SPORTS SECTION E
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2017
BUDDY
Rising Stars, Pg 5
BIG RED MACHINE WIN 27TH TITLE IN SCHOOL HISTORY By RENALDO DORSETT Sports Reporter rdorsett@tribunemedia.net
GO TEAM BAHAMAS: Bahamian players in training yesterday at the new Malcolm Park beach soccer stadium on East Bay Street. Photos: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
Let the games begin By RENALDO DORSETT Sports Reporter rdorsett@tribunemedia.net
T
he Bahamas is set to square off against the top teams in the region on the beach soccer pitch as they vie for a spot in the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup 2017. Competition begins today in the Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) Beach Soccer Championship and Bahamian national team head coach Alexandre Soares said the side is eager for an opportunity to represent the country on the highest stage. The Bahamas faces Guyana 8pm tonight in the national beach soccer facility at the foot of the Sir Sidney Poitier Bridge. “The guys are ready. The guys understand the system, the guys want to play well for their country and I’m happy with their progress so far,” he said. “We started with our programme on December 15, and I think the team has improved tremendously in the tactical aspect. We have good players, the players have good potential and techniques. But the team needed to improve in defence and the tactical aspect of the game, so in those two months we worked hard on that tactical aspect to improve the system of our game and I believe it will pay dividends on the pitch.”
Bahamas to face Guyana tonight Soares, a native of Brazil and currently the technical director and head coach of the Soccer 7 Academy in Miami, Florida is also a former pro player with Brazilian club Fluminense FC. He was also a former soccer and pro futsal (indoor soccer) player for eight years in Spain. He holds the record for being the only coach to lead a national beach soccer team to four world titles. He led Brazil to the FIFA World Beach Soccer titles in 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009. He was head coach of the Brazil national beach soccer team - 2005-2011. As head coach, he accumulated 145 wins in 150 games and, at one point, 75 wins in row. In January, The Bahamas participated in the Copa Deportes Nacion against Mexico and Argentina in an effort to prepare for the tournament. Last summer, The Bahamas also travelled to Europe for a six-week
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ALEXANDRE SOARES, head coach of the Bahamian national team, can be seen yesterday during a team training session.
THE streak begins once again for St Augustine’s College Big Red Machine as they regained Bahamas Association of Independent Secondary Schools’ Track and Field Championship title. After trailing on day one, SAC eventually won the meet in come-frombehind fashion and claimed the 27th meet title in the school’s history. The Big Red Machine finished the three-day event at the Thomas A Robinson National Stadium with a total of 1,427 points. The two-time defending champions Queen’s College Comets finished second with 1,338.50 points. The St Anne’s Blue Waves were a distant third with 542, the St John’s Giants were fourth with 390.50 points and the Nassau Christian Crusaders rounded out the top five with 315 points. SAC claimed six of the eight contested categories including the Under-16, U-18 and U-20 girls along with the U-14, U-18 and U-20 boys. The Comets took the U-14 girls and U-16 boys. The Big Red Machine’s Otto Laing was the most outstanding male (U-14) at the meet while the top female honour went to the Comets’ Daejha Moss (U18). Several new meet records were set on the final day of competition. Both the U-16 boys and girls long jump produced new record holders. SACs Anthaya Charlton continued her domination of the meet and tied the mark of 5.40m set by Danielle Gibson in 2010 to have a share of the mark while Nathan Moss of QC leapt 6.23m in the boys’ events. The Big Red Machine’s Taylor Walters bested her mark set last year in the U-18 girls javelin with a throw of 37.47m and Stephen Farquharson set a new record in the U-14 boys
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Norius 5th overall in Mr Olympia Amateur South America By BRENT STUBBS Senior Sports Reporter bstubbs@tribunemedia.net JIMMY Norius, who wants to be known as a versatile bodybuilder, will return from the Joe Weilder’s Mr Olympia Amateur South America as a fifth place finisher in the men’s physique competition. Norius, the only Bahamian to compete in the event in Medellin, Colombia on Saturday, was making his debut in the competition as he switched from bodybuilding to physique to test his ability to compete at such a high level in a different segment. “The competition was much more advanced than the Central American and Caribbean Championships and the top two in my class were competing in the physique competition for the past 34 years,” Norius told The Tribune after the championships. “I really thought I was going to get third place, but
I had a little too much muscle in certain areas and they marked me down for that. But I’m pretty pleased with what I got. As long as you make the final, they gave you some type of award, so I was pleased to get fifth place.” Norius said it was ridiculous to watch so many competitors who competed in the various segments of the championships and the way the organisers were able to pull it all together without any glitches. “There were so many athletes competing in the championships in all of the categories,” Norius said. “You could have a perfect body and still not win the title. That was just how tough the competition was. “The only thing I didn’t agree with was the food, but the competition out there was really stiff. I’m really glad that I got the opportunity to go and compete in it. I think I learned about the sport and am eager to compete in my next compe-
JIMMY NORIUS celebrates with his medal. tition.” If he had to do it all over again, Norius said he wouldn’t mind competing again in the physique as opposed to bodybuilding where he has been able to make a name for himself on both the local and international scene. “There were some competitors who I beat in some of the bodybuilding shows, who performed very well here,” Norius said. “So while I was just trying to
challenge myself to compete in another segment of the sport, I think I will do it again. “I love fitness and I would love to go down as a competitor who not only competed in bodybuilding, but was successful in competing in other categories. I want to be known as a versatile competitor.” On March 11 in West Palm Beach, Florida, Norius is expected to compete in the CG Classic and Pro
Qualifier where he intends to try his hand in the men’s classic physique. “Making it to the final and placing fifth is extremely successful on the world stage at Mr Olympia,” Norius stated. “But I’m not going to say that I am not going to compete in bodybuilding anymore. “I’m going to try my hand in other categories because I want to go down as an allaround versatile athlete and the first Bahamian to have been successful in bodybuilding and physique.” And if he has his choice, Norius said he would prefer to obtain his professional card in the classic physique because there are so many guys competing in the men’s physique and the bodybuilding has been saturated with so many of the bigger bodybuilders taking over. “With classic physique, I’m right in between classic physique and men’s physique,” he pointed out. “I know they love me in body-
building and men’s physique, but I hope they can admire me in classic physique when I try my hand in West Palm Beach next month.” By competing in the two events this year, Norius said he probably will skip the Bahamas Bodybuilding and Fitness Federation’s National Championships in July and just prepare for the CAC Championships. “The championships in West Palm Beach should qualify me for the CAC, so if I do it, I will try to help some of the other bodybuilders as they prepare for the Nationals,” Norius said. “But if I don’t do the championships next month, then I will compete in the Nationals.” Norius, who has dominated the nationals for the past few years, will be taking a day off to recuperate in Florida with his family and friends. He intends to return home on Tuesday to begin preparing for his next competition.