A small Barbadian swimming organization pushing to address rising athlete burnout, elevate technical skill-building and establish the Caribbean island as a premier regional hub for sports tourism has secured formal endorsement from the country’s top sports official. New Wave Swim Club, headed by founder and lead coach Akilah Lashley, showcased its ambitious two-week summer development clinic during a recent visit from Minister of Sports and Community Empowerment Charles Griffith at the Barbados Aquatic Centre in Wildey, St. Michael. During the event, the clinic’s 9 to 18-year-old participants – which include current national team swimmers and emerging youth talent – were formally introduced to visiting guest coach Kyle Dougan, who traveled to the island from neighboring St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
Unlike traditional development models that require promising Barbadian swimmers to travel abroad to access elite coaching and competitive exposure, Lashley’s initiative flips this script by bringing top regional coaching talent directly to Barbados. She explained that the program is rooted in a broader sports tourism strategy designed to keep young athletes close to home during summer training while still connecting them to diverse coaching perspectives from across the Caribbean.
“This gives New Wave and every other local swim club the chance to refine athlete technique without ever leaving the island,” Lashley said. “We get to learn from regional coaches with a wide range of experience and training philosophies, our swimmers get to stay home for the summer and enjoy their time off while still growing, and everyone gets exposure to different technical approaches that can lift their performance.”
Lashley emphasized that the initiative is intentionally structured as a collaborative effort for the entire Barbadian swimming community, not just members of her own club. She noted that cross-cluster cooperation is key to raising the overall standard of competitive swimming across the country, and the clinic creates intentional space for coaches and athletes from different local organizations to connect and share knowledge.
Barbados’ world-class aquatic facilities put the island in a unique position to become the go-to regional destination for swimming development, Lashley added, positioning the country to attract young swimmers from across the Caribbean for training camps and clinics in future iterations of the program.
Minister Griffith lauded the grassroots project during his visit, framing it as a model that larger domestic sporting organizations should replicate to boost youth development and grow the island’s sports tourism sector. He pointed out that the initiative, led by one of Barbados’ smaller swim clubs, demonstrates what local organizations can achieve through regional collaboration, and that exposure to diverse coaching methodologies can only accelerate young athletes’ progress.
“Any time we can bring in coaches from different neighboring jurisdictions to share new skills and innovative technical approaches with our up-and-coming swimmers, it’s a win for our entire sporting community,” Griffith said. “These young athletes are still building the foundation of their competitive careers, and opportunities to train with visiting experts give them tools that will serve them for years to come.”
The minister also signaled that the Barbadian government is open to providing financial and logistical support for future editions of the clinic, with the goal of expanding the program to draw participants from across the Caribbean. Growing sports tourism is a core priority for the current administration, Griffith noted, and expanding this initiative would directly advance that goal while strengthening regional swimming ties.
