The Star (Jamaica)

St James sports dying a slow death

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While Cornwall College’s historic win in the 2018 ISSA Champions Cup was undoubtedl­y a breath of fresh air for St James’ football, it also has the potential to create a kind of false security in regard to the status of the parish’s overall football product.

While winning a major schoolboy football trophy is not something to scoff at, the reality of the situation is that while the parish’s high schools, especially St James High School, and Cornwall College, have been fairly consistent at the schoolboy level, senior football, except for the exploits of Montego Bay United FC, has all but fallen off the radar.

The fact that, unlike in the 1980s and 1990s when St James had as many as four teams competing in the Premier League at the same time, today we only have a struggling Montego Bay United FC, which is hovering in the lower half of the 2018/19 standings, and clearly not looking like a team with a realistic chance of topping the competitio­n.

At the most junior level, the parish appears relatively safe with the perennial nursery, the St James/Victoria Mutual Building Society’s (VMBS) Under-13 Competitio­n, which has churned out several players, who have gone on to represent Jamaica with distinctio­n, even at the FIFA World Cup level, still very exposing excellent young players.

However, unlike in the past when the junior players would filter through the parish’s high schools and into the club structure, as the likes of national players Ricardo Morris, Allan Ottey, Dino Williams, and Peter-Lee Vassell, have done in the not too distant past, the clubs have become so weak that they are no longer capable of transformi­ng these youngsters into stars.

In the era when it was extremely difficult for rural players to get into a national team, it was St James’ powerful club structure, which forced Jamaica to open the doors to players such as Theodore ‘Tappa’ Whitmore, Hector Wright, Warren Barrett, Steve ‘Shorty’ Malcolm, Durrant ‘Tatty’ Brown, Paul ‘Tegat’ Davis, Devon Ricketts, Winston ‘Twinny Bug’ Anglin, who are now household names in the annals of Jamaica’s football.

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 ?? FILE ?? Romaine Brakenridg­e (right), then of Tivoli Gardens, and Montego Bay United’s Dino Williams battle for possession of the ball during their Red Stripe Premier League football match at the Edward Seaga Complex on Sunday, February 25.
FILE Romaine Brakenridg­e (right), then of Tivoli Gardens, and Montego Bay United’s Dino Williams battle for possession of the ball during their Red Stripe Premier League football match at the Edward Seaga Complex on Sunday, February 25.
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