICAN FOOTBALLERS ETC.

    WAS ALSO THE FIRST TIME GIVEN PROPER NUTRITION INCLUDING AT LEAST 6 DIFFERENT COLOURED PILLS TO TAKE DAILY SUPPLEMENTS BOTH FOR VITAMINS AND MINERALS ETC.

    THE LEVEL OF COMPETITION IN PRACTICES DAILY WAS AT A VERY HIGH LEVEL AS ATHLETES ON THE TRACK TEAM WERE RECRUITED FROM ALL OVER THE US HIGH SCHOOLS STANDOUT ATHLETES AND THERE WERE AT LEAST 4 FROM JAMAICA ON SHOLARSHIP 3 FEMALE SPRINTERS AND 1 MALE HURDLER..

    TO MAINTAIN ONE’S SCHOLARSHIP ONE HAD TO CONTRIBUTE TO POINTS FOR THE TEAM EACH YEAR IN YOUR EVENT AT BOTH INDOORS AND OUTDOORS CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS ALONG WITH MAINTAINING ACADEMIC GRADES.

    TRACK PRACTICE WAS ALSO MANDATORY 5 DAYS A WEEK ON THE TRACK AND DURING OFF SEASON CROSS COUNTRY.

    DURING CHRISTMAS AND SUMMER HOLIDAY BREAKS ONE WAS STILL EXPECTED TO TRAIN ON ONE’S OWN AND TO RETURN BACK TO UNIVERSITY CAMPUS AT A HIGH LEVEL OF FITNESS.

    ON THE 2 X 3 ISLAND WAS NOT THE CASE AS PRACTICES WERE 3 TIMES A WEEK AND TO PAY FOR NUTRITION SUPPLEMENTS WAS BEYOND MOST ATHELETES AND THEIR PARENTS.

    I TRAINED 6 DAYS A WEEK, 3 DAYS ON MY OWN BEFORE LEAVING THE 2 X3 ISLAND WITH LITTLE NUTRITION AND GYM FACILITIES AS I HAD SET A GOAL AND WAS DETERMINED TO MAKE A BETTER LIFE FOR MYSLEF ELSEWHERE..

    THIS IS THE FATE AND CHALLENGES OF MOST ATHLETES ON THE 2 X 3 ISLAND TO THIS DAY.

    ON MY LAST TIME OF LIVING ON THE 2 X 3 ISLAND I ATTEMPTED TO GIVE BACK AND WAS THE PRO FOR THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION OF BARBADOS TO THE POINT THAT SOME MEETINGS WERE HELD IN MY BUSINESS OFFICE BY THE EXECUTIVES OF THE ASSOCIATION.

    HOWEVER I GOT FEDUP AS IT WAS CLEAR TO ME THAT MANY MEMBERS OF THE EXECUTIVE WERE JUST USING THEIR POSITIONS FOR PERSONAL STATUS AND FREE TRIPS AND NOT IN HELPING TO DEVELOP THE JUNIOR OR SENIOR ATHLETES THROUGH THE LOCAL TRACK CLUBS AND BY EXTENSION COACHES.

    IT DOESN’T AMAZE ME THAT THERE ARE STILL EXECUTIVES OF THE ASSOCIATION STILL IN THE POSITIONS FOR THEIR DEAR LIVES HANGING ON WITHOUT LETTING GO WHILST PRETENDING THEY HAVE THE LOCAL ATHLETES BEST INTEREST AT HEART SO AS TO CONTINUE TO BENEFIT FROM YEARLY FREE TRIPS AND MONETARY STIPENDS OUTSIDE THE 2 X 3 ISLAND.

    MS MAYNARD AND NOEL ‘BARNEY’ LYNCH ARE/WERE FORMER COLLEAGUES OF THE AAA EXECUTIVE WERE TWO OF THE BIGGEST BENEFICIARIES AND NEVER DID ANYTHING FO THE LOCAL ATHLETES EXCEPT APPEAR ON THE TV, NEWSPAPER OR RADIO AND SPIN A PRETTY YARN


  6. “I LEFT ON AN 4 YEAR FULL ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIP TO AN US UNIVERSITY AND WAS FIRST TIME I SAW PROPER FACILITIES INCLUDING GYM JUST FOR ATHLETES INCLUDING TRACK AND FIELD, AMERICAN FOOTBALLERS ETC.”

    It was in the 80’s that I went to a US university. One day I poked my head in as I was passing by the gym which was located in the football stadium and I was caught completely by surprise. I had gone to this university directly from UWI St Augustine. There just was no comparison between the gym at St Augustine and the gym for athletes at the University of Florida. One was the small fishing boat used by our fishermen and the other a cruise line.

    To properly develop athletes and Barbados, we will need more than a new stadium. We will need coaches who know what they are doing, a variety of sporting equipment and athletes that are disciplined and hungry with a desire to win.

  7. William Skinner Avatar

    @Baje;TLSN
    You have both clearly expressed the basic problem which is a lack of real interest in our sports development and I mean all sports/disciplines.
    I remain steadfast in my conviction that properly funded and managed , we could easily have all of the above but once more we place political lackeys in positions and they sing for their supper everyday and then send out some propagandists to make excuses for them with useless cliches and double speak.
    Now, with all the disadvantages, you both have mentioned and correctly so, we have still been able to compete at the world class level. So, imagine ,where we could be if the jackasses stop braying and actually begin to pull the damn cart. Thank you both for telling it as it is.


  8. During and after every global athletic event some Bajans tend to look with envy at the success of their Jamaican brothers and sisters in comparison to their locals mostly measly “also ran” efforts. I won’t pretend to know the reason(s) for Jamaica’s dominance on the athletic field, but their athletes have been winning gold medals at the Olympics-still the gold standard for athletic competition- since 1948. That’s right, 75 years and counting, a Bajan athlete has been able to stand on the Olympic podium once (I’m not counting Wedderburn who was part of a West Indian effort) during that period and the then Minister responsible for Sport tried to tear him a new one because the athlete was not sufficiently deferential to him.

    I will leave it to the experts to articulate the reasons for Jamaica’s exceptional performance on the athletic field but maybe the main reason is the country’s support for their athletes, and nothing succeeds like success.

    I will make one suggestion to the powers that be; if possible, send a few up-and-coming young coaches to intern with Jamaican coaches and hope that effort bears fruit.


  9. I will make one suggestion to the powers that be; if possible, send a few up-and-coming young coaches to intern with Jamaican coaches and hope that effort bears fruit.

    XXXXXXXXX

    THIS IS NOT A NECESSITY OVER THE YEARS THE 2 X 3 ISLAND HAS HAD SOME VERY GOOD COACHES WHEN COMPARED TO USA COACHES A COUNTRY THAT HAS HAD MANY OLYMPIC AND WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP MEDALISTS FROM MY FIRST HAND OBSERVATIONS..

    HOWEVER WHEN THE LOCAL ATHLETES ON THE 2 X 3 ISLAND DON’T HAVE ACCESS TO LITTLE OR NONE OF THE NECCESSARY ESSENTIALS AS MANY COME FROM FAMILIES IN THE POORER COMMUNITIES WITH NO RESOURCES THAT IS THE PROBLEM.

    JAMAICA’S TOP ATHLETES WHO ALL COME FROM THE POORER COMMUNITIES ARE FROM TWO OR 3 TRACK CLUBS ON THE ISLAND WITH THOSE CLUBS AND SOME ATHLETES HAVING MAJOR INTERNATIONAL SPONSORS, DONORS AND WORLD CLASS TRAINING FACILITIES, THERE IS NO COMPARISION TO WHAT IS NOT IN PLACE ON THE 2 X 3 ISLAND.

    THAT IS WHY SADE WILLIAMS BRONZE MEDALIST TRAINS IN JAMAICA WITH ONE OF THOSE TOP CLUBS AND OTHERS IN THE USA WITH ALL THE RESOURCES IN PLACE YEAR ROUND.

    JAMAICA ALSO HAS A PROPER WORLD CLASS STADIUM WITH A PROPER TRACK.

    BACK IN THE DAY THE 2X3 ISLAND TRACK AT THE STADIUM FOR RACING WAS CALLED ‘ROCK GEORGE’, WITH NO PROPER FACILITIES FOR THE ATHLETES TO CHANGE OR TRAIN IN A SUITABLE GYM AT THE STADIUM.

    TWO OF THE TOP LOCAL CLUBS WIBISCO STARS AND FREEDOM STRIDERS HAD POOR RAKEY BACKYARD TYPE GYMS AND ATHLETES TRAINED PRIMARILY ON GRASS FIELDS WITH SOME HAVING HOLES DEPENDING ON THE TIME OF THE YEAR THAT WAS HAZARDOUS TO LOCAL ATHLETES IF THEY HAPPEN TO STUMBLE AND FOOT LANDED IN ONE.

    NOTHING MUCH HAS CHANGED IN 2023 LOCALLY ON THE 2 X3 ISLAND.

    THE ATHLETES TRAINING AT THE LOCAL NATIONAL STADIUM USING THE TRACK YEAR ROUND DEVELOP CHIN SPLINTS AND OTHER INJURIES QUICKER BECAUSE OF THE SURFACE WHILST BUILT FOR RACING WAS NOT BUILT FOR TRAINING WEEKLY,

    EVEN NOW THOUGH A MODERN TRACK, THE LOCAL STADIUM IS DILIPIDATED, WITH NO SHELTER FOR RAIN.

    THE NATIONAL STADIUM IS A DISGRACE AND USING THE WORDS OF DECEASED FORMER PRIME MINISTER OWEN ARTHUR ‘POOR RAKEY’

    INSTEAD OF COMPLAINING BAJANS SHOULD BE HAPPY THAT THERE ARE STILL SOME POSITIVE YOUNGSTERS WITH THE ODDS AGAINST THEM TRYING THEIR BEST TO COMPETE WITH SOME SEEKING A BETTER LIFE THROUGH SCHOLARSHIPS ETC.


  10. Wunna could talk what wunna like, ….but a lotto money does get spend on bare sport every year bout here, so there HAVE to be some Bajans that are happy as shiite wid ‘sports’.

    When yuh say one ting yuh gotta say de udder….

    Our athletes can indeed do much better – if that money was spent on facilities, training and nutrition, BUT!!!! …. what would then be left for those who are CURRENTLY having such a ball ..?

    Wunna alright!!

  11. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David I’ll ping this to you but speak generally related to the remarks by @Baje and @Theo.

    Based on his experiences I can only view @Baje’s remarks as those of a man totally disenchanted by local issues during his professional career.

    It is incredible that anyone who UNDERSTANDS the US collegiate INDUSTRY as he should would attempt in ANY way to compare it to local or regional operations.

    Good grief, the US college athletic operations is freaking BIG business with annual revenues exceeding $10 – $15 Billion. Repeat BILLION.

    How on earth therfore do u NOT expect state-of-the-art gyms at places like University of Georgia (current NCAA football champions) where their stadium seats over 92,000 fans! 😒🤦🏾‍♂️

    Let me put that in perspective if it’s still hard to grasp. Many, many years ago when I discovered that the Maracana stadium in Brazil seated some 78,000 i was just blown away … the stadium in Georgia is only the TENTH largest for college football in US … and on many season Saturdays the damn places are FULL. FULL!

    Or said another way: a football coach at Georgia, Michigan or Alabama (top Div 1 teams) earn at least $10 million/year … that’s the range of what soccer star Robert Lewandowski earns also per year!

    No one disputes our local cronyism and serious deficiencies but let’s get real with these unreal comparisons.

    Div 1 sports in US is BIG BUSINESS …

    If you go a lower div sports institution or a community college (which realistically would be a better comparison) you definitely would NOT find the awesome facilities or perfect emphasis on nutrition … YES, there will be some decent facilities and detailed guidance for self maintenance !

    Need we be reminded that student-atheletes in US have now gained rights to their own brand image and the $$ therefrom to be made!!!

    You CANNOT compare Bim’s or even Jamaica’s athletic landscape to all that! 🤦🏾‍♂️🙏🏿


  12. @Dee Word

    Nothing to add.


  13. Based on his experiences I can only view @Baje’s remarks as those of a man totally disenchanted by local issues during his professional career.

    It is incredible that anyone who UNDERSTANDS the US collegiate INDUSTRY as he should would attempt in ANY way to compare it to local or regional operations.

    Good grief, the US college athletic operations is freaking BIG business with annual revenues exceeding $10 – $15 Billion. Repeat BILLION.

    XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

    IF SPEAKING THE TRUTH MAKES ME DISENCHANTED WELL WELL WELL.

    I ALSO SPOKE TO JAMAICA AND WHAT THEY HAVE IN PLACE COMPARED TO THE 2 X 3 ISLAND LACK OF AND PEOPLE ARE MOANING ABOUT LACK OF PERFORMANCE.

    TRUTH IS WHEREVER I GO I SUCCEED PROFESSIIONALY BECAUSE OF THE DISCIPLINE AND DEDICATION I GAINED FROM TRACK AND THE COACHES I HAD FROM A TEENAGER.

    NOT DISILLUSIONED AS YOU WOULD LIKE TO DISCREDIT THE REALITY.

    I SPEAK ONLY OF WHAT I KNOW AND HAVE EXPERIENCED AS A FORMER NATIONAL ATHLETE WHO GAINED A SCHOLARSHIP ABROAD AND CAME BACK AND GAVE OF MY TIME AND RESOURCES WITH NO FINANCIAL BENEFIT OR WAS LOOKING FOR NONE JUST SEEING OTHERS HAVING SIMILAR OPPORTUNITIES ON A WIDER SCALE.

    CONTINUE TO POKE HOLES HOWEVER DEAL WITH THE REALITY.

    JAMAICA DOES NOT HAVE THE RESOURCES OF THE USA HOWEVER ……………….


  14. @ TheOGazerts,


  15. ‘Well said,’ dpD. The comparsions are definitely silly.

  16. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Dee Word
    The facts cannot be disputed. Numbers alone make comparisons difficult.
    However, we have failed to even provide the basics or the basic required standards for our sportspersons.
    Being small does not mean we cannot strive to be broader and better in outlook.
    There maybe 365 murders a week somewhere else it ; does not mean we should accept 2 per week.
    So yes, stadiums overseas can hold 90,000; it does not mean we cannot not have a proper modern facility holding 10,000.
    The question to be posed in several areas is: are we being the best we can be ?

  17. Narrow Thinkers Avatar

    @ William Skinner

    They will always be those who try to distract.

    @ Baje also made comparisons with Jamaica.

    However the usual individuals continue to show their heads and narrow minded thinking

  18. A Narrow Minded Thinker Avatar
    A Narrow Minded Thinker

    I guess comparing the gym at UWI St. Augustine with that at the University of Florida, at which football, baseball, basketball are played at a ‘semi-professional’ level, against other college teams, hence, the proper gym facilities, is wide minded thinking.


  19. Talking loud and saying NOTHING, as USUAL.


  20. I guess comparing the gym at UWI St. Augustine with that at the University of Florida, at which football, baseball, basketball are played at a ‘semi-professional’ level, against other college teams, hence, the proper gym facilities, is wide minded thinking.

    Xxxxxxxx

    What about the gyms in Jamaica at the top track clubs.

    Does Jamaica has a modern stadium that can seat 90000?

    Answer is of course not.

    Small minds will always catch at the shadows instead of the substance.


  21. @Hants
    In the video the woman is talking a out Mr Kellman.
    That video has to be at least five years old


  22. ‘Small minds will always catch at the shadows instead of the substance.’

    I thought the comparison was apt. The real comparison is really the gym at a single university versus what we have as a nation (Barbados).

    You missed the main point. Small minds beat mice minds everyday.

  23. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    TheO
    It was used in the context that over time the residents had contact several politicians and officials re the flooding issue.
    You too fast to…..lol


  24. I love my fellow Bajans.

    We may be lacking in equipment, but that does not concern them. Instead they try to point out why UF has a good gym. The same small mind will be making the same small point in 2026 when we still lack proper facilities.


  25. I thought the comparison was apt. The real comparison is really the gym at a single university versus what we have as a nation (Barbados).

    Xxxxxx

    @ Theo

    Was agreeing with both @ Baje and your feedback the narrow mindness had nothing to do with any of your comments.

    It was directed at other individuals.


  26. Perhaps this may explain why
    Bajan women do not gravitate towards sport. Here is a classic example of our toothless media, draconian laws and an incompetent sporting body working in unison.

    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2022/feb/03/fifa-investigates-after-st-kitts-appoint-coach-accused-of-sexual-abuse


  27. @ David,
    As we are talking about sports here’s an interesting story concerning American tennis players.

    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2023/aug/25/american-mens-tennis-grand-slam-title-drought


  28. @TLSN

    While it is true enough focus is not given to sports in Barbados and in many small islands, there is a good reason – lack of resources mean we can never sustain a high performance sports program given competing priorities. We will have to get creative.

  29. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Skinner, I agree that we are clearly “not being the best we can be”. My point above didn’t refute that; it dismissed the silly (IMHO) comparisons of the scope of operations/facilities.

    In the context of Bim we have to do better surely and the serious practical thrust of your or @Baje’s posts does speak to that and too our hurky-jerky efforts to develop suitable facilities. To wit: a then newish Sir Garry gym which hosted the regional BB tournament back in late 80s when Gay Griffith
    I believe was Pres; a then viable Waterford stadium which hosted many top flight cycle meets and where the said Barney Lynch ran a race creditably against the TnT Olympic champ Hasley Crawford; the revamped Kensignton, of course; the then new facilities at UWI and others.

    The major problem: why were the facilities and programs NOT SUSTAINED.

    That’s party about funds but moreso about the personnel who ran affairs … so yes I (and others) get IT … but I repeat, the comparisons to US – as made – were absurd and lacked context.

    It also should be noted that there are multiple more ‘good’ gym (private mainly) facilities across Bim than ever before…

    2…It should be noted that folks like Orlando Greene, Watson and Mac Fingall – (the former two like @Baje had scholarships to US: not sure about Mac-) came back and built excellent programs that developed promising atheletes. And of course before them the Jerston Clarkes and others mentioned above also had solid programs from which talented youth evolved.

    So I say again let us be practical and real in our comparisons…

    Peace brother.


  30. TLSN you never bring anything with substance and always expose yourself as a jackass.


  31. @Wake up
    Sincere apologies. My fingers seem to be faster than my old mind.

    I thought you were one of my good friends and overreacted.

    Sincerest apologies.


  32. Talking loud and saying NOTHING as USUAL.


  33. Invest in sports

    MAYNARD CALLS FOR MORE ASSISTANCE TO BE GIVEN TO ATHLETES

    By Anmar Goodridge-Boyce

    Longstanding track and field administrator Esther Maynard says a holistic approach is needed if Barbados is to produce more world-class athletes who will excel on the international stage.
    Maynard, a director of the Barbados Olympic Association who has served in several capacities in athletics around the Caribbean, believes now is the time for Government and the private sector to rally together to help local athletes reach the top.
    Speaking during a telephone interview with Barbados TODAY from Budapest, Hungary, at the World Athletics Championships following Sada Williams’ bronze medal run in the women’s 400-metres, Maynard said major improvements were needed if other athletes were to emulate Williams’ success on the world stage.
    “We are lucky to have Sada and we are proud of her, but we have to ensure that we as a country, not only as an association, provide the foundation that other athletes can come through to that level once they show the potential. It means that everything has to improve; our facilities, training and the functioning of everybody around athletics to make sure we keep improving and finding more Sadas,” Maynard said.
    “We cannot pay lip service to this.
    Everybody that can needs to contribute financially as well as helping with the support structure that enables the country to keep producing, not just to produce one athlete like that. It would help us to have more than one medalist not just at Worlds but at the Olympics as well.”
    Williams became Barbados’ first athlete with multiple World Championships medals after capturing her second bronze medal.
    She also placed third at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene, Oregon.
    “Sada deserves all the success that she has had. She had an excellent World Championships campaign, setting the national record in the semi-final and then fighting her way back with determination to place third in a very tough field in the final. She had stiff competition and had to run at her best to get that medal. All kudos go to Sada. I hold the performance in very high esteem. She has shown that she is a world-class athlete,” Maynard stated.
    She also took the opportunity to encourage Barbados’ men’s 4×400-metre relay team which narrowly missed out on qualification.
    “Going into the Olympics next year it has to be a continuation of where we are. We have a very good men’s 4x400m relay team and we need to build on that. We just missed the qualifying by being the 17th ranked team. Yes, we have a lot of work to do but not just at the top, the wider the base, the higher the pyramid where our athletes can reach and perform.
    “We have to ensure that we have the quantity. We have the talent, the aim now should not only be the individual medalists but the men’s 4x400m relay. We need a little more depth now to ensure that we are capable of making it into relay finals because the 4x400m relay in 1984 was the first event that Barbados qualified for as a team,” Maynard said.

  34. William Skinner Avatar

    We cannot possibly believe that citizens are not interested in athletics. Parents of children from the primary to secondary levels encourage and support the efforts of the children.
    These meetings attract a cross section of the society. I don’t think there would have been this level of enthusiasm from these young participants without parental and indeed community support.
    Furthermore , Radio Barbados carries both these meets. A recent interview with one of the primary school athletes was very well received.
    There is a tendency to blame the masses for all the shortcomings of those who govern. It’s a dastardly cop out.
    We don’t even properly maintain school grounds. When are we going to stop
    this embarrassing defense of what is nothing more than a political pappy show.


  35. Barbadians generally support their children if they are interested in athletics, but what does this look like when it is time to go next level? This is where the discussion is currently located. A majority of Barbadians especially in the blue collar segment will lean to educational opportunities over athletics.


  36. ..but what does this look like when it is time to go next level?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    The problem is that there is NO next level bout here…except for the career sports administrators…


  37. @Bush Tea

    What some struggle to understand is that a few successes because of outlier scenarios does not address the systemic issue why Barbados and others are challenged. We have limited resources and can do better to move the needle but we have a problem with managing to success in most areas of society. We never look at the big picture:


  38. Look Boss..
    It is MUCH simpler than you speculate…

    Visionary leadership is 99% responsible for societal success outcomes. Where there is no leadership vision, the brass bowls will be condemned to be vessels for night stool duties….

    Jamaica has shown what strong, visionary leaders in Sport can achieve – even with limited finances.

    The challenge is .. How do we select and maintain visionary leadership?


  39. @Bush Tea

    You have been to Jamaica, has this visionary leadership translated to other areas of society? Why do many Jamaican set a goal of emigrating to almost every country in the world including Barbados?


  40. One of the most surprising things about the 2023 is that Jamaican are competing in every area of track and field and meeting with great success.

    This excursion with other events should not have been a surprise as this was a Caribbean island with a bobsled team


  41. …has this visionary leadership translated to other areas of society?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Is this big red herring?
    We were speaking of Sport and thus sport leadership.
    Jamaica’s sport leaders are not the leaders in other sectors…


  42. @Bush Tea

    You should know better than most that Jamaica’s athletics success is driven by other factors besides leadership. That said we can learn a lot from Jamaica although the we come from a different place.


  43. @Bush Tea

    Have you ever attended a meeting with different countries from the region and observed how Jamaicans present compared to others?

    Discuss for 5 points.


  44. Grenadian star.


  45. Boss, Jamaicans are different to all other brass bowls is a very special way. But this in neither better or worse… just DIFFERENT.
    Bushie’s reference was strictly to the matter of leadership in sport.

    The same applies in Australia, for example after they did poorly in an Olympic Games, and the National leadership undertook a massive reform in sport that now sees Australia as a top performer in almost evert possible sport.

    Bushie is a piece o’ Jamaican, so no need to discuss…


  46. @Bush Tea

    Let us agree on that- we don’t other attributes they have perfected taking root in Barbados.


  47. […] out of the blog Sports needs an Oba the suggestion was made BU should highlight a few of these deadbeat local sports association if we […]

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