SPORTS SECTION E
TIGER, Page 3
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 2018
Baseball leagues reunite under one umbrella By BRENT STUBBS Senior Sports Reporter bstubbs@tribunemedia.net ow that they are back together under one umbrella, the Bahamas Baseball Association is set to host the National Baseball Championships next weekend in Grand Bahama. And the association has confirmed that all of the affiliated leagues have confirmed their participation in the championships, scheduled for June 21-24 at the Emera Baseball Complex. It’s expected that a total of six leagues, comprising of 30 teams playing in 83 games, will make up the four-day package that is once again being sponsored by the Grand Bahama Port Authority. BBSA president Samuel Rodgers thanked all of the leagues, executives, coaches, players and
BBA TO HOST NATIONAL BASEBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS NEXT WEEKEND
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BBA executives (l-r) are the chairman of technical committee Shane Albury, president Samuel Rodgers, tournament director Terran Rodgers, BOC president Romell Knowles and umpire in chief Martin Burrows. Photo by Stanley Mitchell parents for their support in the amalgamation of the sport again. More than 380 players from teams from the Legacy Baseball
and Rising Stars Baseball from Grand Bahama, Eleuthera Baseball, North and Central Abaco Baseball and the Community,
Freedom Farm and Junior Baseball League of Nassau will be participating. Terran Rodgers, director of the national tournament committee, said they are excited about the direction the sport is taking with the amalgamation of the sport since March 2017 and now they are prepared for the staging of their first tournament. “As a vice president, who I have been in a background approach over the years, I’m excited about this opportunity for us to do what is required under one umbrella,” he pointed out. “Everybody has come on board and have been a part of the process and appreciate the process
and understand that moving forward, it’s about developing the game of baseball in the Bahamas.” This year, the BBA has restructured the age group divisions for the tournaments so that they can maximise the efforts of the players involved. They will now participate in the under-8, under10, under-12, under-14, under-16 and under-18 divisions. From the tournament, Rodgers said the BBA will be looking at selecting its national teams, including an international baseball tournament for the under-18 team in Panama in November.
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Jordin in World Cup opening FOOTBALL for Friendship has announced that 12-yearold Bahamian football player Jordin Wilson will participate in the opening ceremony of the FIFA World Cup in Moscow, Russia, scheduled to be broadcast live to 3.2 billion persons globally at 10:30am EST on Thursday, May 14. Wilson will be carrying the Bahamian flag during the ceremony, as the youth representative of The Bahamas, alongside children from around the globe. Wilson and the Bahamian F4F delegation have been in Moscow since June 9, participating in the global Football for Friendship event. Football for Friendship promotes youth football globally and emphasizes tolerance and friendship among children from different countries. Participants have had the opportunity to discuss among their peers the key values of the programme such as friendship, equality, fairness, health, peace, devotion, victory, tradition and honour. Wilson was selected to attend F4F by the Bahamas Football Association (BFA), the governing body for soccer in the Bahamas, as one of two young Bahamian football players to represent the island nation. He has been an active football player since he was five years of age and is currently an active member of the Western Warriors Football Club, where he is coached by Paul James. The Western Warriors Football Club, founded in 2007 by Michael Hooper and Saskia D’Aguilar, have three teams in the BFA Youth League, including a boys’ under-15 team, a boys’ under-17 team, a girls’ under-17 team and a men’s team in the BFA Senior League. He is the son of John and Simone Wilson and has one brother, Jostin.
BAHAMIAN SOCCER PLAYER TO CARRY NATIONAL FLAG AT CEREMONY
FOOTBALL for Friendship: Jordin Wilson is expected to participate in the opening ceremony of the FIFA World Cup in Moscow, Russia, scheduled to be broadcast live at 10:30am EST on Thursday, May 14.
After surgery, Justin Roberts eager to get back on court By BRENT STUBBS Senior Sports Reporter bstubbs@tribunemedia.net AFTER taking some time off to undergo surgery on his right wrist, Justin Roberts is eager to get back on the court and continue his quest
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to move up the ladder on the men’s international tennis circuit. Roberts, who graduated last month from the University of South Florida, still has another year of college tennis eligibility which he will spend in his final campaign with Arizona State University as of August. Over the last two months, however, Roberts has been working out intently on getting ready to return to the tennis courts. He’s home working out with his manager/ coach Ricardo Demeritte Jr from Impact Tennis Academy before he leaves town on Friday to play in three tournaments in Canada - Calgary (June 18-24), Kelowna (June 25-1) and Saskatoon (July 2-8). “I am just happy to be back on the court,” said Roberts, who helped the USF Bulls men’s team achieve some success while he was a member of their roster over the past three seasons.
“I was out for about with any ATP computer 6-7 months. It’s been a points and is ranked at long time coming to get 1,261 in singles. In his back to where I am right last tournament a year now. I did a lot of rehab, ago in Kaarina, Fina lot of fitness, stuff that land, Roberts lost in the you really don’t want to quarter-final. be doing. But now that “I feel like I’m playI am fit, I want to start ing well, so I think I playing again to see can go deep into these where I am.” tournaments,” Roberts After tearing a ligaprojected. ment in his right wrist “I haven’t played in and ending up with a about a year, so there ROBERTS bone avulsion where a are some things I will piece of the bone broke have to deal with like the off on its joint, he eventually had rust. But I’ve been training hard, to have it reattached. so I think anything could happen. “I’ve been playing regularly It’s hard to say. I don’t have much from April and it’s been getting to go off. better,” he pointed out. “I feel “So I don’t know how I will react strong right now, so I just want to to certain situations, but if I play throw my hand into some matches as hard as I’ve been practicing, I and see where I’m at right now.” think I will do very well.” At present, 21-year-old Roberts is the only Bahamian male player SEE PAGE 2
KEVIN MAJOR JR GETS WIN IN PRO DEBUT By BRENT STUBBS Senior Sports Reporter bstubbs@tribunemedia.net EVEN though he skipped the trip to Costa Rica to participate on the men’s Davis Cup team, Kevin Major Jr said he has no regrets because he was able to get his professional career started. Major Jr, home after graduating from Seminole State College in Oklahoma last month, made his professional debut, winning the men’s singles title at the USTA National Men’s Open in Fort Lauderdale, Florida with a 6-4, 6-2 win over American Charlie Force. The following week, Force earned his first pro points, which has inspired Major Jr to get himself ready to take the next level in the sport. “I just want to get in shape and play a lot of tournaments and put my play together to make everything realistic,” Major Jr said as he worked out with Impact Tennis Academy, coached by Ricardo Demeritte Jr. “I want to treat everything like a business so I can have some realistic goals for myself, whether they be physical or mental goals, I want to reach those goals.” And just what are those goals? “My main goal is to play a lot of tournaments because in my junior career, I was semi-successful, but I still didn’t play as much tournaments as I should have,” he reflected. “Now my main goal is to play as much tournaments as I could and gain as much experience and exposure as I could. You never really ready until you go out there and play.” Having had a taste of the international competition, Major Jr said he now sees himself in an environment where he could fit right in and be a force to reckon with. “To realise it more now is kind of cool because you can see where you can be, if you work harder,” he said. “I would like to see myself at the top, but in order to get there, I know I have to put in a lot more work. “It won’t be easy, but I am willing to do whatever it takes to get there.” Hopefully at the end of the month, Major Jr intends to participate in his next
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