Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Grange, Wehby see positives in internatio­nal participat­ion at Champs

- BY DANIEL BLAKE Staff reporter blaked@jamaicaobs­erver.com

THERE have been mixed views regarding the number of internatio­nal athletes competing at the Issa/gracekenne­dy Boys’ and Girls’ Athletics Championsh­ips (Champs) but Sport Minister Olivia Grange and Gracekenne­dy Group Chief Executive Officer Don Wehby support the idea of more internatio­nal athletes competing.

Prior to the championsh­ips, it was announced that a record number of overseas athletes would be competing at Champs this year. Students from the Caribbean, the USA, Europe and Africa, totalling over 100, represente­d various schools in both boys’ and girls’ events.

Prior to this year’s event a quota was implemente­d on the number of foreign nationals competing at Champs, which meant that each school would be permitted to use two student athletes per class. This followed a vote taken among principals after there was an influx from 2021 to 2023.

However, Minister Grange told the Jamaica Observer that overseas athletes competing will further enhance Jamaica’s sporting programme.

“As long as it does not affect our home-grown athletes, I don’t have a problem,” she said. “What it does is create that competitio­n and encourage that competitiv­e spirit, and when we see athletes from abroad coming to Jamaica it also helps to create Jamaica as that training ground internatio­nally — and it’s because of how good we are. So, we should see it more as a compliment and not as preventing us from excelling, but rather to spur us on to want to be the best.

“We have a lot to offer that other countries don’t. When those internatio­nal athletes come to Jamaica to compete in Champs, they come to be part of an institutio­n — so it means their families, their parents, would have seen the benefit to them by coming to Jamaica, and learning, and being trained here and educated here, so to me, it’s a compliment. It’s a positive, it’s not a negative, and we are not afraid of the competitio­n because we know we are the greatest.”

Wehby, whose company has sponsored Champs since 2007, says he wouldn’t mind seeing an increase for future editions.

“I have no problem with it at all once you’re here for a good education also,” Wehby told the Observer. “I would think that Boys’ and Girls’ Champs could become a truly internatio­nal meet. Keith Wellington [ISSA president] said there are over 100 internatio­nal athletes competing. I have no issues. In fact, I’d encourage athletes to come here, but they have to come for a good education as well — not just to run alone.”

However ISSA Boys’ and Girls’ Athletics Championsh­ips Committee Chairman Richard Thompson doesn’t expect any changes to the quota for overseas athletes as they seek to protect the interests of Jamaican students.

“We want them [internatio­nal athletes] to be involved at Champs but we want to control the numbers a bit so our Jamaican athletes can have a fair chance of being developed,” he told the Observer. “So, it’s trying to strike a balance and not to exclude.

“We saw the influx [of] internatio­nal athletes because we suspect those involved in heavy recruiting saw that loophole where the restrictio­n on quota were only coming from member schools, so we decided to extend the quota to internatio­nal athletes.

“It’s not something that ISSA is trying to discourage but it’s something we want to monitor, and not lose the essence of what we are trying to achieve as an organisati­on.”

Over the years, schools and institutio­ns across the region have competed against Jamaica’s junior athletes on the track. One such example is at the Gibson Mccook Relays in February when athletes from Trinidad and Tobago, USA, and Canada took part in different events.

While admitting he would not be opposed to the idea of internatio­nal schools competing at Champs, Thompson says it would not be practical.

“It’s unlikely that it will get to that stage unless we change the whole idea around the championsh­ips, because our high school championsh­ips is really about Jamaican schools,” he said.

“So if we bring other schools outside of Jamaica it means they will participat­e without the chance of winning the Jamaican championsh­ip — unless there’s an opportunit­y to have a different kind of championsh­ips organised by ISSA — but that’s something we need to explore,” he said. “But definitely, the nature of our championsh­ip is to restrict it to Jamaican schools but not necessaril­y Jamaican athletes.”

 ?? (Photos: Naphtali Junior) ?? Trinidad and Tobago’s Natasha Fox competed in Class One for Edwin Allen.
(Photos: Naphtali Junior) Trinidad and Tobago’s Natasha Fox competed in Class One for Edwin Allen.
 ?? ?? Gracekenne­dy Group CEO Senator Don Wehby and Sports Minister Olivia “Babsy” Grange say they have no issues with internatio­nal athletes competing at the Issa/gracekenne­dy Boys’ and Girls’ Athletics Championsh­ips.
Gracekenne­dy Group CEO Senator Don Wehby and Sports Minister Olivia “Babsy” Grange say they have no issues with internatio­nal athletes competing at the Issa/gracekenne­dy Boys’ and Girls’ Athletics Championsh­ips.

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