1. The league will have 12 FRANCHISES, not teams. Teams will drop out only because of financial reasons.
2. Within the next three years, at least two new teams will emerge, or existing teams will be renamed and compete under a corporate name.
Example: Red Stripe FC, Sandals FC, etc.
3. A Super League championship WILL NOT guarantee automatic promotion, or a chance to be promoted through a tournament, to the JA/NPL. If the league decides to expand, or openings become available, certain clubs with an excellent record on the pitch and sufficient financial backing will be "invited" to apply.
In my years of following Jamaican soccer, the landscape is littered with teams won the Super League, then crashed with a thud in NPL, the debt burden driving them to ruin. (Invaders and Arlington come to mind)
4. Instead of a team winning a playoff tournament in June and having only two or three months to assemble players and sufficient financial backing for the NPL, it is possible that a prospective new team be given a longer period of time to get everything in order. For example, a new team may be approved in January to begin play in the 2008-09 season.
The last thing this new league needs is underfunded teams.
I have seen at least two minor league pro hockey leagues crash under the weight of too many underfunded teams. THe league was willing to accept anyone with enough money for a franchise and no clue how to run a team. It is better for the JANPL to have eight solid teams than to have eight solid teams and four shaky teams.
2. Within the next three years, at least two new teams will emerge, or existing teams will be renamed and compete under a corporate name.
Example: Red Stripe FC, Sandals FC, etc.
3. A Super League championship WILL NOT guarantee automatic promotion, or a chance to be promoted through a tournament, to the JA/NPL. If the league decides to expand, or openings become available, certain clubs with an excellent record on the pitch and sufficient financial backing will be "invited" to apply.
In my years of following Jamaican soccer, the landscape is littered with teams won the Super League, then crashed with a thud in NPL, the debt burden driving them to ruin. (Invaders and Arlington come to mind)
4. Instead of a team winning a playoff tournament in June and having only two or three months to assemble players and sufficient financial backing for the NPL, it is possible that a prospective new team be given a longer period of time to get everything in order. For example, a new team may be approved in January to begin play in the 2008-09 season.
The last thing this new league needs is underfunded teams.
I have seen at least two minor league pro hockey leagues crash under the weight of too many underfunded teams. THe league was willing to accept anyone with enough money for a franchise and no clue how to run a team. It is better for the JANPL to have eight solid teams than to have eight solid teams and four shaky teams.
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