Rainbow Sports and Cultural Club (RSCC) in collaboration with communication provider Flow Trinidad, officially launched their second annual Flow South/ Central Youth Rugby Tournament at the Manny Ramjohn Stadium, Marabella, on Saturday.

This developmental joint venture will see five newly formed rugby teams from rural areas throughout the south land do battle against each other and hosts RSSC, for top honours.

However, capturing the 2015 title is a secondary target for this tourney, since club president Rudolph Jack and main sponsors Flow, are primarily focused on using this programme as a platform for both the promotion of rugby and young people in the southern community.

The tournament will feature beginner teams from Guapo, Basseterre, Sixth Company Moruga, Mafeking and Sobo, along with RSCC, battling on the field until the October 3 grand finale. This initiative is the brainchild of Jack, who was only able to achieve his dream of introducing the sport into rural communities, when Flow came on board and assisted in setting up Rugby Caravans last year. In 2014, both organisations took their training camps to Guapo, Basseterre and Sixth Company, where they trained members of these communities for three months, and then set up village teams.

In doing so, RSCC and Flow opted to expand their plans this year and sought to infiltrate even deeper south Trinidad by heading to Makefing and Sobo.

According to club public relations officer, Paul Scott, both institutions have been using this idea to cross several barriers within the rural communities by setting up these caravans.

“Last year was our first year with the Rugby Caravans and to date, they have been reaping rewards for the young people of Trinidad and Tobago,” said Scott yesterday. “What we usually do is go into villages for approximately half day and play several exhibition games. At the end of it, the young people that are interested, we register them and go back into the communities every week for three months and train them.” Rainbow Sports is one of the top-ranked local rugby clubs in TT and is considered the best competitive unit in south. Their partnership with Flow thus far has even seen three youngsters from Sixth Company be selected to train with the National Under-19 outfit in recent times.

Even though these young men did not make the final cut for team selection, Scott was pleased to highlight the great progress and determination shown by the youngsters.

“After the Youth League is finished, the players in the community that show potential, we intend to register some of them under Rainbow Sports to play in the National League. We are exposing them and the more competition they get the better.” Rainbow is hoping to register another Under-18 team to play in the National League and this unit will comprise mostly of players from the five rural communities.

According to Scott, 90 percent of the rugby clubs hail from within the East/West corridor with Rainbow being the only official ‘village’ team in TT . All of RSCC’s players hail from Trainline, Marabella, and administrators of this club saw it fit to seek out the hidden talents tucked away in rural communities.

“We want to increase the sport’s popularity in south and central,” Scott continued. “Flow was looking for a sport that was not too popular and when they saw Rainbow’s work on the Trainline, they were impressed. We went into some rough neighbourhoods to introduce it as an alternative sport. But it’s really a platform to interact with young people. This initiative has always been Rudolph’s vision to spread rugby to the south but we never really had the finances. With Flow coming on board and with the Caravans, they’ve helped us a lot and we will continue such endeavours as long as we have the funding.”

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Less than 24 hours after their historic third-place finish in Saturday's IAAF World Championship women's 4x100 metres final, Kelly-Ann Baptiste, Michelle-Lee Ahye, Reyare Thomas and Semoy Hackett returned to the Bird's Nest Stadium here in Beijing, China, yesterday, to receive their bronze medals.

Baptiste, who ran the leadoff leg for Trinidad and Tobago, told the Express that the medal ceremony was a very special occasion.

“It felt good to see our flag being raised, and knowing that it was our efforts that got it there. When you have those experiences, it drives you more to push yourself and be a better athlete, and to keep on having those types of occurrences at every championship.”

For Ahye, the T&T second leg runner, it was an emotional experience.

“Once I saw the flag going up, it kind of brought a tear to my eye. I kind of held it in, but I felt really proud to be out there.”

Third leg runner Thomas concurred.

“It felt great to know we were able to get a bronze medal and make Trinidad and Tobago proud.”

Anchorwoman Hackett gave her impressions of the medal ceremony.

“We were happy and a bit emotional,” she told the Express, “because of the struggle we have had in the relay, and individually as athletes. To actually get it done on the major stage was overwhelming. I felt proud of all of us. We went out as a team and we got the job done as a team. We achieved everything as a team.”

While Khalifa St Fort was not on the podium, yesterday, she contributed as well to World Championship bronze, the 17-year-old anchoring the team to second spot in their qualifying heat.

St Fort hopes to be part of future medal ceremonies. On this occasion, she recorded the moment.

“It felt great,” said the bubbly teenager. “I loved watching them. It was so exciting to see the Trinidad and Tobago flag go up, and they looked so happy. I took so many pictures. I'm so proud of them.”

The flags of the medal-winning countries are raised at all medal ceremonies. This time, IAAF World Championship women's 4x1 gold went to Jamaica, with United States getting silver and T&T bronze. Only one anthem, however, is played, and the requirement is gold. Yesterday, the honour went to Jamaica.

Baptiste said she is looking forward to the day “Forged from the Love of Liberty” is played during a women's 4x100m medal ceremony at a major senior global meet.

“That could happen very soon,” the 2011 World Championship 100m bronze medallist declared, “very very soon. Especially for the other girls, since it's their first time actually being on that podium, I know it's extra motivation for them to train hard and to compete with the best of the best in the world.”

Hackett is already looking forward to T&T's Olympic medal bid.

“Hopefully, next year we can go on and be stronger and better for Rio 2016.”

Quadruple Olympic medallist Ato Boldon is now coaching, and has been a key figure in the preparation of the women's 4x100m team here in Beijing.

T&T manager Dexter Voisin has also played an important role on the journey.

“I have been around this team from since 2005,” Voisin told the Express, “and I think I qualify to give a comment on what I think went well with regards to this 4x1.

“In the past, the women, just as the men, we always tried for them to understand the importance of relays. In these major championships, even when the men were disappointing in their individual events, somehow or the other we were able to pull out some medals in the relays.

“This time around,” he continued, “the women, they understood their potential, understood how they stood coming into this championship with regard to the relay. I remember in one of the team meetings I made them understand that they need to see the relay differently in comparison to how they looked at it in the past.”

Voisin said evidence of the new relay attitude was on display after Hackett and Thomas exited the 200m event at the semi-final stage.

“The following day,” said the manager, “they were out on the track going through the paces with the batons. In the past they would take a day-off and then come the following day. But they saw where they needed to go out there and work on the baton passing. They recognised the baton passing was the problem over the years, and they understood what needed to be done at these Championships.”

Yesterday, T&T's best female sprinters enjoyed the fruit of their labour—World Championship bronze medals as a reward for Saturday's 42.03 seconds national record run.

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IN STARK contrast to their miserable start, Trinidad and Tobago’s IAAF World Championships campaign ended in joy and relief yesterday, as the Men’s 4x400m Relay squad finished a close second to the United States in the event that brought the curtain down on the nine-day programme in Beijing, China.

Twenty-four hours after the TT women won 4x100m Relay bronze, ensuring the contingent would not return home empty- handed, the “mile relay” men produced a silver medal-winning performance that did even more to repair the country’s reputation as a producer of fine athletes through the decades.

The two podium finishes, just one day apart, presented a welltimed gift as the nation celebrates 53 years of independence today, much as Javelin-thrower Keshorn Walcott’s Olympic gold did on August 11, 2012.

Having produced the second-fastest qualifying time behind the Americans, the TT men, knew they would have to run even faster to be sure of a podium finish. Machel Cedenio came in for Jarrin Solomon and was assigned the anchor leg. Renny Quow had opening leg responsibility once again, while Lalonde Gordon was moved to second and Deon Lendore remained on third.

The noise was deafening at the Bird’s Nest Stadium as, starting in lane four, the diminutive Quow gave TT a fantsatic start, completing the circuit in 43.23 seconds; Gordon’s split was 45.68, but Lendore, fresher than the others because he did not compete in the 400m, ran a 44.75 that had them just about level with the US on the final handover. Cedenio then took them home in 44.14 seconds; however, LaShawn Merritt held him off for the US to claim gold in a world-leading two minutes, 57.82 seconds.

The TT men actually lowered the national record- 2:58.20, to finish just 38-hundredths of a second behind the winners.

Great Britain took the bronze in 2:58.51, the same time as Jamaica who were adjudged to have finished four thousandths of a second slower. The Jamaicans had been ahead of the British, but Javon Francis faded in the final metres.

The result gave Trinidad and Tobago its first ever medals in the 4x400m at a World Championship; Quow, Lendore and Gordon were all part of the team that won relay bronze at the London 2012 Olympics. As the TT men celebrated, the Jamaica camp was even more jubilant, as just before the Men’s final they had claimed gold in the Women’s mile relay in a world-leading three minutes, 19.13 seconds. A brilliant run on the straight by the experienced Novlene Williams-Mills had won it, as the veteran overhauled the fading Francena McCorory in the final metres to snatch the gold from the Americans. The Jamaican quartet of Christine Day, Shericka Jackson, Stephenie- Ann McPherson and Williams-Mills could not contain their emotions after the victory.

The US got the silver in 3:19.44 while Britain (3:23.62) took the bronze.

“These girls, they did it all the way. That is when you have the heart of a champion, that is what you do,” Williams-Mills said following the victory.

Jamaica, with 7 gold, 2 silver and 2 bronze medals finished second behind table-toppers Kenya in the standings, pushing the USA back to third; TT , with a silver and bronze finished tied for 22nd with the Bahamas and the Ukraine in the medal count. Trinidad and Tobago was also tied for third with the Bahamas among the Caribbean teams, behind Jamaica (2nd) and Cuba (10th) overall of the 32 teams that got among the medals.

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Sports Minister Brent Sancho and TT Olympic Committee (TTO C) president Brian Lewis have both congratulated the TT athletes and officials in Beijing for their medal successes at the World Championships.

In a media release yesterday, Sancho responded, “What a way to end the Championships! The disappointments suffered by Team TT earlier in the meet have been turned into joy and adulation as Trinidad and Tobago mounts the podium for the second time this Independence weekend. Setting a NR also shows the tremendous resilience and determination with which the athletes ran.

Trinidad and Tobago is proud, and supremely proud of you — Jarrin Solomon, Renny Quow, Lalonde Gordon, Machel Cedenio and Deon Lendore.

We also congratulate the NAAA and all the athletes’ support staff on the success. May it continue into Rio 2016!” Lewis is in New Zealand representing the TTO C and the Commonwealth Games Association at the Commonwealth Games Federation General Assembly in Auckland.

Admitting he missed the TT women’s bronze medal performance, he said it was great for women’s sprinting in TT .

“I am delighted for them, in particular KellyAnn Baptiste and Seymoy Hackett who endured a torrid and difficult two years,” he said. “Their resilence and indomitable will to put those difficult days behind them is to their credit.” Lewis also paid credit to Ato Boldon, who joined the coaching team in Beijing, and president of the National Association of Athletics Administrations (NAAA) Ephraim Serrette.

“Lets build on this,” he continued. “As I continue to call for greater collaboration and cooperation and alignment between national sport organisations, TTO C, Ministry of Sport and Sport Company. Lets ensure our athletes get the support they need when they need it. Not when they win medals.

Rio 2016 is less than 365 days away.”

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The voting power of countries which have hosted the Pan American Games on multiple occasions is set to be significantly diluted under a new Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) Constitution.

A proposed version of the new document - which has been approved by the PASO Executive Committee for circulation, but which remains subject to input from regional National Olympic Committees (NOCs) and approval by the PASO General Assembly before it can enter effect - currently contains two options.

The first of these amounts to a simple "one country one vote" formula; the second would permit a second vote for past Games hosts, but only for elections to determine where future events will be staged.

Present rules give past Pan American Games hosts up to five votes in both host city and Executive Committee elections, including the election of the President.

These rules tend to favour the region’s bigger nations.

Comments prepared by the President of PASO’s Legal Commission note that the Executive Committee has concluded that the existing voting structure is “not sustainable”.

In a move that might be interpreted as an attempt to ensure there are no surprise outside candidates at next year’s Presidential election, the working document also contains wording insisting on three years’ experience as a top NOC official “immediately preceding” a Presidential candidate’s nomination.

Julio Maglione, the 79-year-old Uruguayan who is completing the late Mario Vázquez Raña’s term as PASO President, has promised not to seek the role on a permanent basis.

Those who are thought to be considering running for the position include Carlos Nuzman, President of the Brazilian Olympic Committee and head of the Organising Committee for Rio 2016, Ivar Sisniega, the first vice-president of PASO, who formerly led Mexico’s National Commission for Physical Culture and Sport, José Joaquín Puello of the Dominican Republic and possibly Richard Peterkin, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) member from Saint Lucia.

The working document, which runs to more than 100 pages and has been seen by insidethegames, proposes a three-term - ie 12-year - limit for the PASO President, but not for Executive Committee members.

It stipulates that the “headquarters registered office” of PASO be in Mexico City, while stating that it may be transferred to another location “by decision of the Executive Committee”.

It states that, while the official languages of PASO are Spanish and English, it is the Spanish text that will continue to prevail in case of conflict.

It spells out that the Pan American Torch is to be lit pre-Games at a special ceremony at the Pyramid of the Sun in Teotihuacan, Mexico; the current version says merely that the ceremony should be in Mexico.

The new document is the combined result of work by the Statute Amendments Commission and the Executive Committee.

Proposals for changes to the current wording are to be considered before a final document is presented to NOCs for approval.

Once the final wording is adopted by the General Assembly, the text must then, in turn, be approved by the IOC.

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Silver ! Silver ! Silver ! Silver !

Silver was the colour yesterday on the final night of the 2015 World Championships in Beijing, China. It was delivered to this country by four brave men on a damp night where clouds threatened rain. A torrential downpour sent many scampering for over three hours.

On the track, though, it was the opposition that was sent scampering as T&T’s quartet of  Renny Quow, La Londe Gordon, Deon Lendore and Machel Cedenio, woke up 70,000 persons in the Bird Nest Stadium with some quick times over the four legs of the mens 4x400 metres relay final, only to lose to the more experienced USA team, anchored by 400 metres silver medallist, La Shawn Merritt.

T&T finished second in a new national record of 2.58.20 , eclipsing the old mark of 2.58.34.

 Quow  again ran the opening leg and gave a much improved performance after his struggles in the preliminaries.

He handed over to Gordon who ran  the race of his life. This powerfully built man with the heart of a lion, roared his way forward and made up the stagger. Turning into the home straight, he ran past the American to hand the baton to Lendore in first place.

 Lendore led all the way, handing over to Cedenio in first place as T&T chased gold.

Running into the home straight, Cedenio was in third, falling behind  Jamaican Javon Francis and Merritt, but he did not panic. “I know that is the strongest point of my race. I was calm, I know I have enough leg speed to catch them, so I was still good.”

Although he passed Francis, he could not go past Merritt.

Lendore, who was the first man off the track after the race, said he and his teammates were very happy to give the country a silver medal on the eve of Independence.

 “After the prelims, we knew we had a great chance of medalling and we came out here and delivered. Our strategy was to get to run from the front. We wanted to run free, and to see the best we could do from the lead,” Lendore said. “We started off great and we are happy. We all gave 110 per cent and we have seen the result. It made us all proud,” added Lendore.

Quow was also ecstatic about the performance, describing it as well  executed. “We had a good race plan and did what we wanted to from the beginning. We wanted to hit them from the beginning so we would not have much work to do and that is what we did.”

Gordon was not happy with his start even though his finish was marvellous. “Once I cut in and messed up a little. I let the USA man (Tony McQuay) get into the lead but I just kept my focus and said I will pass him on the homestretch and that is what I did,” he added.

Cedenio belied his youthfulness. “We ran second to a guy who medalled in the 400, so that was a very good performance . Every single one of the team ran good, especially the lead off.  Renny, La Londe, Deon, we all came together. We had a tough decision in picking the team but we came together finalised it and we felt this was the best team to get the medal here tonight,” noted Cedenio.

T&T ended the Championships with two medals, following the success of the women’s  4 x 100 metres team of Kelly Ann Baptiste, Michelle Lee Ahye, Reyare Thomas and Semoy Hackett, who won the bronze medal on Saturday.

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