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Offline Socapro

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #420 on: August 10, 2012, 03:06:29 PM »
What the javelin boy come?
The Javelin final featuring Walcott is tomorrow Weary!  :beermug:
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline weary1969

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #421 on: August 10, 2012, 03:28:38 PM »
What the javelin boy come?
The Javelin final featuring Walcott is tomorrow Weary!  :beermug:

AH ANXIOUS plus I eh get no REM sleep since July
Today you're the dog, tomorrow you're the hydrant - so be good to others - it comes back!"

Offline Brownsugar

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #422 on: August 10, 2012, 03:55:19 PM »
What the javelin boy come?
The Javelin final featuring Walcott is tomorrow Weary!  :beermug:

AH ANXIOUS plus I eh get no REM sleep since July

Aye miss lady, you gave Socapro mih hug and kiss??   :)
"...If yuh clothes tear up
Or yuh shoes burst off,
You could still jump up when music play.
Old lady, young baby, everybody could dingolay...
Dingolay, ay, ay, ay ay,
Dingolay ay, ay, ay..."

RIP Shadow....The legend will live on in music...

Dumplingdinho

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #423 on: August 10, 2012, 08:57:23 PM »
Socapro ah cyah believe yuh fnck up de board with that corneal article
:rotfl:

ent, socapro did an outstanding on the T&F forum only to spoil it with corneal article.  ;D

come like yuh cook ah pelau, it smelling real good, man mouth watering then yuh buss ah shit on it.

corneal real annoying

Offline Socapro

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Excitement for Walcott builds
« Reply #424 on: August 11, 2012, 12:56:02 AM »
http://www.newsday.co.tt/sport/0,164652.html

Excitement for Walcott builds
Saturday, August 11 2012

THE excitement is building in Trinidad and Tobago and in particular east Trinidad ahead of the Olympic Men’s Javelin final today where Keshorn Walcott will be in action.


The Toco athlete is continuing to make his nation proud and Councillor for Toco/Fishing Pond, Terry Rondon, is adamant that he will be bringing home a medal on his return tomorrow.

On Thursday an excited Rondon was in a jubilant mood at the Sangre Grande Regional Corporation and even created a song.

“Keshorn, Keshorn, bring back gold for we nah son!” Rondon exclaimed, much to the delight of his fellow Councillors who were getting ready for a meeting.

Rondon, who last month met with Walcott at him home in Toco to offer words of support and encouragement ahead of his trip to Spain for the World Junior Championships, is supremely confident in the teenager’s abilities.

The Councillor is also planning a gala celebration for Walcott on his return regardless of his performance at the Olympics. Rondon explained that there is much to celebrate from the 19-year-old who not only is a World Junior champion but also this country’s first Olympic javelin finalist. Big screens will be erected throughout Toco today where his hometown fans will be able to see him in action.

The Men’s javelin final will get underway at 2.20pm today with each athlete getting three throws. Walcott’s personal best is 82.83m which may not be enough for a medal but the teenager has shown an ability to step up for the big occasions and will be expected to do the same.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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Morris says London 2012 is T&T’s best Olympics
« Reply #425 on: August 11, 2012, 12:58:01 AM »
http://www.newsday.co.tt/sport/0,164656.html

Morris says London 2012 is TT’s best Olympics
By KEVIN SUNICH Saturday, August 11 2012

DESPITE not being able to claim numerous medals, the Trinidad and Tobago 2012 Olympic athletes continue to be praised for their efforts.


The latest to express this sentiment is former World Indoor 400m silver medallist and two-time Olympian Ian Morris. “I have one word to describe this years’ performance and that is excellent. It is the first Olympic Games that I could remember that we have had so many athletes reaching the finals of their individual events”, said Morris.

So far out of seven individual finalists Lalonde Gordon has been the only one to claim a medal with bronze in the Men’s 400m. Then he returned with the 4x 400m relay team along side Deon Lendore, Jarrin Solomon and Ade Alleyne-Forte to claim another bronze for TT.

However there is still some hope for TT to do better in the medal count as the Men’s 4x100m relay team will compete in today’s final along with 19-year old World No 1 ranked junior Keshorn Walcott who will contest the final of the javelin today as well.

Yesterday in the 4x400 metres final Bahamas claimed an historic win ahead of the USA in a time of 2:56.70. The American quartet secured the silver in 2:57.05 while TT got their second medal of the Olympics in a time of 2:59.40.

TT’s 4x100m relay team of Richard Thompson, Marc Burns, Emmanuel Callender and Keston Bledman will also go after gold after they finished third in the heat yesterday.

Youth sensation Keshorn Walcott who secured the number one position among the juniors in the world at the Carifta Games in April carries high hopes of a medal today.

The boy from Toco advanced to the final on his last throw on Thursday with a distance of 81.75 metres. And yesterday Morris, a former quarter miler for TT, said the Olympic Games are not all about the medals although the TT public would love to see their athletes on the medal podium. “We cannot just look at the fact that they did not win medals. The bigger picture is that they made it to the finals, and that in itself is a big accomplishment for us as a small nation.

“Yes we would have liked for a few more of those finalists to produce some medals, but we have to be proud of what they have done for our country.

“They have all done creditably well and I am proud to be a Trinbagonian right now”, said Morris.

The TT Sports Hall of Fame 2004 inductee said the future looks bright for our country. “This shows that something is being positive way right now. We just have to push some more and get the athletes to come out and represent their country in the various disciplines.

The fourth place finisher at the 1992 Olympics called for the TT public to be more supportive of their athletes despite their performances. “We need to go all out for our athletes and we must be 100 percent behind them. The Jamaicans don’t hold back when it comes to their athletes and they give them maximum support. That is what we need, and it will go a far way” Morris said.

He however, feels that corporate TT must also play a bigger role and not just rely on the government to bring our athletes to the forefront.

So far TT have kept the trend of claiming at least one medal at every Olympics since the 1996 Atlanta Games, where four-time Olympic medallist Ato Boldon claimed bronze in the 100 and 200 metres.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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Cubans back T&T’s javelin finalist
« Reply #426 on: August 11, 2012, 01:04:37 AM »
http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,164619.html

Cubans back TT’s javelin finalist
By STEPHON NICHOLAS Saturday, August 11 2012

Trinidad and Tobago’s Keshorn Walcott will be hoping to create further history today when he competes in the Olympic men’s javelin final which gets underway at 2.20 pm at the Olympic Stadium, London, England.


Already the first person from this country to reach a javelin final, Walcott is surely not content with that and will be keen on taking home a medal in his first appearance at the Olympics.

The 19-year-old has been receiving tremendous support, not only from TT, but from other Caribbean countries, among them Cuba, following his powerful 81.75-metre throw that hurled him into today’s final but will have his work cut out against a very experienced field.

Czech Republic’s Yitezslav Vesely was the most impressive in the qualifying rounds on Wednesday, justifying his number one IAAF ranking with a mammoth 88.34-metre throw that was almost four metres more than his nearest rival.

In Walcott’s humble village of Trois Rouche in Toco, the anticipation is boiling over with his friends, family and fans all eager to see him bring home a medal.

The Sangre Grande Regional Corporation has also arranged for big screens to be set up at several venues in Toco today for the community to gather and cheer their hometown hero.

Speaking to Newsday yesterday, John Andalcio, coach of Toco TAFAC and the man responsible for helping Walcott hone his craft, expressed great pride and joy in what his former student has been able to achieve.

The current World Junior champion, who began taking javelin seriously at around 16 years old, spent three years under Andalcio’s tutelage before Cuban coach Ismael Lopez Mastrapa took over.

Andalcio was hesitant to predict a medal for the teenager but believes he will improve on his personal best of 82.83 metres in the final.

“I am extremely proud of him. He’s a guy who is strongly motivated and has already achieved everything he has set out to do this year (CAC Junior and World Junior gold medals) so he will be throwing with a free mind. He doesn’t have that pressure on him anymore,” he explained.

Commenting on Walcott’s performance in the qualifying round, Andalcio believes nerves played a part in the young athlete’s first two throws which were below 80 metres before getting it together on his final attempt.

“When I went to Beijing (for the Olympics) in 2008, I came back with video footage of the javelin event. In the prelims on Wednesday he was a little overawed by competing against some of the guys he’s been accustomed seeing but he is in the final and does not have that ‘jumbie’ over him anymore,” he continued.

Andalcio explained from the very first time he saw Walcott, he realised he was going to be something special.

“We love javelin throw in this area and one day we just said, ‘Keshy come and take a throw’, and he threw over 50 metres in the first time he ever threw a javelin,” he revealed.

Tributes and words of encouragement continued to pour in on Walcott’s facebook page with even his peers congratulating him.

Cuban javelin thrower, Victor Orozco, hailed Walcott as the man to look forward to in the 2016 Olympics in Brazil and is also not ruling out a surprise today.

He posted, “Awesome man, you are the future of javelin! Bring it on in the finals, you can do it.”
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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T&T stands by relay women
« Reply #427 on: August 11, 2012, 01:06:53 AM »
http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,164616.html

TT stands by relay women
Saturday, August 11 2012

A FAILED baton exchange between Michelle-Lee Ahye and Kelly-Ann Baptiste cost Trinidad and Tobago a chance of a medal in the women’s 4x100-metre relay final at the 30th Olympiad in London, England.


At the Olympic Stadium, Baptiste took off too early in the second leg, and she was out of her designated area when she was handed the baton by Ahye.

As a result, Kai Selvon, the assigned third leg runner, and Semoy Hackett were left as mere spectators as the United States won the race in a world-record time of 40.82 seconds, lowering the previous mark of 41.37 seconds set by East Germany in 1985.

The quartet of Tianna Madison, Allyson Felix, Bianca Knight and Carmelita Jeter were followed across the finish line by Jamaica in 41.41 seconds, with Ukraine third in 42.04.

The US team had failed to reach the final at the Beijing Olympics but after qualifying fastest for the 2012 final, Madison gave the US an electric start, with Felix and Knight maintaining the lead before 100 metres silver medallist Jeter stormed down the straight to capture the gold.

The Jamaican quartet featured 100 metres champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and bronze medallist Veronica Campbell-Brown, but they could not match the fierce pace of the world champions.

Manager of the Trinidad and Tobago team, Dexter Voisin, commented yesterday, “it was a bitter-sweet day for us, with the unfortunate situation with the women (who) did not get the baton around. We felt they could have medalled.”

He continued, “They have worked hard. As a matter of fact, in practice, all their passes were on top. It’s unfortunate, this is athletics, these things could happen and we can’t dwell on this.”

Former national sprinter Ayanna Hutchinson tweeted, “my Trinbago ladies. I still love you guys. Never doubt I support you wholeheartedly, win, lose or draw.”

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee added, “we are still extremely proud of our 4x100-metre girls for making it into the finals.”

And cyclist Njisane Phillip also wrote on his Twitter page, “these things happen in sport, support all the way not half way. Am proud of them.”
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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Bronze is gold
« Reply #428 on: August 11, 2012, 01:12:40 AM »
http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,164617.html

Bronze is gold
Saturday, August 11 2012

BRONZE IS GOLD.


This is how local fans felt about the Olympic medal the men’s 4x400-metre relay team won in London yesterday.

The normal Friday after-work lime for Trinbagonians turned into celebration as men and women stood with their eyes glued to big screens in their favourite liming spots anticipating a win for TT. People were screaming and shouting praises to sprinters Lalonde Gordon, Jarrin Solomon and Ade Alleyne-Forte before the baton was passed to fourth runner Deon Lendore, who raced to the finish line giving the team and TT a third place win. In bars, fans sang and danced to celebrate Trinidad’s second bronze medal for the London Olympics after Gordon won the first medal in the men’s 400 metres on Monday.

Limers at Pancho’s Restaurant and Bar, Queen Street, Port-of-Spain, said they were there all day waiting for the final and were not disappointed.

“Bronze is excellent, that is like gold for us, they did their best and we have to celebrate that, and I believe there are more medals on the way for TT,” said Kevin Prudhomne.

Many patrons at the D Bocas, Independence Square, Port-of-Spain, sang praises as well.

Ashmeed Hamid, all dressed in his work suit, with a group of friends at a table lined with empty beer bottles said, “That win is well deserved for us, they worked hard and competed with the best, we are proud and we are celebrating it.”

He also commented on the women’s 4x100 metre relay team where Kelly-Ann Baptiste, on the second leg, was out of the transition area when receiving the baton from Michelle-Lee Ahye. He said maybe it was nerves but it was disappointing the women did not make a win.

Bernard Persad, who saw the race at MovieTowne, Mucurapo with friends, said, “Bronze is gold for us, this is very exciting, Trinidad is in high celebrations because of this.”
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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Race for gold
« Reply #429 on: August 11, 2012, 01:14:59 AM »
http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,164618.html

Race for gold
Saturday, August 11 2012

TRINIDAD AND Tobago will be aiming for back-to-back relay medals at the Olympic Games in London, England today.


On the heels of the bronze medal success in the men’s 4x400-metre relay yesterday, at the Olympic Stadium, Trinidad and Tobago booked a spot in today’s final of the men’s 4x100-metre relay. The final is scheduled for 4 pm.

Richard Thompson, Marc Burns, Emmanuel Callender and Keston Bledman — all members of the 2008 silver medal squad at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, China — finished third yesterday in the second semi-final heat in a time of 38.10 seconds, behind the United States (37.38) and Japan (38.07).

Thompson, had a decent first leg but Burns was tested by the challenge of the Americans and managed to remain in second position, but Callender faltered slightly on the third leg and was overtaken by his Japanese rival.

Bledman had a lot of ground to make up to get third place, and an automatic spot in the final, and he managed to do so, ahead of France and Australia on the line.

Dexter Voisin, manager of the TT track and field team, said yesterday, he expected the team to discuss their approach to today’s relay with their coach.

“I definitely think they would have to reconsider the order that has been working for us in recent times and definitely go out there and perform to their best,” he added. “They definitely weren’t at their best (yesterday).”

And former Olympian Alvin Daniel admitted, “we always had a very good chance of getting a medal.

The problem we encounter is the changeover. Once we could get the stick around, Trinidad always stand a very good chance of winning or getting a medal, at any major championships.

“I’m not even looking at the US quite clearly,” he added. “The US always have a problem with the baton (passing). Apart from that, they always have a sort of rumbling in their camp.

“Whenever it comes to these major meets, they never get it right. If they do, in fact, get the stick around, we would have some problems.

“Jamaica is the most balanced team, I think, in the history of putting out a team together. The only thing that can beat Jamaica on that track is if they drop the baton, or injuries.” Trinidad and Tobago has been drawn in lane nine of today’s final.

In the first semi-final, Britain, who finished second, were later disqualified due to poor change-over in the final leg.

Jamaica, the defending Olympic champions, won in 37.39 seconds, followed by Canada (38.05) and Netherlands (38.29).
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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Bahamas wins gold
« Reply #430 on: August 11, 2012, 01:17:57 AM »
http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,164613.html

Bahamas wins gold
By Stephon Nicholas Saturday, August 11 2012

Bahamas continued the domination of the Caribbean on the track yesterday with a gold medal victory in the men’s 4x400-metre relay final at the London Olympics.


The quartet of Chris Brown, Demetrius Pinder, Michael Mathieu and Ramon Miller shattered their national record with a time of 2:56.72 seconds to leave Americans Bryshon Nellum, Josh Mance, Tony McQuay and Angelo Taylor with the silver after clocking 2:57.05.

The Trinidad and Tobago team of Lalonde Gordon, Jarrin Solomon, Ade Alleyne-Forte and Deon Lendore took the bronze in a new national record of 2:59.40.

The Bahamas victory effectively ended the dominance of the Americans who have won gold in that event in a remarkable six of the previous seven Olympics. But with not a single American in the men’s 400 metres final, that era has certainly passed and the Caribbean teams are now coming to the fore.

Bahamas went into the final with the fastest qualifying time (2:58.87) while the US were second with 2:58.87 and TT third (3:00.38).

Led by a superb final leg from Miller, the Bahamas ensured the medals would be distributed in that very order. Miller got the baton some five metres behind US anchorman Angelo Taylor, but never lost his composure and sped by the American in the last 50 metres to burst to the finish.

Brown, the veteran, had earlier given them a very good start, which Pinder built on before Mathieu lost the lead. Luckily, Taylor, of the US, could not finish strongly under strong pressure from Miller in the stretch.

“We owe it to the Lord,” an ecstatic Brown said.

“It was not just the Bahamas we did it for, we did it for the entire Caribbean, all those who came before us and those who trying to go and do what we did tonight.”

He continued, “It was tough for us because we ran the same four guys as we did in the heats. They (US) brought in two fresh legs and we still came out victorious so we owe it to God to bless us with this talent we have.”

Pinder added, “It’s history. No one ever did it before so we were ecstatic, which led to the celebration at the end.”
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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VALIANT RACE
« Reply #431 on: August 11, 2012, 01:20:39 AM »
http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,164612.html

VALIANT RACE
By STEPHON NICHOLAS Saturday, August 11 2012

Less than an hour after seeing the national women’s 4x100-metre team fail to finish their race, the men’s 4x400-metre team eased the pain of the nation with a battling bronze medal performance that turned faces of sorrow into joy.


The effort took Trinidad and Tobago’s (TT) Olympic medal tally from the London Games to two which has already equalled the quota of Beijing 2008 with Keshorn Walcott, men’s javelin, and the men’s 4x100-metre team still to come in their respective finals today.

Led off by the 2012 Olympic 400-metre bronze medallist, Lalonde Gordon, 23, the TT quartet which also included Jarrin Solomon, 26, Ade Alleyne-Forte, 23, and Deon Lendore, 19, smashed the national record yet again to cross the finish line third in 2:59.40 seconds.

The gold was won by Bahamians Chris Brown, Demetrius Pinder, Michael Mathieu and Ramon Miller who broke their national record in a sizzling 2:56.72 seconds ahead of the highly fancied Americans, Bryshon Nellum, Josh Mance, Tony McQuay and Angelo Taylor, who had to settle for second in 2:57.05.

It was a valiant effort from the TT foursome who had to dig deep to come away with a medal.

After winning their semi-final race on Thursday, nothing less was expected of the TT team who went into the final with the third fastest qualifying time behind the Bahamas and US.

The race started with Gordon on the opening leg but after running three rounds in the individual 400 metres and also in the relay semi-final, the 23-year-old looked tired and handed off the baton to Solomon in about sixth place. Solomon was in no mood to settle for less than a medal and ran a brilliant second leg before passing smoothly to Alleyne-Forte. The San Fernando resident, already trailing the US and Bahamas, maintained the distance between the chasing pack as he passed the baton to Lendore for the final lap. The 19-year-old was well behind the top two runners but by then all TT wanted was a medal and Lendore obtained it with a nerve-wrecking final leg.

There was a bit of a scare going into the straightaway as Lendore seemed to fade a bit but the TT runner found a last burst of speed to hold off Great Britain’s Martyn Rooney to hang on to third. “Everybody came on top of the game,” Gordon said.

Lendore added, “Coming out here we had it in our minds that we have to do our best to get a medal. The world may be surprised, but as a team, watching our own performances throughout the year, we knew we would have given the teams here strong competition and take a medal.”

It was an effort that typified sheer determination and hunger from the TT team who celebrated the bronze by laughing and piling on each other on the ground while at home their fans applauded their brilliance.

TT’s former World Indoor silver medallist, Ian Morris, was in tears yesterday when contacted by Newsday and could not contain the happiness of seeing the local quartet bring glory to this country.

Morris was part of the 4x400-metre relay team that placed seventh at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics and was also edged out of a medal in the 400 metres with a fourth place finish that saw him return home empty-handed.

“I am overjoyed. Tears are in my eyes still because these guys ran excellent,” Morris declared, “We haven’t done this in years and I think this Olympics is for the Caribbean,” he continued.

Morris revealed he had reservations of Alleyne-Forte running the third leg but acknowledged his concern may have been without merit following his superb effort which maintained TT’s third place.

Speaking to Newsday yesterday as well, Alleyne-Forte’s father, Learie, was bursting with sheer excitement following the race and stated the bronze medal was the culmination of years of hard work put in by his son.

“I am very proud of him and the entire Trinidad and Tobago team. These guys, especially Ade, have been working toward this from since a young boy and here he is today. He has achieved his lifelong dream and I’m so happy for him. The guys went out and executed to their best ability,” Learie declared. He noted that he was sure the team would medal and was not surprised with their performance yesterday.

“They can’t have their best race everyday but I was fully confident that they would have delivered — so said so done. The guys held their own and Trinidad and Tobago should welcome them into their arms. They have done exceedingly well,” he exclaimed.

The relay team was a hot topic on Twitter yesterday with several popular local personalities congratulating the quartet on their feat.

Former Soca Warrior, Shaka Hislop, expressed his delight on obtaining a medal, stating “Congrats to the 400 metres relay team, and medal, another reason to feel proud!”

Local cyclist, Njisane Phillip, who just missed out on an Olympic medal with a fourth place finish in the Match Sprint, was still elated that his compatriots were able to achieve what he could not.

“Sweet! Another medal!” he tweeted.

TT’s Olympics athletics manager, Dexter Voisin, also hailed the relay team for stepping up at sport’s biggest showpiece and writing their names into history.

“Coming into this meet here, these guys did not make the ‘A’ qualifying standard but that did not deter them. They continued to train hard and prepare themselves for the relay,” he stated. Earlier yesterday, TT fans across the country were talking about the possibility of picking up two medals with the women’s 4x100-metre team going into the final with the second fastest qualifying time.

It was not be, however, as TT’s race ended in calamity with Michelle Lee Ahye and Kelly-Ann Baptiste unable to exchange the baton. It was a sad end for the TT team which also included Semoy Hackett and Kai Selvon. For Baptiste and Hackett it was a repeat of the 2008 debacle where they also experienced baton transition problems and failed to finish their race.

Also yesterday, the men’s 4x100-metre team sealed a place in the final with a third place finish in their semifinal. The team of Richard Thompson, Marc Burns, Emmanuel Callendar and Keston Bledman, who copped silver four years ago clocked a season best of 38.10 seconds behind the US and Japan.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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BRONZE BOYS ...T&T strikes third spot in men's 4x400m Olympic final
« Reply #432 on: August 11, 2012, 01:25:22 AM »
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/news/BRONZE_BOYS-165818466.html

BRONZE BOYS
T&T strikes third spot in men's 4x400m Olympic final

By Kwame Laurence
Story Created: Aug 10, 2012 at 11:54 PM ECT


Deon Lendore ran his heart out for Trinidad and Tobago at the Olympic Stadium, here in London, England, yesterday, battling to the line to earn his team bronze in the London 2012 men's 4x400 metres relay.
 
Lendore had to contend with thousands and thousands of screaming Britons, determined to push their anchorman Martyn Rooney into the bronze medal position. But the 19-year-old T&T quartermiler was even more determined than the partisan crowd, holding off Rooney to finish the job that had been started by Lalonde Gordon, and continued by Jarrin Solomon and Ade Alleyne-Forte.
 
"I don't think I ever ran so hard in my life," Lendore told the Express. "It was a wonderful feeling. I may have cried if he passed me.
 
"Seeing that we ran a new national record," he continued, "and seeing my teammates running up to me, it was a very emotional moment."
 
The T&T quartet returned a time of two minutes, 59.40 seconds, smashing the 3:00.38 national record they had established in the qualifying round, on Thursday.
 
There was also a national record for Bahamas, but more importantly the Bahamians struck gold, Chris Brown, Demetrius Pinder, Michael Mathieu and Ramon Miller combining for a 2:56.72 clocking. The United States, champions in the event 16 times, were forced to settle for silver on this occasion, in 2:57.05.
 
Yesterday's championship race appearance was the seventh for T&T in an Olympic Games men's 4x400m event. It was only the second time, though, a medal was bagged.
 
At the 1964 Games in Tokyo, Japan, Edwin Skinner, Kent Bernard, Edwin Roberts and Wendell Mottley earned bronze. Forty-eight years later, Skinner is here in London as a member of the T&T coaching staff.
 
"Mr Skinner," Solomon told the Express, "showed a few of us the (1964) bronze medal run when we were in Wales in the Cardiff camp. Just to see how happy they were and how hard they worked we wanted to come out and emulate that same thing. And we knew we had the team to bring home a bronze medal, if not a gold, so we came out here confident and ready to deliver."
 
Gordon ran three rounds in the individual 400m, culminating with bronze in the final in a personal best 44.52 seconds. He also competed in the qualifying round of the 4x4. The opening leg in yesterday's final was his fifth time round the Olympic Stadium track, but the 23-year-old athlete dug deep into his reserves to put his country in contention for precious metal.
 
Solomon continued the good work, and T&T were in the bronze medal position when he handed the baton to Alleyne-Forte. Obviously rusty in the qualifying round, Alleyne-Forte stepped up his game in the final, staying in third to set the stage for Lendore's anchorleg heroics.
 
"It was a much better effort than yesterday (Thursday)," said Alleyne-Forte. "I hadn't competed in a while, prior to yesterday. I told these guys after the race it was going to get better. It got better, and I'm pretty satisfied.
 
"Thank you T&T for all the support. We came out here to represent you all, and my honest hope is that we did it to our best."
 
Virtually unknown coming into the London Games, Gordon is now the proud owner of two Olympic bronze medals.
 
"Words can't explain; just a wonderful feeling. Thank God man, thank God.

"I felt I could have done a little better," he continued. "I didn't really feel the power getting out the blocks, but it was a good run."
 
Yesterday's bronze was the second global 4x4 success for T&T in 2012. On March 11, Gordon, Renny Quow, Jereem Richards and Solomon teamed up for bronze at the World Indoor Championships, in Istanbul, Turkey.
 
"Two or three years ago," said Lendore, "I would not have thought of being an Olympic bronze medallist. But during this year I had the thought. Seeing how my teammates all progressed greatly, I knew that we had a chance to do anything in this Olympic Games."
 
For Solomon, the podium finish had special significance. His father, Mike Solomon represented T&T with distinction, appearing in two Olympic 4x400m finals—1976 and 1980—as well as the individual 400m championship race in 1980. On each occasion, sixth spot was the senior Solomon's fate.
 
"I know he really wanted to medal," said Jarrin. "In '84 he was supposed to run, and he didn't get the chance to go to the Games, so this was very important to me, to go out there, give my best, and bring home a medal for the family. We've been to three Olympics already. I think it was due time to bring home a medal."
 
After spending more than a fortnight in cool, and sometimes cold London, Gordon is looking forward to some warmth.
 
"We coming home for doubles," he declared.

The hunger for precious metal already satisfied, the double Olympic bronze medallist is eager to celebrate not only with his teammates but with all of T&T.
« Last Edit: August 11, 2012, 01:27:21 AM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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Bahamas end US 4x400 dominance
« Reply #433 on: August 11, 2012, 01:32:16 AM »
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/sports/Bahamas_end_US_4x400_dominance-165821776.html

Bahamas end US 4x400 dominance
Story Created: Aug 11, 2012 at 12:46 AM ECT

l LONDON


America's 28-year domination of the men's Olympic 4x400 metres relay ended in thrilling fashion yesterday when the Bahamas overhauled them to snatch gold in a pulsating final leg.
 
Chris Brown, Demetrius Pinder, Michael Mathieu and Ramon Miller sped home in a Bahamian record time of two minutes 56.72 seconds, Miller passing American Angelo Taylor with just 50 metres left to huge roars from the crowd.
 
"Miller had a phenomenal leg. I really feel bad for these guys (teammates). I really didn't hold up the tradition," Taylor told reporters. "I felt pretty good for 300 (metres), then I tried to hit it and I just didn't have it."
 
Bryshon Nellum, Joshua Mance, Tony McQuay and Taylor claimed silver for the US with a season's best time of 2:57.05, ending a run of seven successive golds in the event.
 
The gold was a first in men's track and field for Bahamas.

"It is great, we finally got the gold over the US," the Bahamas' Mathieu said. "The streak is finally gone, we finally got them."
 
Trinidad and Tobago's Lalonde Gordon, Jarrin Solomon, Ade Alleyne-Forte and Deon Lendore won bronze with hosts Britain just outside the medals in fourth.
 
The US had finished ahead of the Bahamas in Beijing four years ago to take gold in an Olympic record time of two minutes 55.39 seconds—the second fastest performance ever—but their team in London was much weaker.
 
American 2008 Olympic 400m champion LaShawn Merritt, a first-choice relay option, injured his hamstring moments into his title defence on Saturday and pulled out of the Games, while Manteo Mitchell suffered a broken leg during the relay heats.
 
Double US relay gold medallist Jeremy Wariner was also unfit to run in London.

The US still remained favourites for gold and their chances looked to have been bolstered on Thursday when medal contenders Jamaica crashed out in qualifying after Jermaine Gonzales pulled up injured and ended their race.
 
The world's fastest man Usain Bolt had said there was a slim chance he might have run the final if Jamaica had got there.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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Coe: Rudisha's world record win a stand out moment
« Reply #434 on: August 11, 2012, 01:35:39 AM »
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/sports/Coe__Rudisha_s_world_record_win_a_stand_out_moment_-165821826.html

Coe: Rudisha's world record win a stand out moment
Story Created: Aug 11, 2012 at 12:46 AM ECT


Kenyan David Rudisha's win in the 800 metres in a world record time was the "stand out performance" of the London Olympics, Games chairman and former record holder Seb Coe said yesterday.
 
The London Games have seen several great performances, including Usain Bolt's sprint double, as well as many British golden moments in the host country's best medal haul since 1908.
 
But Coe, who won two Olympic 1,500m golds and held the 800 world record between 1981 and 1997, especially praised the Kenyan's run on Thursday.
 
"I am probably biased and I would say this, but I think...that will be the stand out performance of these Olympic Games," he told reporters.
 
Rudisha, who romped to gold in one minute 40.91, had said he had wanted to come to London and make his good friend Coe proud.
 
"I'm very proud that David ran the way he did, I thought it was an extraordinary piece of racing," Coe replied when asked if Rudisha had achieved his aim.
 
"This was in an Olympic final. To basically express such physical and mental confidence that you take an 800m out in an Olympic final from gun to tape (is remarkable)."
 
Rudisha, the world champion, dazzled the 80,000-strong crowd in the Olympic stadium to beat the mark of 1.41.01 he set two years ago in Italy.
 
Coe never won an Olympic gold in his favoured 800.

He described Rudisha's run as "simply an unbelievable performance".

"Instead of just doing enough to win the race he wanted to do something extraordinary," Coe said.
 
"I feel privileged to have witnessed it in London."
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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US women smash relay record
« Reply #435 on: August 11, 2012, 01:38:57 AM »
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/sports/US_women_smash_relay_record-165821906.html

US women smash relay record
Story Created: Aug 11, 2012 at 12:46 AM ECT

l LONDON


America's women left their great Jamaican rivals trailing to storm to gold in the Olympic sprint relay yesterday, running a perfect race to smash one of the oldest world records in the book.
 
On a dramatic night on the track, Ethiopia's Meseret Defar surged to victory in the women's 5,000 metres to deny her compatriot Tirunesh Dibaba a historic second double of Olympic distance titles.
 
And the Bahamas, silver medallists four years ago, ran down a weakened US quartet in the home straight for gold in the 4x400m, denying the Americans an eighth successive Olympic title.
 
On a day when former drugs offenders won gold in the women's 1,500m and hammer throw and the men's 10km swim, there was news of two new doping suspensions in distance running.
 
Elsewhere, the Netherlands won the women's hockey tournament, Australia asserted their dominance in sailing, and Olympic minnows Colombia and Latvia won golds in BMX cycling.
 
The US reigning Olympic basketball champions, featuring LeBron James and Kobe Bryant, set up a repeat of their 2008 final against Spain by brushing aside Argentina 109-83. Spain beat Russia 67-59.
 
The penultimate day of track and field competition in London, England, brought high drama in the relays.
 
Bungled handovers had denied the American women 4x100m gold at the last three Games, but Tianna Madison, Allyson Felix, Bianca Knight and Carmelita Jeter combined slickly to run 40.82 seconds, beating East Germany's 1985 world mark by more than half a second.
 
Jamaica finished second in a national record, only 0.04 seconds outside the old world record of 41.37.
 
Jamaica and the United States have carved up all the sprint golds between them so far in London, and Jamaica's 100m bronze medallist Veronica Campbell-Brown praised her rivals.
 
"I feel females don't get as much respect as their male counterparts. We need to get more records.... The result was phenomenal," she said.
 
In the women's 5,000, Dibaba was unable to reproduce the scintillating last lap that won her the 10,000m a week ago.
 
Having failed to shake off her main rivals, the "baby-faced destroyer", winner of the 5,000 and 10,000 in Beijing, China, faded at the end to be outsprinted by Defar, the 2004 champion, and Kenyan world champion Vivian Cheruiyot.
 
Asli Cakir Alptekin, who served a two-year doping ban from 2004 to 2006, won Turkey's first-ever athletics gold in the 1,500, leading the field in a storming last lap after a painfully slow first 1,200m.
 
Russia's Tatyana Lysenko, who watched the 2008 Olympics on television while serving a two-year doping ban, won the women's hammer.
 
Mathew Kisorio of Kenya, the world's great middle- and long-distance power alongside Ethiopia, was confirmed to have tested positive for a banned substance in June.
 
Kisorio told German television that blood-doping and steroid use were widespread in Kenya, but officials dismissed the allegation while acknowledging there had been other cases.
 
"We don't joke with doping matters. This year alone, we have banned four athletes," said David Okeyo, secretary general of Athletics Kenya.
 
French 5,000m runner Hassan Hirt failed a test for the banned blood-booster EPO (erythropoietin) prior to competing in London, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said.
 
France's 3,000m steeplechaser Nour-Eddine Gezzar had also been suspended for using EPO in the run-up to the Games.
 
Tunisia's Oussama Mellouli, who served an 18-month ban in 2006-2007 for using banned stimulants, won the men's swimming marathon through the Serpentine lake in Hyde Park to become the first swimmer to get medals in the pool and open water.
 
Earlier in the week, Victor Conte, convicted owner of a now-defunct laboratory at the centre of a global steroid scandal, said it was easy to cheat at the Olympics by using drugs.
 
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) dismissed his comments as being "like a poacher criticising a gamekeeper".
 
France's European champion Renaud Lavillenie produced an Olympic record jump of 5.97m to win gold in the men's pole vault after Australia's defending champion, Steve Hooker, went out of the competition early on.
 
But there was better news for Australia in sailing where they are set to finish as the leading country. They won their third gold in the men's 470 class and look all set to win another in the women's Elliott 6-metre keelboat today.
 
In hockey, the Netherlands beat world champions Argentina 2-0 in the women's final—and will go for the double when their men play Germany in what could be a classic final today.
 
Mariana Pajon, Colombia's flag-bearer at the opening ceremony, won her country's first gold medal of the Games when she thundered to victory in the BMX cycling where competitors race over bumps and around banked corners.
 
Latvia's Maris Strombergs, who cried when he first saw a BMX race at the age of five, remained the only men's Olympic champion in the discipline when he retained his title.
 
In handball, three-time men's silver medallists Sweden gave themselves a chance of a first Olympic gold by beating Hungary.
 
In the final they will meet France, the title-holders, who beat twice winners Croatia in their semi-final.
 
The United States stood atop the overall medals table with 41 golds to China's 37.
 
The two have been neck-and-neck throughout London 2012 in the race for Olympic bragging rights. Whoever wins, the home nation will certainly be celebrating their best medals haul since 1908 when London first hosted the Games.
 
Britain's 25 golds puts them behind China in third place and easily surpassed their 2008 total of 19.
 
That golden glow has helped fuel the popularity of the Games among a public that has packed many venues and lifted athletes with deafening cheers.
 
IOC president Jacques Rogge gave the London Games a lavish endorsement, telling the city's Evening Standard newspaper: "The superlatives created here in London will live on long after the cauldron is finally extinguished.
 
"In the true spirit of Britain, huge crowds have cheered on not just their athletes but those of the world, and sent an echo that resonates in every home across the globe," he added.
 
Before the baton is passed to Rio de Janeiro, which hosts the first South American Olympics in 2016, the world will witness a closing ceremony celebrating British music, with the Spice Girls, The Who and Brian May among those set to perform.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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Today's London Olympics schedule
« Reply #436 on: August 11, 2012, 02:17:57 AM »
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/sports/Today_s_London_Olympics_schedule-165821916.html

Today's London Olympics schedule
Story Created: Aug 11, 2012 at 12:46 AM ECT

Athletics

At The Mall

Men's 50km Race Walk, 9 a.m.
Women's 20km Race Walk, 5 p.m.

At Olympic Stadium
Men's 5000 final, 4x100 Relay final, Javelin final; Women's 800 final, 4x400 Relay final, High Jump final, 6:45 p.m.

Basketball - At North Greenwich Arena
Women—Bronze medal, 5 p.m.
Gold medal, 9 p.m.

Boxing - At ExCeL
Men's Light Flyweight (49kg); Men's Bantamweight (56kg); Men's Light Welterweight (64kg); Men's Middleweight (75kg) and Men's
Heavyweight (91kg) finals, 8:30 p.m.

Canoe (Sprint) At Eton Dorney, Buckinghamshire
Men's Canoe Single 200 final; Men's Kayak Single 200 final; Men's Kayak Double 200 final; Women's Kayak Single 200 final, 9:30 a.m.

Cycling (Mountain Bike) At Hadleigh Farm, Essex
Women's Cross-Country race, 12:30 p.m.

Diving At Olympic Park-Aquatics Centre
Men's 10-Metre Platform semifinal, 10 a.m.
Men's 10-Metre Platform final, 8:30 p.m.

Field Hockey At Olympic Park-Hockey Centre

Men

Classifications (5th-6th & 11th-12th places), 8:30 a.m. Bronze medal match, 3:30 p.m.
Gold medal match, 8 p.m.

Gymnastics At Rhythmic Wembley Arena
Women's Individual All-Around final, 1:30 p.m.

Modern Pentathlon

Men

Fencing (At Olympic Park-Handball Arena), 8:45 a.m.
Swimming (At Olympic Park-Aquatics Centre), 1:20 p.m.
Riding (At Greenwich Park), 3:20 p.m.
Combined Event (At Greenwich Park), 6:45 p.m.

Sailing At Weymouth and Portland, Dorset
Women's Elliott 6m (medal race), Noon

Soccer At Wembley Stadium
Men's gold medal match, 3 p.m.

Taekwondo At ExCeL
Men's +80kg and Women's +67kg preliminary round of 16, 9 a.m.
Men's +80kg and Women's +67kg quarterfinals, semifinals, 3 p.m.
Men's +80kg and Women's +67kg repechages, bronze and gold medal contests, 8 p.m.
 
Team Handball At Copper Box

Women

Bronze medal match, 5 p.m.
Gold medal match, 8:30 p.m.

Volleyball At Earls Court

Women

Bronze medal match, 11:30 a.m.
Gold medal match, 6:30 p.m.

Wrestling (Freestyle) At ExCeL
Men's 60kg, 84kg and 120kg qualifications, 1/8 finals, quarterfinals, semifinals, 1 p.m.
Men's 60kg, 84kg and 120kg repechage rounds, bronze and gold medal contests, 5:45 p.m.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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T&T goes after medals in men's 4x100m relay, javelin at Olympics today
« Reply #437 on: August 11, 2012, 02:26:14 AM »
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/sports/T_T_goes_after_medals_in_men_s_4x100m_relay__javelin_at_Olympics_today-165821926.html

T&T goes after medals in men's 4x100m relay, javelin at Olympics today
By Kwame Laurence
Story Created: Aug 11, 2012 at 12:46 AM ECT


With tears rolling down her cheeks, Kelly-Ann Baptiste lamented her cruel fate.

For the third time in as many Olympic Games, a baton bungle ended Trinidad and Tobago's women's 4x100 metres campaign. On each occasion, Baptiste was part of the team.
 
"I can't explain it," she told the Express. "It's hard, because we all trained really good and wanted to come out here and have a good performance. To feel like you've done all you could in practice, and to train so hard and to come up short is just disappointing."
 
Michelle-Lee Ahye ran the leadoff leg for T&T in yesterday's final, at the Olympic Stadium, here in London, England. At the changeover, Baptiste reached for the baton, and reached again, but the exchange was never completed, and the country's hopes of a first-ever Olympic medal in a women's event were dashed.
 
"I don't have anything to say," said Baptiste. "We didn't make the handoff. I really couldn't tell you (what went wrong). I just didn't get the stick. "I can't question God," she continued, "so I'm just going to keep my head up and keep pushing."
 
Third leg runner Kai Selvon and anchorwoman Semoy Hackett watched on in agony, powerless to change T&T's fate.
 
United States struck gold, obliterating the world record in the process. Tianna Madison, 200m gold medallist Allyson Felix, Bianca Knight and Carmelita Jeter got the baton round the track in a jaw-dropping 40.82 seconds, slicing more than half a second off the 41.37 standard, established way back in 1985 by East Germany.
 
Jamaica picked up silver in a national record time of 41.41 seconds, while bronze went to Ukraine in 42.04—also a new national standard.
 
At four o'clock this afternoon (T&T time), Richard Thompson, Marc Burns, Emmanuel Callender and Keston Bledman will bid for honours in the men's 4x100m final.
 
In the qualifying round, yesterday, the T&T quartet finished third in heat two in 38.10 seconds to secure an automatic berth in the championship race. United States produced a new national record, 37.38 seconds, to win the race, beating Japan (38.07) into second spot. Jamaica topped heat one in 37.39 seconds.
 
Thompson ran the leadoff leg for T&T, yesterday, handing the baton to Burns. Callender had third leg responsibilities, and Bledman anchored. The same quartet earned silver for T&T at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Four years ago, however, Bledman led off and Thompson anchored.
 
"We all have faith in the leg that we're running," Thompson told the Express, "and we believe this is the best order for us to win a medal. We know our chances are strong, so we just have to execute properly. I feel like the execution could have been a little better , so as long as everything is cleaned up tomorrow (today), there's no doubt in my mind that we could win a medal.
 
"With a relay, anything can go wrong, anything is possible, so it was just about getting the stick around. We thank God we were able to do that, and have a berth into the final."
 
Burns said he is pleased to be in the medal race.

"We made it to the next round, and that's all that matters. Each of us know what's at stake and the adjustments we need to make for the final. But we'll be okay."
 
Callender is confident of earning a second Olympic sprint relay medal.

"One hundred per cent. In all things, just having faith in God, anything is possible."
 
Bledman had some work to do on the home straight, yesterday, to ensure T&T claimed one of the three automatic qualifying berths up for grabs in heat two. "This is the first time we ever tried this order, but we trust in the team and trust in God. Tomorrow (today) is a different day. We're going to go out even tougher."
 
T&T have been drawn way out in lane nine for today's championship race. Defending champions Jamaica will run in lane six, next to United States, in seven.
 
Keshorn Walcott will be at the Olympic Stadium today, for the 2.20 p.m. (T&T time) men's javelin final. When he takes his first throw in the competition, the 19-year-old will become the first male field athlete from T&T to compete in an Olympic final.

2012 Summer Olympic Medals Table
(Ordered By No. of Medals)
Nation G S B Tot

United States 41 26 27 94
China 37 25 19 81
Russia 15 21 27 63
Britain 25 15 17 57
Germany 10 18 14 42
Japan 5 14 16 35
Australia 7 14 10 31
France 9 9 12 30
South Korea 13 7 7 27
Italy 7 6 8 21
Netherlands 6 5 8 19
Canada 1 5 11 17
Hungary 8 4 3 15
Ukraine 3 1 9 13
Spain 2 8 3 13
New Zealand 4 3 5 12
Brazil 2 2 8 12
Iran 4 5 1 10
Jamaica 3 4 3 10
Belarus 3 3 4 10
Cuba 3 3 4 10
Poland 2 2 6 10
Kazakhstan 6 0 3 9
Romania 2 5 2 9
Denmark 2 4 3 9
Czech Republic 2 3 3 8
Kenya 2 3 3 8
Colombia 1 3 4 8
Sweden 1 3 3 7
North Korea 4 0 2 6
Ethiopia 3 0 3 6
Azerbaijan 0 2 4 6
South Africa 3 1 1 5
Turkey 2 2 1 5
Mexico 0 3 2 5
Croatia 2 1 1 4
Georgia 1 2 1 4
Argentina 1 1 2 4
Slovenia 1 1 2 4
Ireland 1 0 3 4
India 0 1 3 4
Mongolia 0 1 3 4
Slovakia 0 1 3 4
Switzerland 2 1 0 3
Norway 1 1 1 3
Tunisia 1 1 1 3
Lithuania 1 0 2 3
Armenia 0 1 2 3
Belgium 0 1 2 3
Uzbekistan 0 0 3 3
Dominican Republic 1 1 0 2
Latvia 1 0 1 2
Egypt 0 2 0 2
Bulgaria 0 1 1 2
Estonia 0 1 1 2
Indonesia 0 1 1 2
Malaysia 0 1 1 2
Serbia 0 1 1 2
Taiwan 0 1 1 2
Thailand 0 1 1 2
Greece 0 0 2 2
Moldova 0 0 2 2
Qatar 0 0 2 2
Singapore 0 0 2 2
Trinidad & Tobago 0 0 2 2
Algeria 1 0 0 1
Bahamas 1 0 0 1
Grenada 1 0 0 1
Venezuela 1 0 0 1
Botswana 0 1 0 1
Cyprus 0 1 0 1
Finland 0 1 0 1
Guatemala 0 1 0 1
Portugal 0 1 0 1
Afghanistan 0 0 1 1
Bahrain 0 0 1 1
Hong Kong 0 0 1 1
Kuwait 0 0 1 1
Morocco 0 0 1 1
Puerto Rico 0 0 1 1
Saudi Arabia 0 0 1 1
Tajikistan 0 0 1 1
« Last Edit: August 11, 2012, 02:28:14 AM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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T&T relay men snatch bronze in London ...Two medals in the bag so far
« Reply #438 on: August 11, 2012, 02:32:30 AM »
http://www.guardian.co.tt/olympics/2012-08-11/tt-relay-men-snatch-bronze-london

T&T relay men snatch bronze in London
...Two medals in the bag so far at Olympic Games

Published: Saturday, August 11, 2012
Rachael Thompson-King


Beautiful bronze came T&T’s way again yesterday in the men’s 4x400 metres final of the 2012 Olympic Games when the quartet of Lalonde Gordon, Jarrin Solomon, Ade Alleyne-Forte and Deon Lendore for the second straight night broke the national record for the event.
 
In the feature race of the evening, T&T crossed the line in 2:59.40, to place third behind the Bahamas, which stopped the clock at 2:56.40 and also set a new national record, to claim gold after overtaking USA in the home straight. The Americans got the silver in their season’s best 2:57.05. Gordon, who is making his debut at the games, is so far, the most celebrated local athlete at the 30th Olympiad, copping his second bronze medal. He was third in the men’s 400m final on Monday.

The Tobagonian, always short with words said, “I feel good. Thank God. I just want to say thanks for the support from T&T. I’m just glad to make the country proud and make the flag fly high again.” Gordon ran the first lap and just like in the semifinals, he gave T&T a good start, staying among the leaders who comprised Bahamian Chris Brown and USA’s Bryshon Nellum, before handing off to Solomon.

Solomon completed an impressive second leg again and was right in the mix with the Joshua Mance (USA) and Demetrius Pinder (Bahamas). By the third lap, Alleyne-Forte had pushed T&T to third as American Tony McQuay and Michael Mathieu (Bahamas) began pulling away, to make it a two-country race. In the final lap, USA, through Angelo Taylor, was clearly ahead with Ramon Miller gaining with every step. Lendore, meanwhile, kept T&T a distant third.

Heading down the straight, Miller caught up with Taylor, who despite his best effort was passed some ten metres from the line with the Bahamian going on to give his country its first gold of the London games. Lendore did just enough to hold off Great Britain’s Martyn Rooney, who sprinted the final 30 metres but in vain. The Britons placed fourth in a season’s best 2.59.55.

“The feeling haven’t kicked in 100 per cent yet but right now watching how everything turned out, just making the victory lap and hearing everybody cheering for us, it was a very excellent feeling,” said Lendore after the exceptional performance. “It even made me want to cry just knowing we came out here as a team and did the best that we could and it just got us a bronze medal at the Olympics.” Similar sentiments were shared by his teammates Solomon and Alleyne-Forte.

Solomon said: “This is the best feeling in the world right now. I prayed hard over the last two days. We just went out there and did our best and the best was the national record and a bronze medal so we can’t ask for much more than that.” Alleyne-Forte expressed some relief in improving from his previous performance in the semifinals.

“I told you I was going to get better. And I proved it. It was rough yesterday (Thursday) coming off not competing in a while, but coming out tonight, we got together and did all the necessary things and executed,” said Alleyne-Forte.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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T&T women blunder
« Reply #439 on: August 11, 2012, 02:38:41 AM »
http://www.guardian.co.tt/sport/2012-08-11/tt-women-blunder

T&T women blunder
Published: Saturday, August 11, 2012


T&T will have to wait another four years for a chance at its first female Olympic medal after the 4x100m relay team blundered in the final,  at the London Olympics, yesterday in London, England. The local team never made it around the track after messing up the first hand over between Michelle Lee Ahye and T&T’s most experienced women’s sprinter Kelly-Ann Baptiste. The transition failed to be completed. Ahye struggled to get the baton to the outstretched hand of Baptiste, who got off quickly as her teammate approached. A distraught Ahye slammed the baton on to the surface of the track as she saw T&T’s best chance for a medal slip away. All Kai Selvon and Semoy Hackett, who was to run the anchor leg, could do, was stand and watch their Olympic experience come to a devastating end without even getting chance to challenge for a spot on the podium.
 
USA team of Tianna Madison, Allyson Felix, Bianca Knight and Carmelita Jeter raced away to cop the gold in 40.82 seconds, a new world record. The Jamaicans ran a national record of 41.41, to take the silver while Ukraine bagged the bronze in 42.04. Baptiste could not hold back the tears as she commented: “It was really hard. We trained hard. It feels like you trained hard and came up short. It’s just really disappointing. “I can’t question that (the failed hand-over) right now so I’m just going to keep my head up right now and keep pushing.” T&T had high hopes of being among the top three finishers after breaking the national record, the previous evening with a time of 42.31 in placing second in heat one, to also automatically qualify for the final. Baptiste could not explain what went wrong. “I just couldn’t tell you I just didn’t get the stick.” The quartet dropped their heads as they walked away from the Olympic Stadium, clearly devastated by the outcome.

Women’s 4 x 100m Relay Final
 
1 United States 40.82
2 Jamaica 41.41
3 Ukraine 42.04
4 Nigeria 42.64
5 Germany 42.67
6 Netherlands 42.70
7 Brazil 42.91
DNF Trinidad & Tobago
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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Walcott goes for Olympic glory today ...Toco lad takes aim in javelin final
« Reply #440 on: August 11, 2012, 02:47:04 AM »
http://www.guardian.co.tt/olympics/2012-08-11/walcott-goes-olympic-glory-today

Walcott goes for Olympic glory today
...Toco lad takes aim in javelin final

Published: Saturday, August 11, 2012
Kevon Felmine


It was his dream to compete on the world’s biggest sporting stage and now that he has achieved it javelin thrower Keshorn Walcott should feel no pressure heading into today’s final at the 2012 London Olympics in England. At the age of 19, many believe the Toco lad can write his name into the history books by becoming Trinidad and Tobago’s first athlete to win an Olympic medal in the javelin event and one of those people expecting him to write history is his former coach, John “Slim” Andalcio.

So at 2.15 pm (T&T time), when he takes centre stage at the Olympic Stadium in London, he will be hoping for a repeat, this time against more accomplished and experienced throwers. Walcott left it late on Wednesday when he qualified for the final on his last throw with a distance of 81.75 metres in heat two, finishing in 10th place overall. He will go up against the likes of the Czech Vítezslav Vesely who qualified for the final with a throw of 88.34 metres and Norwegian Andreas Thorkildsen who has a personal best of 91.59 metres set in 2006.

From throwing bamboos and sticks on the beaches of Trois Roche, Toco where he grew up, Walcott is now a three-time winner in the Under-20 javelin throw at the CARIFTA Games, setting a new North, Central American and Caribbean Junior record earlier this year. He improved this record on May 27, with a throw of 80.11 metres in Havana, Cuba—a feat that Andalcio is confident that his former protege will exceed.

Tents have already been pitched and television sets are expected to be placed at several beaches in Toco for the village’s Fishermen’s Fete today. Walcott’s parents, Beverly Walcott and Endy King have made plans to be among close family when the last child of their three children, makes the throw of his life.

“It was one of Keshorn’s dreams to reach the Olympics from the time he made it on world youth team. He came back from that competition and said he wanted to be the best in the world,” Andalcio said on Thursday. But with no proper facilities and interested sponsors, he has had to fight an uphill battle. And the question has been asked: What made Walcott so focused to be successful? Andalcio’s simple answer was, “Keshorn’s work ethic is amazing.”

He has been coaching the sport for over 30 years and explained the journey which began when Walcott was 16 years old and was more inclined towards playing cricket rather than throwing the  javelin. “ At age 16, I recognised his potential. He was into cricket but we encouraged everyone to get into javelin. But it was amazing. The first time he tried, he threw over 50 metres and that was very good. From there, he loved the sport at that point,” Andalcio said.

Despite the youngster coming up against the best in the world, the coach said that in javelin, anything can happen. He said Walcott has the ability to raise his standard on each occasion, going into the Games ranked at position 18 but is now the tenth best thrower in the world.
 
“He will just want to throw his personal best and that can propel him to a medal. He went into competition ranked 18th and he has risen to 10th and this has always been his ability, to raise standards at every competition. If you have noticed his progress over the years, he has been  amazing. Definitely there is more to come,”  Andalcio predicted.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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T&T’s Olympic relay bronze brings joy
« Reply #441 on: August 11, 2012, 02:56:25 AM »
http://www.guardian.co.tt/olympics/2012-08-11/tt%E2%80%99s-olympic-relay-bronze-brings-joy

T&T’s Olympic relay bronze brings joy
Published: Saturday, August 11, 2012
Kevon Felmine


Sport Minister Anil Roberts burst into loud screams yesterday when he saw sprinter Deon Lendore crossing the finish line to give Trinidad and Tobago the bronze medal in the final of the men’s 4x400 metres relay. So passionate were the screams, Roberts said, he is sure that his neighbours thought he was losing his mind. He said so during an interview with the T&T Guardian yesterday.

Roberts returned home earlier this week after attending part of the Olympic Games in London where he also helped coach T&T swimmer George Bovell III. “At first, it was pure silence, looking at everything—the strides, the baton-passing—but then in that last 100 metres, when Lendore was running, and I saw the Brits coming, who had an advantage of over 83,000 supporters, I start to make noise. I started to scream, I’m sure the neighbours heard me and thought I was going mad,” Robert said.

Still sounding full of excitement, the minister said it was a fantastic accomplishment, which has been on the cards since last year. He said the athletes had been running consistent times in the relays, and even without local powerhouse Renny Quow, who bowed out the Games owing to injury, they were able to break two national records, while en route to the bronze medal.
 
Roberts praised the quartet of Lendore, 400-metres bronze-medallist Lalonde Gordon, Jarrin Solomon and Ade Alleyne-Forte, saying they ran a blistering race. He said the men ran with pride and passion for their country, and thanked the coaches for the strategic placement of the athletes. He was however sympathetic to the women’s 4x100 relay team, which was disqualified after dropping the baton after the first leg in the final.
 
“Our women, three of them, did not get to run in the finals, and it is very sad, but we knew that they would have gotten the bronze medal and they would have been sub-42. We want them to keep their heads high and stay focused for the World Championships next year, where the pain will be turned to glory. “We congratulate our women and we understand that it is part and parcel of relay running. The very Jamaicans and Americans who were are seeing on the podium suffered that same fate in past Olympics.”
 
Commenting on the accomplishment of the men, secretary of the National Association of Athletic Administration (NAAA) Allan Baboolal said,“ We are excited and very happy that they were able to win a medal after the disappointment by the women. I think they did exceptionally well.” Speaking of the women, he said, “Again we had a very strong team. These things happen sometimes, the baton doesn’t go all the way around. Today was one of those days. It’s tough luck, but we have to move on from that.”
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Ray Agostini

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #442 on: August 11, 2012, 05:08:11 AM »
Sally Pearson.

Female Athlete of the Year.

World Junior Champion (2003), 100M Hurdles. Commonwealth Champion (2010), 100M Hurdles. World Champion (2009), 100M Hurdles. World Indoor Champion (2012), 60M Hurdles. Olympic Champion (London 2012), 100M Hurdles. Silver medalist, Beijing Olympics 2008, Gold medalist in London.



Sally Pearson, an athlete worthy of honour.

Offline STMB

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #443 on: August 11, 2012, 10:34:33 AM »
Nice tribute.

However our umbilical cords bury in T&T so please big up T&T athletes!!

Offline Peong

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #444 on: August 11, 2012, 12:27:46 PM »
National Record!!!!

Man come out with a beast of a throw on his first try.  How he learn to pelt like dat?
The website sayin 83.51, he's on top so far.
« Last Edit: August 11, 2012, 12:30:34 PM by Peong »

Offline D.H.W

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #445 on: August 11, 2012, 12:28:45 PM »
83.91 metres I think wow
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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #446 on: August 11, 2012, 12:30:58 PM »
83,51

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #447 on: August 11, 2012, 12:35:58 PM »
thanks couldnt remember the number
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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #448 on: August 11, 2012, 12:36:33 PM »
National Record!!!!

Man come out with a beast of a throw on his first try.  How he learn to pelt like dat?
The website sayin 83.51, he's on top so far.

Toco boy, we have to send some scouts.
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Offline Peong

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Re: Thread for the London Olympics 2012: Fri.27th July to Sun.12th August!
« Reply #449 on: August 11, 2012, 12:39:26 PM »
AND HE BETTERS HIS FIRST THROW!!!!  Wdf

 

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