Jamaica Gleaner

Excelsior end 51-year wait at Champs

- Hubert Lawrence/ Gleaner Writer

WHEN TRAVIS Williams took the baton across the line for Excelsior High School’s 4x400 metres team at last week’s ISSA/ GraceKenne­dy Boys and Girls’ Athletics Championsh­ips, it ended a 51-year wait for a win in the four-lap relay. David Riley, Excelsior’s head coach, says he knew he had a high-calibre team a year ago.

Last Saturday, 51 years after Excelsior won the 1968 Boys Championsh­ips 4x440-yard final, a rested quartet of Demar Francis, Devonte Archer, Kewani Campbell and Williams outran the opposition in 3 minutes 10.94 seconds. That’s the fastest time ever in Excelsior track and field history.

Riley explained that the meet schedule has prevented him from fielding his best 4x400m team for several years but that he was thrilled that his team was able to deliver this time around.

“This year, we were able to, but the last two years, it’s been difficult because of the change in schedule, where the 200 metres Class One boys’ is only 30 minutes from the 4x400m prelims,” Riley said. “So because our top sprinters are very useful for us over the 400m journey, we’ve always not been able to get that done.”

Excelsior did reach the final in 2017.

“I actually took a risk with Andel Miller, who I had given instructio­ns to just finish second in his semifinal of the 200m and then just to come over, walk back to the finish line, and run a leg of the 4x400m,” he recalled.

This year, that problem was averted. Francis and Williams ran only the Cass One 400m, with Francis reaching the final and Archer and Campbell competing in the 400 hurdles. The rest helped.

With split times of 47.8, 47.3, 48.9, and 46.9 seconds, respective­ly, Francis, Archer, Campbell and Williams completed a victory that had been predicted by Excelsior track and field patriarch Desmond Shakespear­e.

“Since last year, I kept telling them that they could run 3.10 [minutes] this year, and I kept telling everybody who would hear me, including my former teammates”, said Shakespear­e.

Once the stick reached Williams, Shakespear­e grew confident even though Kingston College had pulled into contention.

“I know his style, and just as he was going to come off the turn, I started screaming, ‘Put down the hammer, Travis, put down the hammer’ because I know he was going to just blow them away because I’ve seen him run so many times,” he recounted.

The overjoyed Excelsior veteran, whose 1968 teammates were Dennis Smellie, Robert Thomas and 1972 Olympian Garth Case, thinks the champion team can go faster.

“For me, I don’t know what Coach Riley is thinking, but for me, I wouldn’t be surprised if they go 3.08 [minutes] or thereabout­s, or even quicker,” the 1968 Excelsior team captain said.

Riley put the win into perspectiv­e. “From my standpoint, there are two things you can do in a championsh­ip. You can either win the whole thing, or you win the last race, you know, and so us winning the last race is very special and memorable, and it’s great to have created memories,” said Riley.

By way of example, he added, “One person told me that if the race was any longer, her bed would have been broken down because she watched the race on her bed and she was just jumping up and down, and good thing it wasn’t any longer.”

 ??  ?? GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR Excelsior’s Travis Williams (right) celebrates with teammate Demar Francis after anchoring his team to the gold medal in the 4x400m relay Open final at the ISSA/ GraceKenne­dy Boys and Girls’ Athletics Championsh­ips at the National Stadium last Saturday.
GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR Excelsior’s Travis Williams (right) celebrates with teammate Demar Francis after anchoring his team to the gold medal in the 4x400m relay Open final at the ISSA/ GraceKenne­dy Boys and Girls’ Athletics Championsh­ips at the National Stadium last Saturday.

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