‘We hold no grudges’, says JAAA after athletes’ allegiance switch blocked

In a recent decision that has sent ripples through the global track and field community, World Athletics’ Nationality Review Panel has rejected nationality transfer applications from four elite Jamaican athletes seeking to compete for Turkey, a top Jamaican athletics official has confirmed.

The high-profile group includes three Olympic medalists — Roje Stona, Wayne Pinnock and Rajindra Campbell — alongside Jaydon Hibbert, the young star who holds the World Under-20 triple jump world record. The four athletes were part of a larger cohort of 11 competitors who had initiated the process of switching their national affiliation to the European nation, but all related transfer requests were turned down in Thursday’s ruling.

Garth Gayle, president of the Jamaica Athletics Administrative Association (JAAA), has stressed that the governing body holds no resentment against the athletes who pursued the transfer, and that the national federation remains willing to welcome them back to the Jamaican team. “We hold no grudges, our doors are wide open,” Gayle stated in an interview with Jamaica Observer Online. He added that the federation would not place any barriers to the athletes re-integrating into Jamaican competitions, as long as they maintain good standing within the sport. “We are all Jamaicans and once they are in good standing,” he noted.

Gayle also shared that this situation is not without precedent in Jamaican athletics. He revealed that it is not the first occasion that athletes have started the nationality change process only to reverse their decision later, a situation the JAAA has navigated before. Beyond Jamaica’s own experience, the JAAA president pointed out that concerns over elite athletes being poached by other nations are not unique to the Caribbean country — many other athletic powerhouses have raised similar issues about the growing trend of nationality transfers driven by recruitment from other nations. The JAAA plans to release a full formal statement on the ruling later this day.