Before an audience gathered to mark International Olympic Day at the Pegasus Hotel recently, Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA) President Christopher Samuda delivered a stirring keynote titled “Transforming Lives Through Sport.”
Anchored in the global theme “Let’s Move,” Samuda’s address demanded immediate, measurable progress—“action and not talk”—in building sport’s economic engine and safeguarding the welfare of those who play it.
Yesterday’s diagnoses vs. tomorrow’s demands
“We must learn from the past,” Samuda conceded, “but not be pre‑occupied with yesterday’s unchanging record. Tomorrow is only a day away, and it compels movement—a change of location.” He warned that endless symposia on familiar problems amount to “a talk‑fest superstructure” unless matched by revolutionary implementation.
Echoing remarks he first made two decades earlier, the JOA president declared:
“We have to sweat and spill blood if change is to be a reality. The blood of men in history germinated the seed of progress, and today men tremble to spill it even figuratively.”
For Samuda, discomfort is not optional but a prerequisite for genuine transformation.
Proof of motion: The Jamaica athletes’ insurance plan
To illustrate “movement,” Samuda retraced the painstaking journey that produced the Jamaica Athletes Insurance Plan, launched in 2016: exhaustive research on foreign health schemes, actuarial modeling, and marathon negotiations with providers. “*It was done for insurance. It can be done for others, like pension—*that neglected child of sport.” Hundreds of national athletes now enjoy medical and personal accident coverage; the same resolve, he insisted, must underpin retirement security and wealth creation.
Samuda envisioned a national regulatory body of industry specialists capable of handling “a multi‑billion‑dollar mutual fund of public and private investment.” Such an entity would operate under strict governance, leverage tax incentives for “angel and archangel” investors, and channel dividends and capital gains back into facilities, programs, and athlete welfare. “It can be done. Let’s move!”
From sponsorship to partnership
“The JOA does not buy ready‑made; we build, engineer, and deliver capital,” Samuda affirmed, urging corporations to exchange once‑and‑done sponsorships for shared‑risk, shared‑reward partnerships:
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Align funding with clear commercial strategies that match brand ethos.
Elevate “poster athletes” to corporate ambassadorship.
Activate robust social media platforms for mutual traction.
Offer premium event accreditation to turn supporters into stakeholders.
“Let’s move the corporate dollar from the boardroom to the field of play,” he said.
Guarding birthrights and forging futures
Samuda cautioned against ceding Jamaica’s sporting “birthright” to “foreign landlords” issuing passports to Olympic glory. Homegrown infrastructure must ensure athletes remain “bankable and pensionable” inside their own borders.
Quoting reggae artist Anthony B, he warned:
“Nobody wannu plant the corn; everybody want to raid the barn.”
Marking Olympic Day’s global celebrations, Samuda saluted Kirsty Coventry, newly elected as the first female President of the International Olympic Committee. Her rise, he said, was propelled not by gender tokenism but by the “three C’s—character, competence, and credentials.” Her story underscores the upward trajectory possible when talent meets unrelenting momentum.
The JOA’s mandate: Business‑minded, athlete‑centric, national in scope
Samuda closed with a summation of the association’s ethos:
Culture: emphatically business.
Character: unmistakably member‑ and athlete‑centric.
Mission: unequivocally national and international.
Goal: to transform lives and become an indispensable earning asset for Jamaica.July 4, 2025