Category: Athletics

Sky to host winner-take-all game 5 tonight

Connecticut Sun forward Jonquel Jones shoots as Chicago Sky forward Candace Parker, left, defends during the second half of Game 4 of a WNBA basketball playoff semifinal Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2022, in Uncasville, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

Connecticut Sun forward Jonquel Jones shoots as Chicago Sky forward Candace Parker, left, defends during the second half of Game 4 of a WNBA basketball playoff semifinal Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2022, in Uncasville, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

As of Thursday, September 8, 2022

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#THE ninth meeting between Jonquel Jones’ Connecticut Sun and Chicago Sky will determine which team will advance to the WNBA Finals and which team will see its 2022 season come to an end.

#The Sky will host a winner-take-all game five at 8pm tonight in the Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. The game will be broadcast live on ESPN2 and the winner will advance to face the Las Vegas Aces in the Finals.

#Facing elimination Tuesday night, the Sun scored a WNBA playoff record 66 points in the paint en route to a 104-80 win in game four. Jones finished with nine points, seven rebounds and five assists.

#The 24-point margin of victory was the largest in the series thus far and the Sun’s 104 points was a franchise record on 57 percent shooting from the field.

#Sun head coach Curt Miller said the team responded in the manner it had to with their season on the line.

#“Big response by our team and the starting group that really set the tone early with the aggressiveness at both ends of the floor. We talked the entire time about how this was going to be a points in the paint series for us and that was an incredible performance with points in the paint,” he said.

#“We felt deflated after game three that we played so well defensively but couldn’t get to the finish line, so incredible heart and determination by our players to do what was capable.”

#He highlighted Jones’ leadership early on as a scorer, then later as a facilitator when the Sky came with double teams.

#“I thought she was very aggressive with catches, she set the tone with her aggressiveness wanting the basketball,” he said. “She was unselfish, I thought at times she was almost too unselfish out of some congestion and I thought she could take some shots but I was really pleased with her activity, her aggressiveness was impressive.”

#Along with Jones’ stat line, DeWanna Bonner finished with 19 points, six rebounds and four assists, while Alyssa Thomas finished with 17 points, eight rebounds and four assists.

#It marked just the fifth time in WNBA Playoffs history that a team had three players each with over nine points, six rebounds and four assists and the first time since the Minnesota Lynx accomplished the feat in 2013.

#The Sun shot under 40 percent in two of the first three games of the series, before their efficient shooting percentage in game four.

#Early in the series, Jones cited ball control and defence as her team’s keys to winning.

#“We got to take care of the ball, making an emphasis on being strong with it whether we’re in the post – for me and the other post players the double teams are coming – so being ready for that – but ultimately just being better,” she said following a game two loss.

#“For us, defence is such a big part of what we are doing, being able to get stops and run out in transition. In the games we lost you could count the amount of times we got three stops, which is something we use as a mark for the level of defence we’re playing in the game.”

#Jones scored her seventh point midway through the second quarter, more than she scored in all of game three when she finished with a series low six.

#Game five will be the 10th matchup this season between the two teams. The Sun took game one on the road at Wintrust Arena before the Sky took back-to-back games to take a series lead. “Obviously home court and crowds play a factor but it will come down to who plays better for two hours on Thursday,” Miller said. “We have won some tough road games, we have a team that grinds and has toughness and has grit and I feel like that’s what you need to win a big playoff game on the road.”

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/08/sky-host-winner-take-all-game-5-tonight/?news

Battle 4 Atlantis all set to continue in paradise

As of Thursday, September 8, 2022

#COMING off an historic 2021 Bad Boy Mowers Battle 4 Atlantis that saw the return of its decade-long men’s tournament and the debut of its first-ever women’s tournament, the Atlantis resort has announced that the 2022 edition will continue in paradise.

#Taking place the week of Thanksgiving, Battle 4 Atlantis will welcome 16 NCAA Division I basketball programmes, along with its players, coaches, families and fans for the women’s tournament (November 19-21) followed by the 11th year of the men’s tournament (November 23-25).

#More information can be found at:

#www.battle4atlantis.com

#The field for the Women’s Tournament will include Louisville, Tennessee, South Dakota State, Rutgers, UCLA, Marquette, Texas, and Gonzaga.

#The Bad Boy Mowers Battle 4 Atlantis men’s tournament will include Butler, BYU, Dayton, Kansas, NC State, USC, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.

#The 12-game, three-day tournament is regarded as one of the most challenging early-season tournaments.

#“We extend a warm Bahamian welcome to Atlantis Paradise Island for the Men’s and Women’s Battle 4 Atlantis, the premier early-season NCAA college basketball tournament. The tournament is the highlight of our year, and we couldn’t be more excited to host the athletes, coaches, alumni and fans for what is always a memorable experience,” said Audrey Oswell, president and managing director of the Atlantis resort on Paradise Island.

#“After a groundbreaking inaugural Women’s Battle 4 Atlantis which produced the eventual, national champion South Carolina, and the 10th anniversary of the Men’s Battle 4 Atlantis, we are looking forward to another amazing year of world-class college basketball to be held at the ultimate destination, Atlantis Paradise Island,” said Lea Miller, CEO, Complete Sports Management.

#Going on its 11th year, Battle 4 Atlantis is one of the most important college basketball traditions of the year, and through seamless, world-class hospitality along with rich, cultural exchanges, Atlantis Paradise Island is committed to celebrating the global game of basketball through a vibrant Bahamian lens.

#Year after year, the event has been highly touted as the most coveted early-season tournament, and Atlantis Paradise Island is proud to serve as the longest-standing international host destination in college basketball history.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/08/battle-4-atlantis-all-set-continue-paradise/?news

Eleuthera Tennis Association elects new president

Island Luck and Aliv donated backpacks filled with school supplies for the children.

Island Luck and Aliv donated backpacks filled with school supplies for the children.

As of Thursday, September 8, 2022

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HARTIE JOHNSON, left, new president of the Eleuthera Tennis Association, and the former president Jerome Hill.

#THE Eleuthera Tennis Association (ETA) held its annual general meeting and the new executive board consists of the following persons who ran unopposed:

#President – Hartie Johnson; Vice President -Juanita Percentie; Treasurer – Barbara Johnson; Assistant Treasurer – Laura Culmer; Secretary -Parry Culmer; Assistant Secretary – Rose Johnson- Kirby; Chaplin – Jackie Percentie; and Assistant Chaplin- Charles Rolle.

#On hand was the Bahamas Lawn Tennis Association (BLTA) treasurer, Timothy Dames.

#Mr Dames brought remarks on behalf of the BLTA, noting that the BLTA will continue to support the ETA as they seek to develop and grow the sport in Eleuthera.

#The BLTA congratulated incoming president Johnson and his team and wished them well as they lead the ETA.

#The BLTA also extended warm regards to outgoing president Jerome Hill for his service to tennis on the island of Eleuthera over the past years,

#President Johnson and his administration have hosted a Back2School Tennis Fun Day.

#He thanked Island Luck and Aliv for provided backpacks filled with school supplies.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/08/eleuthera-tennis-association-elects-new-president/?news

Randall, Archer make impact with Dodge City Conquistadors

As of Thursday, September 8, 2022

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DEFENSIVE linemen Mazio Randall, left, and Amarie Archer.

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#IN their debut season of college football, Mazio Randall and Amarie Archer have made an immediate impact as freshmen with the Dodge City Community College Conquistadors.

#Both defensive linemen are two of the latest in the pipeline from The Bahamas to the Miami International Academy programme.

#Dodge City has struggled early on with losses in their first two games of the season but Randall found the stat sheet early with three tackles, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery against nationally ranked. No.2 Iowa Western Community College Reivers.

#He added another tackle the following week in a 38-10 loss to the Coffeyville Red Ravens.

#Archer has recorded a tackle in each game in limited minutes thus far.

#Randall, 6’4” 300 pounds, played on both the offensive and defensive sides of the ball as a senior at Miami International.

#He chose Dodge City, in the Kansas Jayhawk Community College Conference of the NJCAA over offers from South Alabama in the Sun Belt Conference, Kentucky Christian, and Webber International University in the NAIA.

#“One of the most unselfish kids I ever coached, Randall was a starting defensive tackle the last two seasons but has made the move to offensive tackle to help the team,” said Miami Prep’s Mike Tunsil.

#“College coaches, he can play offensive tackle, defensive tackle, or strongside defensive end at the next level. Randall is one of the best interior players in South Florida.”

#Archer is a 6’4” 320 pound versatile offensive lineman that has played centre, guard, and tackle at Miami Prep but has played defensively thus far in Dodge City.

#He previously received offers from Webber International University and Florida Memorial University.

#“I’ve coached some good offensive teams during my coaching career. All Sun Belt, All MEAC and All Ohio Valley,” Tunsil said.

#“I have three good senior offensive linemen that have all conference potential. Kaylin Smith, Mazio Randall, and Amarie Archer.”

#Both players join a Dodge City programme that also welcomed new offensive coordinator Richard Dorceus under head coach Terry Karg.

#Dorceus, a Florida native, was a former offensive linemen at Howard University where he racked up several postseason honours, including Howard Offensive Lineman of the Year twice, MEAC Offensive Lineman of the Week four times, and second-team All-MEAC in 2005, and also served as a team captain two seasons.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/08/randall-archer-make-impact-dodge-city-conquistador/?news

Jones, Sun force decisive Game 5

Connecticut Sun forward Jonquel Jones is guarded by Chicago Sky forward Candace Parker during the first half of Game 4 of a WNBA basketball playoff semifinal, Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2022, in Uncasville, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

Connecticut Sun forward Jonquel Jones is guarded by Chicago Sky forward Candace Parker during the first half of Game 4 of a WNBA basketball playoff semifinal, Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2022, in Uncasville, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

As of Wednesday, September 7, 2022

#UNCASVILLE, Conn (AP) — DeWanna Bonner and Courtney Williams each scored 19 points to help the Connecticut Sun rout the Chicago Sky 104-80 last night and force a decisive Game 5 in their WNBA semi-final series.

#Alyssa Thomas added 17 points for Connecticut, which will travel to the second-seeded Sky for the winner-take-all game on Thursday night. Jonquel Jones helped out with nine points, seven rebounds and five assists in 28 minutes on the floor.

#It’s the second consecutive playoff series for each team that has gone the distance. Both Chicago and Connecticut had to go on the road in the third game of their opening-round series and win to reach the semi-finals because of the new playoff format that saw the higher seeded team host the first two games of that best-of-three set.

#Connecticut coach Curt Miller has been saying for the entire series that his team would have to make the game “messy” to beat the Sky. Getting into a high-scoring game wouldn’t benefit the Sun.

#That wasn’t the case yesterday, as the Sun raced to a 22-6 lead, scoring 10 of the first 12 points. Thomas was a big reason why with seven points, four rebounds and two assists in the first five minutes. The All-Star forward had six points total in Game 3 and seven in Game 2 — both Connecticut losses.

#The Sky got back within eight by the end of the first quarter, but couldn’t get much closer as Connecticut had an answer for every Chicago run — thanks to Thomas, Bonner and Jonquel Jones.

#Chicago got within 38-33 midway through the second quarter before the Sun went on a 15-5 run to restore the double-digit advantage. DiJonai Carrington had five points during the burst that was capped by Thomas’ layup with 1:01 left in the half.

#Candace Parker, who had been stellar in the first three games of the series, scored her first points of the game on a 3-pointer 16 seconds later that got the Sky within 53-41. Connecticut scored the final five points, including a layup just before the buzzer by Carrington that made it 58-41 at the break.

#Williams was the spark in the third quarter, helping the Sun stave off any Sky run. Her teammates were looking for her when Chicago would come double them, and Williams was left open for layups. She had 10 points in the third quarter.

#Kahleah Copper scored 16 points and Emma Meesseman added 14 for the Sky.

#AWARD WINNER:

#WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert honoured Sun forward Brionna Jones before the game with the league’s Sixth Person of the Year award.

#Jones received 53 of the 56 votes from a national media panel. It’s the first time Jones has won the award.

#TIP-INS:

#The Sky are trying to be the first team to repeat as champions since Los Angeles did it in 2001-02.

#Six other defending champions reached the finals since then, but all lost in that round.

#The UConn women’s basketball team was in attendance, sitting a few row up from the Chicago Sky bench.

#Bonner moved into seventh on the all-time postseason scoring list in WNBA history.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/07/jones-sun-force-decisive-game-5/?news

‘Major Pain’ to run for president

As of Wednesday, September 7, 2022

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MEACHER MAJOR

#By BRENT STUBBS

#Senior Sports Reporter

#bstubbs@tribunemdedia.net

#MEACHER ‘Major Pain’ Major, whose Major Boxing Club is preparing to stage the inaugural Frederick Sturrup Boxing Championships on September 24 at the National Boxing Gymnasium, has decided to put his name in the hat for the post of president of the Boxing Federation of the Bahamas.

#Major, a resident of Buffalo, New York, is expected to challenge incumbent Vincent Strachan whenever the elections take place this year. No date has been set as yet for the elections, but Major said he just wants to let the pubic know that he wants to take over the reigns of the amateur boxing programme in the country. “I want to give the Almighty God thanks and praise for the people who have encouraged me to run for president,” said Major, one of the former prolific amateur and professional boxers in the country. “I feel now is the time to bring something new to the Bahamas as a tourism destination.

#“A lot of the present coaches and even coaches from the past have been complaining about what is going on and with my experience as one of the first amateur boxers to come out of Ray Minus Jr’s Champion Boxing Club and one of the professionals to retire from the sport, I know all of the ins and outs of the sport.”

#Major said he has been studying the new IABA rules and laws and is well versed on what’s going on in the sport, being exposed to a high level of competition in the United States, he is confident that he can bring a new, vibrant programme to the Bahamas.

#“I feel our boxers could have a better chance when they compete at these international competitions and have an even smoother transition whenever they decide to turn pro like I did,” he said. “So I’m really looking forward to making a difference if I am successful.”

#At the elections, Major said the delegates will not just be voting for him, but for the amateur boing programme in the Bahamas.

#“We don’t really have a junior national boxing team and we hardly have a senior national team. A lot of the amateur boxers have quit because they didn’t see anywhere to go,” Major said.

#“Only Carl Hield really stuck around and Rashield Williams has turned a pro fighter because of his frustration with the amateur programme.

#“But I feel with my connections in the United States and with the coaches I have who are willing to come to the Bahamas with their teams to compete, I feel this will be a fresh new opportunity for our amateur boxers and the coaches.”

#If elected, Major said he will make sure that the amateur boxers in the country will get the opportunity to go to the next level.

#The inaugural Frederick Sturrup Boxing Championships is the first initiative that Major intends to put on as he looks ahead to the future for the sport.

#He thanked the Ministry of Youth, Sports and Culture for allowing his Major Pain Boxing Club to put on the show.

#The show is being spearheaded by Alpachino Allen, another former amateur/pro fighter, who is working along with Major.

#In his absence from the Bahamas, Kato Ferguson, another former amateur/ pro fighter, runs the Major Pain Boxing Club.

#Tyrone Oliver, one of the most exciting amateur boxers, is expected to be one of the top boxers to watch on the show. Major said they are still putting together all of the details for the show.

#The show is expected to take place one day before the Bahamas Boxing Commission, headed by Sturrup, stages a boxing clinic in the Kemp Road community on September 23. “I want to thank all of the local coaches who are coming on board to work with Major Pain Boxing Club to put on this show,” Major said.

#“It’s so good to see the young coaches like Kieshno Major, Valentino Knowles, Tureano ‘Reno’ Johnson, Kayla Johnson and those in Inagua, Grand Bahama, Eleuthera and Exuma all expected to compete,” Major said. “This is something that we haven’t had before. I know Ray Minus Jr used to put on a lot of in-house boxing shows because a lot of the local clubs didn’t want to band together.

#“But hopefully we can do this to get boxing back to the level that it used to be and even further in the future.”

#Whenever the elections for the federation takes place, Major said he will be putting all of his emphasis into making his campaign a successful one.

#Because he has a number of ideas that will be implemented to bring more programmes throughout the country under one umbrella once again like it was when he competed under Champion Boxing Club with Major Jr.

#The 40-year-old Major, who turned pro with a TKO over Juan Trevino on October 28, 2000 in Nassau, had his last official fight on October 27, 2018 with a knockout win over Martin Anderson in Nassau after he compiled a 24-6-1 win-loss-draw record. While he was still on the active trail, Major started his Major Pain Boxing Club in 2014 with Ferguson, catering mainly to the boxers coming out of the Kemp Road community where he was born and grew up.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/07/major-pain-run-president/?news

Sydney Clarke eager to get her junior fall season underway

SYDNEY Clarke in action for the University of Alabama at Birmingham Blazers women’s tennis team.

SYDNEY Clarke in action for the University of Alabama at Birmingham Blazers women’s tennis team.

As of Wednesday, September 7, 2022

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SYDNEY CLARKE

#By BRENT STUBBS

#Senior Sports Reporter

#bstubbs@tribunemedia.net

#SYDNEY Clarke is eager to get her junior fall season started with the University of Alabama at Birmingham Blazers women’s tennis team.

#Clarke, who closed out her sophomore year in May by being named to the Conference USA All-Conference Singles Second Team, is set to begin playing for the Blazers September 16-18 in the Austin Peay Hidden Duals in Clarkesville, Tennessee.

#“Things are looking good, preparation wise,” said Clarke, a right-handed player. “Pre-season has been going very well. We have been getting in a lot of practices getting prepared and equipped for what is ahead of us.”

#After coming home this summer to play for the Bahamas in the prestigious Billie Jean King Cup, formerly the Fed Cup, Clarke said she’s hoping that the experience gained will help her as she continues her tenure for the Blazers.

#“I just want to continue doing better and get better,” stated Clarke, who won the Bahamas Lawn Tennis Association’s December Invitational to win the top spot on the national team.

#“I’m really hoping for a very successful fall. My spring season has been pretty good. So I’m really going to push myself so that I can do better than I did in the spring.”

#Already, Clarke said the coaching staff, headed by Mark Tjia, assisted by Paula Baird, expect her to improve on her game and take more of a leading role as the number two player in singles and No.1 in doubles for the Blazers.

#“They expect for me to be more professional on the court and to be more of a leader on the team,” she stated. “I expect to be more calm and composed and be able to fight right to the end in every match that I play. If I can do that, I have a chance to do very well for the team.”

#Clarke, a 20-year-old graduate of Windsor Academy after transferring from CR Walker Secondary High, said there’s a lot of pressure, but she’s confident that she can handle it.

#“Playing these matches in the fall should really help me in the spring next year,” Clarke said. “So I want to be able to take advantage of these opportunities to be able to improve my game.”

#Once the fall season starts next weekend, Clarke said they should be playing in a series of matches just about every weekend until the end of October.

#As for her classes at UAB, Clarke said she switched her major to mass communication with a minor in broadcasting with marketing on the side. She said her classes have already been intense since she returned to school, but she’s looking forward to the year ahead of her.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/07/sydney-clarke-eager-get-her-junior-fall-season-und/?news

Gaither, Charlton in Diamond League Final

Sprinter, high hurdler all set for big event in Zurich

SPRINTER Tynia Gaither, left, and high hurdler Devynne Charlton, right, are the only two Bahamians who secured a spot in the Wanda Diamond League Final this week in Zurich, Switzerland.

SPRINTER Tynia Gaither, left, and high hurdler Devynne Charlton, right, are the only two Bahamians who secured a spot in the Wanda Diamond League Final this week in Zurich, Switzerland.

As of Tuesday, September 6, 2022

#By BRENT STUBBS

#Senior Sports Reporter

#bstubbs@tribunemdedia.net

#After four months and 12 meetings, high hurdler Devynne Charlton and sprinter Tynia Gaither are the only two Bahamians who survived for a spot in the Wanda Diamond League Final this week in Zurich, Switzerland.

#The league’s most dramatic climax will take place on Wednesday and Thursday when 32 champions will be crowned with the prestigious Diamond Trophy in the series final at Weltklasse Zurich.

#While six finals will take place at a city event on Wednesday, Gaither and Charlton will be among the remaining 26 featured at the Letzigrund Stadium on Thursday.

#The duo earned their berths in the series of events that took place from May 14 in Doha, Qatar, to Brussels, Belgium on September 2. In the series of meets throughout that period, athletes earned points from 13 meetings across four continents.

#Notably absent from the list is Olympic and world champion Shaunae Miller- Uibo, who qualified in both the women’s 200 and 400 metres, but she opted not to compete.

#Instead, she shut down her season after winning the gold medal at the North American, Central American and Caribbean Championships in Grand Bahama a few weeks ago.

#The 28-year-old Bahamian multiple national record holder finished the series in fourth place in the 200m with 12 points from two meets, while she occupied the second spot in the 400m with 22 points in thee meets.

#Gaither, the 29-year-old Grand Bahamian native, is having undoubtedly her finest season, having emerged in her first Diamond League Final tied for fifth place with American Gabrielle Thomas, Swiss sprinter Mujinga Kambundji and Great Britain’s Beth Dobbin, all with 10 points from two meets.

#Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson tops the field with 23 points from three meets. Jackson, who has had a terrific transformation from the 400m to the sprints, winning a medal in just about every international meet she competed in, is also entered in the 100 at number three behind Marie-Josee Ta Lou of the Ivory Coast and fellow Jamaican sensation Shelly- Ann Fraser-Pryce, who is going for her fifth Diamond League title.

#Like Gaither, national record holder Charlton is making her debut in the women’s 100m hurdles as she capped off a tremendous season that started with a silver medal at the World Indoor Championships, another at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England and a bronze in the NACAC Championships at home.

#Charlton, 26, is tied for second place in the standings with Puerto Rico’s Olympic champion and world championship bronze medallist Jasmine Camacho-Quinn, both with 16 points from a pair of meets.

#The leader of the pack is World and Commonwealth Games champion Tobi Amusan, the world record holder with 22 points from three meets.

#The women’s 100m hurdles will take place at 7:25pm on Thursday with Charlton competing against Amusan, Camacho-Quinn, Jamaican world championship silver medallist Britany Anderson, former world record holder Kendra Harrison along with Nia Ali and Tia Jones, all from the United States, Switzerland’s Ditaji Kambundji and Poland’s Pia Skrzyszowska.

#“I’m feeling pretty good, looking forward to rounding out my season with a strong performance,” Charlton said.

#“It’s a tough field and should make for a really fast race. “I’m focused on having a good execution to put myself in the running.”

#Charlton, ranked at number seven in the world and a seventh place finisher at the World Championships, heads into the meet having lowered the Bahamian national record to 12.46 for her lifetime best at the Bahamas National Championships at the Thomas A Robinson National Stadium in June.

#Amusan clocked 12.12 in the semi-finals at the World Championships in Eugene, Oregon in July for the world record before she lowered it in a wind-aided 12.06 in the final that wasn’t a legal time.

#The 29-year-old Gaither, on the other hand, rebounded from a false start in the 100m at the World Championships to make the semi-finals of the 200m.

#Then she went on to the Commonwealth Games where she got seventh in the 100m and was a silver medallist in both the 100m and the women’s 4 x 100m on a brilliant comeback leg at the NACAC Championships.

#Gaither, currently ranked at No.27 in the world with her lifetime of 22.41 this season, will run in the 200m at 9:42 pm against a stacked field.

#The field includes Jackson with the world’s fastest time of 22.41 this year, Americans Thomas, Jenna Prandini and Tamara Clark, Swiss’ Kambundji, Dobbin from Great Britain and Ida Karstoft from Denmark.

#In addition to winning the Diamond League trophy, athletes will be competing for a total of $30,000 in prize money with a further $30,000 distributed amongst the other finalists. While first place will pocket $30,000, second place will collect $12,000, third place $7,000, fourth place $4,000, fifth place $2,500, sixth place $2,000, seventh place $1,500 and eighth place receives $1,000.

#From the Diamond League series, the overall winner will also get $10,000, second place $6,000, third $3,500, fourth $2,000, fifth $1,250, sixth $1,000, seventh $750 and eighth earns $500.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/06/gaither-charlton-diamond-league-final/?news

CONCACAF Men’s U-17 qualifiers: Bermuda tops the Bahamas

As of Tuesday, September 6, 2022

#BERMUDA has now topped The Bahamas in three consecutive matches at the CONCACAF Men’s U17 Qualifiers level.

#Bermuda emerged with a 4-0 win yesterday over The Bahamas as Group A play continued at the IMG Academy Field in Bradenton, Florida.

#With the win, they secured qualification to the CONCACAF U17 Championships in Guatemala in 2023.

#The sides previously met in the 2010 edition of the qualifiers when The Bahamas won the first match 1-0 and Bermuda followed with a 5-1 win. At the 2014 qualifiers, Bermuda took a 4-0 win.

#Bermuda now tops Group A with 12 points and an unblemished 5-0 record while The Bahamas fell to 2-2 and fourth in the group with six points.

#Bonaire is second in the group with nine points (3-1), Guyana is third with seven points (2-1-1), the British Virgin Islands is fifth with one point (0-3-1) while Saint Martin has yet to tally a point in the tournament (0-4).

#The Bahamas closes out the round robin group stage with a matchup against Bonaire Wednesday September 7 at 9:10am. Bermuda looks to remain undefeated with a matchup against Guyana at 11:15am.

#Bonaire opened the competition with a 4-2 win over Guyana, followed by a 2-1 win over BVI, a 2-0 loss to Bermuda and a 2-1 win over Sait Martin. The Bahamas opened competition with a 2-1 win over Saint Martin led by goals from Reuben Edgecombe and Kai Perez.

#In their second match, they suffered a 4-0 loss to Guyana. They then improved to a 2-1 record as they blanked BVI 1-0 on Saturday via a goal from Robert Holcombe.

#The four group winners will advance to the 2023 CONCACAF Men’s U17 Championship.

#In addition to Bermuda leading Group A, Aruba leads Group B at 3-0, Dominican Republic leads Group C at 3-0 and Nicaragua clinched Group D.

#They will join the top 16 ranked nations that have been seeded directly into the group stage of the 2023 CMU17 Championship.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/06/concacaf-mens-u-17-qualifiers-bermuda-tops-bahamas/?news

Gibbs and Forbes reach semi-finals at FINA World Juniors

As of Tuesday, September 6, 2022

#TEAM Bahamas concluded competition at the FINA World Junior Championships in Lima, Peru with a pair of semifinalists over the weekend.

#Rhanishka Gibbs reached her second semifinal of the meet and Nigel Forbes advanced for the first time at the Videna Aquatics Centre.

#Gibbs concluded day five with an 11th place finish in the women’s 50m Freestyle with her time of 26.68 seconds – a new personal best.

#She advanced to the semi-finals with the 14th fastest time out of the prelims, 26.99. Keianna Moss also contested the event and finished tied for 23rd overall with her personal best time of 27.70.

#Forbes finished 12th overall in the men’s 50m Butterfly with a new personal best time of 24.71.

#Forbes finished 17th in the preliminaries with a time of 25.12 and was an alternate for the semifinal round.

#After a withdrawal of an athlete in the top 16, Forbes received the opportunity to swim in the semifinals.

#Marvin Johnson also swam the 50m Butterfly and finished 35th overall with a time of 26.06. Team Bahamas reached the semifinal round in four events at this year’s World Championsships.

#Gibbs was the first to advance out of the prelims with her 14th overall (33.46) finish in the 50m Breaststroke last Tuesday.

#Johnson advanced to the semis of the 50m Freestyle and finished 13th overall in 23.39.

#All six members of Team Bahamas participated across four events on day five.

#Johnson and Forbes both contested the 100m Freestyle.

#Forbes finished 30th in 52.29 and Johnson was 39th in 52.95.

#Gibbs was 35th in the 100m Butterfly in 1:09.97.

#In addition to Moss’ aforementioned appearance in the 50m Freestyle, she also swam the 100m Butterfly and finished 22nd in 1:05.21.

#Erald Thompson III and Emmanuel Gadson finished 20th (30.17) and 31st (31.45) respectively in the 50m Breaststroke.

#On the final day of competition, Gadson and Forbes were the only members to compete in an individual event – the 200m Butterfly.

#Forbes finished 21st overall in 2:06.75 while Gadson was 31st in 2:18.05.

#The duo then went on to team with Thompson and Johnson to finish 12th overall in the 400m Medley Relay.

#More than 500 of the world’s best junior swimmers from over 80 countries competed over the six-day event which concluded on Sunday, September 4.

#This Videna Aquatics Centre also hosted the XVIII Pan American and Parapan American Games in 2019, the 2021 South American Youth Aquatic Sports Championship and the 2022 FINA Water Polo World League Intercontinental Cup.

http://www.tribune242.com/news/2022/sep/06/gibbs-and-forbes-reach-semi-finals-fina-world-juni/?news