Renward Wells
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men’s Athletics | ||
Competitor for Bahamas | ||
CARIFTA Games Youth (U17) | ||
Bronze | 1986 Les Abymes | 400 m |
Renward Ricardo Wells (Rendward Ricardo Wells; born 23 February 1970) is a retired Bahamian sprinter who specialized in the 100 metres.
He competed at the Carifta Games in 1986 in Guadeloupe where he won a Bronze medal in the 400 meters. He also competed in Carifta Jamaica 1988 and in Barbados in 1989.
In May 1989 Wells helped the Boise State University Broncos to their first Track and field Big Sky Conference title in 22 years.
He competed at the Olympic Games in 1996 and 2000 and the World Championships in 1995, 1997, 1999 and 2001 without reaching the finals.
His personal best time was 10.18 seconds, achieved at the 1995 World Championships in Gothenburg. Wells also co-holds the Bahamian national record in the 4 x 100 metres relay, achieved with teammates Dominic Demeritte, Iram Lewis and Andrew Tynes. Wells in 1994 ran one of the fastest times ever recorded under any conditions in the 200 meters[1]
He was suspended from August 2002 to August 2004 due to a doping offense.[2] He had tested positive for three banned substances.[3] He is rumored to be a friend and a confidant of Victor Conte and Patrick Arnold who were the masterminds behind the Balco doping scandal. Wells' name, though, never came up in the grand jury trial where numerous professional athletes, including Barry Bonds and Marion Jones, testified.
Wells was coached From 1996 to 2001 by the famed coach Steve Riddick in Virginia Beach, Virginia.
Early life
Renward Ricardo Wells was born in Nassau, Bahamas. His parents William Wells and Leoma Flowers were never married. In 1971 at age one, Wells went to live with his father's parents in Deadman's Cay on Long Island, Bahamas. He left in 1973 and was sent to live with his mother's parents on the Island of South Andros in the settlement of Driggs' Hill. At that time in the Bahamas, neither of those islands possessed electrical installations or modern sewage systems, so Wells grew up in spartan conditions assisting his grandfather, Bertram Flowers, fishing and grandmother, Natalee Flowers with subsistence agriculture farming. In December 1979, he was reunited with his mother and her husband-Yorick Smith in Freeport, Bahamas on the island of Grand Bahama.
Education
Wells attended Driggs Hill All Age School, Bartlette Hill Primary School, Eight Mile Rock High School and RM Bailey Senior High School. He was an active student leader, avid reader and athlete. He graduated at the top of his class in 1987 in the science stream and was elected by students and teachers to be school President.
With the aid of an athletic scholarships in 1988, Wells attended Boise State University in Idaho. Wells left Boise State in May 1989 for an athletic scholarship to the University of California, Los Angeles, U.C.L.A. However, Boise State refused to sign his release letter required for transfer by the NCAA, so Wells had to sit out an entire year before he was able to attend UCLA. In June 1992, Wells again made another university switch leaving UCLA to attend, on an athletic scholarship, Oral Roberts University. While at Oral Roberts, he began dating Sarah Adermann. Sarah competed in the high jump event for the Oral Roberts University's track team. Renward and Sarah married in June 1993.
Wells graduated from Oral Roberts in 1995 with a Bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering. While at Oral Roberts, Wells taught himself to play the guitar and has written a number of messianic Christian worship songs.
In September 1998, Wells enrolled in Regent University Law School and Divinity School. He left Regent University in December 2000 and moved to his wife's hometown Coon Rapids, Minnesota, to concentrate on his growing family.
Post athletic career
In September 2003, Renward moved back to The Bahamas and began working for The Government of The Bahamas in the Ministry of Works and Transport as a mechanical engineer.
Since returning home to The Bahamas, he has become politically active, discussing and debating many social issues and has become a member of the Executive Steering Committee of the National Development Party (NDP), a political party he was instrumental in helping to form in 2008. He became the deputy chairman of the executive steering committee in October 2009 and chairman on 5 April 2010.
The NDP was the first party in the Bahamas to allow every member of the party the right to vote for the leadership team and officers of the party. The NDP held a nationally televised debate between the nominees for the leadership on 17 November 2010. On 29 November 2010, Wells was elected the first leader of the National Development Party at the party's first convention. In 2011, however, he was one of several NDP members who defected to the Progressive Liberal Party, following a schism in the party as the new Democratic National Alliance began drawing away some of the NDP's support.[4] Wells was elected to the Parliament of the Bahamas as a PLP member in the 2012 election.
Wells is married to Sarah Cathleen Wells and the couple have five children; Sethren, Sasha, Sierra, Soren and Soraya. Sarah is a stay-at-home mom and the Wells' children are all homeschooled.
References
- ↑ Commonwealth All-Time Lists (Men)
- ↑ IAAF News N.61 April 2003, p.7: 2003 POSITIVE CASES IN ATHLETICS, SANCTIONED DEFINITIVELY, ACCORDING TO INFORMATION RECEIVED BY THE IAAF AS OF 30 April 2003
- ↑ Bahamas suspend Wells, The Telegraph India, 25 October 2002
- ↑ "The Rise & Fall of The NDP Part 3 – The Final Betrayal". Straight Talk Bahamas.
External links
- Renward Wells profile at IAAF