T&T will kick off its campaign in the Concacaf Under-17 Men's Championships Group E Qualification Tournament against Bermuda at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida from 4 pm today.
Defending champions Mexico and Jamaica will face off in the second Group E match two hours later.
Simultaneously, at the same venue, Barbados, Canada, Guatemala and USA will do battle in Group F; El Salvador, Guyana, Haiti and Honduras compete in Group G, and Costa Rica, Curacao, Panama and Suriname face off in Group H.
So far the quartet of Nicaragua (Group A), Dominican Republic (Group B), Guadeloupe (Group C), and Puerto Rico (Group D) have advanced from the qualifiers draw as group winners to the last-16 and will be joined by the 12 qualifiers from Florida in the knockout stage.
The top four teams at the end of the Concacaf competition will qualify for the 2019 FIFA Under-17 World Cup in Brazil.
The team led by former World Cup players in Stern John as head coach and assistant Kenwyne Jones, have been preparing team for the past few weeks and will go into today's first-ever meeting between both countries brimming with confidence ahead of its remaining matches versus Jamaica on May 3rd and Mexico two days later, at the end of which the top three teams will advance to the knockout stage.
John and 17 of his players travelled to Florido, USA on Monday night and were met by three USA-based players in Jerrel Nixon, Ajani Fortune and Curtis De Leon and the T&T coach was expected to have a final session yesterday afternoon ahead of today's match.
Speaking on the eve of the match, John, T&T's all-time leading goalscorer, said he would be seeking three points from the onset.
“We are here to compete and we’ve spoken about this as a team. That means we have three points to get in this opening game to give ourselves some breathing space for the remaining matches in the group,” John said.
“We’ve prepared as best as we can and now it’s down to the boys to execute. It’s up to them now as we cannot play from the bench. What we will do is guide them as best as we can. I am confident in their ability. I think the key will be to settle early because there will be some nerves at the start and that’s expected because it’s a first time for a lot of the boys. Once we put our heads down and play to our ability then we should be pulling off a result to give us a good head start,” John added.
Forward Justin Araujo-Wilson is eager to put in a shift that will hopefully get T&T off on a right start.
“The preparation was very organised and well done to coach Stern and coach Kenwyne for bringing the boys together and pushing us hard to prepare for this tournament. We have to come out and work hard and win games for ourselves, our families and the country. Doing well in this kind of tournaments can save our lives,” said Araujo-Wilson.
“It’s mandatory for us to get three points. We know what we can do but we have to have something to show for it. I just like wearing the Red, White and Black because growing up watching the Soca Warriors play was good and now it’s a dream come true to play for the national team, he added.
Today's match will be the 50th Concacaf Under-17 match for T&T, with its record standing at 12 wins, 13 draws, and 24 defeats, scoring 60 goals, with 103 against, for a winning percentage of 33.3.
Bermuda, meanwhile, will be playing only its third CONCACAF Under-17 match, and has a record of two defeats from as many outings, scoring once and conceding 13.
The 2019 Concacaf Under-17 Championship is the sixth edition of the Concacaf Under-17 Championship (19th edition if all eras included), the men’s under-17 international football tournament organized by Concacaf.
On Friday
Jamaica vs T&T, 4pm
Bermuda vs Mexico, 6pm
On Sunday
T&T vs Mexico, 4pm
Bermuda vs Jamaica, 6pm
RELATED NEWS
Coach Stern: We have three points to get.
By Joel Bailey (Newsday).
T&T start Concacaf U-17 campaign today vs Bermuda…
T&T Under-17 men’s football team will be looking for a winning start to their 2019 Concacaf Under-17 Championship campaign when they face off with Bermuda in their opening fixture today, from 4 pm, at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida, United States.
Team coach Stern John said, “We are here to compete and we’ve spoken about this as a team. That means we have three points to get in this opening game to give ourselves some breathing space for the remaining matches in the group.”
John, who is also an assistant coach on the T&T men’s team, continued, “We’ve prepared as best as we can and now it’s down to the boys to execute. It’s up to them now as we cannot play from the bench. What we will do is guide them as best as we can.
“I am confident in their abilities. I think the key will be to settle early because there will be some nerves at the start and that’s expected because it’s a first time for a lot of the boys. Once we put our heads down and play to our ability then we should be pulling off a result to give us a good head start,” John added.
Canadian-based forward Justin Araujo-Wilson said, “The preparation was very organised and well done to coach Stern and (assistant) coach Kenwyne for bringing the boys together and pushing us hard to prepare for this tournament.
We have to come out and work hard and win games for ourselves, our families and the country. Doing well in these kind of tournaments can save our lives.”
The other group opponents Mexico and Jamaica will square off in the second match of the double-header while other matches on the day includes El Salvador versus Guyana and Honduras versus Haiti.
The top four teams from the competition will qualify for the 2019 FIFA Under-17 World Cup in Brazil, which is scheduled from September 17 to October 8.
The Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) has offered their support towards the team, particularly players who are still involved in the local schools league.
In a media release yesterday, SSFL president William Wallace said, “You all have an opportunity to pave your way towards further success and to write your own history. Go out there and give of your best for the country and represent your country, the league and your schools with honour and pride.
“Be a source of inspiration for your younger peers who will be looking to follow in your footsteps in the 2019 SSFL season and beyond. You have an opportunity to compete and showcase your ability at the Confederation’s biggest event in your age group and the chance to test yourselves against some of the region’s best teams. Make the best of it,” Wallace added.
SPORTT pays for T&T U-17s to sit CSEC exams in Florida; Stern: Time to execute.
By Lasana Liburd (Wired868).
The Trinidad and Tobago Men’s National Under-17 Team have precious little time to soak in the atmosphere in Bradenton, Florida. The junior Soca Warriors landed in Florida last night and, by tomorrow evening, they will already be in ‘do or die’ territory when they tackle Bermuda from 4pm at the IMG Academy in the Concacaf Under-17 Championship.
Three from the four teams in Group E advance to the knockout round but Trinidad and Tobago’s other two opponents are Jamaica and Mexico. It cannot be overstated how important it is for the Warriors to start with a positive result.
“We are here to compete and we’ve spoken about this as a team,” National Under-17 Team head coach Stern John told the TTFA Media. “That means we have three points to get in this opening game [against Bermuda] to give ourselves some breathing space for the remaining matches in the group.”
The Trinidad and Tobago Football Association (TTFA), plagued by financial woes and administrative paralysis, considered not sending this squad to the Concacaf Championship in the first place.
Privately, TTFA president David John-Williams floated the idea of withdrawing from the competition, which serves as a qualifying series for the Brazil 2019 Under-17 World Cup. And there was a suggestion that the local football body might send its Under-15 Boys Team—the only one of the TTFA’s nine potential teams that trains all year round—to participate in the higher age group for ‘experience.’
In the end, though, the John-Williams-led administration appointed John to spearhead their campaign with barely six weeks to screen, select and prepare a team for competition at the highest level in the confederation. The key selling point for the hiring of John and his staff was that they were prepared to work for free.
“The TTFA didn’t so much as buy a bun for the players!” one parent told Wired868, on condition of anonymity.
It left well wishers to pick up the financial slack. Commissioner of Police Gary Griffith, whose son, Gary Griffith III, was selected in the final 20-man squad, figured prominently among the parents who contributed to meals and transport for the players.
The Sport Company of Trinidad and Tobago also took care of not only airfare for the National Under-17 Team but meals at the airport and, crucially, airfare, accommodation and related costs for two examiners who will travel to Florida this weekend to oversee the players’ CSEC tests.
CSEC exams start on 7 May and roughly a dozen players are due to sit. It means precise arrangements to ensure the boys take exams at precisely the same time as the rest of the country and that the process is above reproach with sealed papers and proper supervision.
Normally, even if the Ministry of Education agrees to assist—with the permission of the Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC)—the organisation making the request for examiners must meet the full cost of the exercise. But, with the TTFA’s accounts frozen due to its failure to meet its debt to the National Futsal Team, SPORTT has stepped in the breach.
“The TTFA came with the request and the budget,” said SPORTT executive manager sport development Anthony Creed. “My job was to go to the board to ensure that everything was in order; and the approval was given so it is only a matter of waiting for the release [of funds].
“[…] We also budgeted to ensure the players were able to get a meal at the airport when they got to Florida so they would not be disadvantaged.”
Creed’s nephew, Brendon Creed, was a member of the Trinidad and Tobago Under-17 Team that got to the quarterfinal stage of the Concacaf Championship in 2013. It is as well as the Warriors have fared since 2007 when a Kevin Molino item ensured the twin island republic of a 1-0 win over Jamaica and a place at the Korea Republic 2007 FIFA Under-17 World Cup.
John hopes to somehow steer his undercooked squad to similar heights.
“We’ve prepared as best as we can and now it’s down to the boys to execute,” said John, a former 2006 World Cup forward and Trinidad and Tobago’s all-time record goal scorer. “It’s up to them now as we cannot play from the bench. What we will do is guide them as best as we can. I am confident in their ability.
“I think the key will be to settle early because there will be some nerves at the start and that’s expected because it’s a first time for a lot of the boys. Once we put our heads down and play to our ability then we should be pulling off a result to give us a good head start.”
The National Under-17 Team should expect much from former Fatima College stand-out Justin Araujo-Wilson and Trinity College East goalkeeper Kahlil Oliver as well as overseas-based inclusions like midfielders Ajani Fortune (Atlanta United—USA) and Tyrese Pierre (WSV Apeldoorn—Netherlands), full back Isa Sayeed (Indy Premier Soccer—USA) and Jerrell Nixon (Concorde Fire Soccer Club—USA).
Sayeed and Nixon are the sons of John and Jerren Nixon, a former Under-20 World Cup forward, respectively.
Araujo-Wilson told the TTFA Media that he is thrilled at the chance to make some history for himself.
“The preparation was very organised and well done to coach Stern [John] and coach Kenwyne [Jones] for bringing the boys together and pushing us hard to prepare for this tournament,” said Araujo-Wilson. “We have to come out and work hard and win games for ourselves, our families and the country.
“[…] It’s mandatory for us to get three points; [and] we know what we can do. I just like wearing the Red,White and Black because growing up watching the Soca Warriors play was good and now it’s a dream come true to play for the National Team.”