Jean Lowrie-Chin | Jamaica Observer column | 24 June 2013
- from sportige.com |
When news broke that there was a doping allegation
against Jamaica’s beloved Veronica Campbell-Brown, the country went into
collective mourning. VCB is our ‘Golden
Lady’ – her legendary career started when she was Sweet Sixteen – triumphing as
a member of the girls’ 100x4 relay team in 1996 at the CAC Junior Championships
in San Salvador. She has won 22 Gold medals, 15 silver and 3 bronze – she is the
most decorated Jamaican athlete in our track and field history.
In one of the many ‘VCB discussions’ last week,
attorney-at-law Sandra Phillips remarked that the athlete was beloved “because
she always gives 150%”. How true – the
moment VCB stands in her lane, we see a quiet determination, and when she takes
off, every sinew in her body strains to give its utmost. We agreed that her dignity, her stately demeanour
made her a credit to our country, a great role model for our youngsters.
I remember live-blogging as we lined up to see the
200m women’s final in Beijing in August 2008.
“Is this Veronica’s night?” I asked.
Several screams and heartbeats later, I was able to blog, “It WAS
Veronica’s night! Gold again for Veronica in the 200m!! She won in tremendous
style - smooth and strong! Kerron Stewart took the bronze!” - http://lowrie-chin.blogspot.com/2008/08/it-was-veronicas-night.html
VCB after winning the 200m event in Bejing - China Daily photo |
The next day, the China Daily’s report was headlined, “Veronica keeps Jamaica on
top”: “Campbell-Brown bolted out of her blocks and immediately gained on Felix.
She powered through the first 50m and had the psychological nudge on Felix
coming around the bend. She was 2m clear of the field, with Stewart
neck-and-neck with Felix for second spot. But no one could catch Campbell-Brown
whose fluid style saw her coast through to the finish line.”
These are the reliable, winning ways, of VCB – joyfully
invading our consciousness! This is our
tried-and-true sister, the one in whom we are truly well-pleased.
You can imagine therefore, the tear-filled Twitter
timelines and Facebook pages after the doping allegations surfaced. Most of us
refused to believe that she would deliberately do such a thing though there
were the hard-hitting realists who told us to give up on our dreams. Sadly, there were also some very ugly
comments in the vein of ‘now we know why those Jamaicans keep winning’.
It was with measured relief that we heard the
opinion of IAAF deputy general secretary Nick Davies last week. Observer writer Paul Reid confirmed with him
that he had said to an overseas reporter: "We can acknowledge that there is a case, but also take
the opportunity to urge a sense of perspective... this seems, from evidence, to
be a minor doping offence, according to our rules, so we want to remain
realistic in our reaction, pending the conclusion of the case."
For us,
VCB is family and we should continue to show our appreciation for the pride and
joy she has brought us. We pray that the outcome will be just a small blip on
her legendary run for our country.
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