Let's all hail Harbour View FC
Saturday, May 19, 2007
The recent 2007 ICC Cricket World Cup in the Caribbean overshadowed much else in local sport.
So it is that the triumph of Harbour View Football Club in the 2006/07 Wray & Nephew National Premier League for only the second time in their 32-year history passed without the public acclaim they most certainly deserve.
It's been a month since they were declared champions but, we trust, not too late for this newspaper to officially join those who will have already hailed the east Kingston club for their success this season.
Such has been the impact of Harbour View FC on Jamaica's football it will undoubtedly come as a surprise to many that this is only their second title at the highest level locally.
For, in fact, Harbour View FC have consistently been the beacon for others as Jamaica sets about the entrenching of a football culture of its own and the development of a professional approach and system - so necessary for the game to move forward.
Those who remember the original Harbour View football field, 'Compound' as it was called - an absolute eyesore of a surface, bare of grass and gravel-infested - more resembling an abandoned mine excavation than an arena for the expression of the 'beautiful game', will readily appreciate the leaps and bounds the 'Stars of the East' have made down the years.
Today, the Harbour View Mini Stadium stands as an abiding tribute to the faith, vision, self-sacrifice and determination of a few leaders who saw what was possible and refused to be deterred.
The building of that community stadium in 1994 - three years before the Reggae Boyz would make history by qualifying for the 1998 World Cup Finals in France - was a high watermark in Jamaican football.
In terms of the necessity and indeed the possibility of developing physical infrastructure, Harbour View showed the way. Others such as Arnett Gardens FC, Waterhouse FC and Tivoli Gardens FC have gratefully followed.
It is fair to suggest that when the legendary Brazilian coach Rene Simoes laughingly said that by qualifying for the World Cup, Jamaica had done the totally illogical - akin to a builder who first puts up a roof without having established a foundation - he was not thinking of Harbour View.
It's no accident that in the aftermath of the 1998 World Cup the first to secure a major overseas professional contract was a Harbour View product, the outstanding Ricardo Gardner, who continues to be an exemplar for Jamaica's football in one of the world's top leagues.
That the club remains the leading exporter of Jamaican football talent and a major feeder for the national programmes for all ages and both genders, underlines its commitment to professionalism and the great respect it commands at home and abroad.
Harbour View's mission statement, PROFESSIONALISM NOW, to be found on its website www.HVFC.net, which envisions the development of Jamaica's football as an industry - "a net foreign currency earner" and a major employer of labour - should be a must-read for all those who aspire to lead and guide the game in this country.
Today, we know we speak for the football fraternity when we say thanks to Harbour View FC and wish them the very best for the future.
Saturday, May 19, 2007
The recent 2007 ICC Cricket World Cup in the Caribbean overshadowed much else in local sport.
So it is that the triumph of Harbour View Football Club in the 2006/07 Wray & Nephew National Premier League for only the second time in their 32-year history passed without the public acclaim they most certainly deserve.
It's been a month since they were declared champions but, we trust, not too late for this newspaper to officially join those who will have already hailed the east Kingston club for their success this season.
Such has been the impact of Harbour View FC on Jamaica's football it will undoubtedly come as a surprise to many that this is only their second title at the highest level locally.
For, in fact, Harbour View FC have consistently been the beacon for others as Jamaica sets about the entrenching of a football culture of its own and the development of a professional approach and system - so necessary for the game to move forward.
Those who remember the original Harbour View football field, 'Compound' as it was called - an absolute eyesore of a surface, bare of grass and gravel-infested - more resembling an abandoned mine excavation than an arena for the expression of the 'beautiful game', will readily appreciate the leaps and bounds the 'Stars of the East' have made down the years.
Today, the Harbour View Mini Stadium stands as an abiding tribute to the faith, vision, self-sacrifice and determination of a few leaders who saw what was possible and refused to be deterred.
The building of that community stadium in 1994 - three years before the Reggae Boyz would make history by qualifying for the 1998 World Cup Finals in France - was a high watermark in Jamaican football.
In terms of the necessity and indeed the possibility of developing physical infrastructure, Harbour View showed the way. Others such as Arnett Gardens FC, Waterhouse FC and Tivoli Gardens FC have gratefully followed.
It is fair to suggest that when the legendary Brazilian coach Rene Simoes laughingly said that by qualifying for the World Cup, Jamaica had done the totally illogical - akin to a builder who first puts up a roof without having established a foundation - he was not thinking of Harbour View.
It's no accident that in the aftermath of the 1998 World Cup the first to secure a major overseas professional contract was a Harbour View product, the outstanding Ricardo Gardner, who continues to be an exemplar for Jamaica's football in one of the world's top leagues.
That the club remains the leading exporter of Jamaican football talent and a major feeder for the national programmes for all ages and both genders, underlines its commitment to professionalism and the great respect it commands at home and abroad.
Harbour View's mission statement, PROFESSIONALISM NOW, to be found on its website www.HVFC.net, which envisions the development of Jamaica's football as an industry - "a net foreign currency earner" and a major employer of labour - should be a must-read for all those who aspire to lead and guide the game in this country.
Today, we know we speak for the football fraternity when we say thanks to Harbour View FC and wish them the very best for the future.
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