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Key clash for Young Boyz in Caribbean football union youth

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  • Key clash for Young Boyz in Caribbean football union youth

    Key clash for Young Boyz in Caribbean football union youth championships
    published: Wednesday | August 23, 2006

    Paul-Andre Walker, Staff Reporter


    JAMAICA'S UNDER-17 footballers will start today's game 90 minutes away from making sure they at least find themselves in the third and fourth play-off of the Caribbean Football Union Youth Championships being held in Trinidad and Tobago.

    The Young Reggae Boyz will run on to the Dwight Yorke Stadium pitch to face Panama, having already dispatched Canada in impressive fashion to lead the Group B quarter-finalists on goal difference.

    Behind the eight-ball

    Panama are behind the eight-ball having already lost to Mexico in a closely contested 2-1 game.

    Despite that, Panama are still expected to offer a stiff challenge to the Jamaicans but coach David Hunt has said that his team is relishing the opportunity to face them before the CONCACAF qualifiers.

    "I'm happy for the change made by the CFU because it gives us the opportunity to match up against the teams we will be playing against them in the CONCACAF qualifiers so, to me, it is a blessing in disguise," Hunt had said after his team's 3-0 thrashing of Canada.

    While Jamaica are on a high, they have not forgotten that this game is still a must-win because they don't want to have to beat Mexico to make their way into the final.

    A victory in today's 3:00 p.m. fixture could mean Jamaica only need a draw against Mexico to top the group. However, they will still have to await the result of the Mexico/Canada match-up.

    The format of the competition dictates that the top teams from the two-group quarter-finals will play against each other in the final.

    Five remaining


    The second-placed teams from each group will face-off against each other in a third and fourth place play-off. The top CFU team, of which there are five remaining (Suriname, Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago, Haiti and Jamaica), will vie for the top CFU spot.

    The top two teams from the region will automatically qualify for the CONCACAF qualifiers. Jamaica, however, have already qualified for that tournament as CFU defending champions.

    In other results out of the championships, Trinidad and Tobago drew their first quarter-final match against Barbados 1-1 while Haiti dismantled Suriname in a 7-1 affair

  • #2
    RE: Key clash for Young Boyz in Caribbean football union youth

    mi see men quiet about wha hunt say

    Comment


    • #3
      RE: Key clash for Young Boyz in Caribbean football union youth

      Is not everybody can keep it real .... worse dem fraid a backlash from Jack.
      "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

      Comment


      • #4
        RE: Key clash for Young Boyz in Caribbean football union youth

        r u for real? dirt is devoid of essential vitamins required for brain power! change yuh diet!

        Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

        Comment


        • #5
          RE: Key clash for Young Boyz in Caribbean football union youth

          lazie yuh cyar done eh easy he is happy for the change

          Comment


          • #6
            RE: Key clash for Young Boyz in Caribbean football union youth

            Mi accept the change ... just wondering when it will happen again. Hope yuh know this isn't the first time.
            "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

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