April 25, 2024, 06:15:42 PM

Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Topics - Sando prince

Pages: 1 2 [3] 4 5 ... 8
61
GOOD LUCK TRINIDAD & TOBAGO RED STEEL


T&T Red Steel Team
S Badree, SJ Benn, J Botha, DJ Bravo*, DM Bravo, KK Cooper, ML Cummins, DYA Davis, CS Delport, M Deyal, JH Kallis, Kamran Akmal†, JN Mohammed, WKD Perkins, MKA Richards, JPR Scantlebury-Searles

Guyana Amazon Warriors Team
CD Barnwell, RR Beaton, D Bishoo, S Chanderpaul, M de Lange, AB Fudadin, TA Griffith, SO Hetmyer, BJ Hodge, SP Narine, V Permaul, D Ramdin*†, LMP Simmons, Umar Akmal, D Wiese, PG Wintz


62
General Discussion / Another Mass Shooting in America
« on: July 24, 2015, 06:40:16 PM »
This time in  Lafayette, Louisiana


63

GOOD LUCK T&T RED STEEL


Red Steel Team
S Badree, SJ Benn, J Botha, DJ Bravo*, DM Bravo, KK Cooper, ML Cummins, DYA Davis, CS Delport, M Deyal, JH Kallis, Kamran Akmal†, JN Mohammed, WKD Perkins, MKA Richards, JPR Scantlebury-Searles

Jamaica Tallawahs Team
DE Bernard, J Blackwood, NE Bonner, N Deonarine, CH Gayle*, DPMD Jayawardene, RA Lewis, CA Lynn, H Miller, NO Miller, AD Russell, K Santokie, JE Taylor, J Theron, DL Vettori, CAK Walton†

Match scheduled to begin at 18:00 local time (22:00 GMT)


64
Trinidad and Tobago History / Interesting facts/points about T&T
« on: July 16, 2015, 01:07:39 PM »
Trinidad & Tobago 🇹🇹 🇹🇹

1. The Steelpan: The only new acoustic instrument to be invented and accepted worldwide in the 20th century originated in Trinidad and Tobago.

2. Trinidad and Tobago is home to the world’s largest traffic roundabout around the Queen’s Park Savannah.

3. In 2006, Trinidad and Tobago became the smallest country ever to qualify for the 2006 Football World Cup.

4. Trinidad and Tobago contestant Ms Janelle Penny Commissiong was the first Black Miss Universe in 1977.

5. Trinidad and Tobago’s Brian Charles Lara holds the record for the highest individual score in a test innings (400 not out against England, Antigua 2004). He is also the only batsman to have ever scored a hundred, a double century, a triple century, a quadruple century and a quintuple century in first class games over the course of a senior career.

6. Trinidad and Tobago is one of the oldest hydrocarbon producers in the world, with commercial production dating as early as 1908. Trinidad and Tobago is also a major petrochemical hub and is one of the world’s largest exporters of ammonia, ethanol and liquefied natural gas. The two largest ethanol plants in the world are found in Trinidad.

7. The Leatherback Turtle: the largest of all living turtles chooses the shores of Trinidad and Tobago as one of its nesting grounds. Trinidad and Tobago is one of the most important leatherback nesting sites.

8. The Pitch Lake: The Pitch Lake in South Trinidad is the largest natural deposit of asphalt in the world.

9. Trinidad and Tobago is the birthplace of calypso, a style of Afro-Caribbean music that gained international popularity in the 1950s, primarily through the music of Harry Belafonte.

10. Trinidad and Tobago Carnival has been consistently ranked as one of the top ten Carnival celebrations in the world. It is popularly known as ‘The Greatest Show on Earth’. The founder of the Notting Hill Carnival, Europe’s largest street festival, Claudia Jones, also hails from Trinidad and Tobago.

11. The limbo dance originated as an event that took place at wakes in Trinidad and Tobago, but became internationally renowned through the work of Julia Edwards and her dance company in the 1960s.

12. The oldest rainforest reserve in the Western Hemisphere is located in Tobago. Little Tobago is home to the world’s largest brain coral. Trinidad and Tobago has over 400 species of birds, making it one of the richest birding countries per square mile.

13. Tobago was the location of Daniel Defoe’s classic Robinson Crusoe. Tobago is also widely believed to be the place Robert Louis Stevenson had in mind when he penned Treasure Island.

14. On August 1, 1985 Trinidad and Tobago became the world’s first country to declare a public holiday in commemoration of the abolition of slavery.

15. Trinidad and Tobago-born Stokley Carmichael (also known as Kwame Ture) was a member of the United States Civil Rights Movement who rose to prominence as the Honorary Prime Minister of the Black Panther Party. He popularized the term ‘black power’ as a social and political slogan.

16. The only national to serve as Prime Minister and President of Trinidad and Tobago, ANR Robinson was instrumental in the establishment of the International Criminal Court (ICC) during his tenure as Prime Minister from 1986-1991. In 1989, during the 44th session of the UN General Assembly, Prime Minister Robinson proposed the creation of the court, which was eventually inaugurated in 2002 to hear cases of crimes against humanity.

17. Trinidad and Tobago’s Dr Joseph Lennox Pawan achieved international acclaim for the discovery of the transmission of the rabies virus by vampire bats. This led to the development of a vaccine for the virus.

18. Born in Trinidad and Tobago in 1878, Eugene Chen left behind a successful career and moved to China where he founded the Peking Gazette. Chen later became the Foreign Minister to four successive governments and the personal adviser to Sun Yat-Sen, the founder of Nationalist China.

19. The Trinidadian accent ranks 10th on the CNN’s top ten sexiest accents in the world.

20. In 2013, the Trinidad Moruga ‘Scorpion’ Pepper has officially been ranked as the world’s hottest pepper by the Guinness Book of Records.

21.Trinidad & Tobago is the 6th Country in the world with the most holidays. 17 Holidays. No wonder we came in the Top 10 ' happiest' countries in the world.

66
General Discussion / Driving in T&T
« on: May 26, 2015, 12:23:57 PM »
These recent youtube videos make me interested in going to places in Trinidad and Tobago that ah never went..

Hope allyuh like this thread


Moderators I am hoping allyuh let this thread develop and not merge it with anything related with cars or driving.


.

67
Trinidad and Tobago History / History behind T&T National Flower
« on: May 18, 2015, 07:38:34 PM »
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/jDv3eieRToI" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/jDv3eieRToI</a>

68
General Discussion / This Is Not Your Grandfather's Laventille
« on: May 12, 2015, 07:10:21 AM »

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/TZUgnNONln4&amp;app=desktop" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/TZUgnNONln4&amp;app=desktop</a>

69
Trinidad and Tobago History / History of Woodford Square
« on: April 24, 2015, 07:24:50 PM »


<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/Jx8f71FuzdE&amp;list=PLZMVCVqvnRrTyZfuGXtZ_Pd9_Iqa03szT&amp;index=5" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/Jx8f71FuzdE&amp;list=PLZMVCVqvnRrTyZfuGXtZ_Pd9_Iqa03szT&amp;index=5</a>

70
Jokes / Majah Hype
« on: April 20, 2015, 11:28:10 PM »


 :rotfl: This man take win


West Indians in Court

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/Oi-1waUkS5k" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/Oi-1waUkS5k</a>

71
Other Sports / 'Calypso Warriors' Rugby Thread
« on: April 20, 2015, 01:15:28 AM »

Moderators please don't merge this thread because the other rugby thread is very old


TT Rugby lovers share any updates

72
What about Track & Field / Allyson Felix - Athletics Motivation
« on: April 15, 2015, 11:54:10 PM »

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/NzhXgmoa9KM" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/NzhXgmoa9KM</a>

73
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Tobago Jazz Festival 2015
« on: April 14, 2015, 10:31:54 PM »
Who going? I will be there


<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/0D4ookl91_M" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/0D4ookl91_M</a>

74



T&T athletes Machel Cedenio and Michelle Ahye will be in action. More updates as we get closer to the meet date.

75
Cricket Anyone / Darren Bravo to set up academy in Trinidad
« on: April 09, 2015, 10:58:40 AM »
Bravo to set up academy in Trinidad

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport/Bravo-to-set-up-academy-in-Trinidad_18713409

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (CMC) -- West Indies middle-order batsman Darren Bravo has announced plans to set up a Youth Cricket Academy in Trinidad and Tobago.

The academy is due to start on May 2 and run until July 26, with sessions conducted by West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) registered coaches Eldon Ramadeen and Frank Sorzano.

"I want to be a part of the rise of West Indies Cricket as a player, but I also want to inspire young players not only by my performances but by my personal interaction with them," said Bravo.

"Cricket mirrors life in that it demands that individuals have to always assess where they are and try to develop themselves to become better human beings."

The academy is targeting boys and girls between the ages of six and 19, and sessions are carded for weekends at the Brian Lara Recreational Ground in Santa Cruz, Bravo's home town.

"I've always wanted to be able to give back to my community and alongside the Santa Cruz Sports Association, we felt the time was right to introduce this academy," said Bravo, who has played 32 Tests, 81 One-Day Internationals and 12 T20 Internationals.

"I have learnt so much from the game and the various people that have helped me along the way give me the will and desire to play a part in helping young people through sport."

76
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/-8lr22QJ7ek" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/-8lr22QJ7ek</a>

77
General Discussion / Alloy Lequay dies at 90
« on: March 15, 2015, 11:14:30 PM »

RIP. Another Patriot passes on

Lequay dies at 90

http://www.guardian.co.tt/news/2015-03-16/lequay-dies-90

Tributes have been pouring in following the death of Alloy Lequay, former political activist and cricket administrator, who has died at age 90. Born October 1, 1924, in Port-of-Spain, Lequay had been a sports administrator since the 1940s, contributing to the organisational structure of table tennis and cricket as a founder of the T&T Table Tennis Association (TTTTA), member of the West Indies Cricket Board of Control and head of the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board (TTCB). He also served as a Member of Parliament and was twice nominated to the Senate.

He was Chaconia Medal of Trinity (Gold) for sport administration in the 1988 national awards ceremony and the West Indian Tobacco Company Ltd (Witco) honoured awarded him the inaugural Jeffrey Stollmeyer Award for outstanding sport administration. The TTCB went on to win the Stollmeyer award four out of six times under Lequay’s stewardship. In the political arena, Lequay became the secretary of the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) in 1960 and contested two elections. He was elected a Member of Parliament for the district of South Naparima in 1966.

He was leader of government business in the Senate during the tenure in office of the National Alliance for Reconstruction, 1986-91. Among those paying tribute yesterday was Congress of the People (COP) political leader Prakash Ramadhar who said Lequay was a founding member of the party who had contributed to its early growth and development.

“Lequay’s enthusiasm and work ethic towards building this new vehicle of hope matched and even surpassed many of those far younger than he was. It was testimony to the passion and commitment which he brought to every undertaking—and explained, in part, the tremendous success he achieved in various disciplines,” Ramadhar said. Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Dookeran said Lequay was “a man among men, unyielding in his service to his country and fellow man. He served his nation with great devotion in his various positions: in politics, sport and social services.”

Dookeran, former political leader of the COP, said Lequay had developed a reputation for being reliable and helpful. “His dreams will continue to inspire us and his deeds to ‘fix our politics’ will always be remembered. Personally his kind advice, strong support and selfless acts of duty towards will nation building and good governance will remain in my memory for all times,” he said, adding that Lequay was a “great patriot” who will be missed.

78
Thread for T&T athletes performances at the 44th Annual CARIFTA Games 2015 in St Kitts & Nevis.

Scheduled for 04/04/15 – 06/04/15

Looking forward to seeing this T&T team bring home a significant amount of medals including gold medals.

TEAM T&T

Boys’ under-20--Xavier Mulugata, Francis Louis, Jonathan Farinha, Corey Stewart, Jamoul Pierre, Jesse Fredericks, Ashton Gill, Kyle Stanley, Iley Bruce, Aaron Lewis, Tauren George, Omari Benoit, Andwuelle Wright, Kenejah Williams, Shaquille Singuineau, Ian West, Kareem Lezama, Michael Mackenzie, Gervais Ford

Girls’ under-20--Kayelle Clarke, Kadesha Prescott, Thyla-Marie Scott, Jeminise Parris, Khemani Roberts, Portious Warren, Chelsea James, Shaiann Charles, Ayana Glasgow, Anya Akili, Meriah Freeman, Jeunice Maxime, Jessica King

Boys’ under-18—Akanni Hislop, Tyrel Edwards, Jacob St Clair, Judah Taylor, Terry Frederick, Myles Jackson, Ako Hislop, Kobe John, Troy Richards, Franklyn Stanislaus, Clement Campbell, Terrel Paul, Isaiah Taylor, Tyriq Horsford, Daniel McNish, Nkosi James, Vandell Joseph, Jalen Purcell, Jerod Elcock, Jaden St Louis, Kareem La Gendre

Girls’ under-18--Deleth Charles, Akeera Esdelle, Jendayi Noel, Renee Stoddard, Anika Wolfe, Kershel McIntyre, Aaliyah Mitchell, Cheziah Phillip, Safiya John, Chevelle McPherson, Alisha St Louis, Akidah Briggs, Peaches Stewart, Asha James, Shikyla Walcott

Officials—Lucretia Warner-Burns (manager), Allan Baboolal (assistant manager), Reynold Porter-Lee (head coach), Gerard Franklyn (coach), Antonia Burton (coach), Arlon Morrison (coach), Kelvin Nancoo (coach), Nadine Hamid (coach), Wade Franklyn (coach), Robin Brereton (coach), Wendell Williams (coach), Dexter Voisin (coach), Abeyola Akowe (chaperone)

Medical team—Dr Anyl Gopeesingh, Kern Roberts, Zephyrinus Nicholas, Shurland Bonas, Kurlyn Smith

79
Cricket Anyone / Death of West Indies Cricket
« on: March 01, 2015, 01:11:41 PM »

Death of West Indies cricket
One Man's View

By HG Helps

I have listened to the many arguments circulating about the governance of West Indies cricket in recent time.

It is now well known that incumbent Whycliffe 'Dave' Cameron, a Jamaican, will be challenged for the presidency of the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) by the legendary former Barbados and West Indies cricketer Joel 'Big Bird' Garner, when 12 delegates are shown the way to the voting station in Kingston on March 7.

The winner will lead the administrative charge of West Indies cricket for the next two years.

From the look of things, Cameron remains the frontrunner to confirm a second two-term reign, based on how the politics of West Indies cricket works. But even if he wins, the challenges of West Indies cricket will remain, as he does not have the capability or the approach to deal with them.

In many instances, the best man for the job is not necessarily the one who gets it, as we have seen from Cameron's performance so far. To cloud my mind even further along a negative pathway, I heard his running mate, Emmanuel Nantan, now vice-president of the WICB, speak on television some weeks ago and I had to wonder about the kind of thinking that goes into the organisation. If some of us think that Cameron is bad, just listen to Nantan.

There is no doubt that West Indies cricket is in the doldrums, both in terms of cricket standards and finances. Since my father took me to Sabina Park to watch my first Test match between the West Indies and England as a single-digit boy in 1968 when I could barely understand what was happening out in the middle, I have seen the fortunes of the West Indies fluctuate. But never have I seen the results as bad as they have been these days. Neither have I seen administration as woeful.

Some of the problems that have affected West Indies cricket have been around for decades. There is one called insularity, which, when stirred with parochialism, forms a potent drink that has kept the Caribbean culturally drunk and largely divided.

The latest saga involving the membership of the Jamaica Cricket Association (JCA) overturning the initial decision by the board of directors that it empowered to act on its behalf, regarding which presidential candidate to support is the pungent form of insularity that has further poisoned the Caribbean cricket environment.

When I looked around the room at the annual general meeting of the JCA, it was not difficult to see why Jamaica's cricket was falling, and why the fortunes of the West Indies team are as terrible as they are.

A majority of the near 90 delegates who attended the meeting, sad to say, either do not understand cricket, or the issues involved in respect of the leadership of West Indies cricket. They went to that meeting with one purpose in mind -- to beat down a 'Bajan', Garner, and to keep the Jamaican. How in God's name can our cricket improve with people like that in such crucial positions?

It would have been simple for those same 'delegates' or representatives of clubs and institutions to look at what has happened to West Indies cricket over the last two years.

Two of the most vociferous in the crowd were Hugh Perry of the Portland Cricket Association, and Cecil Fletcher (the man who started the 'cass cass') from St James -- two parishes in which cricket is as dead as my grandfather's sugar cane grinding machine.

Both Perry and Fletcher are the typical cricket dinosaurs. Their thinking is as old as Noah. Yet, they, like many others, wield considerable influence on the proceedings.

They are not alone, not when you consider that an 'intellectual' like the mighty and most 'powerful' Dr Franklyn Johnston, who wrote in the Observer of Friday, February 20 inter alia: The noose of OECS, cricket, small island peeves is tightening. A vote for Garner is a vote against Jamaica.

"Be not intimidated by Anglophone 'micro chips'. Dave Cameron for president! We are in the Greater Antilles, neighbour of Haiti, DR, Cuba, Puerto Rico; birthplace of Bob, Usain, Shelly-Ann; sons of Bogle, Garvey, Gordon, Manley, Sharpe, Busta; daughters of Nanny; refuge of Bolivar and Maceo de Graceles. I love West Indian heritage, but I love Jamaica. Viva Jamaica!"

What utter garbage from an advisor to a Jamaican Cabinet minister -- a minister of education at that! No wonder Jamaica is in the sad state in which it finds itself if such a well-learned man can consistently have diarrhoea of the pen and sputter such foolishness.

What stares us in the face is that under Cameron's leadership there has been no growth in West Indies cricket. People tell me rubbish about the introduction of a franchise system for the regional four-day championship, but apart from fancy names tagged to some teams (Jamaica franchise still doesn't have a name), precious little has changed. The home-and-away system that now prevails was tried before. In summary, the only thing that is not the same is the standard of the cricket, which has nose-dived.

Cameron still has many questions to answer arising from the debacle of the aborted tour of India by the West Indies last year. If the stories that we are hearing are true, that he turned his back on his counterparts at the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI)

when they requested his intervention at the height of the players' dispute over money, then that was an error in judgement that he ought to pay for.

His ill-advised retweet that seemed to have endorsed a proposed retirement package for legendary Jamaica and West Indies cricketer Chris Gayle was totally out of order and confirmed his arrogance and shallowness. It appears as if Cameron is not thinking straight.

I hold no brief for former West Indies Cricket Board President Pat Rousseau, who, in newspaper articles called for Cameron to give himself out and walk back to the pavilion.

Rousseau asked some pertinent questions of Cameron, none of which have been answered by the incumbent, which I find strange. Refusing to even address the issues raised, tells me that something is amiss.

Like me, Cameron attended the illustrious Kingston College, now celebrating 90 years of existence. There is a view within some school circles that one should keep quiet when addressing people from his alma mater. I beg to differ. West Indies cricket is precious to me. Under Cameron's leadership, the game has been heading down a road that has the sign marked 'Certain Destruction' prominently nailed against

a post.

The WICB is virtually bankrupt, even before India's added pro forma invoice of US$42 million in compensation reached its headquarters in Antigua. The international team, importantly, remains planted at number eight in the International Cricket Council's Test and One-Day International rankings.

How also, can Cameron and his WICB justify the appointment of Jason Holder as One-Day captain when the youngster cannot even command a place on the team, nor has he demonstrated any particular sharp leadership skill? Even if your selectors make such a recommendation, as is the norm, isn't it within the right of the Board to flush it down the drain?

I will shed no tears for Dwayne Bravo and Kieron Pollard, who, like some of the other team members, have not improved their game in ages. In any event, that matter can be further ventilated later.

And who says that politics has no place in cricket? The hypocrites call for prime ministers, like Dr Ralph Golsalves and Dr Keith Mitchell to be burned at the stake for uttering remarks that they consider 'negative' against Cameron.

Gonzalves, Mitchell and all the other prime ministers, and politicians around the region must have voices. They, too, are ordinary cricket lovers and, like Mitchell and St Kitts/Nevis Cabinet minister Vance Amory, played the game at a fairly high level. The governments of the region, while they have no direct control over the running of the WICB, keep the game alive in their own territories, however small the support might be.

And when they know things that we do not know about, like a breach of a gentleman's agreement between the WICB and the players after the India tour shutdown, we are grateful to them for speaking out.

Chris Gayle would not have been playing for the West Indies had Jamaican Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller not cried out for his re-inclusion after he was sidelined for remarks he made on KLAS sports radio in Jamaica. Interestingly, Cameron was vice-president of the WICB when Gayle was put out to pasture, and, as far as I am aware, did nothing to try to get the player back from eating grass to the delicacies that he has grown accustomed to consuming.

Now, Gayle is being punished for speaking out at the non-inclusion of his teammates, while Cameron, who chastised Gayle, is free to play his childish games

of insulting the player on social media.

Cameron, we should remember, was head of the WICB's marketing committee that forged a deal with cellular phone company Digicel, over long-time sponsor Cable & Wireless, and a later probe led by Justice Anthony Lucky, the Trinidad & Tobago jurist, found that there were gaping holes in that deal.

The WICB has contested some of the Lucky commitee findings.

We also need to know if there is any truth to the allegation that the WICB got a 'soft loan' of US$4 million from the ICC last year, as claimed by veteran English journalist Scyld Berry in the highly respected Sunday Telegraph newspaper. If so, what has happened to it and what was it used for? The WICB has not denied the newspaper report.

Read More http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport/Death-of-West-Indies-cricket_18487812

80
Quizz Time & Facts / Who is the child among the icons?
« on: March 01, 2015, 12:58:18 PM »

Who is dat young fella?


81
http://www.caribbean360.com/news/trinidad_tobago_news/trinidadian-film-maker-seeking-major-award-at-african-film-festival

PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad, Thursday February 26, 2015, CMC – A film by the Ghanian-born, Trinidadian film-maker Yao Ramesar has been selected for screening at the Pan African Film & Television Festival in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.

“Haiti Bride” is in the running for Africa’s major film award.

It is the first time a Caribbean film-maker will compete for the prestigious Etalon de Yennenga award at what has been described as “Africa’s Oscars”.

The select 20 features include the 2015 Oscar nominee, Timbuktu, along with the latest movies from many of the masters of contemporary African cinema.

Ramesar’s participation will be a first for the biennial event which has been hosted since 1969 and is taking place this year from February 28 to March 1.

Haiti Bride was funded in part by a grant from the University of the West Indies (UWI) and premiered at UWI’s Film Programme.


<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/aRdNfdr5_P8#t=41" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/aRdNfdr5_P8#t=41</a>

82
General Discussion / Election results being withheld in St Kitts
« on: February 17, 2015, 04:29:57 PM »

Wha really going on over dey now?

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/Grenada--T-T-calls-for-release-of-election-results-in-St-Kitts-Nevis

Quote

“From what I understood is happening is that the supervisor stopped counting votes in certain constituencies and this is rather frightening,” Grenada Prime Minister Dr Keith Mitchell said.

83
Football / 'Too many blacks' in Italian under-20 ranks, says Sacchi
« on: February 17, 2015, 02:46:48 AM »


'Too many blacks' in under-20 ranks, says Sacchi

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/too-many-blacks-under-20-ranks-says-sacchi-230825343--sow.html;_ylt=AwrTWVXlvOJUnUsAERPQtDMD

Milan (AFP) - Former AC Milan and Italy coach Arrigo Sacchi has hit out at Italy's youth set-up by claiming it features 'too many blacks' and 'too many foreigners'.

Sacchi, a renowned football coach and innovator who notably helped Milan to back-to-back European Cups in 1989 and 1990, was speaking at an awards ceremony in Montecatini Terme on Monday evening.

According to a website report on La Gazzetta dello Sport, the 68-year-old Sacchi used the occasion to hit out at the number of non-native Italians involved in the lower ranks of Italian football.

"Italy now has no dignity or pride, because we have too many foreigners playing in the under-20 leagues: in our youth sectors there are too many blacks," said Sacchi, a former director of Italy's national team at under-21 level.

Sacchi claimed he was not racist because he signed a player like Frank Rijkaard, a Dutchman of Surinamese origin.

But he insisted that 'too many coloured players' featured for Italian youth sides at the famous Viareggio tournament, known in footballing circles as the Viareggio Cup World Football Tournament.

"I'm certainly not racist, as my coaching history demonstrates with Rijkaard," added Sacchi.

"But look at the Viareggio tournament. I would say that there are too many coloured players, also in the under-20 teams in Italy."

When asked to clarify his remarks, Sacchi claims he had been misinterpreted.

"I've been misinterpreted, you think I'm really racist? All I said was I saw a game featuring a team who fielded four coloured players," he added.

"My history speaks for itself, I've always coached teams with great players from every colour and I've brought in a lot, whether to Milan or (Real) Madrid.

"I only wanted to underline that we are losing our national pride and identity."


84
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / 10 Best Caribbean Beaches Awards
« on: February 17, 2015, 12:36:35 AM »


The winners in the “Best Caribbean Beach” contest category for USA TODAY 10Best Readers’ Choice are as follows:

Crane Beach – Barbados
Horseshoe Bay Beach – Bermuda
Baby Beach – Aruba
Seven Mile Beach – Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands
Sandy Point – St Croix, US Virgin Islands
Shoal Bay – Anguilla
Orient Bay Beach – Sint Maarten
Bathsheba Beach – Barbados
Seaquarium Beach – Curacao
Magens Bay – St Thomas, US Virgin Islands

Read more: http://www.caribbean360.com/travel/barbados-dominates-10best-caribbean-beach-awards#ixzz3Ryvo4E9N

85
Cricket Anyone / Dwayne Bravo quits Test cricket
« on: January 31, 2015, 01:52:43 PM »
Dwayne Bravo quits Tests

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport/Dwayne-Bravo-quits-Tests

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad CMC – All-rounder Dwayne Bravo has announced his retirement from Test cricket, after four years in the wilderness and just weeks after being sacked from the one-day squad.

The 31-year-old has played 40 Tests but had not suited up for West Indies since December 2010, when West Indies toured Sri Lanka.

He was recently axed as one-day captain and dropped from the team for the tour of South Africa and the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand next month.

In a statement late Friday, Bravo said he had already informed the West Indies Cricket Board of his decision to retire from Tests but said he had made clear his desire to continue playing One-Day Internationals and Twenty20s.

“Over the years, with the greatest enthusiasm, I have done my best with the deep awareness that I am ultimately representing the people of the game,” Bravo said.

“I recognise that this is a difficult time for all of us. Our people of the region have seen and enjoyed great cricketing days but we will not return to glory until we agree to go forward with our love for the game and the respect of the administrators, players and the public.”

Bravo made his international debut back in 2004 in an ODI against England and developed into the region’s leading all-rounder at one stage.

He came to be known for his effervescent medium pace and a brilliant outfielder, with a safe pair of hands, and effecting batting down the order.

Overall in Tests, he compiled 2200 runs at an average of 31 with three centuries – with a best of 113 against Australia in 2005.

He bagged 86 wickets at an average of nearly 40.

The Trinidadian was appointed captain of the ODI team in 2013, replacing Darren Sammy. He then played a key role as players’ spokesman on the controversial abandoned tour of India last October, where he frequently clashed with the West Indies Cricket Board and players union, WIPA.

He was subsequently dropped for the one-day tour of South Africa and the World Cup, prompting claims of victimisation from several quarters.

Bravo said he had tasted both success and “the devastating pain of defeat” during his career but had also accumulated “joyous memories”.

“I have experienced the exhilarating joy of victory and the devastating pain of defeat. The joyous memories will remind me of what we are capable of achieving. I want to be part of that mission,” Bravo said in the statement.

“I thank the cricketing fraternity for their support and look forward to serving you with determination and the pride of being a West Indian.”

Bravo recently signed a year-long retainer contract with the WICB.

86
For T&T
Olympic icon offers Montreal gold to 10golds24 fund

By Garth Wattley
Published on Jan 27, 2015, 7:57 pm AST (T&T Express)



Hasely Crawford put his Olympic gold medal where his mouth is yesterday.

Catching the audience at the atrium of the Guardian Group offices in Westmoorings completely by surprise, the 1976 Montreal 100 metres champion said he would put up the medal and the gear he wore on that historic day to be leased, in support of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee’s #10golds24 Athlete Welfare and Preparation Fund.

“I am offering my Olympic gold medal, my jersey, my pants, the socks and the shoes to you, the Olympic Association,” Crawford said, addressing a stunned TTOC president Brian Lewis at the head table. “You need to work out some form of arrangement where it can be leased to support our young people.”

Crawford’s words were followed by sustained applause from the gathering that was there to witness a cheque presentation by the Guardian Group in support of the Olympic Committee’s #10golds24 project.

Before presentation time arrived however, Crawford made a passionate plea for public support for the Fund.

Recalling his own personal struggles in the build-up to his Montreal triumph, he said: “A lot of people do not understand what an athlete goes through, especially to win an Olympic medal.”


He then gave examples of the current need for corporate help involving, “two of our young, budding athletes, 16, 17,” who, “personally I feel they will be world beaters in time to come.”

Crawford recalled: “Their coach came to me and said, Mr Crawford, one of these athletes needs to have an MRI but he doesn’t have the funding...I made some enquiries and it was done.

“He brought another athlete, we talking about Olympic potentials, she did not have a proper pair of shoes or equipment to train. I’m saying these things so you all could understand how important these things are...

“Ladies and gentlemen, to win an Olympic gold medal is not easy. You need a lot of support, especially our younger athletes...The reason I stay with it is that we have a lot of very, very poor athletes. If we really want to win these 10 gold medals, we need to really come forward and support Mr Lewis.”

Speaking to the Express later about his offer, Crawford elaborated: “I am offering to them (for the medal and gear) to be leased to some company and the proceeds will go towards the Olympic Association.

He added: “It doesn’t make sense me having it in my house, it’s for Trinidad and Tobago.”

Crawford said he has other projects in mind, the full details of which are still to be worked out.

In response, a still shocked Olympic Committee president Brian Lewis, who walked Sunday’s T&T International Marathon to kick off the Welfare and Preparation Fund said: “The gesture is awesome. I’m almost speechless at what Hasely Crawford today has offered to do, not only in support of not only the provision of 10 Olympic medals by the year 2024, but the Athlete Welfare and Preparation Fund. I didn’t come here anticipating that was going to happen.”

87
General Discussion / Does Caribbean integration have practical value?
« on: January 25, 2015, 12:09:25 PM »

Does Caribbean integration have practical value?

Astute reflections of Owen Arthur

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/columns/Does-Caribbean-integration-have-practical-value-_18273863

THERE is no doubt about the passion of Owen Arthur, one of the Caribbean's foremost economists and thinkers, for the economic integration of the region.

As the prime minister of Barbados and the member of the Bureau of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) responsible for the Caribbean Single Market and Economy (CSME) for 13 years, Arthur worked tirelessly.

Regardless of which side of the divide anyone stands, it would be churlish not to acknowledge the contribution that he made to understanding the imperatives of regional integration and the robust intellectual arguments that underpin it.

Therefore, it is stimulating that he returned to the fray at the Institute of International Relations at the St Augustine Campus of the University of the West Indies on January 19 with a robust, hard-hitting analysis of the present conditions in which Caricom finds itself. He said it is "beyond dispute" that these conditions are "more dire" than in 1989 "in every respect".

The year 1989 is when the then Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago A N R Robinson wrote to the heads of government in great alarm and concern to say that, unless something was done to address the situation, "the Caribbean could be in danger of becoming a backwater, separated from the main current of human advance in the twenty-first century".

What arose from A N R Robinson's urgings was the West Indian Commission, chaired by Sir Shridath Ramphal and including economists of the high calibre of Sir Alister Mcintyre, to produce a people-based blueprint for the future of Caricom. One of the Commission's strong recommendations was deeper integration and the creation of the CSME.

Arthur did not mince his words in the analysis of where CARICOM countries are today. "The stage has been reached", he said "where the sheer magnitude of the economic problems that require immediate and far-reaching response raise disturbing doubts about the capacity of Caricom countries to function as viable economies." Only those with their heads in the sand would doubt him.

The majority of Caricom countries are lumbered with high debt-to-GDP ratios; extreme difficulty raising anything but expensive and onerous loans on the international capital market; poor terms of trade; budget and balance of trade deficits; high costs of food imports; and a lack of capacity to defend themselves from drug traffickers.

Arthur makes two other points that are not new. Other commentators have identified them before. But the fact that he has now made them adds gravitas and urgency. He says: "In many instances, there are no apparent or articulated domestic solutions that can suffice. Compounding this is the fact that there are no regional mechanisms that countries can look at, in this time of grave crisis, to provide effective solutions to economic problems which require immediate and far-reaching responses."

In a devastating portrayal of the integration movement, he slams it as "functioning virtually as the fifth wheel to a coach", and concludes that "it exists, but it is of very little practical value".

In truth, ever since the Caricom Heads of Government made a decision to put the movement towards the CSME on "pause", nothing much has happened to strengthen or utilise regional machinery to address the problems that individual governments cannot handle alone in any effective way. If anything, the institutions of the regional movement have been weakened as nationalist solutions alone are trumpeted even in the face of inadequacy.

To be sure, not all Caricom Heads of Government agreed with this development. Some of them, such as St Vincent's Ralph Gonsalves, made their disagreement known publicly, but parochialism won the day.

Arthur gave some telling examples of the debilitating conditions that now confront Caricom. They are worth recounting here:

* the Caribbean's share of the world's exports have declined from 0.5 per cent in 1980 to 0.2 per cent.

* the region's integration into the global economy has been much slower than countries which have not enjoyed preferential access to some of the main markets of the world.

* over the past five years many Caribbean countries have lost market share in their principal service export sectors.

* concerning the ease of doing business, the region figures poorly on virtually all indices and none register in the top 50 countries globally.

A further telling statistic is the Caribbean's own self-dislike. In 2008 alone, 18,000 work permits were issued by Caribbean countries, of which over 85 per cent were issued to persons who were not nationals of the region. Arthur reveals that "the brutal truth is that the Caribbean economy in any given year grants 10 times more work permits to foreigners than it grants skill certificates to its own nationals". Yet, the aspect of the CSME to which some politicians and other vested interests have objected most is freedom of movement that is integral to the success of all. Arthur points out that "there is no evidence to show that the movement of persons outside the categories provided for in the Revised Treaty has had any negative on the functioning of the societies as alleged".

He takes time to explain that "the creation of a Single Market was to take the form of removal of all of the constraints on the movement within the region of goods, services, labour, capital and the creation of enterprises over centuries". It was never meant, as its detractors claimed, to replace local autonomy with a regional supranational authority that would set policy which always would have remained with governments operating collectively. Arthur did not say that the time has come for majority decisions of Heads of Government to be implemented even in the face of objections by one or two governments. But for too long the progress of the region as a whole has been held to ransom by the narrow interests of a small number.

He did admit that "it was a strategic mistake not to develop the Regional Negotiating Machinery (RNM) into a supranational authority, working with a prime ministerial group to manage Caricom's trade relations and negotiations". The RNM, renamed the Office of Trade Negotiations, is now a shadow of its former self. Yet, as Arthur convincingly emphasises, "it is inconceivable that Caribbean economies will ever effectively succeed in developing their export capabilities if they remain unwilling to join the rest of the world in entering new trade pacts that are compatible with international trade law". As it is, Caricom has the lowest participation with other regional trade groupings, accounting for only two per cent. To make connections in a beneficial way, Caricom countries need a single, well-resourced supranational trade negotiating authority.

Arthur's presentation should be read by all - decision-makers and the general Caribbean public in whose name decisions are made. It displays the thinking of an intellectual, once at the full face of the Caribbean development furnace, who has had the time to think deeply on the serious challenges now confronting Caricom countries.

Sir Ronald Sanders is a consultant, senior fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies at London University and former Caribbean diplomat.

88
Other Sports / Boxing remembers Jizelle Salandy
« on: January 07, 2015, 09:03:50 PM »
 

Boxing remembers Jizelle Salandy


http://www.trinidadexpress.com/sports/Boxing-remembers-Jizelle-Salandy-287583211.html

By Mark Pouchet

Ma Pau Members Club and former boxing promoter Boxu Potts celebrated the sixth anniversary since the death of former eight-time world champion jiselle Salandy at Sweet Lime, Ariapita Avenue yesterday.

The occasion was also used to promote the proposed WBC Super Welterweight fight between Trinidad and Tobago’s Lorissa “Cheetah” Rivas and Sweden’s Mikaela Lauren that is tentatively scheduled for late March/ early April.

Salandy died on January 4, 2009 after a car crash on the Beetham Highway and was later given the WBC accolade of “Eternal Champion”. The Trinidad and Tobago Boxing Board of Control (TTBBC) adviser Boxu Potts called it a bitter-sweet occasion yesterday.

“Bitter in the context that our iconic figure Giselle Salandy is not here with us. Gone too soon at a young age but it is sweet to know that we can remember her and celebrate her life and times,” Potts said, adding that the luncheon was hosted to also promote the upcoming Rivas/Lauren world bout.

Potts added that at the five-day World Boxing Council (WBC) 52nd annual convention in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA in December, the organisation decided to honour Salandy as the first female eternal champion by hosting a world title fight here in T&T.

Rivas will fight for the title in the division that Salandy dominated, ruled and died undefeated in.

“It is a rare thing in boxing but the WBC has stepped up to the plate to honour her and we are pleased to have such a high accolade in boxing in our homeland,” Potts said. In preparation for the world title bout, Rivas fought a warm-up fight Saturday night when she defeated Guyana’s Shondelle Williams by a first round knockout and she is scheduled to have another bout at month’s end against a yet-to-be named opponent before travelling to Jamaica in February for a fight versus Sharon Ward.

Potts said Lauren has also been offered the opportunity to have a final warm-up fight here in T&T before the world title bout. Those warm-up bouts are expected to be part of the TTBBC’s community boxing drive which started Saturday with a card in Chaguanas.

Former promoter /manager for Giselle Salandy Harry Ragoonanan said while he was glad Rivas was earning a world title engagement, this country “has never really seen the full strength of Salandy and all she was capable of... The year that she died we had great plans for her but sorry the country missed out on that.”

Ragoonanan said he was happy she was being recognised by being inducted into the WBC Hall of Fame and he expects her legend to live on in T&T boxing.

Potts said it would be remiss of him not to remind young athletes to beware of fans posing as friends and the dangers of drinking and driving when athletes are fatigued.

TTBBC member Neale Greaves said that the planned main bout, featuring Rivas and Lauren had already received the blessings of the WBC and vice-president of the Europe Eurasian Pacific Boxing Council Malte Muller-Michaelis.

89
What about Track & Field / Borel top female athlete of 2014
« on: December 29, 2014, 05:34:17 PM »



Bovell, Borel top athletes of 2014

http://www.guardian.co.tt/sport/2014-12-25/bovell-borel-top-athletes-2014

Swimmer George Bovell and field athlete Cleopatra Borel were named the 2014 Sportsman and Sportswoman of the Year respectively, at the annual Guardian Sports Desk Christmas Lime, on Tuesday, at the company’s office, St Vincent Street, Port-of-Spain. Also recognised were Michelle Lee Ahye, who was named ‘Emerging Athlete of the Year’ while former national footballer/coach Everald ‘Gally’ Cummings was honoured with a Lifetime Achievement award for his contribution to national life. The Desk also named cricket writer Vinode Mamchan as its ‘Personality of the Year’ while Nigel Simon collected an award for his productivity and Jelani Beckles was named ‘Young Sportswriter of The Year.’ Andre Baptiste was named ‘Columnist of the Year.’

Bovell and Borel were the two outstanding athletes for T&T at the 22nd Central American and Caribbean (CAC) Games at Leyes de Reforma Aquatic Centre, Veracruz, Mexico, in November.
Bovell won the 50 metres freestyle, speeding home in 22.30 seconds, .07 hundredths of a second outside in 2010 record of 22.23 to turn the tables on his rivals Suriname’s Renzo Tjon-A-Joe (22.62) and Cuban, Hanser Garcia (22.69). Bovell also bagged nine medals at the FINA/MASTBANK World Cup Swimming Circuit which included three gold, five silver and one bronze. The highlight of his World Cup was a first ever 50m breaststroke medal, silver in 26.91 seconds Bovell also picked up a bronze medal in the 50m backstroke at the CAC Games.

Borel won gold in the shot put for the second consecutive time at the CAC Games to follow up her second place at the Commonwealth Games, in Glasgow, Scotland, in July. She collected her award from Guardian Managing Director, Lisa Agard, and said she was thrilled. Borel noted that 2013 was an up and down year for her but she was able to bounce back this year. “There is still a long way to go in 2015, but I am working hard, and I know with the kind of support I have been getting, things will be a lot easier.”

Bovell is currently out of the country on personal business but expressed appreciation at his award.”I am really sorry I could not be there to receive the award. I am very grateful for it and for all the support from everyone.” Cummings, in his acceptance speech, said he was grateful for the honour, noting that he sometimes felt like a forgotten person. Cummings guided T&T within a point of the World Cup Football Finals in 1990, arousing and igniting the nation with his Kaisoca, a brand of football he described as indigenous. “You can’t achieve anything without a piece of your culture. That is why we were so successful in 1989.”

Cummings was also a member of the national football team which was robbed of a place in the Germany World Cup finals in 1974. T&T finished second in the Concacaf finals in Haiti, losing to the hosts 1-2, after scoring five goals in the match, four of which were disallowed. The referee from that match was subsequently banned by Fifa. Sports Editor Valentino Singh described Cummings as a national hero and a treasure for whom a permanent place within the administration of football should be made. The function was attended by a number of sporting personalities, among whom were TTOC president Brian Lewis, TTFA secretary Sheldon Phillips, Sportt chief executive officer Adrian Raymond, batting legend Brian Lara, former national cricketer Colin Murray, ex world boxing champ Ria Ramnarine, sports analyst Andre Baptiste, motivation speaker Don La Foucade and university lecturer and sports columnist Anand Rampersad.

90
General Discussion / Cuba, Obama and Assata Shakur
« on: December 20, 2014, 10:47:41 PM »

What will happen?

Pages: 1 2 [3] 4 5 ... 8
1]; } ?>