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Anneisha McLaughlin| Remaldo Rose

ANNEISHA MCLAUGLIN

Anneisha passes the baton to team mate in a record breaking 4x100 Relay

Up to the staging of the 10th World Junior Championships, Grossetto, Italy in 2004, the record for most medals at these Championships was held by Germany’s Katrin Krabbe, 5 medals.

Jamaica’s Anneisha McLaughlin, a student of Holmwood Technical High, has garnered six (6) medals and has thus earned that covered record.

At the age of 14 years 9 months, Anneisha McLaughlin competing at the 8th World Junior Athletic Championships in Santiago, Chile, ran 54.14 seconds on the third leg of the 4 x 400 metres relay to assist in giving Jamaica a silver medal.

At the 9th World Junior Championships before her home Crowd at the National Stadium, Kingston, Jamaica, Anneisha added two (2) more medals - a silver medal in the 200m with a run of 22.94 seconds, and running the third leg in the 4 x 100m relays as Jamaica sped to gold in a World Junior Championships record of 43.40 seconds

In 2004 in Italy at the 10th World Junior Championships, the Holmwood Technical High student again won the silver in the 200 metres in 23.21 seconds and won her 5th and 6th medals in the relays, silver in the 4 x 100m and bronze in the 4 x 400m relays.

OTHER ACHIEVEMENTS

Competing at the World Youth Championships in Poland in 2001, Anneisha at the age of 15 gained a bronze in the 400 metres clocking 53.35 seconds.

In 2003 at the World Youth Championships in Canada, she won the 200 metres gold 23.26 seconds.

In 2004 at the National High School Championships at the National Stadium, Kingston, Jamaica, she won 3 gold medals and one silver. In the 400 metres, she won gold with 52.80 seconds, silver in the 200 metres in 23.48 seconds, gold in the 4 x 100 metres and the 4 x 400 metres relays.

Competing in her last year in High School, she won 4 gold medals at the 2005 edition of the National High School Championships - Gold in the 100 metres 11.62 seconds gold in the 200 metres, 23.40, gold in the 4 x 100 metres, in a record 44.25 seconds and gold in the 4 x 400 metres in 3 minutes 36.20 seconds.

A very special talent, Anneisha McLaughlin of Holmwood Technical High is being watched by the track and field world as she joins the band of seniors seeking athletics glory.

Writer - Robert Fray

REMALDO ROSE
 
Remaldo representing Jamaica at 2005 CARIFTA Games in Tobago

Outstanding young sprinter Remaldo Rose attends Camperdown High School in the Eastern part of the Captial City of Kingston.

Remaldo’s most outstanding achievements came in 2004 at the 10th World Junior Athletic Championships, Grossetto, Italy.

He won heat 4 of the 100 metres in 10.67 seconds, placed 3rd in semi-final one in 10.36 seconds, and in the final he earned a bronze in 10.34 seconds

He was beaten by two (2) lads who were two years his senior.

In June 2004, at the age of 16 years and 7 months young Rose set his personal 100 metres record of 10.33 seconds at the National Junior Trials at G. C. Foster College, Spanish Town, Jamaica.

Almost 3 months earlier at the National High Schools Championships on March 27, 2004, Remaldo Rose, clocked times of 10.45 seconds for the 100 metres and 21.18 seconds for the 200 metres, both records for these championships in that division.

At the High School Championships on 18th & 19th March 2005, Remaldo won the under 19, 100 metres, with rounds of 11.21, 10.98 and 10.54. The wind reading throughout the rounds were – 4.00 metres per second, -3.1 metres per second, - 0.4 metres per second.

He ran scorching back stretch to enable his school team to demolish the 4 x 100 metres relay record of 40.46 as he and his team-mates combined to record 40.39 seconds.

The Principal of Camperdown High School states of Remaldo:-

“It is usually said that sprinters in order to achieve their goals have to be selfish persons, but this is not so with Remaldo whose strong point is that he is always considerate of others.”

The ‘sprint factory’ of Camperdown High School has gifted Jamaica with another athlete for the future.”

Contributor – Robert Fray