Jamaica Gleaner

Champs more prestigiou­s than CARIFTA

Why is it that the big athletes in Jamaica, at times, will miss out on Carifta, but they will never opt out of Champs? Why would all that be true if they did not see Champs as the bigger and more prestigiou­s meet?

- Orville Higgins

EARLIER THIS week, some of my colleagues at KLAS Sport FM 89 and I had what eventually turned out to be a quite heated discussion. The moot was “Is ‘Champs’ (ISSA/ GraceKenne­dy Boys and Girls’ Athletics Championsh­ips) a more prestigiou­s meet than the Carifta Games to the young athletes who competed in both?

My simple answer was yes. My colleagues countered with the argument that a high school meet in Jamaica cannot be considered more prestigiou­s than a regional meet involving athletes from all over the Caribbean.

Consistent with what all good debaters do, I went for the definition of the word prestigiou­s. What I found was “inspiring respect and admiration; having high status.”

I could not see how one could not argue that Champs had more respect and admiration attached to it than the Carifta games.

I started by putting these questions to my stubborn colleagues. Why is it that Jamaican coaches peaked their athletes for Champs and not for Carifta? Why are personal bests more likely to happen at Champs, than at Carifta? Why is it that the big athletes in

Jamaica, at times, will miss out on CARIFTA, but they will never opt out of Champs? Why would all that be true if they did not see Champs as the bigger and more prestigiou­s meet?

I should have won the argument from there. My co-workers should have given up, but they dug their heels in and tried to put up a fight. I then reminded them that virtually all of our Jamaican high school track and field stars over the years performed at both meets, but what will we remember them most for, their performanc­e at Champs or Carifta? The exploits of athletes like Usain Bolt, Jermaine Gonzales, Daniel England, Anneisha McLaughlin-Whilby, Michael Ohara, and Christophe­r Taylor are all etched into our minds.

The performanc­es of these athletes at Champs is almost part of our folklore. Do we even remember what they did at Carifta?

“And what of the crowds,” I asked my colleagues, who were by now metaphoric­ally hanging onto the ropes. Why do we have 30,000 noisy hysterical supporters at one meet, while we may have four or five thousand at the other? Why do scouts pour into Champs in far greater numbers than the Carifta Games, if it was not a bigger and more prestigiou­s meet?

The argument that a regional meet involving countries MUST be more prestigiou­s than a high school meet does not hold up. Sometimes the “smaller” competitio­n carries far more significan­ce to all concerned than the bigger competitio­n.

The ISSA/Digicel Manning Cup and ISSA/WATA daCosta Cup finals, for example, are usually better attended and played with more gusto by the players than the Olivier Shield, which is supposed to be “the symbol of schoolboy supremacy.” It may not make sense, but it is just the way it is.

By now, my colleagues were gasping for air. They could not come up with any arguments that stood up to rational scrutiny. Then, I cruelly came up with the coup de grace.

One of those arguing against me was the sports editor himself. I reminded him how he treated both meets.

For Champs he arranged a strong panel and live continuous coverage for the last two days, while for Carifta, we may be lucky if we get four “updates” for the day. That did it! They did not concede but only because they did not have to!

 ?? COLLIN REID ?? In this file photo from Friday, April 24, 2015, Edwin Allen High School’s Shaquine Cameron leads home ahead of Vere Technical and St Jago High School to win the Championsh­ip of America 4x400m relays at the Penn Relays at the Franklin Field Stadium in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia, USA.
COLLIN REID In this file photo from Friday, April 24, 2015, Edwin Allen High School’s Shaquine Cameron leads home ahead of Vere Technical and St Jago High School to win the Championsh­ip of America 4x400m relays at the Penn Relays at the Franklin Field Stadium in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia, USA.
 ?? GLADSTONE TAYLOR ?? Rajay Morris (centre) of Clarendon College wins Heat One of the Class One Boys 200m semi-finals, ahead of Jamaica College's Robinson (right) and Calabar High School's Christophe­r Taylor at the National Stadium in Kingston on Thursday, March 28, 2019. File
GLADSTONE TAYLOR Rajay Morris (centre) of Clarendon College wins Heat One of the Class One Boys 200m semi-finals, ahead of Jamaica College's Robinson (right) and Calabar High School's Christophe­r Taylor at the National Stadium in Kingston on Thursday, March 28, 2019. File

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