Jamaica Gleaner

SHELLY-ANN UNVEILED

Statue unveiled to honour multiple Olympic champion

- IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER

The statue of Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce was last night unveiled inside Statue Park at the National Stadium.

SHELLY ANN Fraser Pryce’s determinat­ion has been immortalis­ed by a statue in Statue Park at Independen­ce Park.

The statue was unveiled yesterday by Minister of Sport, Olivia Grange, Prime Minister Andrew Holness and sculptor Basil Watson.

“The statue of Fraser-Pryce raising her fist in celebratio­n represents the diminutive sprinter’s determinat­ion,”Watson said.

Watson said his objective was to capture the determinat­ion Fraser-Pryce depicted when she crossed the line first in the women’s 100m final at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China.

Minister Grange said the statue will stand as a reminder that women from humble beginnings can rise above great obstacles.

“Her story is another among great Jamaican women who are born in humble circumstan­ces, who are mindful of the glory they could bring to their families and communitie­s, and set out to play their parts on the great woman stage. In doing so, Shelly-Ann has become a great model for girls, “Grange said.

Holness said: “Shelly-Ann is a true example of what we mean when we say ‘Wi likkle but wi Tallawah.”

STOOD BY RULES

Dr Warren Blake, President of the Jamaica Athletics Administra­tive Associatio­n (JAAA), said the fist pump emblem that is captured in the statue was made possible because the executives of the associatio­n stood by its rules when they were widespread calls for Fraser-Pryce to be replaced by the then sprint-queen Veronica Campbell-Brown.

Fraser-Pryce had finished second in the women’s 100m at the JAAA Senior Championsh­ips in 2008 and secured one of the three automatic spots to represent Jamaica in the 100m at the Beijing Games.

But the seasoned CampbellBr­own was preferred by the public, even though she was placed fourth in the race.

“When she placed second at the National Championsh­ip in 2008, she also pushed the more seasoned competitor (Campbell-Brown) into fourth and suggestion­s came from far and wide that the JAAA should violate its rules and replace the new and unproven Shelly-Ann with that competitor,” Blake recalled. “She rose above that adversity to become the 2008 100m Olympic champion and it is that celebrator­y fist in the air that she did when she crossed the line that is forever captured by the statue we see here.”

The two-time Olympic 100m champion has won 15 medals for Jamaica at the Olympic Games and IAAF World Championsh­ips, nine of which are gold.

She is also the joint national record holder in the 100m at 10.70 seconds with her MVP Track Club training partner Elaine Thompson.

Fraser Pryce was thankful for the honour.

“The honourable Minister Grange, I want to thank you for this initiative in making sure that our athletes, while still alive, can see their statues,” she said.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Shelly Ann Fraser-Pryce holds the maquette of her statue, shortly after it was presented to her by sculptor Basil Watson, during the unveiling of her statue in Statue Park at the National Stadium yesterday.
Shelly Ann Fraser-Pryce holds the maquette of her statue, shortly after it was presented to her by sculptor Basil Watson, during the unveiling of her statue in Statue Park at the National Stadium yesterday.
 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER PHOTOS BY ?? Olympian Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (second left) poses with the maquette of her statue which was unveiled at Statue Park at the National Stadium yesterday. Also pictured are sculptor Basil Watson (left), Sports Minister Olivia Grange (second right) and Prime Minister Andrew Holness.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER PHOTOS BY Olympian Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (second left) poses with the maquette of her statue which was unveiled at Statue Park at the National Stadium yesterday. Also pictured are sculptor Basil Watson (left), Sports Minister Olivia Grange (second right) and Prime Minister Andrew Holness.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica