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From preschool to Olympics: Jamaicans tell TT to rethink strategy - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Through the knowledge and expertise of qualified trainers from Jamaica's GC Foster College, over 60 TT coaches and PE teachers are being given the formula to nurture pre-schoolers to international athletes.

Through a two-week programme which has been organised by the Sports Company of Trinidad and Tobago (SporTT), a coaching and administrative team from GC has come to TT seeking to pass on some of the methods and development strategies which have brought the Caribbean island so much success in the sprinting world.

Marlon Gayle, a senior trainer at GC, said Jamaica prides itself on producing a sustainable "sprint factory" which has nurtured world-class talents such as Usain Bolt, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and Elaine Thompson-Herah. He noted that the country has major athletic events for its youngsters from as young as age three.

These games are referred to as the Basic Athletic Championship and caters for children from ages three to six, with over 1,500 participants flexing their young muscles over a three-day period. These games are designed to mirror the format of major international athletic meets, with similar championships conducted to target children at the primary and secondary school levels as well.

"It's about getting these children from the grassroots level to greatness," said Gayle, during a workshop at the Hasely Crawford Stadium on Wednesday. "We must ensure athletes peak at the right time. It's not a guess-and-spell situation as we need to identify the needs of the athletes."

"This is not heaven, but things can get better once you stick to the plan and do the right things going forward."

Both Gayle and Dr Geogre Dawkins, a consultant to GC, stressed that it is important for fun to be the emphasis at the early childhood care stage, while the talent identification process begins at the primary school level and is then further enhanced at the secondary and senior levels.

"Both stakeholders from TT and GC Foster College wanted to begin with a unit or module on physical education. Physical education is a precursor to development at other levels and that has to be done in an informal fun way," Dawkins told Newsday, with consultation between the prime ministers from TT and Jamaica having got under way last year.

"We progress seamlessly from physical education to movement education at the early childhood, primary and secondary level and then we went into the game skills," Dawkins said. "The major emphasis was in the area of track and field, sprints and hurdles."

This current two-week programme is seen as phase one of GC's partnership with SporTT, with phase two set for October/November 2023 and phase three to include further visits from GC officials.

"We want to create an environment where people can share their feedback, experiences and challenges," said Dawkins, who boasted that the eight-time Olympic champ Bolt ran his first ever competitive race at a GC meet. "Phase three would be for advanced training and further analysis. That is likely be a physical visit by two high-level coa

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