Jamaica’s bobsled pilot wants the team known beyond ‘Cool Runnings’ Today Us News


By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — Monday would have been a fantastic day for fishing in Jamaica. The weather was just about perfect with bright sunshine, forecasters calling for temperatures in the low-to-mid 80s, somewhat calm breezes.

Under normal circumstances, Shane Pitter probably would have been on the water.

He was on frozen water instead at the Milan Cortina Games.

Jamaica’s next chapter of bobsled history is being written, and at the forefront of the story is the 26-year-old Pitter — someone whose “real job” is being a fisherman, and someone who has gained quite a bit of notoriety for making videos about his fishing exploits. Along the way, he and Jamaica somehow discovered that he’s got tons of promise as a bobsled pilot as well.

“We’ve got a lot of young athletes on the team and coming on the team,” Pitter said. “It’s still a development stage. Even though we are young athletes, we are the best athletes Jamaica ever had in bobsled.”

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Jamaica’s Shane Pitter, right, and Junior Harris start for a two man bobsled run at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, Monday, Feb. 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

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These Olympics are the ninth with Jamaica competing in the bobsled events, a stretch that started — as probably most everyone on the planet knows — at Calgary in 1988 with the team that inspired the “Cool Runnings” movie. It still rings true now: think Jamaica bobsled, think “Cool Runnings.”

The Jamaicans don’t mind. Perhaps more accurately, they understand.

“It’s OK for them coming up to me and asking me about ‘Cool Runnings’ and the history and so forth,” brakeman Junior Harris said. “It is nice to interact with the fans, you know. And I’m going to give them every minute I have, when I have time, apart from doing the sport. I’m going to always be there to talk to them.”

Jamaica has never finished better than 14th in an Olympic bobsled race and that might not change in Cortina; Pitter and Harris were 23rd out of 26 sleds in the first two heats of Monday’s two-man race, one that’ll conclude on Tuesday. Mica Moore was 15th going into the final two heats of the women’s monobob event on Monday night.

Olympic medals are still the dream — but are a long way off. And funding is a massive issue, as has always been the case: Moore, a one-time bobsledder for Britain, said she spent more than 40,000 pounds ($54,500 USD) to fund her Olympic season, simply because there is no other funding available.

“It’s a very expensive sport, and that’s me doing the season on a cheap budget,” Moore said. “We’ve got the heart and we’ve got the drive, and as long as you’ve got that, you make things happen.”

She sees the potential in Pitter.

“All I do know about Shane is he just loves driving bobsleds,” Moore said. “Like, if we have a day off, he’s like, ‘I just want to get back on the ice.’ I’m like, ‘OK, Shane, let’s just have a day. We need a day.’ He is invested in it. And as long as the program can keep supporting him and he’s going to do great.”

Pitter might be the one who can find a way to someday make a realistic push toward Jamaica bobsledding being celebrated for something other than the movie. He picked up 10 medals this season on the North American Cup circuit, with eight of them gold on what’s basically become the team’s de facto home track in Lake Placid, New York.

“He might be the best young pilot we’ve had,” Jamaica bobsled federation president Chris Stokes said earlier this year.


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