LAZY BOYZ LABEL? - Are Caribbean footballers stuck with a stigma overseas?
GORDON WILLIAMS, Contributor
( L - R ) Andy Williams, Tyrone Marshall - file
Players admit hearing about it. A few were asked directly. And at least one is sure it exists, claiming it has followed him during his career.
A stigma, labelling Caribbean footballers as lazy and undisciplined has been making the rounds of overseas professional football clubs for years, especially in North America, according to some of the game's insiders. The tag, they said, hurts players from the region, including Jamaicans, seeking contracts.
The insiders claim word has spread that some club officials believe Jamaicans and others from the Caribbean are unwilling to work hard and make sacrifices necessary to succeed, despite the record of accomplishments earned by countries and players past and present.
"It's just something that goes around, that Caribbean players are lazy," said Andy Williams, a Jamaica international midfielder who has played with six different United States Major League Soccer teams during a decade in the MLS, North America's top competition.
Williams is not the only one who claims to know about it.
"On a whole it's true to some extent," said national defender Shavar Thomas, now in his second season with Chivas USA after playing with three other MLS clubs over four years. "I've heard it."
Fellow Reggae Boy Tyrone Marshall, a 10-year MLS veteran, said he too is aware of the tag.
"I think they (clubs) underrate (Caribbean players)," explained the Toronto F.C. defender. "I don't think they give them any rating."
Closely scrutinised
A recent check showed more than a dozen Caribbean-born players on MLS rosters preparing for the 2008 season, which begins this month. Many on that list, among them five born in Jamaica, either migrated early to the U.S. with family or left the Caribbean after high school on scholarships to attend American Universities where they were closely scrutinised. But players seeking to leave directly from the Caribbean to join clubs may not have that opportunity.
"The coaches or teams don't scout in the Caribbean," said Williams. "They'd rather go to Europe or South America."
Yet some football insiders are not ready to blame the so-called stigma solely for the absence of larger numbers of Caribbean players in the MLS or other North American leagues.
I don't know," said Clyde Jureidini, general manager of Harbour View Football Club, who has negotiated with American clubs over the years. "That has not been said to me."
Jureidini believes the clubs' marketing strategy influences where they recruit. U.S. clubs target American-born players first, he offered as an example, because their fans are more easily drawn to them. From there, he added, clubs may select players who will attract particular fans in the region they are located. For example, a club like Chivas USA, which has Thomas on its roster, is likely to target Hispanic players because the club is a spin-off from a club in Mexico and located in California, which shares the Mexican border and has a huge Hispanic population.
"They tend to recruit less from the Caribbean side because the Caribbean fan base in the U.S. is smaller," Jureidini explained.
However, Williams, who was raised in Jamaica but attended school in the U.S. before turning pro, said he discovered the "lazy" tag had been pinned on him, which forced him into a career-long battle to shake it off.
"That's my stigma in this league," he said. "But every coach I've had says the opposite."
"They use the term, that Caribbean players are sometimes lazy, not motivated, too laid back," explained Marshall, who said he was approached years ago by a club official who asked about the stigma attached to a player from the region. "That's why they don't really pursue the Caribbean players."
Yet Williams and Marshall said that, based on their experiences in the MLS, the stigma is not based on fact and both backed the efforts of their colleagues from the region even if they sometimes don't pay off.
"Every Caribbean player who comes here works his tail off," Williams said, "but they (the clubs) just pick somebody else."
"Caribbean players work hard," added Marshall.
Personally affected
MLS club officials contacted for this story also denied the stigma exists, at least within their organisation. One official, who did not want to be quoted, pointed to the make-up of his club's roster past and present as proof that Caribbean players were always welcome. At least one coach flatly declared that the nationality of the player did not influence whether or not he is signed.
"I don't think as a coach you look at stigmas," said Tom Soehn, of D.C. United of the MLS. "You look to make your team better ... I think we evaluate each individual."
Some Caribbean players in the league claim they have not been personally affected by any stigma. Thomas, for example, now in his second season at Chivas USA, said he was embraced by the club, coaches and fans from day one.
"It's amazing to me, the response I get from them," he said recalling last season.
But the label that the people of the region carry a "no problem", laid back attitude on and off the field, may have already done some damage, football insiders claim. Despite saying he had no proof that Jamaican players acted "lazy" when contracted overseas, Jureidini believes the perception could exist.
Not working hard
"I am speculating that that is a mindset, that Jamaican and Caribbean players are lazy, undisciplined and aggressive," explained the Harbour View G.M., who offered a list of players, including Marshall, Wolde Harris, Fabian Taylor, Anthony McCreath and Damani Ralph who represented his club and the MLS, but were never accused of not working hard.
"In my mind that is not so."
There is also suspicion that several Caribbean-grown players, who actually made it into North American leagues, did not stay long because the clubs were not pleased with their attitude. A few seasons ago one player, who has represented his Caribbean nation, said he was criticised by an MLS coach for not playing hard, even after he showed the club that injuries to his feet prevented him from being at his best. Word also circulated that a couple Jamaicans did not show the right attitude and were not signed or re-signed by their North American clubs.
"There may have been a few bad apples which may have given (the clubs) that view and that carries weight in the league," Marshall said.
So, despite the recent success of teams from the region, for example World Cup berths for Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago over the last decade, professional teams are more likely to look elsewhere for talent.
While the MLS offers a genuine professional option, more Caribbean players prefer to play in Europe, particularly Great Britain. The pay and competition is generally better there and more clubs mean more potential offers.
Yet Williams, who has had tryouts with clubs in Europe, said the problem of the stigma is not limited to North America. He also believes it will not go away soon.
"It's just politics and I don't think you're going to get rid of it," he explained. "They don't have faith in people like us."
Meanwhile, players believe the Caribbean has undeservedly suffered from the stigma.
"I don't think that's fair," said Marshall.
Gordon Williams is a Jamaican journalist based in the United States.
GORDON WILLIAMS, Contributor
( L - R ) Andy Williams, Tyrone Marshall - file
Players admit hearing about it. A few were asked directly. And at least one is sure it exists, claiming it has followed him during his career.
A stigma, labelling Caribbean footballers as lazy and undisciplined has been making the rounds of overseas professional football clubs for years, especially in North America, according to some of the game's insiders. The tag, they said, hurts players from the region, including Jamaicans, seeking contracts.
The insiders claim word has spread that some club officials believe Jamaicans and others from the Caribbean are unwilling to work hard and make sacrifices necessary to succeed, despite the record of accomplishments earned by countries and players past and present.
"It's just something that goes around, that Caribbean players are lazy," said Andy Williams, a Jamaica international midfielder who has played with six different United States Major League Soccer teams during a decade in the MLS, North America's top competition.
Williams is not the only one who claims to know about it.
"On a whole it's true to some extent," said national defender Shavar Thomas, now in his second season with Chivas USA after playing with three other MLS clubs over four years. "I've heard it."
Fellow Reggae Boy Tyrone Marshall, a 10-year MLS veteran, said he too is aware of the tag.
"I think they (clubs) underrate (Caribbean players)," explained the Toronto F.C. defender. "I don't think they give them any rating."
Closely scrutinised
A recent check showed more than a dozen Caribbean-born players on MLS rosters preparing for the 2008 season, which begins this month. Many on that list, among them five born in Jamaica, either migrated early to the U.S. with family or left the Caribbean after high school on scholarships to attend American Universities where they were closely scrutinised. But players seeking to leave directly from the Caribbean to join clubs may not have that opportunity.
"The coaches or teams don't scout in the Caribbean," said Williams. "They'd rather go to Europe or South America."
Yet some football insiders are not ready to blame the so-called stigma solely for the absence of larger numbers of Caribbean players in the MLS or other North American leagues.
I don't know," said Clyde Jureidini, general manager of Harbour View Football Club, who has negotiated with American clubs over the years. "That has not been said to me."
Jureidini believes the clubs' marketing strategy influences where they recruit. U.S. clubs target American-born players first, he offered as an example, because their fans are more easily drawn to them. From there, he added, clubs may select players who will attract particular fans in the region they are located. For example, a club like Chivas USA, which has Thomas on its roster, is likely to target Hispanic players because the club is a spin-off from a club in Mexico and located in California, which shares the Mexican border and has a huge Hispanic population.
"They tend to recruit less from the Caribbean side because the Caribbean fan base in the U.S. is smaller," Jureidini explained.
However, Williams, who was raised in Jamaica but attended school in the U.S. before turning pro, said he discovered the "lazy" tag had been pinned on him, which forced him into a career-long battle to shake it off.
"That's my stigma in this league," he said. "But every coach I've had says the opposite."
"They use the term, that Caribbean players are sometimes lazy, not motivated, too laid back," explained Marshall, who said he was approached years ago by a club official who asked about the stigma attached to a player from the region. "That's why they don't really pursue the Caribbean players."
Yet Williams and Marshall said that, based on their experiences in the MLS, the stigma is not based on fact and both backed the efforts of their colleagues from the region even if they sometimes don't pay off.
"Every Caribbean player who comes here works his tail off," Williams said, "but they (the clubs) just pick somebody else."
"Caribbean players work hard," added Marshall.
Personally affected
MLS club officials contacted for this story also denied the stigma exists, at least within their organisation. One official, who did not want to be quoted, pointed to the make-up of his club's roster past and present as proof that Caribbean players were always welcome. At least one coach flatly declared that the nationality of the player did not influence whether or not he is signed.
"I don't think as a coach you look at stigmas," said Tom Soehn, of D.C. United of the MLS. "You look to make your team better ... I think we evaluate each individual."
Some Caribbean players in the league claim they have not been personally affected by any stigma. Thomas, for example, now in his second season at Chivas USA, said he was embraced by the club, coaches and fans from day one.
"It's amazing to me, the response I get from them," he said recalling last season.
But the label that the people of the region carry a "no problem", laid back attitude on and off the field, may have already done some damage, football insiders claim. Despite saying he had no proof that Jamaican players acted "lazy" when contracted overseas, Jureidini believes the perception could exist.
Not working hard
"I am speculating that that is a mindset, that Jamaican and Caribbean players are lazy, undisciplined and aggressive," explained the Harbour View G.M., who offered a list of players, including Marshall, Wolde Harris, Fabian Taylor, Anthony McCreath and Damani Ralph who represented his club and the MLS, but were never accused of not working hard.
"In my mind that is not so."
There is also suspicion that several Caribbean-grown players, who actually made it into North American leagues, did not stay long because the clubs were not pleased with their attitude. A few seasons ago one player, who has represented his Caribbean nation, said he was criticised by an MLS coach for not playing hard, even after he showed the club that injuries to his feet prevented him from being at his best. Word also circulated that a couple Jamaicans did not show the right attitude and were not signed or re-signed by their North American clubs.
"There may have been a few bad apples which may have given (the clubs) that view and that carries weight in the league," Marshall said.
So, despite the recent success of teams from the region, for example World Cup berths for Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago over the last decade, professional teams are more likely to look elsewhere for talent.
While the MLS offers a genuine professional option, more Caribbean players prefer to play in Europe, particularly Great Britain. The pay and competition is generally better there and more clubs mean more potential offers.
Yet Williams, who has had tryouts with clubs in Europe, said the problem of the stigma is not limited to North America. He also believes it will not go away soon.
"It's just politics and I don't think you're going to get rid of it," he explained. "They don't have faith in people like us."
Meanwhile, players believe the Caribbean has undeservedly suffered from the stigma.
"I don't think that's fair," said Marshall.
Gordon Williams is a Jamaican journalist based in the United States.
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