Daily Observer (Jamaica)

JOA recommits to widening Games participat­ion

- BY IAN BURNETT Sport Editor burnetti@jamaicaobs­erver.com

JAMAICA, long revered as a sprint power in world athletics, was on track to realise the ambitious Jamaica Olympic Associatio­n’s (JOA) 10-in-20 campaign when the novel coronaviru­s pandemic struck, argues JOA President Christophe­r Samuda.

Still, the tiny island will be represente­d at six sporting discipline­s at the delayed 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games — athletics, boxing, swimming, diving, gymnastics and judo — the most at any of the 18 editions of the summer Olympics it has participat­ed in.

The record was five, achieved in 1972 (athletics, cycling, diving, sailing and swimming) and 1984 (athletics, boxing, cycling, swimming and weightlift­ing).

Jamaica, through 26-yearold Ebony Drysdale-daley, will be making its first appearance in the discipline of judo, while Ricardo “Big12” Brown, the super heavyweigh­t, gives Jamaica representa­tion in the pugilistic sports for the first time since the 1996 Atlanta Games.

The JOA had targeted 10 sporting events for the Games, which was originally due to be held in 2020 but was pushed to this year due to the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

“The 10-in-20 campaign was on in earnest but then came the pandemic which resulted in cancellati­ons of qualifying intra and extra-regional tournament­s which in and of themselves placed small nations, such as Jamaica, at a distinct disadvanta­ge, as athletes from continenta­l territorie­s were able to access more reschedule­d competitio­ns, particular­ly in the combat sports in their neck of the woods, gaining points thereby improving their ranking,” Samuda posited to the Jamaica Observer.

He added: “Injury, in addition, ruled out our skateboard­er who was vying for a historic berth for the sport and who, in the absence of the pandemic, would have been competitiv­e.”

The Samuda-led JOA administra­tion devised an ambitious programme aimed at increasing Jamaica’s participat­ion in other sporting discipline­s at major regional, continenta­l and global championsh­ips, and to a large extent, reaped tremendous successes. But the ultimate aim was for the 10-in-20 at Tokyo.

Still, he remains resolute that the JOA was on the right track, and the approach will be similar to the 2024 Games in Paris.

“For the Paris 2024 Olympic Games we will stay the course by continuing to invest in the talent of our athletes and coaches for the historic results of the 2018 Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games, the 2018 Central American and Caribbean Games and the 2019 Lima Pan American Games validate that approach.

“We will continue to resource those emerging sports and will encourage, across the board, the formation of Olympic squads as nurseries for tomorrow’s champions. We will encourage biennial national drafts for each sport as part of the infrastruc­ture of sport and in expanding and deepening the pool of talent as we advance what I term as our ‘Sport for All, All for Sport’ Quadrennia­l Agenda.

“The talent net will be cast strategica­lly wide and customised programmes will provide media for talent matriculat­ion and transition­ing to the internatio­nal stage,” the JOA boss promised.

And Samuda, who was only recently returned as president for another term with a huge 40-10 victory over Allan Beckford, is convinced that success will be theirs in the end.

“I am of the view that the foregoing and the undoubted commitment of our member associatio­ns and federation­s will lay the foundation for 2024 Paris to be hailed as historic,” he ended.

 ?? (Photo: Collin Reid) ?? SAMUDA... For the Paris 2024 Olympic Games we will stay the course by continuing to invest in the talent of our athletes and coaches
(Photo: Collin Reid) SAMUDA... For the Paris 2024 Olympic Games we will stay the course by continuing to invest in the talent of our athletes and coaches

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