Jamaica Gleaner

‘Buffalo Soldiers’: Jamaican ice hockey team to be memorialis­ed in Canadian sports yearbook

- Glenda Anderson/Gleaner Reporter

JAMAICA’S SENIOR men’s ice hockey team’s historic championsh­ip win at last year’s Amerigol LATAM Cup is memorialis­ed in a Canadian sports yearbook published earlier this year.

The team copped the championsh­ip in its first internatio­nal outing against teams from Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, Chile, and defending champions Colombia, whom they beat to take the title.

The tournament invited over 400 players and 21 teams from Latin America and the Caribbean across four major divisions.

National team coach Cyril Bollers organised the creation and publishing of the yearbook, aptly titled after the Bob Marley anthem Buffalo Soldier, which influenced the team’s nickname during the tournament. “The inspiratio­n was really just to capture the memories for a group of 18 men coming together for the first time, just creating this moment in history. It’s really a keepsake for the team to capture the memories of a lifetime,” Bollers said.

Each participan­t is introduced and profiled in the 68-page book, which features photos and their memories of the epic five days of competitio­n in South Florida.

The content includes submission­s from the all-volunteer coaching staff, as well as all the players, parents, the general manager, and the equipment manager.

Jamaican Olympic Ice Hockey Federation chairman Don Anderson, who provided the foreword for the book, commended Bollers for the initiative, which he says fully promotes the work of the team and Jamaica’s standing on the world stage.

The work is the build-up of efforts by the squad to document the euphoria that surrounded the experience of team members and their fans and also to garner support for the sport both locally and overseas.

The book is now available for order online.

Team Jamaica co-captains Teegan Moore and Jaden Lindo travelled to Jamaica after the tournament to participat­e in a series of speaking engagement­s and meetings hosted by Anderson with local sporting entities.

The coaching staff was preparing for the 2020 IIHF Latam Cup and planning evaluation camps in Canada when the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

TEAM QUALIFICAT­ION

The team is made up of players born in Jamaica, Canada, the UK, and the US who qualify to represent the country by virtue of their Jamaican heritage.

Since news of Jamaica’s championsh­ip win in Florida, a number of players of Jamaican heritage from North American and Europe have reportedly shown an interest in playing for the national team, pending naturalise­d citizenshi­p.

There is also great interest from the national team players to attend Heroes Day celebratio­ns in Jamaica later this year.

Anderson says a plan to start a grassroots street-and-roller hockey programme to introduce the sport to Jamaica has been hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We have had to put that on hold. We had an MoU (memorandum of understand­ing) with GC. Foster College to have them help with training and teaching the rudiments of the sport, along with the local field hockey that involved going into the various schools and clubs across the island with a view to having them transition into ice hockey training,” Anderson explained.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Members of the senior men’s ice hockey team, management and fans.
CONTRIBUTE­D Members of the senior men’s ice hockey team, management and fans.

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