|
The
T&T 4x100m relay men, Keston Bledman, Emmanuel Callender,
Marc Burns and Richard Thompson collect their medals during
the presentation ceremony after the quartet ran 38.06 to
earn silver in the mens sprint relay at the Beijing
Olympic Games in the Birds Nest Stadium, Beijing,
China on August 22.
BEIJING
A dream of an Olympic Games for the Caribbean in
Beijing ended with a glittering closing ceremony at the
Birds Nest Stadium watched by 91,000 fans on Sunday.
Led by the astounding talent of Jamaican sprinter Usain
Bolt, the English-speaking Caribbean captured a whopping
15 medals including six gold a performance unparallelled
by the region in Olympic history.
Bolt could have been foremost in the mind of Liu Qi, the
Beijing Olympics Organising Committee Chairman, when he
praised the competitors, saying: Let us congratulate
the athletes on their great achievements.
Bolt stunningly smashed World records in every event in
which he participated.
He clocked 9.69 seconds to win the mens 100 metres,
lowering his own World mark, before smashing Michael Johnsons
formidable 200-metre World record with a staggering run
of 19.30 seconds.
Bolt, who turned 22 years old during the Games, also helped
Jamaica obliterate a 16-year-old American World record when
their mens sprint relay team stopped the clock at
37.10 seconds.
T&Ts rising star Richard Thompson clocked a fabulous
personal best 9.89 seconds for silver in Bolts 100-metre
record run, and helped T&T collect silver in the sprint
relay behind the Jamaicans.
The highly praised opening ceremony on August 8 was almost
matched by another stirring show from the Chinese that complemented
the brilliance in sporting competition over the last two-and-a-half
weeks.
Jacques Rogge, the International Olympic Committee president,
also acclaimed the quality of the games, at which Bolt and
the American super star swimmer Michael Phelps, with a record
eight gold medals, were the standouts.
New
stars were born, Rogge said. Stars from past
Games amazed us again. We shared their joys and their tears,
and we marvelled at their ability. We will long remember
the achievements we witnessed here.
The IOC reported that 43 World records and 132 Olympic records
were broken.
Caricom countries left the World stunned with their outstanding
sprint performances.
With the exception of the womens 4x100-metre relay,
which the Russian Federation won after the hot favourites
and defending champions Jamaica botched a baton changeover,
the Jamaicans won every sprint medal on offer in track and
field.
In addition to Bolts sprint double and the mens
sprint relay, the Jamaicans won the womens 100 and
200 through Shelly-Ann Fraser and Veronica Campbell-Brown
respectively.
In four of those events, Caricom runners finished in medal-winning
positions.
In the womens sprints, Kerron Stewart and Sherone
Simpson tied for second behind Fraser in a unique gold-silver-silver
sweep in the 100 metres.
Stewart secured a second medal when she placed third in
the 200 metres.
Melaine Walker picked up the sixth Jamaican gold medal with
an Olympic record 52.64 run in the womens 400-metre
hurdles.
There were six silver medals and three bronze for the region.
Jamaican Shericka Williams, in the womens 400 metres,
and the Bahamas 4x400-metre mens relay team
claimed silver medals, and other bronze medal winners were
Bahamian Leevan Sands in the mens triple jump and
Jamaica in the womens 4x400-metre relays.
The quality of medals allowed the region to celebrate its
best ever showing, surpassing the Sydney 2000 Games at which
they belatedly picked up 15 medals.
Caricom countries had gathered a combined total of 12 medals
in Sydney, but subsequent placing upgrades following the
disqualification due to doping infringements
of Americans Marion Jones and Antonio Pettigrew, lifted
the tally to 15, three gold, six gold, and six bronze.
Here, the region picked up six gold, six silver and three
bronze medals.
Jamaica celebrated six gold, three silver, and two bronze
for 11 medals and 13th in the overall medal standings.
They placed a striking third in the track & field standings
behind the Unietd States (7-9-7) and the Russian Federation
(6-5-7), while other Caribbean nationals Cuba (1-2-2), T&T
(0-2-0) and Bahamas (0-1-1) finished seventh, 25th and 27th
respectively.
Hosts China emerged No 1 in the overall medals with 51 gold,
21 silver, and 28 bronze medals, to top the United States
(36-38-36) and the Russians (23-21-28).
Caricom nations again struggled in non-track and field disciplines.
Appearing in nine different sporting disciplines here, the
regions best showing outside of track & field
came in swimming and boxing.
T&Ts George Bovell and Bradley Ally of Barbados
reached swimming semi-finals, and the Bahamian boxer Taureano
Johnson was a quarter-finalist in the boxing ring.
Jamaican cyclist Ricardo Lynch was eliminated in the first
round of the keirin and his equestrian teammate Samantha
Albert made little impression in her dressage events.
Bahamian tennis players Mark Knowles and Devin Mullings
were first-round losers, and T&Ts table tennis
ace Dexter St Louis also lost in the first round.
Sailing and shooting competitors from the region were unable
to figure prominently in their events and will need to improve
their levels significantly for the London 2012 Games, for
which the IOC has promised to maintain strict qualification
guidelines in most events.
The customary teaser for upcoming hosts at Olympic Closing
ceremonies came in the form of a lively presentation by
London, whose new singing star Leona Lewis joined veteran
guitarist Jimmy Page and delighted the fans with a lively
performance.
International football star David Beckham, emerged on top
of a red double-decker bus that unfolded into a hedge-clipped
outline of London and kicked a football from the bus into
a cluster of closing ceremony performers on the infield.
|