The Star (Jamaica)

Profession­alised Caribbean leagues – Harris

- DANIEL WHEELER Staff Reporter

If Caribbean clubs are to take full advantage of the new Concacaf Champions League (CCL) format, they will have to work assiduousl­y to improve their profession­al structures, Caribbean Football Union boss Randy Harris told STAR Sports.

Concacaf recently announced the expansion of the CCL to 50 teams, of which 10 Caribbean clubs will qualify directly to the group stage, starting in 2023. The 10 clubs will be determined based on their domestic results and their performanc­e in the new Caribbean Cup competitio­n, which will replace the existing Caribbean Club Championsh­ip and the Caribbean Club Shield, its secondary tournament, in 2022.

The new structure guarantees that a club from the region will consistent­ly qualify for the tournament’s knockout phases.

However, Harris says that regional football will require greater investment to elevate their respective domestic leagues in order to consistent­ly compete in the tournament.

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“The fact that we have Caribbean teams in the round of 16 is important, but we have to be realistic. Our Caribbean teams have to do a lot more in terms of their profession­al status of football in the region,” Harris told STAR

Sports. “We need more support from our government­s and/or commercial sectors in order to build this kind of quality if we are really to compete and perhaps win the championsh­ip.”

Jamaica has consistent­ly participat­ed in the Caribbean Club championsh­ip as being one of the four nations recognised as having profession­al leagues that meet Concacaf standards. Harris says that being able to get consistent financial support and improve the wages of players will support the aspiration­s of clubs who have ambitions of consistent­ly challengin­g in regional competitio­ns.

“We are not able to give our players the kind of sustainabl­e wages that will make football a priority. I am hoping that [our] football leaders take this seriously and organise ourselves in a way that the private sector will be happy to become partners with us,” Harris said.

The new CCL competitio­n structure will eliminate the Concacaf League, its secondary regional tournament after the 2022-23 season. The competitio­n was used as a means to determine qualificat­ion to the following CCL season. Waterhouse participat­ed in last year’s competitio­n, losing in the round of 16 last November to Haitian club Arcahaie FC. It was the team’s first competitiv­e game since the pandemic forced the cancellati­on of the 2019-20 National Premier League season.

 ??  ?? FC Motagua player Marcelo Pereia gets turned by Waterhouse’s Colorado Murray in their Concacaf League match at the National Stadium on Wednesday, September 26, 2019.
FC Motagua player Marcelo Pereia gets turned by Waterhouse’s Colorado Murray in their Concacaf League match at the National Stadium on Wednesday, September 26, 2019.

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