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April 5, 2014
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Star Sport |
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Coaches not paid to care says MVP coach Francis |
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![]() Francis André Lowe Senior Staff Reporter High school coaches are paid to coach athletes for success at that level and cannot be expected to care too much about keeping them fresh for national representation. That is the view of noted track and field coach Stephen Francis. However, the MVP Track Club head coach, while stating that he understands the pressure of expectation levelled at the feet of the local high school coaches, is also of the view that the youngsters are being pushed too hard, too early. "Each coach in a Jamaican high school is paid by the school that they work for and their job is to do as much for the school, as they can," said Francis. "It is not their job to hold back and to keep athletes for the national programme." Incentives Francis is of the view that the Jamaica Athletics Administrative Association (JAAA) should consider providing incentives such as a stipend for high school coaches if they wish to have them consider the national programme in their preparation of the athletes. "Every coach is going to want to do the best for his school, with the athletes he or she has. I don't think the coach should be concerned about it," Francis reasoned. Still, the veteran coach admits that the current situation is certainly not ideal. "That said, it'd be nicer if there wasn't such an emphasis on current results," Francis noted. "It is one of the saddest things to see somebody, who was extremely good at Class III or Class II, and when he or she is 19 or 20 (years old), he says "I was good at some point in time, but I'm done, injuries got to me. While not everyone will be able to make it on the senior level, a lot of them strive for that. It's a tricky situation - what do you do with a youngster, who is 14 years old and he wants to win at Champs, you want him to win at Champs, his parents want him to win at Champs, so how do you balance, trying to go as far as he could, but trying to prepare him as you should prepare a 14 year-old? It's a very delicate balance," added Francis. "A lot of the kids who do well in this current environment aren't going to make a transition past what they are doing now. But I don't see anything wrong with it, its the system that we have, because we have enough people around, so you can afford to lose a couple and some want their glory now."
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