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22 Jamaicans affected by NCAA cancellation

Published:Tuesday | March 17, 2020 | 12:12 AM

Due to the threat posed by the coronavirus, 22 Jamaican track and field athletes missed the chance to compete for coveted honours last weekend.

The opportunity was removed as the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) cancelled its Division 1 National Indoor Championships, set for March 13-14 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Among those affected are seven Jamaicans in their final year of NCAA eligibility.

The cancellation forestalled a potentially notable Jamaican showing in the horizontal jumps. Seniors Jordan Scott, a Campion College graduate now at the University of Virginia, and O’Brien Wasome, the former Jamaica College captain who studies now at the University of Texas, won the triple jump in 2019 and 2018, respectively. Their rivals would include long jump favourite Carey McLeod, who finished his high-school career at Kingston College. Now at Texas Tech, McLeod has bounded 8.19 metres in the long jump.

Combination jumper Clayton Brown, 60 metres sprinters Raheem Chambers and 2019 NACAC Under-23 100 winner Waseem Williams, 200 metres specialist Karayme Bartley, shot putter Nyoka Clunis and her University of Minnesota teammate, the multievent star Ayesha Champagnie are the other Jamaican athletes in their senior year.

Others to miss out are Charokee Young, last year’s Boys and Girls’ Championships co-captain at Hydel High, 2018 World Under-20 110 hurdles winner Damion Thomas, 2017 World Under-18 400 hurdles runner-up Sanique Walker, and former Calabar High School captain LaFranz Campbell, who would race Thomas in the sprint hurdles.

St Lucian sprint hopeful Julien Alfred was heading to Albuquerque as the best of an exciting 60 metres field. Now at Texas, the former St Catherine High School speedster is the fastest college athlete of the year with clockings of 7.10 and 7.12 seconds, respectively.

Alfred was picked to win by the respected US publication TRACK AND FIELD NEWS.

A March 12 statement from the NCAA extended the decision to championships contested later in the year.

“Today, NCAA President Mark Emmert and the Board of Governors cancelled the Division I men’s and women’s 2020 basketball tournaments, as well as all remaining winter and spring NCAA championships. This decision is based on the evolving COVID-19 public-health threat, our ability to ensure the events do not contribute to spread of the pandemic, and the impracticality of hosting such events at any time during this academic year given ongoing decisions by other entities,” said a release on the organisation’s website.