WHEN TRINIDAD and  Tobago stage the first round of Olympic Games qualifying for Men’s Beach  Volleyball in early May, officials will expect nothing less than  victory from the national teams. The May 8-10 tournament, to be played  at Saith Park in Chaguanas among 12 countries including hosts TT, is the  first of four qualification stages on the road to Rio 2016.
The  TT women will start a similar journey, one week earlier, in Jamaica.  Introducing both the national Men’s and Women’s teams at Olympic House  yesterday, Daymian Stewart, head of the TT Volleyball Federation (TTVF)  expressed satisfaction with the planning and preparation for the event.  
 
“We believe the work that has been done over the last few years in  Beach Volleyball has created a real opportunity for us to be the first  local team sport to qualify for the Olympic Games,” Stewart said. “From  where I sit, I think I’m in a position to guarantee, and put some  pressure on our national athletes, that we will definitely be in the  fourth round of the Olympic qualifications.”  
 
In simplifying the progression, Stewart explained that following the  first round, the second stage will involve teams from the Eastern  Caribbean, after which TT would come up against the Central American  nations, until finally they would have to face the top playing countries  in the Western Hemisphere in the fourth and final phase. He noted,  however, that should TT get to the final round, they would avoid at  least one of the sport’s giants, as the United States would have  qualified through the World Beach Volleyball Tour.  
 
Stating the TTVF had learned much from previous experiences, Stewart  said it had now put together a combination of good athletes, technical  capabilities, facilities, technology and administrative support. 
 
“We can now say that we went through this before,” he told reporters  at Olympic House. “We had a world-class indoor team trying to qualify  for the World Championships, and we know where we went wrong, and the  things that we need to correct. So this time around, we need to get it  right.”  
 
Vice president of the North, Central America and Caribbean  Volleyball Confederation (NORCECA), Mushtaque Mohammed confirmed the  tournament will receive assistance from both the regional and world  governing bodies. “The IVF, the Caribbean VF and NORCECA will be  supporting these events from a financial perspective,” said the former  TTVF head. “We will be giving all the equipment that is necessary for  the event.” 
 
Mohammed will also be heading the tournament’s control committee.  
 
TT Olympic Committee (TTOC) president Brian Lewis, in calling on the  public to come out in their numbers and make the event a success, added  that the tournament presents “an opportunity for the Volleyball  Federation to leverage a format of the game that is suited to Trinidad  and Tobago.” He noted that following the Beijing Games in 2008, experts  found that Beach Volleyball was the most watched event after Track and  Field’s 100 metres.  
 
The women’s first round will be run off between April 30 and May 4  in Jamaica. La Teisha Joseph and Apphia Glasgow will make up one team,  while the other will consist of Elki Phillip and Shenelle Gordon.  Playing for the TT men at Saith Park will be Fabian Whitfield and Daniel  Williams; and Tevin Joseph and Josiah Eccles. 
 
The other participating national teams are Aruba, Barbados, the  Bahamas, Bonaire, the Cayman Islands, Curacao, Guadeloupe, Haiti,  Jamaica, Martinique and Suriname. A number of activities have been  included for the fans, including a nightly skills segment for cash  prizes. Additionally, competition on each night will be preceded at 6 pm  by a women’s exhibition match.