Barbados now boasts a brand-new cricket development hub, after the Noel Gittens and Ezra Moseley Cricket Development Facility was formally opened at St Michael School on Martindale’s Road this week. The new center, which features dedicated professional-grade cricket nets, was delivered through a collaborative partnership between the school and the Barbados Public Workers Cooperative Credit Union’s Legacy Foundation, which provided key funding and support for the project.
The facility carries the names of two icons who left indelible marks on both the school and Barbadian cricket at large: Noel Gittens, a former deputy principal and long-time cricket coach at St Michael School, who joined Principal Tanya Harding to cut the ribbon on the new space, and the late Ezra Moseley, a former fast bowler for Barbados and the West Indies who also served as a coach at the institution.
Speaking at the opening ceremony, Principal Harding framed the new facility as a timely, transformative addition to the school, noting that physical education holds a core place in the national education curriculum for its far-reaching benefits. Beyond building physical fitness and supporting mental well-being, regular physical activity in youth helps reduce the risk of chronic non-communicable diseases that impact quality of life in adulthood, she explained.
Harding added that St Michael School has prioritized student participation in extracurricular programs for decades, with 27 distinct after-school activities currently on offer, nine of which focus on sports. But for years, the school has struggled to accommodate its growing student body and diverse athletic programs due to severe space constraints. The campus currently only has one hard court, one tennis court, and a small playing field that was further reduced in size when prefabricated buildings were added to expand capacity for sixth-form students. At their lowest point, the school’s cricket team was forced to travel off-campus once a week to practice at the Ursuline Convent’s nets, Harding revealed.
Winslow Straker, representing the St Michael School Alumni Association, which spearheaded the initiative alongside the credit union, emphasized that the new facility is far more than a set of practice nets—it is a strategic investment in Barbados’ young people, local communities, and the future of national cricket. The facility’s dual practice wickets, he said, stand as a tangible symbol of opportunity, a dedicated space where emerging young cricketers can hone their technical skills, build personal discipline, grow their self-confidence, and nurture a lifelong passion for the sport.
Straker noted that naming the center for Gittens and Moseley is a fitting tribute to the pair’s decades of dedicated service to the school and regional cricket. Their legacies of commitment will now inspire every generation of young players that trains at the facility, motivating them to pursue their dreams of representing their school, club, and country with national pride, he added.
Reflecting on the cross-sector collaboration that made the project possible, Straker emphasized that a true legacy is not just about honoring the contributions of past leaders, but about building accessible pathways for the next generation to thrive. Partnerships between educational institutions, alumni groups, and local corporate foundations, he argued, demonstrate what can be accomplished when organizations align around a shared vision of youth and community development. He closed by extending the alumni association’s sincere gratitude to the Legacy Foundation for its generous financial donation and collaborative partnership, noting that the organization’s commitment to youth cricket and community uplift has made a lasting difference for St Michael School, with hopes for continued partnership in future impact projects.
