![Clyde Leon at W-Connection Clyde Leon at W-Connection](/images/stories/leon_clyde_w_connection_01.jpg)
Captain of the 2001 Intercol Schools’ Football national title winning team of Princes Town Senior Secondary School, Clyde Leon, was supposed to bury me. I was not supposed to be burying him, as he has now shown his last red card.
Captain of the 2001 Intercol Schools’ Football national title winning team of Princes Town Senior Secondary School, Clyde Leon, was supposed to bury me. I was not supposed to be burying him, as he has now shown his last red card.
So far I have only touched on youth development from a ball manipulation and decision-making viewpoint. However, playing in competitive games non-stop can also hinder the physical development and health of players.
A football skills challenge is being proposed as an alternative for this year's Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) if the League is unable to be held due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic which continues to affect sports in Trinidad and Tobago.
AFTER weeks of campaigning, aided by a host of sterling personal endorsements, long-time football administrator, referee instructor and retired teacher, Merere Gonzales, has been elected president of the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL).
Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) coaches got to air some of their concerns about remuneration when the National Football Coaches of Trinidad and Tobago (NFCTT) continued its town hall-styled meetings on Saturday. Present at the meeting were SSFL Premier Division coaches.
It's a three-man race for the presidency of the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL), as incumbent Phillip Fraser is set to be challenged by East Zone chairman Merere Gonzales and Derek West, a retired Trinity College East principal.
Former East Mucurapo Seconday football team manager Brinsley Hutson past away last Sunday at Mt Hope Hospital. Hutson suffered a stroke last Friday.
Fatima College was on Wednesday gifted 50 copies of Everald ‘Gally” Cummings’ autobiography.
NIGEL “Grovy” Grosvenor was remembered for the love he had for his family, football and pan, but also for the care he showed for all the young footballers during his coaching career that spanned over 30 years.