Stabroek News

LeBron James, Kevin Durant named All-Star Game captains

-

(Field Level Media) LeBron James will start in the All-Star Game for the 17th consecutiv­e time when this season's contest is held March 7 in Atlanta, extending his own record.

The Los Angeles Lakers forward also was named a captain for the AllStar Game. Forward Kevin Durant of the Brooklyn Nets is the other captain and will be making his 11th career appearance.

James and Durant will select their rosters on March 4.

The voting formula for starters consisted of fan balloting counting as 50 percent with player and media voting each counting as 25 percent.

Joining James as starters from the Western Conference are frontcourt players Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets and Kawhi Leonard of the Los Angeles Clippers. The backcourt starters are Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors and Luka Doncic of the Dallas Mavericks.

NBA scoring leader Bradley Beal of the Washington Wizards and Kyrie Irving of the Brooklyn Nets are the starting guards from the Eastern Conference. Joining Durant in the frontcourt are Giannis Antetokoun­mpo of the Milwaukee Bucks and Joel Embiid of the Philadelph­ia 76ers.

Perhaps the biggest surprise was Portland Trail Blazers star Damian Lillard being bypassed as a starting guard. Lillard, who ranks third in the NBA with a 29.8 scoring average, tied with Doncic for a West starting spot.

Fan balloting was used as the tiebreaker. Doncic ranked second in the Western Conference backcourt voting by the fans and Lillard was third. There has been criticism of the NBA holding an All-Star Game during the coronaviru­s pandemic, but commission­er Adam Silver defended staging the contest during an appearance on TNT.

Refusing to surrender to the rampaging assault on their livelihood­s by the ravages of COVID-19 the members of the Mocha Arcadia Multipurpo­se Agricultur­e Cooperativ­e Society are set to stage their second Producers Market Day in two months on Sunday February 21, Chairman of the Society Raeburn Jones told Stabroek Business earlier this week.

Hastening to provide assurances that the event will be attended by an oversight input designed to ensure the strict enforcemen­t of COVID-19 protocols, Jones told Stabroek Business that the decision to stage the event at this time was taken against the backdrop of what the Society has determined is the urgent need to provide a measure of practical material support for the small farmers and agro-processors who continue to feel an increasing financial ‘squeeze’ arising out of the restraints that have been placed on their ability to market their produce. The Producers Day event will commence at 6:00 hrs. and conclude at 17:00 hrs. and will be held on the open plot of land opposite the ‘Big Tree’ off the main access road.

Determined, it seems, to ensure the rigid applicatio­n of the prescribed COVID-19 precaution­s, Jones departed from his account of the details of Sunday’s event to spell out for Stabroek Business the logistics associated with the precaution­ary measures.

Participan­ts in the event, farmers, agroproces­sors, logistical support personnel and visitors/ buyers will all, without exception, be required to wear masks during their stay at the site of the event. Meanwhile, sanitation stations will be set up for all participan­ts while the stalls will be arranged in a U shape, allowing for different entry and exit points. The customary six-foot distancing procedure will also be enforced.

Jones told Stabroek Business that the feedback received so far from farmers and agro processors suggest the around forty vendors from the Mocha community will offer for sale a range of fruit and vegetables including citrus, turmeric, ginger, thyme, ground provisions, agro-processing products, meat and chicken. Provision has also been made for vendors offering detergents, clothing and other items. “This is a genuine effort by the Cooperativ­e and the community to help respond to the pressures that people are facing,” Jones said. Accordingl­y, Jones told Stabroek Business that it was the hope of the organizers that attendance and patronage of the event extend beyond the confines of the Mocha community and reach into other communitie­s of coastal Guyana.

Jones reminded that last December’s event had been a ‘massive success’, the majority of the farmers reporting that their produce had been “sold out.” On that occasion, he said, patronage of the event had extended beyond the Mocha community to other East Bank villages and Georgetown. “We would want patronage to be extended even further this time around,” Jones said. He said that arising out of the patronage realized from last December’s event all the farmers and agro-processors had seen their client base extended. He noted that since then some farmers and agro-processors have had to recruit paid help in order to meet the increase in demand for products that has occurred since last December. “Since last December some farmers have actually begun to provide home delivery services. These now have clients along the East

Bank corridor, in Georgetown and on the East and West coasts of Demerara.

Jones said that the organizati­onal arrangemen­ts for Sunday’s event includes the mobilizati­on of taxis/hire cars at the “Mocha road head” to facilitate persons desirous of being taken to the market day event and back to the public road. The agreed fare, he said is $100 per person adding that such protocols as have been applied for general public transporta­tion will also be applied in this instance. The minibus fare from Stabroek Market to Mocha is one hundred and twenty dollars.

Jones, meanwhile, credits Agricultur­e Extension Officer Mitzie Smith-Barker whom he says continues to use Facebook and other communicat­ion tools to continuall­y promote the agricultur­al and agro processing pursuits of the Mocha community. Smith-Barker is also credited for what Jones says has been her support to Mocha farmers seeking to optimize land use. He said that the efforts of the Mocha community have also secured the support of Professor Pat Francis and Dr. Lawrence Lewis of the University of Guyana and the Internatio­nal Decade for People of African Descent Assembly – Guyana (IDPAD).

The Society’ farmers have received training in packaging and labelling, marketing, and accounting from the Ministry of Agricultur­e and IICA, among other agencies

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Mocha Co-operative Society Chairman Raeburn Jones
Mocha Co-operative Society Chairman Raeburn Jones

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana