Burns fourth in Sacramento

SACRAMENTO: Trinidad and Tobago’s Marc Burns has placed a disappointing fourth in the 100 metres at the US National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) Division One Championships.

The event was won by American Mardy Scales in 10.25 seconds ahead of Pierre Brown (10.34) with Jamaican Michael Frater third in 10.35 seconds. TT’s Burns was fourth in 10.39 and Grenada’s Sean Lambert sixth in 10.43 seconds. Bahamian Leevan Sands and the Jamaican pair of Elva Goulbourne and Aileen Bailey captured gold medals on Friday night. Sands and Goulbourne landed the long jump titles for Auburn University, while Bailey topped a quality field to capture the women’s 100 metres at California State University. In the men’s long jump, Sands registered an 8.05-metre effort that edged Tony Allmond (8.02). Jamaican Aundre Edwards finished fourth at 7.90 metres.

Commonwealth champion Goulbourne became the first ever repeat winner of the NCAA women’s long jump, topping her field at 6.75 metres to maintain a strong Caribbean prominence in the event. Viktoriya Rybalko (6.53) was second, and Jamaican Cameal Rhule finished sixth at 6.35 metres. Goulbourne’s triumph completed an amazing eighth win in the event for the Caribbean in the last 13 years — following Jamaican Diane Guthrie (1991), Bahamians Jackie Edwards, Daphne Saunders and Dedra Davis from 1992 through to 1994, and Jamaican Trecia Smith (1997 and 1999). Bailey powered to an 11.18-second clocking to snatch the women’s 100-metre title, dismissing highly rated American Muna Lee (11.22), with Lauryn Williams (11.31) third, and Goulbourne eighth in 11.52 seconds.

Vincentian Natasha May-ers, the reigning NCAA 200-metre champion, is on the mend from injury and could only manage ninth in 11.58 seconds. Lambert helped the University of Tennessee win silver in the men’s 4X100-metre relay in 38.72 seconds, as Louisiana State University (LSU) sped to a stadium record win in 38.65 seconds, with Jamaican Pete Coley in their line-up. LSU also won the women’s sprint relay, in 42.55 seconds, pushing Bailey’s South Carolina (42.83) into second spot. Caribbean athletes held prominent spots in the 400-metre semi-finals. Women’s defending champion Allison Beckford, from Jamaica, won her heat in 51.13 seconds, with Grenada’s Hazel-Ann Regis second in a national record 51.44 seconds. Jamaica-born American Sanya Richards won heat two in 51.41 seconds. In the men’s semis, Jamaicans Sanjay Ayre (45.16) and Brandon Simpson (45.34) finished first and fourth respectively in semi-final two. American Mitch Potter won the first heat in 44.94 seconds. 

Park Royal upset Eastern b-ball leaders

Park Royal eased past Colours and took a 56-49 win over the top of the table team as the Eastern Community Basketball League continued.

Leading 24-22 at the half, Park Royal kept up the tempo in the dying stages of the match which ended with Anderson Belfon scoring a match-high 16 points taking 17 rebounds and three steals. Darrien Baptiste got 12 points. The pair of Akil and Oba La Roche kept Colours afloat with 14 and 12 points respectively with the latter also taking eight rebounds. Unit Trust Maloney Pacers were keen to keep their Division One top spot and played like a team possessed beating Valencia Heat 69-45 after leading 21-17 halfway through the encounter.

Michael Alert was Pacers’ main weapon in the battle and he proved effective scoring 20 points and taking five steals. Imel Lewis scored 10, took down seven rebounds and blocked a shot while Jeffrey Bourne scored 11 points and had three assists. The efforts of Keegan Garcia and Junior Williams were all that kept the Heat up with Garcia scoring 17 points, taking 14 rebounds and three assists. Williams scored 16 points in a last ditch attempt to take their team to the Big Four.


































































































































































































































Standings
DIVISION ONE 
G L W P 
1.UTC Maloney Pacers 7 0 7 14
2.Marabella Raptors 8 2 6 14
3.Colours 8 3 5 14
4.Sangre Grande All Stars 7 1 6 13
5.CBA Hackers 8 4 4 12
6.Police 7 3 4 11
7.500 Hawks 7 2 4 10
8.Brian Chase Academy 8 6 2 10
9.Sangre Grande Young Stars 8 7 1 9
10.Prisons 7 6 1 8
11.Tacarigua Ballplayers 6 5 0 5
DIVISION TWO 
G L W P 
1.Colours 9 2 7 16
2.UTC Maloney Pacers(2) 8 0 8 16
3.Caledonia Clippers 8 1 7 15
4.Veterans 8 2 6 14
5.Valencia Heat 8 4 4 12
6.TSTT 7 3 4 11
7.Maloney Old School 7 4 3 10
8.Macoya Forum 8 7 1 9
9.Brian Chase Academy(2) 8 7 1 9  
10.CLICO Pioneers 6 4 2 8
11.U.W.I 7 6 1 8
12.Park Royals 6 5 1 7
            
WOMEN DIVISION
G L W P 
1.UTC Maloney Pacers 3 0 3 6
2.Malick Tigers 3 1 2 5
3.Brian Chase Academy 3 3 0 3
4.Police 3 0 1 2

Robin John for World Scrabble Championships

The seventh World Scrabble Championship is being held in Kuala Lumpur from October 19 to 24 at the Renaissance Hotel Kuala Lumpur.

The tournament is organised by Scrabble Masters Malaysia in collaboration with the Malaysian Scrabble Association (MSA). This prestigious event, held biannually and for the first time since its inception in 1991, is being held in Asia. There are 102 players from 45 countries expected this year. There will be 24 rounds of regular play following which the top two players will compete in the best of five games. The World Scrabble Cham-pion will be the first person to win three games.

Robin John, the current Trinidad and Tobago, will participate in the tournament. John has been in devastating form since winning the National Champion-ship in December with an unprecedented hat-trick — Trincity Monthly Open Tour-nament (February, March and April). He also ran away with the inaugural staging of the Point Fortin Borough Tournament winning seven out of seven games.

Red Devils go after cricket hat-trick

Although crowned NSL champions for the second successive time only a week ago, Red Devils Cricket Club is about to start preparing for the next season by looking to make it a hat-trick of titles.

Boodram Bidah, public relations officer of the team, said yesterday they are very elated to be champions of the best-run minor league in the country for the second successive time. “We are however not prepared to rest on our laurels. Preparations for the next season have already begun and we are going to try to take that title yet again,” said Bidah. Red Devils edged Ghandi United by four runs in the finals under lights last Saturday at Guaracara Park, Pointe-a-Pierre. Batting first Red Devils, with former national player Richard Sieuchan in the ranks, made 208 for eight wickets in their 30 overs. Ghandi United then replied with 204 for eight and lost by four runs. “We had a very difficult season this year and we are going to put measures in place to have things better prepared for the next one,” Bidah said. He said the NSL is a well-organised and structured league and the standard of the cricket has risen from year to year. “It can easily be judged by the close finals we had this year. It makes us realise that we need to work harder to win next time around,” Bidah said. Red Devils became $10,000 richer after the finals for their first place finish and Bidah said they plan to make a tour with the proceeds.

Teachers bring class to All Fours

The Nationwide Sports League, in collaboration with Hand Arnold Limited, distributors of Teachers Scotch Whiskey, have launched the richest All Fours league in Trinidad and Tobago. This was done on Thursday at the company’s facilities in El Socorro, San Juan.

This season the islandwide series will be called the Teachers Scotch Whiskey/El Dorado Rum NSL Islandwide Six-Table All Fours Championships. It will carry cash and prizes worth over $150,000. President of the NSL, Lincoln Persad, speaking at the opening said he wants the league to be of the highest class. “We have aligned ourselves with a company of a product of a very high class. We always had the vision of uniting communities and have been enjoying some success in this with the All Fours in the past,” said Persad.

Hand Arnold are sponsoring $25,000 to the league with the promise to stay on. Director of the company, Stephen Hale, speaking at the press conference said he is very happy to be on board. “We are really looking forward to seeing great rewards come out of this venture. All Fours is a sport that cuts through every race, ethnic and social barrier and it is something we really take to at our company,” said Hale. Andy Maharaj, an official of the NSL, described the upcoming series as a very exciting period for All Fours in Trinidad and Tobago. “Here is a top class series that will tower above all in the local All Fours arena,” Maharaj said.

Debbie Persad, who is in overall charge of running the tournament, said the NSL league has always been of a very high standard and assured the sponsors that their product will be marketed in the best way possible. For further information about the tournament, call the NSL head office at 658-3503.

Deyal smashes unbeaten 103 in Guyana

Former national opener Deonarine Deyal has struck an unbeaten 102 in the first match of the two-match series by Couva Sports in Guyana last week.

As part of their celebrations after winning the Carib National League Division Two cricket title, the Couva Boys visited the Mudland for two matches. They won both matches handsomely with Deyal the star of the series. In the first match against Ghandi Youths in Georgetown, the home team made 169 all out. Deyal, with an unbeaten 102, took his team to victory for the loss of just two wickets. In the second match also at Georgetown, King’s Jewelers XI got 153 for eight in 30 overs with Narsingh Deonarine getting 29 and Azeemul Aziz, 53. Former Trinidad and Tobago fast bowler Richard Sieuchan took three for 17. Couva Sports then made light work of the target getting to 155 for four with Andrew Gonzales. A Guyanese playing for Couva in the domestic league, got 70. Deyal made 22 and Fareed Hosein, 31.

IMBERT SHOCKED AT HILLSIDE RAPE

DIEGO MARTIN East MP Colm Imbert is questioning the construction of apartments on the steep slope of Valeview Terrace, St Lucien Road, Diego Martin, which poses a serious threat to nearby properties because of the danger of landslides; and is causing huge traffic jams and inconvenience to residents.

The owner and developer of the land and the project, is known only as a Mr S Mahabir. Yesterday one resident discovered that her two-year-old, solid concrete wall had not only been broken by the pounding of the sidewalk, by enormous bulldozers over the past few months, but had been sandblasted and its colour changed from dark to light brown. The bulldozers have been manoeuvring across St Lucien Road onto the sidewalk in order to climb the narrow steep hillside to the construction site. When the resident drew the broken wall to the attention of the workmen on site yesterday, they laughed and said, “don’t worry, he (the contractor) will fix it.” When the brother of the contractor, a Mr Sookram Mahabir, who also lives on St Lucien Road, was told to let his brother know that the wall had been damaged by his machinery, Sookram replied, “The rain broke the wall. We are tired of your complaints. Call the police. Do what you want..”

When Newsday’s photographer arrived to take pictures of the damage done to the wall, Sookram Mahabir mocked him, and yelled, “Take a picture of me, nah.” However, yesterday, when contacted by Newsday, MP for the area, Colm Imbert expressed shock and horror at what was taking place on the hillside, with mud flowing down into St Lucien Road. The MP said he intends to find out what is going on in Valeview. Imbert, an engineer, said that he thought something was “terribly wrong” with the project when he first noticed it on Saturday while driving along St Lucien Road, on his way to River Estate. Imbert said that his first observation was that there seems to be no appropriate access to the construction site. He also noted that it was “a terrible mess, and a great inconvenience to residents.”

The MP said he plans this morning to write to the Minister of Planning, Dr Keith Rowley and the Minister responsible for the Environmental Management Authority, Dr Rennie Dumas to ascertain whether approval for the development was given, by whom, and if so, whether the contractor is acting in compliance with EMA guidelines. The MP said that one of the responsibilities of a contractor was the putting in place of temporary systems to ensure no mess,  no drainage problems, and no incovenience to residents. “This project is clearly not in compliance with that,”  he observed. Meanwhile residents on both sides of St Lucien Road, in both the constituencies of Imbert and of Diego Martin Central MP, Ken Valley, who was yesterday out of the country, have been complaining for months to the contractor about the blocking of their roads by the heavy equipment, to no avail. This newspaper also carried a page ten photograph approximately two months ago by News Editor, John Babb, entitled “Degradation of our hills,” which showed the environmental carnage taking place on St Lucien Road, yet no response or investigation was forthcoming from either the Diego Martin Regional Corporation, or from the EMA. Residents have also repeatedly complained to the foreman and workmen about the possible damage to their houses from the heavy equipment, and about the blocking of the roads. They have expressed deep concern about mudslides during the rainy season. They also had to ask the truck drivers from Ian Ramdeen and Co, hired for the construction job, to remove their trucks from in front of their houses, and from on top of their front sidewalk lawns. Such requests have inevitably resulted in abuse from the drivers.

Residents have also appealed to Ian Ramdeen himself about his drivers, yet the trucks continue to enter private roads without permission, park on public roadways, and block entrances to people’s streets and garages. Last Friday night, because of the trucks and bulldozers on St Lucien Road, traffic was backed up from the Kentucky Fried Chicken outlet on Sierra Leone Road to the Wendy Fitzwilliams Boulevard, making it impossible for residents to reach their homes. Some living in private side roads could not enter their streets because the trucks were blocking the entrances. Many, too disgusted to take more of the wait, opted to park their cars and walk home. On one occasion last month, as one of the bulldozers was trying to get into the narrow access road, its arm was caught in a telephone wire. Residents had to call out to the driver to stop or their telephone service would have been knocked out. Again, their words of warning were met with abuse. Residents have also complained that work starts very early everyday, including Sundays, finishing late at night and that the noise of the trucks and bulldozers is unbearable. They are also concerned about landslides, as the rainy season is now here. Yesterday, several said they were now prepared to take legal action against the contractor if the EMA, their MPs and the Diego Martin Regional  Corporation failed to put an end to their daily suffering. Some said they were already in contact with their lawyers. In addition, yesterday, West End police noted that it is against the law for anyone to cause an obstruction of the free flow of traffic on any public roadway. The police also said that it is illegal to use sidewalks to park any vehicles if no permission is granted by the owners of the houses and that such acts are tantamount to trespass. Attempts to contact the contractor proved futile.

URP foreman shot to death at home

KAREEM STEDMAN, a URP foreman believed to be one of the suspects in the shooting death of Mark Granger on Friday night, was shot nine times by a lone gunman oustide his home at Village Council Trace, St Barb’s, Laventille, on Saturday night.

Yesterday — Father’s Day — his grieving dad Steve Stedman, 44, wept openly and made a call to the authorities to find any means necessary to put an end to the senseless killings in Laventille. The URP foreman was walking close to his home around 9 pm on Saturday in company with his girlfriend Melissa Phillip, 16,  when a gunman emerged from Stedman’s yard and fired nine shots at him which struck him at various parts of his body. Stedman was rushed to the Port-of-Spain General Hospital where he died around 9.30 pm. His father told Newsday he never expected to spend Father’s Day in grief. He explained that each year on Father’s Day, his son Kareem would spend the day playing music and all his children would gather at his home and have an enjoyable day. Stedman claimed that the planned celebrations turned sour when his son was brutally gunned down.

The grieving man claimed that his son was returning home with his girlfriend when the killer, who was hiding in the yard, waited in ambush. He claimed that Melissa, who had already entered the yard, proceeded inside the house, but when Kareem pushed the gate, he was met by a barrage of gunfire and ran back into the roadway where he collapsed. The bleeding man was then rushed to hospital. Steve, who appeared deep in grief, insisted that his son earned an honest living and was not involved in any gang-related or illicit activities. He also disputed reports that his son was one of two gunmen who carried out a shooting attack on Friday night which resulted in one man dead and five others injured. Stedman called on the police to find the killers and put an end to the killings. He said that, based on information received, his son was killed because he is a Muslim. He added that a directive was recently given to kill all black muslims in St Barb’s. Police investigators said yesterday that based on information received, Stedman was one of the suspects in the shooting death of Mark Granger.

Investigators claimed that two of the four persons who were shot in the attack on Friday will accompany the police to the Forensic Science Centre today to view Stedman’s body. Police investigators told Newsday that a warrant has been issued for the second suspect in Mark Granger’s shooting death. When Newsday spoke with residents of St Barb’s yesterday, they claimed that instructions have already been issued by the head of a gang to execute the second suspect in the killing of Mark Granger. Residents claimed that they are afraid to venture out of their homes at night through fear of being struck by stray bullets. They added that the situation has reached a point where almost very night a murder takes place in Laventille. Checks with the Port-of-Spain General Hospital yesterday revealed that Crystal Best, 20, who was shot and wounded in the shooting on Friday night is warded in stable condition, while her two-year-old son Rondell Harbin was also in stable condition at the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex. Mathew Granger, the twin brother of Mark Granger, who was also shot, discharged himself from hospital. As of Saturday, there were 15 murders for the month averaging one murder per day. The murdered victims for the month were Jerryl Wiltshire, Him Demanie Stoute, Jillia Bowen, PC Derrick Nelson, Daniel Paul, Clarence Brizan, Issac Joseph, Dane Mitchell, Anslem Registe, Joseph Matthew, Don George, Mark Granger, Nigel King and Kareem Stedman.

Suspects in taxi-driver’s death charged

Four suspects in the shooting death of Arima taxi-driver Anslem Registe were charged yesterday with robbery with aggravation and possession of arms and ammunition.

The four — ages 18, 20, 25 and 29 — were arrested by the Cunupia police shortly after the murder on Wednesday night. Newsday learned that Inspector Bullein of the Arima CID will consult with Director of Public Prosecutions Geoffrey Henderson today for directions in the murder. Registe was plying his taxi for hire on Wednesday night when he picked up four men at Pinto Road, Arima. The men pointed a gun at Registe, abducted him, robbed him and then shot him once in the chest. He was then thrown out of his taxi. An eyewitness to the murder alerted the police who sent out an All Points Bulletin to all police divisions to be on the lookout for the stolen taxi. The car was spotted at Welcome Road, Cunupia, and four suspects were arrested. Officers allegedly seized a shotgun and cash.

Tunapuna cops nab suspect following robbery

Quick response by officers of the Tunapuna Police Station following a robbery on Saturday night resulted in the arrest of a Diego Martin man and the seizure of a 9 mm gun.

Reports revealed that around 9.30 pm on Saturday, Gordon Atwell was at his juice and punch shop when two men entered and announced a hold up. They pointed at gun at Atwell and robbed him of $500. Officers of the Tunapuna Police Station were alerted. Shortly after,  they held an 18-year-old Diego Martin man with a 9 mm gun and ammunition. The man will be placed on identification parades for similar robberies. He will appear before a Tunapuna Magistrate today.