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Born | Saint Thomas Parish, Jamaica | 6 April 1956
Source: Cricinfo, 5 November 2020 |
Clement Thompson (born 6 April 1956) is a Jamaican cricketer. He played in twenty first-class and fourteen List A matches for the Jamaican cricket team from 1976 to 1985. [1]
Clement Seymour "Coxsone" Dodd was a Jamaican record producer who was influential in the development of ska and reggae in the 1950s, 1960s and beyond.
Marcia Llyneth Griffiths is a Jamaican singer best known for the 1989 remix of her single "Electric Boogie", which serves as the music for the four-wall "Electric Slide" line dance. It is the best-selling single of all time by a female reggae singer.
Roland Alphonso OD or Rolando Alphonsoa.k.a. "The Chief Musician" was a Jamaican tenor saxophonist, and one of the founding members of the Skatalites.
Leroy Sibbles is a Jamaican reggae musician and producer. He was the lead singer for The Heptones in the 1960s and 1970s.
Uzziah "Sticky" Thompson was a Jamaican percussionist, vocalist and deejay active from the late 1950s. He worked with some of the best known performers of Jamaican music and played on hundreds of albums.
Clarendon College, commonly called CC, is a high school in the town of Chapelton in northern Clarendon, Jamaica.
The sixth team of English cricketers toured the West Indies in the 1910–11 season. For the first time the MCC organised the tour. The team was captained by AWF Somerset and played a total of 12 matches, of which 11 are regarded as first-class, between February and April 1911.
The Silvertones are a Jamaican reggae harmony group formed in 1964, best known for their recordings for Lee "Scratch" Perry in the early 1970s.
Lord Brackley's XI was the fifth team of English cricketers to tour the West Indies, playing in the 1904–05 season. The team was captained by John Egerton, 4th Earl of Ellesmere and played a total of 20 matches between January and April 1905, of which ten are regarded as first-class.
Jamaican Canadians are Canadian citizens of Jamaican descent or Jamaican-born permanent residents of Canada. The population, according to Canada's 2021 Census, is 249,070. Jamaican Canadians comprise about 30% of the entire Black Canadian population.
Lists of women One Day International cricketers are lists of women's One Day International cricket players by team.
The Jamaica national cricket team is the representative cricket team of the country of Jamaica. The team competes under the franchise name, Jamaica Scorpions in the Cricket West Indies' Professional Cricket League which comprises both the Regional Four Day Competition and the Regional Super50. Jamaica has won a sum of 12 regional first class and 9 regional one day titles. Hence the Scorpions have won the second most first class and 50 over championships in the history of West Indies cricket.
Brown stew chicken, is a meat dish eaten throughout the English-speaking Caribbean islands. Some countries in the Caribbean use this name interchangeable with another popular dish referred to as stew chicken that has a different recipe. Brown stew chicken is usually paired with rice and peas and eaten as dinner, preferable on Sundays. The eponymous chicken color is achieved by frying chicken to a deep brown color, after which its cooked in a slow simmer with spices, carrots, and ketchup.
Les, Leslie or Lesley Thompson may refer to:
Jamaica competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, from August 5 to 21, 2016. This marked its sixteenth Summer Olympic appearance as an independent nation, although it had previously competed in four other editions as a British colony, and as part of the West Indies Federation.
Elaine Sandra-Lee Thompson-Herah is a Jamaican sprinter who competes in the 60 metres, 100 metres and 200 metres. Regarded as one of the greatest sprinters of all time, she is a five-time Olympic champion, the fastest woman alive in the 100 m, and the third fastest ever in the 200 m.
Clement Everton Neblett was a Guyanese cricketer, popularly known as “Nebbo". A former Police Sports Club member and an international league cricketer, Neblett represented the Canadian National Team in the 1980s. He spent his childhood and early adolescence in Mahaica Village, in what is now Guyana's Demerara-Mahaica region before emigrating to Canada, where he played in West Indian domestic cricket. He made his first-class debut in October 1973, playing for Demerara against Berbice in the final of the inter-county Jones Cup. Neblett did not make his national debut until January 1978, when he represented the Guyanese national team against Trinidad and Tobago and the Leeward Islands in the regional one-day competition. Later in the year, he also played three Shell Shield games for Guyana, which were his final appearances at regional level.