Monday, November 24, 2025

The National Sports Council Must Reclaim Its Voice and Its Vision

Commentary 

by Michael Bascombe

In a period when Grenadian sport is poised for major transformation, the silence from the National Sports Council (NSC) and its Parish Sports Councils (PSCs) has become glaring. This silence is not merely administrative—it is a missed opportunity to shape, guide, and energise a sporting nation that is undergoing historic change.
Over the past several months, the Government of Grenada has rolled out significant infrastructural and capacity-building initiatives: the long-anticipated lighting of Progress Park, improvements to the Telescope Playing Field, the start of work to light the National Cricket Stadium, and preparations for a string of major regional and international competitions. Yet the agencies legally mandated to champion community sport, nurture development pathways, and mobilise grassroots engagement have remained noticeably absent from public discourse.
This must change.
The NSC’s central role is to develop, promote, and coordinate sport nationwide. Its Parish Sports Councils serve as the boots on the ground—engaging communities, identifying talent, maintaining facilities, and cultivating the next generation of athletes, coaches, and administrators. At a time like this, their involvement is not optional; it is essential.
Within the span of a single month, Grenada has hosted or is hosting high-profile events:
The OECS Table Tennis Championships, the recent Secondary Schools’ Football Tournament, the ongoing Waggy T  Super Knock-Out Football Tournament, and the West Indies vs England Under-19 cricket series at the National Stadium are among the sporting activities.
These are not merely competitions—they are moments to inspire, mobilise supporters, and signal Grenada’s readiness for bigger things ahead, including CARIFTA Games 2026. The NSC should lead public engagement, coordinate parish outreach, support logistics, and drive attendance. Instead, there has been silence.
During the recent TalkSports programme, an overwhelming number of viewers expressed support for establishing a national sports archive. This speaks to a deep hunger for recognition and memory in Grenadian sport. Too many stories have already faded. Too many achievements, struggles, and community contributions remain undocumented.
Former national cricketer, footballer, and coach Ali Debellotte made a powerful suggestion: that each Parish Sports Council should take responsibility for documenting, compiling, and safeguarding the sporting history of its parish. This is precisely the kind of grassroots-driven, community-preserving initiative the NSC should be championing.
We know the names of our recent giants—Alleyne Francique, Kirani James, Lindon Victor, and Anderson Peters. But what of the generations before them?
What of the trailblazers who wore the national colours in an era with no social media, little financial support, and limited global visibility? What of the women whose contributions remain almost entirely undocumented?
What of the home-grown coaches, administrators, and community champions who built the foundations of sport in River Road, Victoria, Gouyave, St David’s, Carriacou, and Petite Martinique?
Without deliberate action, these stories will be lost forever.
Documenting our history is not an exercise in nostalgia—it is a necessary pillar of national development.
A national sports archive ensures that our heroes are remembered, celebrated, and understood. It allows future generations to know where we came from and what we have overcome. Every parish has its legends—players, coaches, teams, rivalries, and community tournaments. Recording these stories strengthens social bonds and deepens local pride.
Understanding our historical achievements helps identify what worked, what didn’t, and where our athlete pipelines have succeeded and failed. Sports development requires institutional memory. Without documentation, each generation is forced to start from scratch. That weakens the system.
A curated sporting archive—physical and digital—can become a powerful attraction for diaspora, researchers, and young athletes. It builds the narrative of a proud sporting nation.
The NSC and its Parish Sports Councils are uniquely positioned to assume this historic responsibility. Their mandate and geographic reach allow them to conduct parish-level interviews with former athletes and administrators and to archive photographs, newspapers, medals, trophies, and memorabilia. It also hosts community “memory days” and oral-history sessions, catalogues sporting facilities and their evolution over time, and partners with schools, clubs, and local historians. It can also collaborate with media professionals and archivists to digitise records.
This is not a luxury project—it is nation-building.
As Grenada continues to invest in infrastructure, talent development, and international hosting, we must also invest in our story. The NSC must find its voice again. The PSCs must re-engage their communities. And together, they must ensure that the soul of Grenadian sport—its history, its people, and its identity—is preserved for generations.
Silence cannot continue when the future is calling.

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