DID ASAFA MAKE TRACK JAMAICA’S NUMBER-ONE SPORT?

Ever since he – by his own words – ‘panicked’ in the Men’s 100-metre finals at the World Athletic Championships in Osaka, Japan in 2007, former world-record holder Asafa Powell has spent much time off the track trying to tell the world that he is not a choker.

Following the disappointment of a fifth place finish at the Olympic Games in Athens in 2004 and missing the 2005 Worlds in Helsinki because of a groin injury, Powell went to Osaka favoured to win the men’s 100m finals. And as was expected he was well on the way to doing just that and claiming his first individual gold medal at a major global championships when he crumbled under pressure applied by American Tyson Gay and finished third. Bahamian sprinter Derek Atkins won the silver medal that day. Atkins, who in 2007 had been telling the world he was Powell’s cousin, spent the next year leading up to the Olympic Games mocking the powerfully built Jamaican. Sure enough, Powell finished fifth in Beijing and then won another bronze in Berlin in 2009. Those two bronze medals are the only two individual global medals to Powell’s name and they have come to define the career of a sprinter who has gone under 10-seconds a record 66 times.

It is that legacy that Powell has spent much of his time defending and what prompted him during a recent interview with a British newspaper to say that his legacy is secure as one of the greatest sprinters of all time, one who made track and field the number one sport in Jamaica and it was he who brought so many fans to or back to the sport. But did Powell, like he did in 2007,  put his foot in his mouth yet again?

‘Before me, track and field was not the No 1 sport in Jamaica, football was,’ he said. ‘Sure, we had Don Quarrie in the Seventies, but that was about it.

‘Then I came along to take the Commonwealth gold and, more importantly, become the first Jamaican to break the world record. That’s when other athletes rose up, with the men’s relay and with the women sprinters.

He may have spoken out of frustration but Powell was not only mistaken but exposed a certain level of ignorance that may also explain why he has not achieved more during his career. First of all, Quarrie came along mid-stream on the way to today’s golden age in Jamaica’s track and field. Arthur Wint won Jamaica’s first individual gold medal back in 1948 but it was Herb McKenley who captured the of the heart nation and set the standard that was to define what Jamaica’s track and field was all about.
Since that era, Jamaica has produced Lennox Miller, Quarrie who won gold and silver in Montreal in 1976, Merlene Ottey who has won more medals in global competition that any other athlete. Powell forgets how people lined the streets from the Norman Manley International Airport right into New Kingston and then right over to Hanover back in ’93 when Merlene won her first global gold medal. Then there was Bertland Cameron, who won Jamaica’s first gold medal at the World Championships in 1983; Raymond Stewart, Gregory Haughton, Roxbert Martin, Juliet Cuthbert as well as  Deon Hemmings, who won gold in Olympic record in the 400-metre hurdles in 1996 and Veronica Campbell who won two gold medals in 2004, all paved the way for the sport’s growing popularity in Jamaica today.
Back in the 1960s Dennis Johnson, the man who created the programme at Utech that Powell has benefitted from equalled the world record in the 100-yards three or four times during his injury plagued career. Herb McKenley is the only man to have a world record in the 100-yards and the 440 yards at the same time.

When I was a child growing up in Trelawny and Manchester I had very little exposure to football. I saw my first football match on television somewhere about 1972 – Liverpool vs Stoke I think it was – but it was track that captured my imagination. At primary school, during recess and lunch my friends and I would adopt the names of many of the world’s great sprinters and line up and race. There was special pressure on anyone who chose the name Quarrie because if you did you were expected to win. Years later Ernie Smith sang Duppy or Gunman that immortalised Quarrie as the fastest ever Jamaican. In high school, we played book racing and lined up Quarrie alongside such sprinters as Steve Williams, Houston McTair, Silvio Leonard, Alan Wells, Valry Borzov, and others as we waited for ‘prep’ to come to a conclusion each evening after school.

By then, however, we were further exposed to the world of football and we often spoke about legends like Alan ‘Skill’ Cole and revered schoolboy stars like Lenny Hyde and Sweetie Smith. It was then that it became clear to me that football was the major sport in Jamaica. Clubs like Santos, Cavaliers, and Boys Town were always mythical and seemingly dominated the sports news on radio back then.

Jump forward 20-something years to 1998. The Reggae Boyz become the first team from the English-speaking Caribbean to qualify for the World Cup in France and the national fervor was unprecedented. For a few years following the World Cup the name Reggae Boyz was on the lips of people across the world but following two subsequent failed World Cup campaigns Jamaica’s football has fallen several pegs on the popularity scale. Still the Premier League continues to be to the most popular organized sporting activity in the country, attracting hundreds of millions of Jamaican dollars in sponsorship and hundreds of thousands of fans watch matches each week live or on television. During this time, Jamaica through the exploits of Veronica Campbell Brown, Shelly Ann Fraser, Sherone Simpson, Melaine Walker, Brigette Foster Hylton and of course, the world’s most marketable athlete, Usain Bolt, have brought in many more fans to the sport locally and at the international level.

Since Campbell Brown’s exploits in Athens in 2004 when she won two gold medals, interest in track and field has grown steadily but most people will tell you that it was after Bolt destroyed the world’s best sprinters in 2008 that track and field’s popularity exploded. Senior meets at the national stadium that used to attract a few hundred people, now attracts thousands and the Jamaica International has for the past two years hosted crowds of near 25,000.

During this time international football matches have struggled to attract crowds of even 10,000. This is in part because of the failure of the administration to capitalize on the novelty that the team brought back in 1998 and the fact that in reality Jamaica doesn’t currently have a charismatic ‘star’ baller. So perhaps, track and field has surpassed football in terms of popularity, even though I am still reluctant to make that call.

But would it be fair to say Powell was the sole cause of this? The answer would be a resounding NO! There has always been a love affair with Asafa. Yes, he was the first to constantly beat the Americans but as time passed the expectations of him winning a major individual medal have dwindled significantly. Bolt is now the man. He wins and wins in style. Not only has he won the sprint double at the last two major championships he has also set world records each time. This has captured the imagination of the country and the world.

Campbell Brown, Fraser Pryce and upcoming stars like Yohan Blake have played very significant roles in raising track’s profile in Jamaica. In the meantime, Powell has been losing popularity. So, I am afraid that Powell has once again made a misstep. Sure, we agree that he has helped raise his sport’s profile in Jamaica but was he solely responsible? No, because that would be like saying Powell is favored to win the gold in Daegu later this summer. Not only would it be inaccurate, it would be downright delusional.

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9 Responses to “DID ASAFA MAKE TRACK JAMAICA’S NUMBER-ONE SPORT?”

  1. richard ingram says:

    It is sad but I think that our female sprinters have gotten somewhat of a raw deal here. For some time now they have been leading our medal charges at major games but do not seem to get the respect that say a Bolt or Powell gets. I wonder if it’s because the world record for women is, what i should say now, okay; harder to break unlike the male’s one?

  2. Frano says:

    Asafa could just be over reacting since the interviewer might have rubbed in the fact that he has not been able to win an individual gold in any global 100m race so far.

    Please let us focus on the greatness that our athletes have achieved for us rather than what they have not accomplished.

    Also remember the achievements of George Rhoden who won Gold in the 400m at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics but was not mentioned in your post.

  3. Fenton says:

    This response is a bit caustic. There is indeed an era where Asafa Powell brought great popularity to the sport of track and field. At least his era represent the monetization of the sports.
    So while his comments may have been a bit out of context, his contribution earns him a bit more respect in dissent.

  4. Joseph says:

    Definitely not! As the article points out there were greats before Asafa Powell.There will also be greats after him! He might help put back some zest in male sprinting but he surely did not single handedly make track & field the number one sport in Jamaica!

  5. Shane says:

    Yes he did, especially for the male

  6. sharon says:

    It is true that Asafa Powell was the one who brought JA to the world with athletics. He was the FIRST one from JA to brake the world record.Growing up in JA I always have athletics as our first sport.

  7. i really think Powell is very frustrated I agree with every thing that is said in this article in my opinion I think POwell should change trainer a long time ago he already have all the speed he needs he needs motivation and I think until he realise that he is not getting It from his training camp he will not win amajor indivisual medals i have been following track and field especially in jamaica all my life and powell is very wrong in thinking he set the standard for its success in jamaica

  8. Antoye says:

    Asafa is not really a student of his own sport. This may say a lot about him than his actual running ability. It is difficult for one to accept that he never heard about the exploits of a Herb Mac, Arthur Wint, George Rhoden, Don Quarrie, Bert Cameron and Dennis Johnson, to name a few of our former greats who repeatedly beat rivals on both sides of the Atlantic; broke World Records – some repeatedly in the process on route to making track and field athletics Jamaica’s number one sport from several perspectives.

  9. Jef says:

    I’ve always been a fan of Asafa’s but he is wrong to think he placed track & field in Jamaica where it is today. Yes, he is a much adored athlete but he’s not the only one. Asafa is under a lot of mental pressure even before he steps out onto the track. If he had learnt to concentrate on his technique, his stride pattern and length, his arm movement, then he would not have panicked on so many occasions in the big races. Still where respect is due to him he should get it.

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levyl Posted by: levyl May 22, 2011 at 10:28 am