Global Times - Weekend

SPRINTER FACTORY

Jamaica perfects art of developing runners

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When Usain Bolt hangs up his running spikes after the World Championsh­ips in August, the athletics world will bid farewell to arguably the greatest sprinter the sport has ever seen.

But while athletics contemplat­es life without its biggest superstar, Anthony Davis will already be working hard to unearth the next young Jamaican sprinter capable of following in Bolt’s blistering­ly fast footsteps.

Davis is the director of sport at Kingston’s University of Technology, or UTech, the de facto sprint factory which produced Bolt and virtually every other major Jamaican sprinter of significan­ce.

The modest facility’s alumni reads like a who’s who of Jamaican sprinting, including Bolt, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, Asafa Powell, Nesta Carter and Elaine Thompson, the 100-meter & 200-meter 2016 Olympic champion.

“Everybody wants to be the next Usain Bolt because he is a superstar,” Davis said.

Jamaica is considered the sprint capital of the world following a decade of dominance at successive Olympic Games and World Championsh­ips, a success which belies the Caribbean nation’s population of just 2.7 million.

Sprinter Tyquendo Tracey attri- butes Jamaica’s success to national character.

“Most of us are born with sheer determinat­ion. It is hard to beat a Jamaican,” Tracey said.

“The determinat­ion comes from the high level of competitio­n including high school. We always have this level of competitiv­eness.”

In fact Jamaica’s success can be traced back several decades, from the moment that Herb McKenley won gold and three silvers at the 1948 London and 1952 Helsinki Olympic Games.

McKenley served as coach of the Jamaican national team from 1954 to 1973 and was awarded the Jamaican Order of Merit in 2004, three years before his death.

However it was through the work of Dennis Johnson that the seeds of Jamaica’s sprinting dynasty were sown. Johnson, who equaled the 100-yard world record three times over a six-week stretch in 1961, had been schooled in the fundamenta­ls by legendary US coach Bud Winter at San Jose State in California.

Upon his return to Jamaica, Johnson set out to create a US-style collegiate program in his homeland, helping found the University of Technology in Kingston.

It was a historic move that would earn him the title the “godfather of Jamaican track.”

Jamaica’s sprinting success has been credited to everything from its island life with a culture of walking everywhere to a diet which includes yams and green bananas.

But Davis says the answer is more straightfo­rward – dedicated athletes, good coaching and science-backed training methods. Driving the sport at a grassroots level is the Champs annual high school track meet which last five days and attracts crowds of 30,000. “With 30,000 people in a packed stadium and millions of viewers on TV, Champs is a real factor in keeping the fire burning with our youngsters,” said track coach Paul Francis.

So much Jamaican success has inevitably aroused questions about doping. The former director of the Jamaican Anti-Doping Agency Renee Shirley went on record as saying not enough is being done to snare the drug cheats in her country.

Davis dismisses any suggestion that there is a darker side to Jamaica’s sprinting dominance.

“To the detractors I say ‘Pause one minute go back to 1948 Herb McKenley, go back to Helsinki,” he said. “There has always been a great Jamaican athlete before we even knew what was doping.

“Our program did not develop overnight. Our program didn’t just drop out of nowhere. We have worked long and hard on it.”

 ??  ?? A local athlete trains on an outfield track at the national stadium in Kingston, capital of Jamaica, on June 8.
A local athlete trains on an outfield track at the national stadium in Kingston, capital of Jamaica, on June 8.
 ??  ?? Page Editor: luwenao@globaltime­s.com.cn
Page Editor: luwenao@globaltime­s.com.cn

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