Kerron stewart biography samples
Athletics in Jamaica
Since the early 20th century, Jamaica has won 65 Commonwealth Golds, 40 World Championship Golds and 27Olympic gold medals in athletics alone. Jamaica has a population of 2.85 million people, making it the 138th most populous country in the world.
History
Early times
Some of the first noted sprinters of Jamaican origin were Alfred R. Downer and G. C. Foster. Downer was Scottish national champion in the 100, 220, and 440 yards events for three consecutive years from 1893, but later lost his amateur status, preventing him from participating further. Foster attempted to enter the 1908 Summer Olympics, but was prevented from doing so as Jamaica was not yet affiliated to the International Olympic Committee. He later became a noted athletics coach.
Norman Manley, who would later go on to become premier of Jamaica, was an outstanding athlete at Jamaica College, winning six medals in the Jamaican schoolboy championships in 1911, including the 100 yards in 10 seconds, an island schoolboy record not broken until 1952. That time would have put young Manley into the final of that event in both the 1908 and 1912 Olympics.
1930s
In 1930, Jamaica entered its first-ever athletics team into an international competition. It was the 1930 Central American and Caribbean Games. Joseph Mackenzie, former student at St. George's College, won a silver medal in the high jump with a jump of 1.75 m becoming Jamaica's first ever international medal winner.
In 1934, Jamaica entered their first ever team into the British Empire Games (now known as the Commonwealth Games) the team won a silver in swimming and Bernard Leopold Prendergast won a bronze in the discus throw with a 40.23m throw.
1940s
The first part of the forties was interrupted by the Second World War. 3 years after the war in 1948, led by an African American Joseph J. Yancey Jamaica made their Country in the Caribbean Sea For other uses, see Jamaica (disambiguation). Jamaica Jumieka(Jamaican Patois) and largest city • Monarch • Governor-General • Prime Minister • Upper house • Lower house • Granted • Total • Water (%) • 2019 estimate • 2011 census • Density • Total • Per capita • Total • Per capita Jamaica is an island country in the Caribbean Sea and the West Indies. At 10,990 square kilometres (4,240 sq mi), it is the third-largest island—after Cuba and Hispaniola—of the Greater Antilles and the Caribbean. Jamaica lies about 145 km (78 nmi) south of Cuba, 191 km (103 nmi) west of Hispaniola (the island containing Haiti and the Dominican Republic), and 215 km (116 nmi) southeast of the Cayman Islands (a British Overseas Territory). The indigenous Taíno peoples of the island gradually came under Spanish rule after the arrival of Christopher Columbu Prediction: the Russians will be at the Rio 2016 Summer Games. Reality check: they should be there. Fundamental fairness dictates that the Russians must be allowed to compete in Rio. To start with the obvious, amid allegations that state-sponsored or -sanctioned doping pervaded the Russian sports system: It’s between a rock and hard place for track and field’s governing body, the International Assn. of Athletics Federations, in trying to decide whether to allow the Russians — the track team is currently suspended — into the 2016 Games. A decision is due June 17 at a meeting in Vienna of the IAAF’s policy-making executive council. Similarly, it’s between that same rock and that same hard place for the International Olympic Committee, which is then going to be charged with reviewing whatever the IAAF decides, and maybe other federations do, too. Never — repeat, never — has the IOC banned a nation for doping violations. The IOC has, of course, banned countries from editions of the modern Games. But only for geopolitical concerns: Germany and Japan didn’t get invites to the London 1948 Summer Games. South Africa’s apartheid policy kept it out of the Games between 1960 and 1992. Afghanistan didn’t go to the 2000 Sydney Games because of Taliban discrimination against women. To ban a country for doping — especially a country as important in the Olympic landscape as Russia — would set a volatile new precedent. Improbable, at best. That said: no matter what decisions ultimately get taken, there’s going to be criticism. Such criticism is likely to be amplified if the rumor now circulating in Olympic circles turns out to be true — that as many as half of the 31 2008 Beijing positives just announced come from Russia. Again, for now and for emphasis — just rumor. Look, criticism comes with life in the public sphere. Whatever. If you are Seb Coe, the IAAF president, or Thomas Bach, the IOC president, that’s why you got elected — to demonstrate leadership, to make Jamaican sprinter (born 1984) Sherone Simpson (born 12 August 1984) is a retired Jamaicantrack and fieldsprint athlete. She is a gold medalist in the 4 × 100 m relay from the 2004 Olympics and silver medalist in 2005 World Championships and now is the silver medalist in the individual event at the 2008 Summer Olympics, after she tied for second with Kerron Stewart in a photo finish. On 14 July 2013, Simpson announced that she had tested positive for the drug oxilofrine. In April 2014, the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission announced that she would be suspended for 18 months over doping charges, expiring in December that year. However, after appealing to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), the suspension was lifted on 14 July 2014. With her personal best of 10.82 seconds in the 100 m, Simpson is ranked 7th among Jamaican women, behind Elaine Thompson-Herah (10.54), Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (10.60), Shericka Jackson (10.65), Merlene Ottey (10.74), Kerron Stewart (10.75), and Veronica Campbell Brown (10.76). Simpson's 200 m personal best of 22.00 seconds ranks her 9th among Jamaican women behind Elaine Thompson-Herah, Merlene Ottey, Grace Jackson, Veronica Campbell-Brown, Juliet Cuthbert, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, Shericka Jackson and Kerron Stewart. She has run this time on two occasions. Simpson is coached by Stephen Francis in Kingston, Jamaica, where she attends the University of Technology. She is also a graduate of Manchester High. Simpson won the gold medal in the women's 200 m at the 2006 Commonwealth Games, beating Olympic champion Veronica Campbell and completing a Jamaican sweep of 100–200 m gold medals. Jamaica also won both sprint hurdles gold medals. At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing she competed at the 100 m sprint. In her first round heat she placed third behind Yevgeniya Polyakova and Jade Bailey in a time of 11.48 to advance to the second round. There she improved her time to Motto: "Out of Many, One People" Anthem: "Jamaica, Land We Love" Capital Kingston
17°58′17″N76°47′35″W / 17.97139°N 76.79306°W / 17.97139; -76.79306Official languages English Vernacular language Jamaican Patois Ethnic groups Religion Demonym(s) Jamaican Government Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy Charles III Patrick Allen Andrew Holness Legislature Parliament Senate House of Representatives 6 August 1962 10,991 km (4,244 sq mi) (160th) 1.5 2,734,092 (137th) 2,697,983 266/km (688.9/sq mi) GDP(PPP) 2024 estimate $33.775 billion (143rd) $12,283 (134th) GDP(nominal) 2024 estimate $20.586 billion (119th) $7,487 (95th) Gini(2021) 40.2
medium inequalityHDI(2022) 0.706
high (115th)Currency Jamaican dollar (JMD) Time zone UTC-5:00 (EST) Drives on left Calling code +1-876
+1-658 (Overlay of 876)ISO 3166 code JM Internet TLD .jm Sherone Simpson
Biography