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  • TT vs England June 1

    Maturana faces Yorker
    ...Warner tests coach's selection philosophy

    Lasana Liburd
    Sunday, February 17th 2008

    Experienced football observers may tell you that although goals win matches, they are rarely the turning points. Rather, the decisive strike is the inevitable outcome of a subtle or obvious catalyst that will probably go unnoticed in the following day's match report.

    Similarly, off the playing field, crucial life-altering decisions are rarely made on examination day.

    New Trinidad and Tobago football coach Francisco Maturana faces his own test of nerve this June. There will be no points at stake-not the kind you can tabulate. It will not be his November 19 or November 15 showdown. It is potentially even more important.

    On June 1, the England FA have apparently agreed in principle to face the "Soca Warriors" in T&T's most eagerly anticipated friendly since Pele's Santos visited Port of Spain in 1972.

    FIFA vice-president and Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation (T&TFF) special adviser Jack Warner is the brains behind the fixture and is understandably eager to make it an unforgettable afternoon. So, as Warner told T&TFF media officer Shaun Fuentes last week, the retired pair of Warriors World Cup captain Dwight Yorke and midfield icon Russell Latapy-arguably the nation's most popular and gifted player-could could be invited to feature as "guest players".

    Maturana, a Colombian who coached his native country at two World Cups, has barely been on the job for a month but he already forcibly made one point and it is about the benefit of youth.

    In his first game in charge on Ash Wednesday, Maturana selected 18-year-old CL Financial San Juan Jabloteh player Khaleem Hyland from the start ahead of, among others, his 31-year-old Jabloteh captain Trent Noel and 32-year-old Neal & Massy Caledonia AIA star Marvin Oliver.

    There are six teenagers and four schoolboys in the squad for his next outing, which comes on March 19 against El Salvador.

    Warner, albeit inadvertently, could undermine the coach's philosophy with two celebrated invitees.

    And now, it is up to Maturana to show his squad and, less importantly, the nation who is really in charge for the 2010 World Cup push. The friendly showing might have more bearing on Trinidad and Tobago's qualification chances than one might think.

    In 1996, a document that supposedly disclosed tactical suggestions from Warner to then head coach Zoran Vranes-the affable Yugoslavia-born coach is back in Trinidad as national youth team director-was leaked to the media in the aftermath of a 1-0 qualifying loss to Costa Rica.

    Another former coach, Vibe CT 105 W Connection boss Stuart Charles-Fevrier, was loudly interrogated about team tactics and selection in his hotel room after a 2-0 loss away to Morocco on September 10, 2003. At least one senior player overheard his boss on the defensive and word spread that the coach, rightly or not, was not his own man.

    Neither Fevrier nor Vranes lasted long after their embarrassments, while tales of national coaches who were "advised" to switch mobile phones on at half time in case the special adviser had an instruction are famous in local circles.

    The last two national coaches were tested, too.
    Dutchman Leo Beenhakker resisted when the T&TFF suggested that former stars Russell Latapy and David Nakhid work as his assistant coaches-Nakhid eventually accepted a position as a scout.

    When Latapy, at 37, did come back to the fold after discussions with Warner and was trumpeted as a returning hero, Beenhakker quickly pointed out that the "Little Magician" was not guaranteed a squad place for the upcoming qualifier against Guatemala.

    Latapy did play and helped inspire Trinidad and Tobago's victory but there was no doubt as to who was calling the shots. On November 15, 2005, with World Cup history at stake, the Dutchman omitted Latapy from the starting line-up and even shunted Yorke to left wing so as to maximise the potential of an in-form Aurtis Whitley.

    At Germany 2006, Beenhakker ignored armchair coaches and special advisers by leaving Latapy on the sidelines for most of the nation's World Cup appearance. It was a controversial decision, particularly as Latapy shone when he was introduced against Paraguay, but the strong team spirit Beenhakker inspired by the force of his personality is indisputable.

    His compatriot and successor, Wim Rijsbergen, never recovered after having his selection policy dictated to by the T&TFF's infamous "blacklist".
    Maturana's own informal test date is set, although fans might argue it is a storm in a teacup.

    Yorke and Latapy have done more for Trinidad and Tobago football than most over the past two decades. Both still compete at high levels too and, important for the T&TFF, can add glamour to a high-profile occasion.
    Latapy did not get the chance to face England at the 2006 World Cup.

    Yorke, who spent most of his career in England, will be tempted to cross swords again with contemporaries like Steven Gerrard and Wayne Rooney.
    But what signal would Maturana send to his own squad by using his most testing warm-up as a fete match?

    How do you explain to the likes of Hyland, who came close to a Premiership move to Portsmouth last summer, and Keon Daniel that they must miss the game of their lives thus far so two retired players can have a sweat?

    And, more importantly, how does Maturana convince his players that it is he and not Warner who will decide their short-term international ambitions?

    Yorke is 36 and a regular player for Sunderland in the England Premier League-one of the most competitive domestic competitions in the world. At present, he is surely still worth a place in the team if he chooses.
    He will be 38 by the time the 2010 tournament kicks off, though, and, almost certainly, would have retired or accepted employment in a less strenuous league.

    Were Yorke to pledge his services to Maturana, it would be an interesting and welcome dilemma. But he is yet to do so.

    Latapy turns 40 in August and signs suggest that the curtain is about to be lowered on a memorable career. The Falkirk player has not started a Scotland Premiership fixture since January 2 and played for the entire 90 minutes just three times since last July.

    Maturana need only look to the opposite bench, this June, for the wisdom of pragmatism over sentiment.

    England's new coach, Italian Fabio Capello, ignored pleas from the England Football Association's sponsors and fans to hand David Beckham his 100th cap in a friendly against Switzerland on February 6. Capello refused and explained that he picked his squad solely for football reasons.
    Beenhakker would concur.

    What say you, Maturana?
    Last edited by Karl; February 17, 2008, 10:40 AM.

  • #2
    Yuh see wha coaches does have to go through i hope we rid ourselves of warner

    Comment


    • #3
      Think about it Naminart.

      FACT: Jack 'the ripper' Warner = T&T football.

      No Jack Warner...no T&T Football.

      Don't believe me? Then ask Cap'n Horace Burrell
      The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

      HL

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by HL View Post
        Think about it Naminart.

        FACT: Jack 'the ripper' Warner = T&T football.

        No Jack Warner...no T&T Football.

        Don't believe me? Then ask Cap'n Horace Burrell



        This is where you and fellow jamaicans are fooled badly.... Jack waner needs trinidad football we dont need him ......... all he does is take fifa money allocated to us.. He does not care about our football you aint see how he treated the world cup players

        Burrell tried to regain power twice when voted out off office , at least that can heppen in jamaica in trinidad there is no such thing a no confidence motion



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        • #5
          A Caribbean Conundrum
          By Andrew Jennings (Sunday Herald)


          February 16, 2008

          SECURITY WILL be on maximum alert at Zurich airport when a bizarre delegation descends for talks with Fifa bosses this month. The Federal police will assiduously search the baggage of former jailbird Patrick John, the man Jack Warner remains determined to impose on football in the Caribbean island of Dominica and check the criminal records of his entourage - just in case.

          Last time John attempted a coup in Dominica he enlisted some odd allies. He'd been ousted from the prime minister's residence in 1979, branded "corrupt and tyrannical" and accused by the BBC of secretly planning to bust oil sanctions on South Africa.

          Look up John in America's news archives and what do you find clustered around his name? Mentions of brothels, drug-runners, arms dealers, white supremacists - and the gallows.

          FBI agents told a court in New Orleans in 1981 that the heavily-armed Ku Klux Klansmen clutching an authentic Nazi swastika flag that they'd arrested on a marina were about to sail for Dominica to oust the recently-elected government and restore John to power.

          Money for the jaunt was provided by "Chuckles" Yanover, a Mob enforcer keen to set up a "free port" with unregulated gambling. Chuckles and his pals called their enterprise Operation Red Dog. Once they were trucked off to prison, the Louisiana Feds renamed it "Bayou of Pigs".

          Ex-premier John didn't fare much better in Dominica. After an abortive coup left a policeman dead, he was jailed for 12 years. The judge said John was prepared to sell Dominica to foreigners "to satisfy his lust for power". The army chief who backed him was hanged.

          In 1990 John was released. Two years later he took over local football and his climb back to power was paralleled by Warner's rise in Caribbean football politics. After John was ousted from Dominican football in 2006, Warner elevated his ally to football's regional Hall of Fame.

          It's been a rocky ride for the man who replaced him.

          The association has been disrupted, president Dexter Francis told me, "by a faction of Warner loyalists, led by Patrick John, constantly making allegations". Meetings were ambushed with procedural wrangling and that meant Francis couldn't manage the association - so Warner had to intervene. He flew in from Trinidad three weeks ago on a few hours' notice and ousted Francis, unilaterally imposing a junta of his choosing.

          Warner's parting words were definitive. "This proposal I am sending to Fifa tonight will be accepted. It will be accepted."

          It wasn't. England's Geoff Thompson, chair of Fifa's Associations Committee, ignored Warner's appointees and announced he "fully recognises the democratically and rightfully elected president Mr Dexter Francis and his board as being in charge of the DFA".

          But new general secretary, Jerome Valcke, (the same Valcke who Fifa president Sepp Blatter accused back in 2001 of trying to "blackmail certain gentlemen of Fifa") isn't likely to stand up to Warner.

          It doesn't matter to Valcke that Warner rigs Fifa congress elections, ripped off his national squad when they returned from the World Cup and was damned by Fifa's former Ethics Committee for his trading in World Cup tickets. That committee was disbanded and replaced by Lord Coe and his nearly all-new ethics committee. He's received a complaint from Dominican football about Warner's antics - but has so far remained silent.

          Valcke has invited the legitimate president Francis and the discredited John to Zurich before the end of the month for a chat. John is said to be a "representative" of something. But of what? The Klan? If Francis doesn't concede something to former felon John, Dominica is still under the threat of being suspended from Fifa.

          Valcke has given the green light to Warner to continue sabotaging Dominica until the country bows and gives power to John. Warner, after being snubbed by Thompson, had been expected to continue his campaign against England staging the 2018 World Cup so what can we make of this week's remarks backing England's bid? What will be Warner's price to change his mind

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