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Maylee and Kennya refuse to join “Women Warriors” under current manager
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Former Trinidad and Tobago National Women’s Senior Team captain Maylee Attin-Johnson and star attacker Kennya “Yaya” Cordner are refusing to represent their country, as the “Women Soca Warriors” remain divided since coming to international prominence during their Canada 2015 World Cup qualifying campaign.

Cordner, who was a 2014 CONCACAF Player of the Year nominee, and Attin-Johnson have refused to play under current team manager, Sharon O’Brien, while former teammates Dernelle Mascall and previous vice-captain Ayanna Russell also allegedly opted out of the current Rio 2016 Olympic qualifying series.

And the disillusioned Women Warriors have company in former head coach Randy Waldrum, who also chose to remain in Dallas due to his concern about numerous administrative issues surrounding the programme and a lack of job security.

Cordner and Attin-Johnson, who were injured at the July Toronto 2015 Pan American Games are angry at their subsequent treatment from the TTFA and, in particular, O’Brien.

Cordner flew to Canada to seek medical treatment after being injured on international duty. And the former three-time Trinidad and Tobago Player of the Year was told she had to pay for her own trip home to play in the Olympic qualifiers, even though plane tickets were dispatched to other W/Warriors who were based in North America.

“Yaya paid for herself to go Canada to have her injuries taken care of,” said Waldrum, “and Sharon (O’Brien) said because she flew there on her own dime, she has to fly back on her dime.

“But she only went there because the (TTFA) wasn’t taking care of her in the first place…”

Cordner suffered a grade two MCL strain on her left knee after she collided with the opposing goalkeeper while scoring Trinidad and Tobago’s equaliser against Colombia on July 14. Her goal meant the Women Warriors retained a chance of qualifying for the semifinal round.

So, despite the injury, Cordner played in T&T’s final fixture, which ended in a 3-1 loss to Mexico. She then paid her own way to return to Canada for treatment at the LJR Physiotherapy Services.

Her ticket was subsequently reimbursed by the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC).

“I didn’t really look to the TTFA for help because of the TTFA’s financial situation and I could not risk waiting and not knowing when my treatment would start,” Cordner told Wired868. “I took the opportunity because I wanted a speedy recovery in order to rejoin the team for the Olympic Games.

“By doing this, I also assisted the TTFA by taking away that financial burden.”

Cordner was flabbergasted when Waldrum informed her that the TTFA would not pay for her return to join the squad.

“I think it is very unprofessional that the TTFA would state that I’m responsible for paying my way to represent my country,” said the W/Warriors star, who is finishing her therapy in Seattle. “I’m cleared to play (by doctors here) so it’s disappointing that I won’t be representing my country in this upcoming tournament.

“I feel as though the current manager is being very vindictive towards me because there are five other players (based in North America) they (bought) tickets for.

“I do wish the team nothing but the best but I can’t subscribe to the current management they have in place.”

Former national captain, Attin-Johnson, slammed the TTFA’s stance on the outspoken Cordner as unforgivable.

“How in heaven’s name can a manager of the national team say Kennya has to pay her own way?” asked Attin-Johnson. “Is she representing us or St Lucia? For me, it shows it is a personal vendetta against Yaya because they brought in Lauryn (Hutchinson) and (Victoria) Swift but not her.

“Kennya is the one player who would play with a broken foot for Trinidad and Tobago. How can I accept that (treatment of her) as captain?

“And it is not just because she is my friend. I could never accept that for anyone.”

O’Brien did not deny asking Cordner to pay for her own airfare back to Trinidad. However, the W/Warriors manager suggested that the problem was partly down to miscommunication.

She did not elaborate.

“Kennya is an issue that we are trying to sort out,” O’Brien told Wired868. “I prefer to keep that private and we will deal with that behind closed doors.

“I feel communication was bad in Kennya’s case, so I am trying to see if I can rectify that situation.”

For now, Attin-Johnson is inconsolable. The gifted playmaker, who said she has recovered from injury at the Pan Am Games, said she will not wear national colours once O’Brien is team manager.

She explained too that she knows her request will not be an easy one for Tim Kee to fulfil—even if he wanted to—as O’Brien is the president of WOLF (Women’s League Football), which has two votes at the upcoming TTFA elections.

“For her to be a manager of a national team is unacceptable and I won’t sacrifice my body for people like that,” said Attin-Johnson, who claimed that many current players are also frustrated. “If I am not going to put my heart and soul into something, it is better I remove myself from it…

“The most difficult thing for me is knowing you worked your ass off to give a certain brand and identity to the women’s program, just to see it destroyed by one selfish individual…

“We are in 2015 and I am not going to take five or 10 goals from America again. And I am not going to make a fool of myself for a trip to Hawaii (for a high profile friendly against the United States).

“I am very proud of my contribution to the women’s national team and, by extension, Trinidad and Tobago. But not even God can tell me play for Sharon O’Brien.”

O’Brien responded that she thought Attin-Johnson was still injured. She declined comment on the former national captain’s stance.

“Maylee, as far as I understand, is still injured (because) she has never indicated to me that she is fit and ready to come back to train,” said O’Brien, who claimed she never had a falling out with Attin-Johnson or Cordner. “That is Maylee’s choice (not to play). Maylee and them have their own agenda.”

The Women Warriors whipped St Lucia 6-0 on Friday and 8-1 tonight to breeze into the Caribbean semifinal round and a match-up with Jamaica on Wednesday at the Ato Boldon Stadium in Couva.

The top three nations from Jamaica, Guyana, Puerto Rico and T&T will advance to next February’s CONCACAF Olympic qualifying rounds in the United States. Only two CONCACAF teams will progress to the Rio Olympics.

O’Brien said the W/Warriors squad, which includes Arin King, Ahkeela Mollon, Tasha St Louis, Lauryn Hutchinson and Janine Francois, will be further strengthened on Tuesday with the return of Karyn and Kimika Forbes and Khadidra Debesette, just 24 hours before the Caribbean semifinals.

“I personally believe that, after months with no training, the girls are beginning to gel again now that they are in camp,” said O’Brien, “and I expect them to do well as per usual.”

RELATED NEWS

W/Warriors coach sidelined; Waldrum wants chance to fix T&T women’s game.
By Lasana Liburd (Wired868).

Trinidad and Tobago Women’s National Senior Team head coach Randy Waldrum must make do with following the “Women Soca Warriors” via newspaper reports and the social media, as poor communication and disorganisation within the Trinidad and Tobago Football Association (TTFA) has left him on the sidelines.

Waldrum explained that the dismissal of TTFA general secretary Sheldon Phillips, who was instrumental in his hiring, had added to his uncertainty regarding the W/Warriors post. And now he wants an assurance about his job security before he returns to Trinidad.

The Texan, who coaches professional outfit Houston Dash, explained that he was supposed to return to Trinidad roughly three weeks ago to prepare the team for the ongoing Olympic qualifiers. But, instead, he was frustrated by intermittent communication with Trinidad and Tobago Football Association (TTFA) president Raymond Tim Kee and team manager Sharon O’Brien.

“It is the frustration of not doing things properly,” Waldrum told Wired868. “We are getting ready to play Olympic qualifiers and we are doing the same thing as the last World Cup campaign. This is no way to prepare…

“Last Sunday night, I emailed Tim Kee and said I still wasn’t being communicated with. And I said, moving forward, I need something in writing that says I will be here for the next cycle so I can prepare properly for the next World Cup.”

Waldrum, whose first national assignment in T&T came while Phillips’s father, Lincoln “Tiger” Phillips, was technical director, conceded that his new yearn for job security was at least partially linked to Phillips’ dismissal.

“I wasn’t sure if, because Sheldon (Phillips) was dismissed, Mr Tim Kee wanted to keep me on board at all,” said Waldrum, who insisted Phillips was a great asset to him here. “So I asked Tim Kee if he planed to keep me and he said ‘absolutely’ but I still wasn’t being communicated with…

“I have no way of knowing if Tim Kee would be re-elected and if a new president would come in and replace me. I have no guarantees and have been doing this voluntary.

“So, I told him it is in our best interest that I don’t come back until I have an agreement in writing.”

Tim Kee, who sacked Phillips on 20 October 2015, will stand for re-election at the TTFA AGM on 29 November 2015.

But Waldrum conceded that the Women Warriors’ problems began long before Phillips’ unceremonious and controversial exit. And he said that the national team had resorted to training with as little as seven players due to the despondence of the players since the Toronto 2015 Pan American Games in July.

“When I got back (to Trinidad) on October 16, I found that many of the players were so frustrated with how they had been treated that they had had stopped training,” Waldrum told Wired868. “Ayanna (Russell), (Dernelle) Mascall… I had to talk Patrice Superville into coming back to the team.

“We only had about seven players coming out to training and there is no way you can prepare for Olympic qualifiers and to play the United States with seven players. So the training was very poor because of that.

“I don’t know if we can even get all the players back… But I believe I can take care of this if I get the authority to do it.”

The situation forced Waldrum to draft National Under-20 players into the senior squad to make up numbers, which caused some friction with youth team coach, Jason Spence.

“I recommended Spence to be the U-20 coach when I was there and I had to go to him and tell him I had to use some of his U-20 players,” said Waldrum, “and he didn’t want to do that because he wants them to be ready for his tournament. And I am saying that it helps player development when they are able to go up a level and play and we will send them back for their qualifiers

“All three national teams (U-17, U-20 and Senior) work independently of each other and we need to have a smooth transition between the three teams. The coach would be different but it should be the same philosophy and format.

“Here, we are all over the map with what each team is dong. I need to be able to come in and correct this, otherwise we would spend another 20 years and be in exactly the same place.”

Spence insisted that he did not stand in the way of his Under-20 players representing the Senior Team but was only concerned about their physical wellbeing.

“A number of our Under-20 players had injuries and we had them in a recovery programme at the time they wanted them,” Spence told Wired868, “but we eventually allowed six of them to go and they kept four players. I raised some concerns (with Waldrum) but it was never a case of me stopping them.”

Spence explained that the failure of many senior players to rejoin the national squad has had a ripple effect which also disrupted the National Under-20 Team’s preparation.

“The state of the national programme is in a mess,” said the St Ann’s Rangers coach. “Honestly, right now I have about 10 players that I may see in training on any given day and I am getting ready for CONCACAF (competition).”

If the dispute between Spence and Waldrum could be resolved over a beer, it might take UN peacekeepers to get star players Kennya “Yaya” Cordner and former captain Maylee Attin-Johnson back into the national set-up.

Cordner and Attin-Johnson were injured at the Toronto 2015 Pan American Games and are left bitter by their subsequent treatment from the TTFA. Both insisted they will not represent Trinidad and Tobago under O’Brien.

“Yaya paid for herself to go Canada to have her injuries taken care of,” said Waldrum, “and Sharon said because she flew there on her own dime, she has to fly back on her dime.

“And she only went there because the federation wasn’t taking care of her in the first place… I can go through a list of players who are not being taken care of.”

O’Brien said the problem was partly down to miscommunication although she did not elaborate.

“Kennya is an issue that we are trying to sort,” O’Brien told Wired868. “I prefer to keep that private and we will deal with that behind closed doors.

“I feel communication was bad in Kennya’s position, so I am trying to see if I can rectify that situation.”

Waldrum believes that he has been on the receiving end of some poor communication as well.

He complained that, despite nominally being the head coach, decisions were made regarding the team’s Olympic preparation with no input from him.

“My players told me they were entering a training camp on Monday but I had no idea about it and I had no plane ticket to be there,” said Waldrum. “So that really upset me and I mentioned it to Tim Kee. And his response was that he didn’t know about it either and he would get back to me. But he didn’t.

“A couple of girls were texting me and said they were having two practice sessions per day…. They hadn’t been training before and I didn’t agree that they should have two sessions per day from Monday to Thursday with a game on Friday, after not training for so long.

“I was worried about that if it wasn’t done scientifically…”

Thus far, the Women Warriors have had little problems on the field as they whipped St Lucia 6-0 on Friday and 8-1 today to saunter into the Caribbean qualifying semifinal round against Jamaica in Couva on Wednesday night.

The top three nations from Jamaica, Guyana, Puerto Rico and Trinidad and Tobago will advance to next February’s CONCACAF Olympic qualifying rounds in Hawaii. Only two CONCACAF teams will progress to the Rio 2018 Olympics.

Waldrum is concerned that the W/Warriors, who are now led by his assistant Anthony Creece, are not primed to do well in the long run.

“We are going to win against St Lucia based on our talent and not our preparation,” said Waldrum. “The game against Jamaica will be difficult and I don’t think people understand how difficult the game against America will be. You don’t train with eight players and then step on the field and play the world champions.

“I love Trinidad and Tobago like it is my own home country and we have a great chance to be a great football nation. But it is just so frustrating because we have no plan and no vision.”

The Texan revealed that, after Phillips’ dismissal, nobody else at the TTFA bothered to arrange his transport to and from training last month.

“I don’t know what the politics are that happened when Sheldon (Phillips) was released but I know he is the person I could go to to make things happen for me,” said Waldrum. “When he was relieved, I no longer had transportation to practice and I had to ask Jan Francois if she would mind taking me to and from practice. It is not something players should have to be responsible for.

“Even Maylee picked me up once and she isn’t even on the team. That would usually be the team manager’s job but Sheldon (Phillips) was the one (who arranged it) the whole time.”

It was an echo of the slipshod management that saw the women head for the US with just US$500 last year and prompted an unforgettable tweet from Waldrum, which asked the public for financial assistance.

Waldrum gave another more recent anecdote of the administrative issues faced in the local set-up.

“They sent me a plane ticket on Monday night to leave on Tuesday (for Trinidad) and it had the wrong last name,” Waldrum told Wired868. “It had ‘Waldron’. I have been a national team coach here for the last year…

“It is a little thing but it sums up the lack of professionalism.”

The W/Warriors coach admitted that it was not the first time it happened either.

“When I came in October, they had my middle name wrong,” he said. “They put my middle name as ‘Jordan’ and it is Marlon. It wasn’t even close!

“So I was able to check my bags in at the counter but, when I had to go through (airport) security, the TSA official said ‘your name doesn’t match your passport’ and they wouldn’t let me through…

“It took me an hour and 15 minutes to get a call through to the travel agency (in Trinidad) to get the ticket changed… Those things are not big things but they kind of highlight the lack of organisation.”

Waldrum says the only payment he received as Trinidad and Tobago coach was a TT$50,000 bonus from then Sport Minister Rupert Griffith and stipends paid during the CONCACAF phase of the team’s World Cup qualifying campaign.

But he insisted that he was more concerned about job stability and the authority to make changes to the structure of the women’s game here.

“I survive on my salary at Dallas because everything I do with Trinidad is free,” said Waldrum. “Obviously we all want to be paid for our professionalism, so I am not saying I don’t want to get paid. But I want to see women’s football succeed in Trinidad and Tobago and I want to see us get the resources we need to develop.

“That is where my frustrations lie and that is more important to me than the financial side of things. It is not about the money but I need to have a contract.

“I think Stephen Hart has been doing a fantastic job but if the men’s coach has a contract then the women’s coach should have a contract. And I should have some authority to make changes and ensure the program runs smoothly.

“I am just fed up with the lack of resources, preparation and respect that the women’s team gets and I need to take a stance for my players.”