Caribbean National Weekly

JOA and Racers Track Club forge milestone alliance for Jamaican athletics

By Ian Burnett··3 min read
JOA and Racers Track Club forge milestone alliance for Jamaican athletics
Key Points(5)
  • <strong>KINGSTON, Jamaica —</strong> In a bold step toward revitalizing Jamaica’s athletic dominance on the global stage, the Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA) has officially entered into a transformative three-year partnership with the renowned Racers Track Club.
  • The collaboration, unveiled at a press conference on Thursday at the JOA’s headquarters, is designed to elevate the development of athletes, coaches, and sports administrators across the island.
  • <h2>“A milestone for Jamaican sport” — Samuda on strategic partnership</h2> President of the JOA, Christopher Samuda, hailed the agreement as a defining moment for Jamaican athletics.
  • “The Jamaica Olympic Association is very pleased to partner with Racers Track Club in this milestone event,” he said.
  • “This is something that is a part of the infrastructure in the development of sport,” he stated.

KINGSTON, Jamaica — In a bold step toward revitalizing Jamaica’s athletic dominance on the global stage, the Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA) has officially entered into a transformative three-year partnership with the renowned Racers Track Club.

The collaboration, unveiled at a press conference on Thursday at the JOA’s headquarters, is designed to elevate the development of athletes, coaches, and sports administrators across the island.

“A milestone for Jamaican sport” — Samuda on strategic partnership


President of the JOA, Christopher Samuda, hailed the agreement as a defining moment for Jamaican athletics.

“The Jamaica Olympic Association is very pleased to partner with Racers Track Club in this milestone event,” he said. “It is a milestone because both entities are invested in sporting development and, more critically, in the development of the primary assets in our sports, which is, of course, our athletes.”

Samuda emphasized that the partnership reinforces the JOA’s commitment to building a sustainable and structured pathway to athletic success — not only for elite performers but for the nation’s broader sporting ecosystem.

“This is something that is a part of the infrastructure in the development of sport,” he stated. “We can’t pursue success unless there is a structure. As I’ve repeatedly said, there can’t be an Olympic swimmer without a 50-metre swimming pool, and a basketball player, aspiring to the Olympic stage, his dreams will be shattered if he does not have a court.”

Veteran coach Glen Mills: A champion for progress


Legendary coach Glen Mills, the architect behind some of Jamaica’s most iconic sprinters, threw his full support behind the partnership. Mills, who has spent over six decades nurturing talent, spoke passionately about the initiative’s significance.

“This is a very important occasion. We at Racers are very happy to collaborate and to work with the Olympic Association,” he said. “As the president had pointed out, it is in the interest of our athletes. For a man who has been, over 60 years, working for our athletes, I am always welcome to working with anything that is progressive and beneficial towards their development.”

Racers Grand Prix to spotlight local talent


As part of the agreement, athletes competing in the JOA’s Destiny Series will be granted the opportunity to qualify for the prestigious Racers Grand Prix — a marquee event on the local athletics calendar — provided they meet established performance benchmarks.

This component is expected to further motivate emerging athletes and provide a direct pathway from local competition to international exposure.

Elevating coaching through technology


The partnership also extends to the professional development of coaches. Racers CEO Devon Blake underscored the critical role that technology will play in modernizing training methodologies.

“One of the most important aspects of it has to do with the training of coaches and the introduction of a technological platform that will enable them to do biomechanics analysis, technical and tactical analysis,” Blake explained. “We will be able to collect data from a team perspective and from an individual athlete perspective.”

By integrating advanced analytics and techniques, the initiative aims to sharpen coaching precision and maximize athlete performance.

Not an exclusive deal — An open door to all stakeholders


While the spotlight currently shines on Racers Track Club, Samuda made it clear that the agreement is not intended to be exclusive. Rather, he views it as an open invitation for collaboration across Jamaica’s sporting landscape.

“There are a myriad of activations in sports that we can pursue, and therefore, this is not an exclusive agreement,” he affirmed. “There are several endeavors that can be pursued, and we can say to other entities, we are here to partner with you in sports, in the interest of our athletes, our coaches, and our administrators.”

“This is an invitation to stakeholders to come and speak with us to see how best we can make arrangements to see to the benefit of our sports.”

The timing of this partnership is deliberate. As Jamaica looks to reverse its downward trend in Olympic medal counts — which peaked at London 2012 — the JOA is clearly setting its sights on the 2028 Games in Los Angeles. This partnership with Racers represents a key pillar in Jamaica’s strategy to reclaim its track and field supremacy.

 

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