With the hottest ticket at the 2022 Commonwealth Games, track and field will begin today as some of the Commonwealth’s brightest stars are all ready to shine at the Alexander Stadium in Birmingham, England.
Among them will be 10 athletes from Guyana, most of whom are making their debut at the Games which started in 1930. 
On the opening day of competition, Emanuel Archibald, along with Noelex Holder and Akeem Stewart, will line up in the men’s 100 metres heats while Jasmine Abrams is down to compete in the women’s 100m.
Holder will run in Heat 5 alongside Ferdinand Omanyala, the Kenyan and African champion. Omanyala has the ninth-fastest time in the history of the 100m, posting 9.77s last year.
Stewart, with a Personal Best (PB) of 10.29s, will race in Heat 9; Archibald is in Heat 10. He will also take to the pit tomorrow in the men’s long jump.
Joanna Archer is set for the women’s 800m in Heat 2; same with Jamaica’s Natoya Goule, who was a bronze medallist at the 2018 Games in Australia.
Coach Julian Edmonds and Johnny Gravesande are tasked with overseeing the team.

According to Edmonds, the athletes, with the exception of the Abrams siblings, Jasmine and Aliyah, and Archibald, are not used to the bright lights at this level, but their performances this season bring hope.
Edmonds said, in light of their inexperience at this level, “it’s important for us to keep them calm and let them focus on things they have control over”.
Archibald and the Abrams sisters, particularly Jasmine, are entering the Games against the backdrop of running PBs in their events this year.
Archibald clocked 10.18s, which made him the second fastest Guyanese over the 100m distance, only behind Adam Harris (10.12s).
Jasmine, at the Trinidad and Tobago senior championships, ran 11.07s, which became Guyana’s National Record in the women’s 100m, breaking Branessa Thompson’s 11.14s mark.










