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Offline Flex

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2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« on: January 09, 2021, 05:04:10 AM »
Football skills challenge to replace SSFL.
By Walter Alibey (T&T Guardian).


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.

The tournament was cancelled last year, among all other sports when the pandemic hit countries across the globe, but the former teacher and FIFA referee, who is also a contender for this year's SSFL Elections Merere Gonzales is putting forward a challenge with the skills of the game to suffice, should the ravaging effect of the coronavirus continues this year.

The skills of football include heading, dribbling the ball, shooting, passing, and trapping or collecting the ball, all of which will be on display for the students/players to show their skills in.

Gonzales told Guardian Media Sports on Friday that,"At this point in time, for almost 10 months now, in a season which was abandoned because of the COVID-19, players, the student-athletes, especially those who are knocking on the doors either for national selection, or scholarship or even those who may wish to go straight on and pursue a professional contract, there are a lot more obstacles and constraints now.

So I think what has to be done, despite the turmoil of the sport between the TTFA and the FIFA, that the SSFL has remained the shining light in the country, and in light of that, I think it is imperative and necessary that if there's any semblance of revamping, the SSFL needs to also be instrumental in doing that by providing the platform for the student-athletes. If things remain as they are, and the threat of life and limb continues to remain, I feel we can engage the student-athlete, even if it is a skill challenge competition."

Gonzales, who will be one of two candidates to challenge interim president Phillip Fraser for the top spot in the SSFL annual general meeting (AGM) in March, said interested persons will be updated on the virtual platform.

The challenge could first begin at the various zones and will progress afterwards, similar to what is done in the regular season.

He made it clear, this is providing that the SSFL, is unable to have the normal 11 versus 11 play, saying: "So at least the football fraternity and the football body, and in this case, the SSFL, will still be making a meaningful input to engage the students and athletes."

The former referee believes the COVID-19 situation has led to a build-up of anxieties which have also triggered fear and doubt and could lead to loss of interest.

The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

Online Deeks

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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #1 on: January 09, 2021, 05:18:09 AM »
Interesting concept!

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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #2 on: January 10, 2021, 09:45:48 AM »
If it runs as sort of what used to happen at combines ... like when the USL held them ... then yeah. Something with a technical-tactical component as opposed to exclusively technical would be ideal.

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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #3 on: January 11, 2021, 06:01:55 PM »
SSFL Girls Premier Div to be introduced.
By Walter Alibey (T&T Guardian).


If long-standing East Zone chairman of the Secondary Schools Football League Merere Gonzales is elected president of the SSFL this year, a Girls Premier Division competition will be introduced.

In fact, a Girls Premiership Division, similar to what is being played by the Boys, will be implemented regardless of who the administrators of the sport will be, as discussions started in 2019 and the COVID19 pandemic stopped what should have been a historic event last year.

However, Gonzales, a former teacher, and World Cup referee will be acting on a desire by the sport's world governing body- FIFA, for more emphasis to be placed on women's football in the country, to have the League (Girls Premiership) to be certain when the SSFL is held again.

Gonzales in an interview told Guardian Media Sports on Friday: "We were going to embark last year on a Girls Premier Division and that is an area that is surely needed to be improved on in the SSFL and in the country at large. As you know FIFA has been advocating for some time now that the future of football is female, so I think that is an area that will be generating a lot of interest in creating a more effective and efficient programme to improve the level of girls football," Gonzales explained.

With the SSFL constitution mandating that the AGM and Elections must be held by March/April this year, following its postponement last year due to coronavirus, Gonzales admitted that a lot of good work was done by the SSFL executive for the past years, and his intention is to continue and better what was done in the coming years.

He said women's football has been so prominent around the world now that in America, on any given scale, if there are 10 scholarships available, out of them, seven are available for females.

"Even last year and year before, what happened was that scholarships were available for girls, a lot of them but most of the girls who are involved in the football are in forms two and three, so they couldn't take up the scholarships. So the opportunities are there but you have to tap into it and ensure that the girls benefit from what is available for them," Gonzales said.

The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #4 on: March 21, 2021, 06:34:33 PM »
Fraser, Gonzales, West in hot SSFL presidential race
By Walter Alibey (T&T Guardian).


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.

Nominations took place on Wednesday, and with all three candidates coming through the ranks of the SSFL, it makes for a close race when the elections are held on April 15 at 3.30 pm. The executive of the SSFL is set to decide soon whether to have the elections, virtually or face-to-face.

Gonzales, a FIFA referee at the 1998 World Cup in France comes highly qualified in his 30-plus years in the school system, telling Guardian Media Sports he is the best man to lead the organisation at this point in time.

In 2010, he defeated Fraser for the position of chairman of the East Zone but he then lost out to West in a tangle for the East Zone vice president's spot. He has not only served in the referees' department in T&T but was also assistant secretary and secretary of the East Zone, vice president of the zone to his current position of chairman of the zone.

He served as a Physical Education teacher at Mt Hope Secondary and was a member of the Disciplinary Committee for both the East Zone and at the SSFL level.

Gonzales has also played a key role as a member of the T&T Unified Teachers Association (TTUTA) and has been involved in many other sporting disciplines as a helper, such as tennis, basketball, badminton, track and field and football, among many others.

Only recently Gonzales proposed a skill-display initiative among the young student/athletes if the COVID-19 pandemic persists, however, he believes more can be done for them if the pandemic subsides.

He said he believes the student/athlete is the most important stakeholder in the SSFL and all programmes or initiative should lead to their benefit by whoever gets the opportunity to lead the organisation.

Meanwhile, incumbent Fraser, a former principal at San Juan North Secondary, said with the experience he has garnered over the years, he is best positioned to steer the organisation forward.

Like, the other two candidates Fraser has come through the ranks, serving on the disciplinary and appeals committees. He believes his vision to "focus on the student/athlete by encouraging continued relevance for sports via sponsorship, training and constitutional reform" encompasses all he intends to achieve if he is given the chance to continue his leadership.

Fraser was chairman of the East Zone before being elevated to vice president to William Wallace, the then SSFL president who resigned from his position because of his new position of leadership of the T&T Football Association (TTFA), which is the parent body for all football in T&T.

Fraser was then appointed interim president when Wallace resigned until the elections are held.

Meanwhile, West, described as the silent jewel in the SSFL, told Guardian Media that he has the credentials to best lead the organisation, having been involved in the SSFL since 1983. He served as South Zone secretary and assistant secretary, and at the executive level as second vice president.

His crowning jewels to date have come both on the field of play and in the classrooms. As principal of Trinity College East, West took his teams to many division and zonal titles from inception. And in the classrooms, he took the school from an 11 per cent pass rate to a 94 per cent pass rate.

West said he has also made significant contributions in treating with constitutional issues. He added that though the race looks like a close one, he is the best man for the job.

The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

Offline Flex

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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #5 on: May 01, 2021, 06:42:28 AM »
Barney’s bible: The SSFL’s backward rule change; and what Yorke and Jordan did that our youths abandoned
By Wayne 'Barney' Sheppard (Wired868).


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.

Again, the local adage that ‘the more you play, the better you get’ is misleading on this count. Time must be spent strengthening players—especially in these modern times when our children live a more sedentary lifestyle than in past decades—and resting muscles that have been taxed. And, often, the two things can be combined.

Bassam Naim, the founder and technical director of an Ontario-based academy named ANB Fútbol and a Uefa ‘A’ and CBF ‘A’ (Brazil’s top badge) licensed coach, told me that he advises parents to allow the player to ‘do anything other than soccer’ in the six week off-season of the Canadian soccer calendar.

More often than not, this involves playing another sport or taking up an activity which utilises a different muscle group. Other times, it involves doing nothing at all—usually for those kids carrying niggling injuries or pains.

I have seen first-hand how detrimental our calendar of non-stop competitions can be to young players. In 2017, I had a technically gifted midfielder at my Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) team. He was two-footed and had a good game IQ. He was 15-years-old at the time.

We felt we would use him off the bench as much as possible that season to gain experience, so the following year, as a fifth form student, he would be our main guy in midfield.

During the course of that calendar year, the boy trained with his club and played in the Republic Bank Cup, and screened and was selected on his zone’s under-15 side before advancing to the Trinidad and Tobago National Under-15 team. He travelled to a Concacaf tournament that August with the national outfit.

He returned the week before the SSFL started and trained with the school’s first team, while he was a starter for our under-16 team which won the zonal league title, national league title, and lost the zonal knockout final on penalty kicks after extra time. Additionally, he played for roughly 15 minutes in each SSFL and Intercol game.

At the end of the 2017 season, I suggested to his father that the boy should do nothing for the next couple of months to allow him to recharge. But at that age boys always want to play and soon he was back training with his zonal team for another proposed tour.

The national team resumed training too and 2018 was just as busy for the boy as the previous year.

In that 2018 SSFL season, our staff made a decision not to use our first team players at under-16 level, although almost the entire squad was eligible. We recognised the danger; but we could not save the young man from his workload.

Soon, the boy’s parents noticed that everything was not right with him. He was having difficulty concentrating and holding his train of thought in conversations, which was unlike him. In training and games, he was flat and lacked his usual dynamism and penetration, while he complained about his legs feeling heavy and that he did not have energy.

A visit to the doctor and subsequent tests revealed that he was suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome. The doctor explained that tissue around his muscles were ‘swelling’—the best layman description I can give—each time he played, as if his body were trying to stop him from doing irreparable damage.

It was so bad that the doctor recommended he have two weeks of total rest from football. And when he got the go-ahead to rejoin training, it came with the caveat that he should not be used in games for more than 10-15 minutes.

Is that an extreme example? Maybe. Or maybe, the only reason we don’t hear of more cases like that is because most families do not have the means to pay for the doctor’s visit and battery of tests necessary to arrive at that diagnosis.

The non-stop calendar also manifests itself in injuries that are not allowed to heal and therefore become chronic.

Another player on that 2018 team also represented his zone and the same national youth team. He received a terrible tackle in the last game of the 2017 season and injured his knee.

The specialist said he was ‘very lucky’ to avoid surgery but the injury was serious and required nine weeks of intensive rehabilitation. The boy began rehab but, as soon as he started to feel better, he was out playing again.

I asked his parents to stop him and, to their credit, they did. But soon the national youth team staff called and he resumed practice before finishing his rehab. He was never close to his best and was eventually forced to stop in mid-season to see about his knee.

Is this constant grind of activity in the best physical interest of our young players?

The SSFL remains the highlight of the youth football calendar. What most people do not know is that it changed from an under-19 to an under-21 competition when the Premier Division started in 2014; or maybe even a few years before then.

I believe this age increase, coupled with the Pro League’s termination of its reserve division around 2018, had a negative impact on player development.

I understand and appreciate that students are now entering secondary school as late as 15 years of age, due to changes made by the Ministry of Education. But this should not have changed schools football from being an under-19 competition in my humble opinion—and I mean for players 18 years and younger, unlike now where ‘under-16’ means for 16 years and below.

We have asked the league to return to being an under-19 competition but were always shut down at SSFL meetings. The argument for the status quo was: ‘once they are students, they are eligible’.

For me, that response cannot come from anyone genuinely interested in player development and the preparedness of these students for the real world.

Frankly speaking, any boy who is 20-years-old and cannot make an adult team is not going to make a living out of football. As such, all energies should be directed towards helping that young man with his academics.

Of course, there will be exceptions. Germany defender and two-time World Cup finalist Hans-Peter Briegel only started organised football at age 17. Dennis Lawrence, the man whose goal took us to the 2006 World Cup, did not have a substantial SSFL career himself. But those are not the norms.

Conversely, any player who is good enough to play adult football but chooses to play in the SSFL is stunting his own development.

I can speak from experience here. I repeated lower six because I missed too much school that year. So in upper six, I was already 19 and could not play in what was then an under-19 competition. (I had already played in the SSFL for four seasons at that point.)

However, I was good enough to play senior club football and, while attending school and preparing for my A’ Level exams, I represented Carib Peterborough, which was coached by former Trinidad and Tobago Football Association (TTFA) technical director Kendall Walkes.

It benefitted my development immensely to play and train with the likes of then National Senior Team player George ‘Killer’ Sadlow and talented young men like Sean Byer, Sean Walkes and Calvin Strong—the latter trio were former national youth players who were all older than me.

I was called up to the National Under-23 Team the same year. The improvement in my game by mid-season was obvious.

Compare that to a far more naturally talented player who stayed in school football beyond its real usefulness to his development. In 2016, while acting as assistant coach for QPCC, I saw a player in a Super League game who caught my eye right away.

He was impressively built and, playing as a centre back, was able to step forward and give his team an additional midfielder when they were in possession. He looked calm and assured on the ball.

I asked my head coach, Shawn Cooper, if he knew the player.

“That is Kierron Mason,” he said. “He left school last year. Good player.”

Mason caused us headaches that game but I was happy to see a player who I had no doubt would soon make a fine national senior player.

However in 2017, on the opening day of the SSFL season, I saw the very same Kierron Mason playing for Shiva Boys Hindu College against Naparima. Madness! How does that help his development?

In that same season when Shiva Boys played Fatima, our 15-year-old five-foot-five National Under-15 midfielder Zach Welch had to come up directly against the 19-year-old six-foot-two Mason. How did that help either player?

It did not challenge Mason, while it did nothing for Welch’s confidence.

The SSFL is full of mismatches like that due to the wide disparity in ages—particularly with schools who can rely on a core of older form six students. And it hurts the competitiveness of the product as well as the usefulness of the league as a developmental tool.

You can add to this the scheduling of two games per week, which I discussed in the previous column.

It may be tempting to think that the way things are has not changed over the decades; and that our current structure is what produced the quality players of my era like Russell Latapy, Dwight Yorke, Clint Marcelle, Colin Rocke, Marvin Faustin, Kerry Jamerson, Shaka Hislop, Ross Russell, Anthony Clarke, Timothy Haynes, Leonson Lewis, Carlos Lee, Sheldon and Brent Bennett.

And, just before our time, Ian Clauzel, Anton Corneal, Garth Pollonais, Veron Skinner, Errol Lovell, Hutson Charles, David Nakhid, Graeme Rodriguez and a long list of top youth players who went on to win National Senior Team caps and dominate Caribbean football and compete with the big boys in Concacaf.

But that is not true.

We did not have the plethora of youth competitions that exist now. I can remember just one national tournament outside of the College’s League (now SSFL), which was the Sunshine Snacks competition.

Of course there were many minor leagues; but, for the most part, your football world centred around the schools football back then.

As a result, youth teams like the Jean Lillywhite Coaching School, Alcons and Harvard’s Sports Club could spend the better part of the year working on the technique, tactics, strength and conditioning of their players, before taking them abroad to play in competitions like the Dallas Cup or mini-tournaments in Brazil.

In training, repetition was your friend. Over and over, your 10 and 15 yard passes were practised, as was your control, shooting, and every technique required in the game. You worked on it until it became habit.

Time was spent working on football actions and tasks like ‘jockeying’ (slowing down and engaging an opponent on the ball), showing an attacker towards the line or into the path of a covering player, tackling, etc.

The countless repetition of these actions not only ensured that individual players ‘got it’, but allowed defenders, as a unit, to understand each other’s unspoken communication based on the stance of a teammate and how he approached an opponent.

Coach Bertille St Clair underlined the benefit of repetition during a chat on The Burdie and Barney podcast, when he spoke about the work done with a young Dwight Yorke. And we all know the quality player he turned out to be.

At the national level, players in each age group from my day knew that if they performed well in school they would be selected for their zonal teams, which trained on selected evenings to work on the understanding of their players’ roles and functions. A player needed decent technique to be called up to even zonal level then.

In fact, school players were so technically accomplished back then that, in 1985, there was a Big 4 competition involving Trintoc, Defence Force, Barataria Ball Players and College League champions San Fernando Technical Institute. And, if memory serves me correctly, San Fernando Tech held the mighty Defence Force to a scoring draw.

The same Defence Force who, that season, swept up five trophies including the 1985 Concacaf Club  Championship title and lost 1-0 to Copa Libertadores winners, Argentinos Juniors (who included 1986 World Cup winner Sergio Batista), in the now defunct Copa Interamericana finals.

A number of players in my day played—or, in my case, tried to play—cricket in the off-season, such as Yorke and Eve. Others like Marcelle, Lewis and Rocke were into track and field. There is a long tradition of our schoolboys excelling in multiple sports, which was possible due to breaks in the football calendar that do not exist today.

Michael Jordan, Allen Iverson, Deion Saunders and Steve Nash are examples of players who competed in multiple sports up to collegiate level without harming their chances of success in their preferred field.

When did we get this idea that continuous football competitions is a necessary part of development? Have we seen an improvement in play or the players we produced because of it?

And, if not, why do we persist with this competition theory?

Editor’s Note: Wired868 will publish the fourth and final part of ‘Barney’s bible’ on Friday 30 April, which offers suggestions to address the issues in Trinidad and Tobago’s youth development.

« Last Edit: May 01, 2021, 06:56:52 AM by Flex »
The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #6 on: June 08, 2021, 06:29:02 PM »
SSFL jumps at Govt’s ‘Vaccinate and Operate’ drive.
By Walter Alibey (T&T Guardian).


After a year of no activity, there is likely to be some action in the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) this year, new schools league president Merere Gonzales said on Tuesday.

His comment comes following Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley, on Saturday, in which the government revealed a plan to reopen the various industries, including the nation’s schools on the heels of a massive vaccination drive that began on Sunday.

The government’s ‘vaccinate and operate’ plan has already caught the attention of the new SSFL executive which will have a meeting to discuss the way forward, inclusive of a Futsal League to replace the normal 11-a-side competition if it becomes a challenging task.

The idea of competition this season will first be discussed by the executive tomorrow (Thursday, June 9) before it is presented to the League’s general council members for approval.

Gonzales, who got the better of Phillip Fraser and Derek West in the election for the position of president at the SSFL annual general meeting (AGM) told Guardian Media Sports: “Pending the statement becomes a reality by the Prime Minister as to the quantum of vaccinations that will be dispatched to the population, and also pending the reopening of school in September, it means that there is a very positive move in the direction of the possibility of having something of a semblance of a season for 2021. And if not in September which will be very tight, maybe somewhere in the middle of October.”

The SSFL boss also explained that serious discussion will take place on whether the season will be a shortened operation, saying: “We want to prepare for the Championship and the Premiership Division schools and to also ensure that the other divisions, the lower divisions are not left unattended. So, if perchance we are unable to go on to the field with them, then we will have the online challenge for the lower divisions.”

This online challenge will be a display of who is better in the skills of the game, such as heading the ball, dribbling the ball, shooting, passing, and trapping or collecting the ball.

Last year the SSFL season was called off due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic which resulted in the closure of sporting activities throughout the world, in March last year.

According to Gonzales: “As far as ensuring that you keep john and jane public involved, and educated and entertained, as well as to be able to achieve some of the things that are in my plans and my goals which are within our controllable areas, we want to have the establishment or the start of training programmes for coaches, coaching education, training and fitness education. A series can also be done re the mental, health issue or awareness for our students.”

The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

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SSFL in January, February 2022
« Reply #7 on: September 15, 2021, 06:08:22 PM »
SSFL in January, February 2022
By Walter Alibey (T&T Guardian)

It will be football in January, February, or possibly March of 2022 for student-athletes of the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) wishing to play in the 2021 season.

President of the SSFL Merere Gonzales told Guardian Media Sports on Tuesday that the league has been toying with several options to have action this year, and one is to begin late in November which would mean that it will run into January or February 2022 if it is to be completed, inclusive of having both League and InterCol tournaments.

Like most other sports in T&T, the COVID-19 pandemic has dished out a red card for the SSFL and has severely affected many students last year, in their final year at schools pursuing athletic scholarships.

"We were of the firm belief earlier in the year, that we were looking at the feasibility and possibility of starting something workable in September, however, the reality is that it is not the case.

"The second plan was to have a truncated season to start in the second or third week in October, and that would have been based on the recent statements made by the Minister of Education, re - the vaccination of students and the passion reopening of school face-to-face.

"That in itself was affected by the situation presently, so we're still looking forward to the possibility to start something workable and feasible and operational in late October or the possibility of November. But we would give ourselves between now and possibly the middle of October to make a declaration to indicate whether or not, we can have a season for 2021 or not."

He noted also: "There is also another possibility that if we were to maybe start late in November in order to complete the League which will now divide itself into two groups of eight teams, seeing that there are 16 teams involved, and also more importantly, that the schools through the principals will be still interested in participating, then we can see ourselves if we start late in November, then it can very well move into 2022 in January, February at which we will have the League and the Intercol.

"So we're having these options available but it is now based on the sanctioning, the permission and the directive to be given by the relevant authorities and in this case the Ministry of Health in collaboration with the Ministry of Education," Gonzales explained.

Another option Gonzales, a former teacher and FIFA World Cup referee said was to have an online skills challenge, which would not cater for all the student-athletes.

Discussions for this challenge have been ongoing as well as a futsal competition for all divisions, the SSFL boss explained: "In spite of that, we are having, at this present moment, planning for the online skills competition or showdown, which will cater for the divisions of the lower levels in the SSFL, which means it will be for the Forms One, Under-13s to the Senior Division, exclusive of the Championship and the Premier Divisions, which we would prefer to have physically and on the field, primarily because we feel that providing a platform for the elder ones, forms five and six, are the ones who are in the present position to pursue, if they so desire, scholarships either local at UTT or regional and or international Colleges and universities abroad."

"If we are unable to have any season whatsoever, we will definitely have the online skills competition for all the divisions, inclusive of the championship and the premiership divisions.

"What we understand is that it is better to have something tangible, concrete or evidenced of being involved in something pertaining to the particular discipline and in this case football, rather than have nothing.

"For instance, last year 2020 would have been the last season for some of the other student-athletes who, for no fault of theirs, we unable to have a season so what we had to do in collaboration with the Ministry of Education, was to have letters prepared for these respective students to support their case for those who wished at that point in time, to pursue scholarships, and that was done and several of them had been successful." 
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Offline Tallman

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Youth Sport Spotlight: Ashante Wilson-Campbell
« Reply #8 on: September 21, 2021, 01:02:14 PM »
Youth Sport Spotlight: Ashante Wilson-Campbell
T&T Express


Express YSS headed to Signal Hill Secondary School in Tobago to meet up with Ashante Wilson-Campbell. She is eighteen years old and very passionate about football. She eats, sleeps and breathes the sport. Ashante says she is very quiet at school and tries to stay out of trouble. When people see how aggressive she is on the football field, they often question if she is the same quiet person they just met.

Ashante has two brothers and three sisters. She is the last child and the only one that plays football. She got into football at the age of eight. Growing up, she saw her father and her uncles playing the game. She was also exposed to track and field and cricket, but football always had her heart. She says football allows her to be her true self on the field, and it helps bring out her inner lioness.

Ashante thanks God for her natural ability in the sport, and says that her biggest motivation is her family. She is also blessed with a supportive village. They constantly encourage her to keep doing her best. Her teachers at Signal Hill Secondary and the coaches and staff of Jewel Sports Club have developed her into the player she is today. She is very proud of earning selection on the national under-15 team in 2018 and skippering Signal Hill Secondary to victory in the national SSFL Big 5 competition.

Ashante stresses the need to continually put your best foot forward on the football field and to fight to the last whistle since everything could change at any moment. She sees herself becoming a professional footballer. Academically, she is aiming for a BSC in Sports Management. Ashante admires Lionel Messi and N'Golo Kanté.

It has been a struggle for Ashante to keep focused and motivated through the Covid-19 pandemic. Additionally, she recently lost her beloved aunt, who was a big part of her support system. She wants to keep growing in order to honour her aunt’s memory.

Ashante is grateful for life and the amazing people around her who encourage her to reach her goals. She would love for the decision-makers in sport to recognise that Trinidad and Tobago has many great female athletes. Ashante wants them to provide more opportunities and platforms for females to flourish, not only in football but in all sports.
The Conquering Lion of Judah shall break every chain.

Offline Tallman

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SSFL announces ball juggling competition for 2021
« Reply #9 on: November 19, 2021, 07:49:51 AM »
SSFL announces ball juggling competition for 2021
By Walter Alibey (T&T Guardian)


The Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) has announced a ball-juggling competition as a replacement for the traditional on-the-field football competition from this year into next year.

New president Merere Gonzales during an online press conference on Thursday said attempts were made to have actual on-the-field play this year, but the global COVID-19 pandemic has had devastating effects on T&T, in particular, and the world at large.

The competition is expected to provide a form of competition for student/athletes wishing to pursue football scholarships and professional contracts and is expected to generate the same level of interest and excitement as the on-the-field play, Gonzales explained.

"We were trusting that we could have had the physical on-the-field football but the global impact of the pandemic continues to have that negative repercussion in the world and more so T&T, and as much as the Secondary Schools' Football League would have put in place all the necessary safety protocols, we still needed to get the sanction and permission of the relevant authority to have on-the-field football.

"In light of that, we have some other activities, and on the front burner, we have the ball juggling competition. We are very concerned for the student-athletes in particular.

"It is actually the second season that we have been unable to have one, which is no fault of ours, but we feel very much able to create, implement and provide that platform for the student-athletes to still be interested in the game they love so much, and in this case football."

According to the SSFL boss: "For some, they will be working towards utilising any form of event or activity to add to their resumes, in the event that those who are pursuing football scholarships or football contract. Having said that, providing this ball juggling showdown is still keeping them engaged and involved."

A few other activities to engage the student-athletes will be revealed in the coming weeks, Gonzales said, as he tries to deliver on previous promises made after assuming office.

Registration for the ball juggling competition will be free of charge but participants will be required to return their registration forms by the deadline date of December 3, 2021.

Forms will be made available from Friday. Gonzales also announced that T&T Women's football captain Karyn Forbes will be one of five judges for the competition.

Forbes who recently released her first book called 'Woman of Substance' will join a team, comprising her teammate Maylee Attin-Johnson, Jefferson George, president of the Unified Football Coaches of T&T, former national player Makan Hislop and Clayton Morris, a former national defender, captain, coach and T&T Super League president.

Participants of the ball juggling competition will be required to supply video presentations following the rules and regulations, which include being fully dressed in the school's uniform, juggling done on a football field, show the size of the ball used (size 5), bouncing ball before juggling is done, and juggling must be done with different parts of the body, among many other rules.
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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #10 on: November 19, 2021, 09:33:24 AM »
SSFL announces ball juggling competition for 2021
By Walter Alibey (T&T Guardian)


The Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) has announced a ball-juggling competition as a replacement for the traditional on-the-field football competition from this year into next year.

New president Merere Gonzales during an online press conference on Thursday said attempts were made to have actual on-the-field play this year, but the global COVID-19 pandemic has had devastating effects on T&T, in particular, and the world at large.

The competition is expected to provide a form of competition for student/athletes wishing to pursue football scholarships and professional contracts and is expected to generate the same level of interest and excitement as the on-the-field play, Gonzales explained.

"We were trusting that we could have had the physical on-the-field football but the global impact of the pandemic continues to have that negative repercussion in the world and more so T&T, and as much as the Secondary Schools' Football League would have put in place all the necessary safety protocols, we still needed to get the sanction and permission of the relevant authority to have on-the-field football.

"In light of that, we have some other activities, and on the front burner, we have the ball juggling competition. We are very concerned for the student-athletes in particular.

"It is actually the second season that we have been unable to have one, which is no fault of ours, but we feel very much able to create, implement and provide that platform for the student-athletes to still be interested in the game they love so much, and in this case football."

According to the SSFL boss: "For some, they will be working towards utilising any form of event or activity to add to their resumes, in the event that those who are pursuing football scholarships or football contract. Having said that, providing this ball juggling showdown is still keeping them engaged and involved."

A few other activities to engage the student-athletes will be revealed in the coming weeks, Gonzales said, as he tries to deliver on previous promises made after assuming office.

Registration for the ball juggling competition will be free of charge but participants will be required to return their registration forms by the deadline date of December 3, 2021.

Forms will be made available from Friday. Gonzales also announced that T&T Women's football captain Karyn Forbes will be one of five judges for the competition.

Forbes who recently released her first book called 'Woman of Substance' will join a team, comprising her teammate Maylee Attin-Johnson, Jefferson George, president of the Unified Football Coaches of T&T, former national player Makan Hislop and Clayton Morris, a former national defender, captain, coach and T&T Super League president.

Participants of the ball juggling competition will be required to supply video presentations following the rules and regulations, which include being fully dressed in the school's uniform, juggling done on a football field, show the size of the ball used (size 5), bouncing ball before juggling is done, and juggling must be done with different parts of the body, among many other rules.


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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #11 on: November 19, 2021, 10:52:49 AM »
What other options do you have Asylum?

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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #12 on: November 19, 2021, 02:38:07 PM »
What other options do you have Asylum?

Inquiries afoot. Would prefer not to be hobbled by exclusively relying on the newspaper report. Will comment in greater depth following that.

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Re: 2021 SSFL & Inter-Col Thread.
« Reply #13 on: November 26, 2021, 04:02:18 PM »
What other options do you have Asylum?

Inquiries afoot. Would prefer not to be hobbled by exclusively relying on the newspaper report. Will comment in greater depth following that.

Had the conversation. What was originally conceived was more elaborate than the version that has emerged. Only takeaway I have is: delivering something is better than delivering nothing.

I had hoped to see activities targeted to displaying technical proficiencies that are directly translatable to 11 v 11. That would have communicated, to onlooking/reviewing coaches, the technical range of the participants in situations ordinarily invoked in the ebb and flow of matches. And, building on that, there could have been a diagnostic of areas of strengths and improvement pertaining to each player. Individualized activity with individualized diagnostic and observation.

Unspecified constraints were said to be the reason for what's on the table.

Of note, there is an emphasis on not trying to ruffle political feathers. Let's see how it plays out. There's room for imagination in what the participants present.

Regarding the feathers: On that score, that would mean the SSFL is a unique source of diplomacy within the present football landscape.
« Last Edit: November 26, 2021, 04:05:45 PM by asylumseeker »

 

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