The Jeezas Chronicles V1
Schäfer Laments Poor Local League
Published: Thursday | February 27, 2014
Jamaica Football Fereration (JFF) president, Captain Horace Burrell (left), speaks to national men's senior football head coach Winfried Schäfer, during a press conference at the JFF office in New Kingston on Tuesday. - Winston Sill/Freelance Photographer
National senior men's team coach Winfried Schäfer has lamented the poor standard of football in Jamaica's local leagues, indicating poor conditions of pitches across the island and sparse communication between club and country to be two of the major factors.
"Everybody knows our fields in the league are a catastrophe," Schäfer told members of the media at the Jamaica Football Federation headquarters on Tuesday.
"I don't know one ground in the league where you can play one-touch, two-touch football; every time you must stop the ball because it goes here and there like a billiard. We cannot change this by ourselves, we need help from outside - maybe our sponsors."
The German coach, who took over following the dismissal of former Reggae Boy Theodore Whitmore, during Jamaica's failed bid to qualify for this summer's FIFA World Cup in Brazil, believes the country must begin from scratch in analysing where the programme failed, with an improvement in the overall standard of the local league as a major factor to be considered. Schäfer pointed to the comparatively strong leagues in the United States, Mexico and Honduras as reasons they were able to separate themselves during the qualifiers and eventually book a spot at the World Cup.
FALLEN TO SECOND TIER
"Jamaica's football has fallen into the second tier here in CONCACAF," Schäfer said, pointing to not only the club's elimination from the qualifiers, but also the recent failure to reach the CONCACAF Gold Cup after a dismal performance in the most recent edition of the Caribbean Cup.
"At the moment we have a big problem. I have seen many matches in the league and it will not be easy," Schäfer said.
"The national team is a mirror of the league. When you see the league in Germany it's fantastic, and our team is number two in the world. In Spain, the league is fantastic, with lots of players coming from the youth (teams) in Barcelona. Spain is number one, the French the same.
"The question is, how can we make our league better to make our national team better; when you have good players in the league our national team is better. Our coaches in the league are responsible for our local players. We must help these coaches; meet with the clubs, coaches and chairmen, find out what are their problems, find out what we can do."
Schäfer Laments Poor Local League
Published: Thursday | February 27, 2014
Jamaica Football Fereration (JFF) president, Captain Horace Burrell (left), speaks to national men's senior football head coach Winfried Schäfer, during a press conference at the JFF office in New Kingston on Tuesday. - Winston Sill/Freelance Photographer
National senior men's team coach Winfried Schäfer has lamented the poor standard of football in Jamaica's local leagues, indicating poor conditions of pitches across the island and sparse communication between club and country to be two of the major factors.
"Everybody knows our fields in the league are a catastrophe," Schäfer told members of the media at the Jamaica Football Federation headquarters on Tuesday.
"I don't know one ground in the league where you can play one-touch, two-touch football; every time you must stop the ball because it goes here and there like a billiard. We cannot change this by ourselves, we need help from outside - maybe our sponsors."
The German coach, who took over following the dismissal of former Reggae Boy Theodore Whitmore, during Jamaica's failed bid to qualify for this summer's FIFA World Cup in Brazil, believes the country must begin from scratch in analysing where the programme failed, with an improvement in the overall standard of the local league as a major factor to be considered. Schäfer pointed to the comparatively strong leagues in the United States, Mexico and Honduras as reasons they were able to separate themselves during the qualifiers and eventually book a spot at the World Cup.
FALLEN TO SECOND TIER
"Jamaica's football has fallen into the second tier here in CONCACAF," Schäfer said, pointing to not only the club's elimination from the qualifiers, but also the recent failure to reach the CONCACAF Gold Cup after a dismal performance in the most recent edition of the Caribbean Cup.
"At the moment we have a big problem. I have seen many matches in the league and it will not be easy," Schäfer said.
"The national team is a mirror of the league. When you see the league in Germany it's fantastic, and our team is number two in the world. In Spain, the league is fantastic, with lots of players coming from the youth (teams) in Barcelona. Spain is number one, the French the same.
"The question is, how can we make our league better to make our national team better; when you have good players in the league our national team is better. Our coaches in the league are responsible for our local players. We must help these coaches; meet with the clubs, coaches and chairmen, find out what are their problems, find out what we can do."
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