Yesterday, I watched the teams play an early morning scrimmage. The senior team had enough players to bring a new team on for the second half. The U20s did not have that luxury.
I think LA Reid scored for the U20s. Keammar scored a freekick for the seniors. Wasn't a great kick but the goalie flubbed it.
Anyway, all the players were on show. First team for the seniors had the likes of Maestro, Shavar, Lovel, Jason Morrison, Tuffy Anderson, Dicoy Williams, Lamar Nelson and others. Second team had Keammar, Omar Cummings, Ryan Johnson, Andrae Campbell, Bibi Gardner, Rohan Reid, and others.
Bibi looks decent for someone not playing competitive football, and so did Keammar, but only decent. Both looked a little slow, but at least they looked trim.
U20s looked good. They kept the ball and moved it around well. I thought Zhelano Barnes and LA Reid were good.
To be fair, the seniors had most of the ball but they did not look very penetrative unless a certain Maestro was on the field. Jermaine Hue is able to make forward passes look so easy, while others were passing the ball backwards or square.
For me, the local players looked at least as good as those who flew in. I know Stoni will not be impressed. His position is that these foreign-based players have learnt to deal with and have overcome adversity in all its different forms, and have become battle-hardened because of that. Those are the guys we need, with their steely resolve, commitment and temperament when we face the teams in the Hex.
Stoni, ever stopped to think what the local players are made of? One of the U20 ballas told me yesterday after the scrimmage that the night before, at around 10 PM, there was a shooting in his neighbourhood. Somebody had picked up 14 shots. Police came thru shortly after and searched his home among others. He explained to them he was a national footballer, flashing his accreditation badge from the recent tournament and showing them his football boots and gear. No, he is not a suspect, although one could say every 17 year old in that community is always a suspect.
Yes, I know some of our foreign ballers went thru some tough times here before having to take on new challenges abroad – snow, racism, homesickness, etc. But I will continue to try and look at the footballers purely for what they can give me on the field without too much consideration for what trials and tribulations brought them to where they are now.
What we need are some friendlies before the real thing starts. That is what will help me to decide who has a steely resolve and who doesn’t.
Trust me, many of the foreigners failed to distinguish themselves from the locals, including the U20s. Hue was the best player out there by far, thinking the game, making great passes, coming up into attack, shooting at goal. Morrison was busy. (I’m going to stick with those who did well, instead of those identifying those who did badly.) Thought Rohan Reid did well, providing support and making passes.
I think LA Reid scored for the U20s. Keammar scored a freekick for the seniors. Wasn't a great kick but the goalie flubbed it.
Anyway, all the players were on show. First team for the seniors had the likes of Maestro, Shavar, Lovel, Jason Morrison, Tuffy Anderson, Dicoy Williams, Lamar Nelson and others. Second team had Keammar, Omar Cummings, Ryan Johnson, Andrae Campbell, Bibi Gardner, Rohan Reid, and others.
Bibi looks decent for someone not playing competitive football, and so did Keammar, but only decent. Both looked a little slow, but at least they looked trim.
U20s looked good. They kept the ball and moved it around well. I thought Zhelano Barnes and LA Reid were good.
To be fair, the seniors had most of the ball but they did not look very penetrative unless a certain Maestro was on the field. Jermaine Hue is able to make forward passes look so easy, while others were passing the ball backwards or square.
For me, the local players looked at least as good as those who flew in. I know Stoni will not be impressed. His position is that these foreign-based players have learnt to deal with and have overcome adversity in all its different forms, and have become battle-hardened because of that. Those are the guys we need, with their steely resolve, commitment and temperament when we face the teams in the Hex.
Stoni, ever stopped to think what the local players are made of? One of the U20 ballas told me yesterday after the scrimmage that the night before, at around 10 PM, there was a shooting in his neighbourhood. Somebody had picked up 14 shots. Police came thru shortly after and searched his home among others. He explained to them he was a national footballer, flashing his accreditation badge from the recent tournament and showing them his football boots and gear. No, he is not a suspect, although one could say every 17 year old in that community is always a suspect.
Yes, I know some of our foreign ballers went thru some tough times here before having to take on new challenges abroad – snow, racism, homesickness, etc. But I will continue to try and look at the footballers purely for what they can give me on the field without too much consideration for what trials and tribulations brought them to where they are now.
What we need are some friendlies before the real thing starts. That is what will help me to decide who has a steely resolve and who doesn’t.
Trust me, many of the foreigners failed to distinguish themselves from the locals, including the U20s. Hue was the best player out there by far, thinking the game, making great passes, coming up into attack, shooting at goal. Morrison was busy. (I’m going to stick with those who did well, instead of those identifying those who did badly.) Thought Rohan Reid did well, providing support and making passes.
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