‘A soldier gone home’…. The Jamaica Football Federation salutes the life and work of George Oliver Thompson, well known as ‘George T’, considered by many to be the most successful schoolboy coach in the history of Jamaica’s football.
His successful coaching of the 1964 Kingston College team to victory at the Manning Cup, Olivier Shield and Walker Cup levels and his subsequent repeat of this in 1965 & 1975 has always remained uppermost in the minds of football fans over the years. This as well as his marshalling of the National Schoolboy Team against a Brazilian Under 23 team to a highly respected drawn game in 1964.
Coach George Thompson not only excelled at the school boy level but was indeed a national coach, including coaching national senior, junior teams; at the club level including Arnett Gardens and the Jamaica Defence Force.
George is also specially well respected because so many of those he coached have become successful at an academic and professional level that it confirms that he had a profound and all-round impact on the very many lives he touched.
Truly altruistic, selfless and humble and the type of coach who players ‘played for’ is the unanimous description of most of his peers and those who indeed played for and under his stewardship.
George was an all-round sportsman, being a founding member of the renowned Gibson Relays.
On behalf of the Federation, the President Captain Horace Burrell extends sincerest condolences to his immediate family, as well as all his peers, the players he coached who hold him in the highest esteem, the entire football fraternity and the many care givers who attended to him during the years of his illness.
Captain Burrell comments “George Thompson will remain an icon of monumental proportion in the nation’s football history. His place in the hall of fame in the sport is very well secured. May his soul rest in peace and life perpetual shine upon him”.
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