Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Congrats to Gayle, now let the work begin

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CONGRATULA­TIONS are in order for the new president of the Jamaica Athletics Administra­tive Associatio­n (JAAA), Garth Gayle, after his comprehens­ive win at the polls over iconic Olympic champion Donald Quarrie at the annual general meeting (AGM) held at the National Arena on Saturday.

Gayle and his entire slate were elected and it goes without saying that there will be no honeymoon period and they will have to hit the ground running if the sport is to avoid further setbacks caused by the ongoing novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

The work starts now and one can only hope the new executive will apply the same energy they used in getting elected to move the associatio­n forward and into the modern times.

Make no mistake about it, despite track and field being our most successful sport, administra­tively, we are still in the dark ages and there remains a lot of work to be done to get us up to par with even smaller countries such as Trinidad and Tobago.

Outgoing President Dr Warren Blake has claimed that it was their management skills that saw our athletes dominate the sprints for more than a decade and see our throwers and jumpers starting to make a name for themselves.

I would agree with Coach Stephen Francis who has described the JAAA as being lucky and have been able to ride on the success created by Inter-secondary Schools Sports Associatio­n (ISSA) and the high schools, clubs such as MVP, Racers TC and Sprintec, as well as the US college systems, that have done more to develop athletes than the national federation. going to vote.

While I agree to some extent, I maintain that Aris was wrong and Dr Blake was also wrong to be holding on to those sentiments that sent the message that they were not answerable to anyone but the relatively few who were casting votes.

The executive of the JAAA, like those of the Jamaica Football Federation, the Jamaica Olympic Associatio­n and all other national sporting associatio­ns, must understand that their positions don’t give then any divine rights, but merely there are only there to safeguard them for the entire country and the Diaspora, for it is not an old boys’ club and that kind of thinking has no place in these times.

It is possible that the ‘old boys’ club attitude’ could be the reason the most successful sport has not been able to attract the level of corporate sponsorshi­p that one would think it would, especially at the local level.

The JAAA managed to get away with avoiding the incorporat­ion of technology for Saturday’s election and despite Dr Blake’s insistence that it must not be trusted, they cannot be allowed to go on with this backward kind of thinking.

Gayle is a member of World Athletics’ Technical Committee and I am willing to bet that he has used similar technology to carry out his responsibi­lities since the lockdown.

The pandemic has seen global business giants and sporting bodies become even more dependent on the use of technology that has improved in leaps and bounds, and if it is good enough for the new JAAA president to use for other business, it must be good enough for the federation.

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