Showing posts with label Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. Show all posts

Monday, 19 August 2013

The Games of 2013

Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.” Sir Winston Churchill


Usain Bolt
Credit Ricardo Makyn
Gleaner Staff Photographer







Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce
Credit Ricardo Makyn
Gleaner Staff Photographer


The 14th IAAF World Athletics Championships held in Moscow ended just right for all Jamaica, with Shelly-Ann Fraser-Price and Usain St. Leo Bolt crossing the finish lines with relay batons safely in hand. How wonderful is it to hear our national anthem played at the very end, three times in a row. We couldn’t ask for more. Or could we?
 
In recent times, to understand the absorption rate of the international track and field games such as the World Championships and the Olympics you also have to follow on social media. Unless, of course, you are fortunate enough to be in Moscow or London in 2012. Only then will you experience the full extent of the interest of all the world in Jamaica’s performance and the growing interest of Jamaicans beyond the 200 metres or relays.


I’ll go out a limb and divine that for the average Jamaican a good run in the short sprints and relays are all that they need to knock two pot covers together in excited hurrah. I am noting however an exciting trend in an increasing number of Jamaicans taking notice of other events beyond those for which we are best known. How else do you explain our ever growing cheers for athletes whose names we can barely pronounce let alone commit to spelling? It’s not accidental; the impact of Usain Bolt has been immeasurable and has brought many personalities and stars into the limelight.

Kimberley Williams Triple Jump Credit Ricardo Makyn
Gleaner Staff Photographer
 


Edna Kiplagat
Marathon Champion
Getty Image
As they say in some circles, “all an a sudden” we’re cheering for names like Mo Farrah, Meseret Defar, Tirunesh Dibaba and Edna Kiplagat; all over distances that we’ve not even ventured an effort let alone a few competitors. We now know the names Bohdan Bondarenko and Svetlana Shkolina (high jump), Teddy Tamgho (triple jump) and Yelena Isinbayeva (pole vault); along with their events. So as consumers of the sport we’re evolving; becoming more sophisticated and wanting to see the country work harder at producing athletes beyond a handful of names like Kimberley Williams (triple jump), Natoya Goule (800 metres) and Damar Forbes (long jump) – hint hint Jamaica Athletics Administrative Association (JAAA).

Hansle Parchment
Credit Ricardo Makyn
Gleaner Staff Photographer
Yes, the “usuals” delivered our craved high but others worth mentioning gave us our doses of uppers and downers. We were spectacularly not surprised, though truly delighted, by the sprint doubles, Warren Weir’s silver run and Nesta Carter’s first individual bright bronze medal. We were sure that the 4x100 metres relays were ours to lose.
We ached with Hansle Parchment and Anneisha McLaughlin as they went to pain filled places and gasped a few “oh somethings” as Andrew Riley clipped that late hurdle to lose his place along the way. We were saddened by Allyson Felix’s fall from grace, she’s a gracious competitor and we always prefer to win by beating the best of them. We were in shock for our Caribbean star, Kirani James, as he learnt the hard lesson of loss against the big boys. We swore aloud at out television screens as they announced the disqualification of our women’s 4x400 metres relay team and let out a great big “kis teet” when Kaleise Spencer was dropped from the 400 metres hurdles for what many saw as “foolishniss”, ‘fight dem a giwi’.  



Novlene Williams-Mills
Credit Ricardo Makyn
Gleaner Staff Photographer

These games delivered more to Jamaica than rankings and medals. They delivered a brief respite from our harsh realities. They delivered messages of determination from those Like Novlene Willaims-Mills who competed against the toughest odds. They delivered messages of pride in our future from those like Stephanie McPherson and the Williams sisters who realized a dream by just getting thus far. They delivered messages of hope from those like Natoya Goule who never made it past the first rounds of their events.
For this fan of the sport however, the most important message to emerge from the 14th IAAF World Championships was about courage, delivered by a teenaged high school student, barely old enough to vote or marry without his parents’ permission. Jevon Francis shouted to the entire world, WE DO NOT QUIT. We do not quit because it’s hard, we do not quit because it seems impossible, we do not quit, because we have nothing to lose by giving our all.


Jevon Francis Credit Ricardo Makyn
Gleaner Staff Photographer

Just as they did in prior years, Jamaicans gathered in Half Way Tree and Downtown Kingston where they were whipped into a freakish frenzy as our athletes delivered just the right doses of victory.
The rest of us congregated on social media to make our pride known, Jamaica Land We Love.


 


Monday, 6 August 2012

Olympics 2012 – History in the 100 metres Sprints

In a year when, for the first time, the Olympic Games saw female athletes from every participating country; the results of the women's 100 metres was particularly sweet for Jamaica. And as if to repeat Helen Reddy's refrain, "I am woman hear me roar, in numbers too big to ignore", Malaysian shooter Nur Suryani Mohamad Taibi competed eight months pregnant.
The women's 100 metres was, by any reasonable measure, historic. Let's start with the winner, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce; not only did she become the first Jamaican woman to win a 100 metres in Beijing, she is only the third woman to repeat the feat and with improved time. Our bronze medalist, Veronica Campbell-Brown with a 10.81 seconds season's best ran 0.16 seconds faster than she did in the Athens Olympics to win that bronze medal. By the way, she's eight years older and this was the fastest 3rd place finish ever.

Picture by Ricardo Makyn - Gleaner Staff Photographer
So what else made this race historic? Six of the eight finalists ran sub-11 seconds.  The London final gave us the fastest times ever in 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th and 8th places. Carmelita Jeter's 10.78 seconds would have won gold in every prior year of female Olympic 100 metres, including 2008.  VCB's 3rd place time would have won her a gold medal in every prior Olympic 100 metres meeting except 2008 or a medal in all. 
 
The men's 100 metres in London produced both incredible history and heart rending drama for Jamaica. It was for starters, overall the fastest 100 metres ever. Not since Americans Archie Hahn (1904 and 1906) and Carl Lewis (1984 and 1988) has any man repeated a gold medal run in the Olympic final of this short sprint. Indeed we can proudly declare that it is the first time in this century, it was done outright. Recall that Lewis' 9.92 seconds (upgraded) gold medal in 1988 came as a result of Ben Johnson's disqualification for doping offense and no record was broken. It is also the first time it is being done by someone who is not an American.

Picture from The Gleaner
Let's face it though, our own Usain Bolt doesn't merely win big championship races, he has this little habit of setting records along the way; this time lowering his own Olympic record to 9.63 seconds. As if to make it beyond clear that ownership should never be in question. It is on record that I wasn't prepared to "bet good money" on Bolt taking the 100 metres, but that was on July 3rd. At the beginning of his heat in London, all doubts vanished as though waved away by a magician’s wand. I saw his face, the fun was back and I saw no signs of the worried and pained look I saw on his face in July at the National Stadium.
 
Yohan Blake, in his first Olympic appearance ran his best, his very best for his well deserved silver medal; we know it because he did it at the national trials to beat Usain. Can't ask for more than your best at 9.75 seconds, for you see, this would have won gold and the record in every year of the Olympic Games since 1896; except those won by Usain Bolt.
Picture from The Gleaner

Our collective Jamaican heart ached as we watched Asafa fall out of the race in agony from his persistent and aggravated groin injury. We'll never know but his chances were as good as any, and better than most of the other men who jostled behind Bolt for a podium spot. Don't forget that Tyson Gay too, who ran a season's best of 9.80 seconds for 4th place, has never won an Olympic medal; both men to this day remain two of the fastest in the history of recorded 100 metres results.


Like the women, the men produced a historic race with the fastest recorded times by 3rd, 4th and 5th place finishers; all from the USA with 4th and 5th having to run season's or personal bests just to place. Not entirely unfamiliar really, when losing to Usain Bolt. In Berlin, Tyson Gay set a national record to take 2nd and Asafa Powell ran a season's best for 3rd as did the 5th, 6th and 7th place finishers.

The history doesn't stop there though, if you exclude Asafa who was injured down the track, every man in that race ran sub-10 seconds. Think about it, just think about it and the one man who didn't has done in at least 78 times; more than any other. In fact, Beijing’s silver and bronze medalists would have placed 6th and 7th in this race, and one of them; Richard Thompson did.

The high tides that are Usain Bolt and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce raised all ships in the 100 metres harbour. Every milestone deserves to be marked, and what a way to punctuate 50 years of our nation's independence.

I remain a very proud and hopeful Jamaican.