Daily Observer (Jamaica)

A West Indian team in the Olympics, World Cup is infinitely worth pursuing

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Dear editor,

It has become rather perplexing that, in spite of the jelling of the West Indies cricket team, the nations of the Caribbean refuse to use this model for all sports. This issue has been mooted from time to time in various Caribbean media starting almost two decades ago, but has never been addressed by Caribbean government­s, sporting bodies, and Caricom.

In the 2016 Olympics, the English speaking Caribbean tallied 17 medals. In 2012 that number was 43.

A West Indies soccer team stands a chance of competing internatio­nally and possibly winning medals in a way that none of the territoria­l teams do. Ditto for any other team sports. In athletics, a West Indies team can bring home significan­t amount of medals from various world games, the Olympics, and so on, especially given that powerhouse Jamaica will be supplement­ed by the best of The Bahamas, Trinidad & Tobago, and the other nations.

There are also other reasons for West Indian participat­ion as a single entity in the internatio­nal sports arena. For one, it’s much more cost-effective since, instead of large numbers of officials that accompany the various teams, there will be one set of officials at any given time and trips for the boys or girls would have been eliminated. As well we have seen how cricket brings us together, even as we debate, argue, and ‘diss’ at the national level in seeking to claim the superiorit­y of our countries’ teams.

This level of coming together on the one hand, and bantering on the other across the Caribbean will become multiplied with each new West Indian birthed, and this can only be healthy for Caribbeann­ess.

As well, besides expanding that glue keeping us together, other West Indian teams can also ensure that cream rises to the top and become internatio­nally sought after while those just below strive to get to the top a la in cricket.

As former West Indies Davis Cup player Ian Macdonald pointed out almost two decades ago, “For 30 years, from 1953 to 1983, there was one other united West Indian sports team: the West Indies Davis Cup tennis team. I know this well, since I played with extreme pride in the very first match for the West Indies in their tie against the United States, in Jamaica in 1953, and later captained West Indies Davis Cup teams with even greater pride in the 1960s.

“I think it was a tragedy that the West Indian Tennis Associatio­n meekly accepted a sudden ruling by the Internatio­nal Lawn Tennis Federation in 1983 that the West Indies, not constituti­ng a country by their rules, could no longer play in the Davis Cup as a united team. Since 1983 there have been a number of years when a West Indian team, drawing on the tennis talents of all the region’s countries, would have done extremely well in the Davis Cup.”

And, like cricket, other sports can bring internatio­nal tournament­s to the Caribbean and overall economic benefits, including boosting tourism and putting the Caribbean on the global stage as cricket is doing. Consequent­ly, there will also be more money to develop sports, including building needed infrastruc­ture and maximising use of currently available ones.

I quote Macdonald again: “I cannot understand why more thought has not been given to organising sports other than cricket on a pan-west Indian basis. Nor can I understand why there has not been more debate on this issue in the Caribbean media. A West Indian presence as one nation in the Olympics, the Commonweal­th Games, the Pan-american Games, the Davis Cup (again), the World Cups in soccer and rugby, and other world and regional events, is infinitely worth pursuing. As West Indians draw closer together, we cannot afford to neglect the tremendous emotional charge that can be derived from grass roots identifica­tion with sporting teams embracing all of us as one.”

And, while some internatio­nal sports bodies, as pointed out above, will claim that the West Indies cannot participat­e as one team since it’s a conglomera­tion of nations, unified West Indian sports teams can fight this, and more likely than not win out, especially given that Caricom does reflect a ‘one team’ concept in many ways.

Annan Boodram caribvoice@aol.com

 ?? (Photos: AFP) ?? The West Indies team celebrates with the trophy after winning the third and final One-day Internatio­nal match between West Indies and Sri Lanka at Vivian Richards Stadium in North Sound, Antigua, on March 14, 2021.
(Photos: AFP) The West Indies team celebrates with the trophy after winning the third and final One-day Internatio­nal match between West Indies and Sri Lanka at Vivian Richards Stadium in North Sound, Antigua, on March 14, 2021.

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