 DEXTER VOISIN, manager  of the Trinidad and Tobago team at the 2012 Olympic Games in London,  England, stated his delight in the performances of the national  athletes, in track and field as well as the other sporting disciplines.
DEXTER VOISIN, manager  of the Trinidad and Tobago team at the 2012 Olympic Games in London,  England, stated his delight in the performances of the national  athletes, in track and field as well as the other sporting disciplines.
In  an interview from London on Tuesday, Voisin said, “we can safely say so  far we are having one of the better Olympics in terms of the amount of  finals that we are in. 
 
“And not just track and field but the whole Trinidad and Tobago  team,” he added. “Njisane Phillip (and) George Bovell reaching  semi-finals (respectively in cycling and, in Bovell’s case, 50m  freestyle final). 
 
Voisin continued, “but if you focus on track and field, so far we  had five finalists (up until Tuesday) and one bronze medal. That is a  very good achievement so far. 
 
“We have a couple of events to go, as recently as Semoy Hackett who  made it to the 200-metre final, for the women,” he continued. “That’s a  first, for a female, making it to the 200m final. 
 
“The track and field team, we have been having some good  performances. I’m not going to make any predictions. The first objective  is to get to the finals.” 
 
Looking at the opposition in the track and field arena, Voisin  commented, “the competition, so far, in the Olympics has been very high,  seven men in the 100m final going under ten seconds for the first time. 
 
“The women 100m final was the fastest final ever. The competition is  very high and our athletes are doing well so far. Some of the athletes  have confessed they could have done much better. From my standpoint, we  are doing well.” 
 
He spoke briefly on men’s 400m bronze medallist Lalonde Gordon, who  rose from obscurity to claim a medal in Monday’s Final. Voisin  acknowledged Gordon’s low profile, stating, “everyone in the world is  asking (who is Gordon), even in Trinidad. 
 
“Coming into the Olympic Games, he was an unknown. Basically what he did was shock the whole world.”
Source: www.newsday.co.tt
