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Offline Flex

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #210 on: December 28, 2016, 06:53:40 AM »
Nigel Grosvenor talks life and football.
By Garth Wattley (Express).


All about the vibes

“Thank You Grovy” tee-shirts have even been printed for the occasion. Grosvenor holds one up and nods his approval.

The 59-year-old would have revelled in the moment in the best of times, but he does so especially now, in times that are not the best.

This is not a radiation treatment day for Grosvenor, but there are too many such days in his life now. They are necessary to beat back the prostate cancer with which he was diagnosed back in July.

“When I first found out I had it,” he said, his voice strong, “it really shook me because you not expecting to hear that.”

For a man who had won so many battles from the sidelines, personally guiding St Anthony’s, his “Tigers” to seven national titles, not to mention numerous zonal accolades, this is the biggest fight yet. But he and his “team” are up for it.

“I went home and told my family, my wife and children” he continues, “and I was really feeling down eh, but they were positive. My ‘lil daughter said ‘Daddy, doh worry ‘bout it’.”

Grovy would not be human if at that early stage he didn’t worry, a lot. That night sleep wouldn’t come. But while watching TV at 3am the next morning, a personal transformation took place.

“I don’t know what happened pardner,” he explains, “I just start to smile, and I felt good; I said, ‘nah boy, yuh beating this thing, and from then on it was just positive vibes...People just pouring a lot of positive vibes into me.”

The words are spoken in the same strong, deep voice with which Grosvenor always speaks, maybe in tones a tad lower than those he would use in his team talks. And one could not help but get the impression that this health battle is getting the same vigorous treatment that Grosvenor gives to his football assignments.

It’s all about the vibes.

When the “Tigers” take to the pitch, they play to a certain rhythm: fast, attacking, showing skill on the ball.
It has been a style cultivated over three decades.

“Sometimes you have to think eh,” he begins. “The majority of players we have had over the 30-something years were short, small, skilful...When you small, you have to play quick, you have to be fast. And the football today is fast, speed, so that has fitted into our style of football.”

He adds: “Evans Wise, Ricky Aleong, Shane Pierre...those guys were skilful!

A degree in physical education to his name but no coaching badges, Grosvenor has still seen St Anthony’s carve a large spot in the schools football landscape. He and his staff have used common sense, a careful study of the sport and good players to their advantage. Plus, there is Grovy’s great passion. He has lost none of it.

The operation in July, and then radiation treatment meant that he was not able to coach the team this year. But “coach” could not stay away.

“I tried to come around...When we played Trinity and had Trinity like 5-0 or 6-0, I still caught myself coaching,” he laughs. “If you see me behind the goalpost...”

But then he adds: “And I went home and started to feel sick because of the excitement, so I said, well look, doh go back there.”

Once his health permits however, Grosvenor plans to be back on the bench next year, whether at St Anthony’s--if they would have him-- or somewhere else.

And free of the responsibility of teaching, he plans to start his own academy with one of his past players, a certain Carlos Edwards.

“He’s so anxious and excited about it, to open up an academy with me because he had that idea too,” Grosvenor says.
The coach and the 2006 World Cup hero have long been a dynamic duo, Edwards being the star man when St Anthony’s won their first national InterCol against St Benedict’s College at a teeming Queen’s Park Oval back in 1997.

Schools football has changed much since those days, and not necessarily for the better. Grosvenor accepts that. He admits that coaching youngsters these days is harder with all the “distractions.” But don’t tell him the SSFL has outlived its usefulness.

“That is totally unfair,” he says with all the strength he can muster.

To those in the Professional League who feel that way, he makes his case.

”Football is not just going on the field and playing. Football is not just, you call a player and put down cones and say okay, I will make you a great footballer. Football has evolved. It’s like a science, it’s more of a holistic thing. You need an education, and I keep telling people that,” he says.

“You need to think. That is where football is now. The last set of players that we had that could pass with only their skill alone would be the Latapy and the Yorke. The days way, way back when we had the Gally Cummings and so on, it’s no longer that. People now studying this game, so you could have all the skill in the world now, barring Messi and a coach will out-think you. They will put a system in place where you will find it very hard. That is why I have a problem with this national team where a student will have six, seven, eight passes, talented, goes on a scholarship to university and they wouldn’t call them back. That’s it for them.

“Why?

“They prefer them to play in the Pro League down here. I have a serious, serious problem with that! (Because) not only you have a guy now who is very talented but is also educated, so you gonna put the two together, so that kid will be more coachable than a normal kid. We here, Secondary Schools Football League and St Anthony’s College is not just about the football. It’s about socialising, it’s a holistic thing and people don’t understand that.”

He would like to see a partnership between the schools and the Pro league clubs.

“What I would love to see is a Pro League team adopt a school,” he says. “Give the school the resources; give the school the finances in terms of football equipment and then, you don’t like the coach, or you feel you need somebody that could assist that coach, you send that person.

“Schools could develop Under-14 to Under-18 teams for clubs if the clubs provide off-season assistance for training, fitness trainers, provide access to gym facilities. If they come to us with that, we would gladly accept....You producing your feeders.”

He has lots to say, and with much feeling about the game that has been a part his entire professional life. As we spoke, one couldn’t help but feel that much more can be done to make better use of the human resources the country has in football, men like Nigel Grosvenor.

But it is now Monday morning. The talk was too much for one sitting.

The Football Lime that ended at 2 a.m. on Sunday is now part of 2016’s history.

“Real people came,” he relates. “People show up, people show up. People I ‘ent see in years, and years and years; footballers come out, all out.”

Even Kenwyne Jones, star of the all-conquering 2003 team was there.

“He said it was the best event easily for the year he went to,” says Grovy.

“The nice thing was, they were all in different groups, different eras and all of them were just reminiscing, and all I was doing, I was just walking around to the different groups. Every group I went to had some memory that they cherished...It was just fun, fun, fun.”

The vibe was good. Grovy is good.


« Last Edit: December 28, 2016, 07:01:43 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.

Offline Flex

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #211 on: January 19, 2017, 04:57:28 AM »
Shiva Boys Hindu College hog spotlight at SSFL awards.
By Mark Pouchet (Express).


Tyrell Emmanuel of Shiva Boys Hindu College and Kedie Johnson of St Augustine Secondary were named the Male and Female Players of the Year 2016, respectively, at the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) 2016 Awards and Prize Distribution Ceremony at the National Cycling Centre in Balmain, Couva, yesterday.

Emmanuel emerged from the top five male players that also included Isaiah Lee (Naparima College), Quinn Rodney (Shiva Boys Hindu College), Junior Asson (Shiva Boys Hindu College) and Kyle Thomas (San Juan North Secondary).

On the female side, Johnson topped a group that also featured Denecia Prince (Fyzabad Secondary), Malak Marcelle (Diego Martin Central), Shaunalee Govia (Tranquillity Secondary) and Collette Morgan (Fyzabad Secondary).

All those players were also named in the Male and Female SSFL All-Star team.

Schools were also presented their trophies for winning competitions during 2016. Naparima College earned the Digicel Cup and $30,000 while Shiva Boys bagged the BGTT League trophy and $23,000 for winning the Premier Division League competition. San Juan North Secondary was awarded the Coca- Cola Trophy in addition to $8,000 bounty for their Coca-Cola InterCol victory.

On the female side, St Augustine Senior Secondary walked away with the FCB National InterCol title. National titles were awarded to Shiva Boys Hindu College (U-14), Bishop Anstey East (Girls U-15), Trinity College East (U-16), Arima North Secondary (Boys U-20) and Penal Secondary (Girls U-20).

In the Championship Division, Diego Martin Secondary earned the FCB Trophy and $5,000 in the girls category while Carapichaima East Secondary nabbed the Shell Trophy and $5,000 among the boys.

Former T&T senior men’s coach Stephen Hart delivered the feature address, in which he implored student athletes to seek avenues to improve themselves and to be fearless about pursuing their goals.

SSFL president Anthony Creed demanded officials remember to serve the students and athletes they were elected to serve. Minister of Sport Darryl Smith and Trinidad and Tobago Football Association president David John-Williams also attended the ceremony.

« Last Edit: January 19, 2017, 05:08:57 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.

Offline Flex

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #212 on: January 20, 2017, 03:13:20 AM »
SSFL awardees hail teamwork as key.
By Nickolai Madray (Newsday).


Teamwork is the key element for success according to the 2016 Secondary School Football League’s (SSFL) Players of the Year.

Kedie Johnson and Tyrel Emmanuel were named SSFL female and male Players of the Year respectively on Wednesday and they both recognised the hard work of their teammates as contributing factors to their success. Both stated that their individual awards simply rounded off a fantastic season.

Newsday spoke to Johnson at the SSFL awards ceremony which took place at the National Cycling Centre in Couva.

“This year brought many achievements and titles for St Augustine Secondary, even though we faced many battles throughout the season, nothing stopped us from keeping focused and uniting as a great team,” the 18-year-old Johnson humbly expressed.

She went on to describe her emotions on being the best female player in the SSFL.

“Words cannot begin to explain how grateful I am because I could not have been named ‘best player’ if they (St. Augustine Secondary teammates) were not surrounding me, so basically I didn’t win this award, they won it for me because they are the best players,” she declared. Johnson was also St Augustine Secondary’s vice-captain as she scored approximately 25 goals for the National Girls Inter-Col Champions during the 2016 season and assisted numerous goals in the process.

Tyrel Emmanuel of Shiva Boys Hindu College also paid tribute to his teammates as he stated, “I’m very pleased to win the Player of the Year award but I would not have been able to win this award without the support of the team, the fans and our school community.

“I would like to say that my success came from the players because we really wanted to win the league trophy this season and we are thankful for the outcome of us winning the league.” He also noted that to win the league, everyone on the team pulled their weight and the investment of hard work during the pre-season along with consistency was the key to rallying out the season and ending at the top of the table.

Emmanuel scored three goals during the 2016 season and was the heart of the Shiva Boys midfield as the 18-yearold maestro created endless chances and assisted several goals in their successful SSFL Premier Division title campaign.

Johnson and Emmanuel already set their next set of goals they desire to meet, in the not so distant future, as they have to keep their mental focus and emerge successors in their upcoming examinations.

They detailed the importance for them to keep on developing as players and furthermore, as citizens of the nation, it is important to develop their mental and academic side to enhance the possibility of future options, offers and marketability.

As both players are set to leave after this academic school year, they left inspiring messages for their teams as they have faith in their respective squads to recapture the titles.

2016 SSFL All-Star Teams Female:

Goalkeepers - Kaydeen Jack (Diego Martin Central), Chelsea Ramnath (Fyzabad Sec), Danisha Britto (St. Augustine Sec).

Defenders - Abigail La Rode (St. Augustine Sec), Kerice King (Tranquillity Sec), Jaasiel Forde (Bishop’s Anstey East), Tamara Johnson, Collette Morgan (Fyzabad Sec).

Midfielders - Malak Marcelle (Diego Martin Central), Denecia Prince (Fyzabad Sec), Shaunalee Govia (Tranquillity Sec), Ranea Warde (Bishop’s Anstey East), Shenieka Paul (Pleasentville Sec), Aaliyah Lynch (St. Augustine Sec).

Strikers - Asha James (Signal Hill Secondary), Celene Lorraine (Mason Hall Sec), Reanique Primus, Chantal Murrell (Bishop’s Anstey East), Adanya Phillip, Ke’die Johnson (St. Augustine Sec).

2016 SSFL All-Star Teams Male:

Goalkeepers - Desean Bowen (Trinity College Moka), Rahim Lee (Pleasentville Sec), Denzil Smith (Shiva Boys).

Defenders - Yohannes Richardson (Shiva Boys), Mylz Barrington (Pres. San’do), Derron John (St. Anthony’s College), Mickel Ravello (St. Benedict’s College), Kyle Thomas (San Juan North Sec), Zion Holder (St. Augustine Sec).

Midfielders - Jordan Riley (Pres. San’do), Akil Frank (Signal Hill Sec), Justin Sadoo (Naparima College), Quinn Rodney, Judah Garcia, Tyrel Emmanuel (Shiva Boys).

Strikers - Isaiah Lee (Naparima College), Haile Beckles (St. Anthony’s College), Junior Asson (Shiva Boys), Ronaldo Boyce (San Juan North Sec), Nion Lamy (Pres. San’do).

« Last Edit: January 20, 2017, 03:44:57 AM by Flex »
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Offline Flex

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #213 on: February 12, 2017, 05:52:49 AM »
North Zone SSFL salutes Rudolph Hope.
By Keith Clement (Guardian).


Rudolph Hope, former secretary of the North Zone Secondary Schools Football League, came in for high praises when the sitting executive of the league held an appreciation function in his honour, at East Mucurapo Secondary School, Mucurapo Road, on Friday night.

Those in attendance to salute the yeoman service provided to local schools football to the 69-year-old Hope, a former teacher of the school, included North Zone chairman Anastasia Griffith; vice-chairman Derrick Phillip; secretary, Roger Martin, and assistant secretary, operations, Marlon Phillip.

Hope, of St James, began his teaching career at Arima Secondary School from 1977 and began his life in football at the school in 1978 under coach Robert Miller before moving to East Mucurapo (formerly Mucurapo Senior Comprehensive) in 1980.

Four years later Hope was elected to the position of SSFL assistant secretary to Azaad Mohammed-Khan.

Two years later Mohammed-Khan was elevated to the post of general secretary of the SSFL, which saw Hope being promoted to secretary, a position he held with great success until his retirement in 2014.

Vice-chairman of the SSFL executive Derrick Phillip, the principal of East Mucurapo Secondary held a function to honour Hope.

During his address to the small gathering, Peter Timothy, the zone's former chairman and coach of Corpus Christi Girls' College football team, praised Hope for creating and developing an avenue for minds to be moulded through sport and become better citizens overall.

Timothy noted that under the tenure of Hope, a founding member of Humming Birds Pan Groove as well as manager of Scrunters Pan Groove and Power Stars Steel Orchestra, the North Zone were the ones who led the way in the establishment of the Girls Championship Division Football.

"We started it in the North Zone and then based on its success, took it to the SSFL executive and with their help we were able to expand to the other zones, having used the North as a pilot project."

Derrick Phillip added, "East Mucurapo is the hub of North Zone SSFL activities and for us Hope is a very special individual.

"Back in 1990 when he came to the school he (Hope) was the welding teacher and manager of the school football team at the same time, and I use to marvel at him doing both jobs with great efficiency.

"As he grew into his craft and he began to rise in his role at the SSFL North Zone level to become secretary he took the zone from being mediocre to a level that other zones could look up too."

Phillip added, "He brought a level of honesty, order and professionalism to the zone and up to this day the zone is the only one that can boast of handling most of our business on our own through a number of fund-raising ventures."

"Because of the tremendous work he did with the North Zone, it was no wonder that SSFL general secretary Azaad Mohammed-Khan called on him to assist other zones on numerous occasions which was a testament to the good work he had done over the years"

As a sign of his commitment to helping the North Zone and in general the SSFL to become a better working organisation, Phillip reminded all gathered that even after Hope retired officially from the zone, he still assisted.

"In his retirement, he found more time to develop to the zone and up to this day he still contributes."

Reflecting on the zone's 50th anniversary celebrations which were held in 2014, Phillip noted that the main organiser behind the scene was Hope himself and even then he was in retirement.

On a sad note, Phillip chided those schools and officials who were not present as he felt it was necessary for them to show some appreciation for the work done by Hope in laying a solid foundation for the North and other zones of the SSFL to follow.

"Up to this day he has a very calm demeanour, and is very organised and honest as well as being hard-working and willing to lend a helping hand by doing what he does for the love of the sport.

The younger of the Phillip's, Marlon (no relation), quickly pointed out that he was a student of Hope and a member of the school's first Inter-Col winning team in 1982.

"I knew what he stood for back then and up to this day he still lives by those principles and for me it was a pleasure to learn and grow under his tenure."

"There isn't a more resourceful person than Hope when it comes to the running of affairs in the SSFL North Zone for certain and I must admit that it was sad not to have a proper function on his behalf at the astute time when he decided to officially call it quit," the younger Phillip 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: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #214 on: February 16, 2017, 04:28:37 AM »
Inter-Col Festival returns next month.
T&T Express Reports.


The Inter-Col Football Nostalgia Committee, under the chairmanship of former Minister of Sport Ken Butcher, will host their Fifth Annual Colleges Ex-Pupils Inter-Col Football Festival on March 4 at St Mary’s College ground, Serpentine Road, St James from 9 a.m.

The competing “Inter-Col Winners” will comprise Queen’s Royal College, Naparima College, St. Benedict’s College, Presentation College, Tranquillity Secondary, Fatima College, Belmont Secondary, St Mary’s College, St Anthony’s College and St Augustine Secondary.

The main objective behind the Festival is to engender a sense of patriotism and passion towards one’s almamater, a media release from the organisers stated.

“Secondly, to provide an environment to engage young players in a manner that affords stability, a disciplined work ethic and credible transition to national service,” the release read.



FLASHBACK: Action from the 2015 InterCol Football festival.
The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

Offline Deeks

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #215 on: February 16, 2017, 04:22:29 PM »
The only person I recognize in the pix is Butcher.

Offline Flex

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #216 on: April 21, 2017, 05:40:48 AM »
Presentation survive Shiva Boys protest over Lee Yaw; San Juan North sunk.
By Lasana Liburd (Wired868).


A late protest threatened to produce a final unexpected twist to the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) Premier Division honour role, as a Shiva Boys Hindu College challenge against Presentation College (San Fernando) offered a glimmer of hope to relegation-threatened San Juan North Secondary.

Presentation forward James Alex Lee Yaw was at the centre of the furore as Shiva Boys questioned whether his academic qualification were sufficient for him to represent his school in the SSFL last season.

Lee Yaw, who was born in the United States to a Trinidadian father, began his local school life in Lower Six at Presentation. However, he got seven subjects at Grade 12, which is supposedly the American equivalent of the CXC test.

The SSFL rules stipulate that a player must have four CXC passes to represent his school in Lower Six.

Presentation had already lost one protest last season over the use of Trinidad and Tobago National Under-20 defender Kori Cupid, who was ineligible to compete due to the year he entered secondary school. Cupid played roughly one quarter of his school’s games and the ruling meant that the “Pres Lions” dropped from second to fifth in the final standings.

Had Lee Yaw been also deemed an illegitimate player, Presentation would have been relegated. However, the SSFL credentials committee, appeals committee and, ultimately, the Ministry of Education’s accreditation committee all declared the teenager to be a legitimate student.

The decision meant Presentation held on to the South Zone Intercol title, which they won after edging Shiva Boys on kicks from the penalty mark. And, better yet, they remain a top flight team for the upcoming season.

However, it is likely to be the final nail in the coffin for San Juan North, who finished one place and a solitary point above the relegation zone at the end of the season, only to have the rug pulled from under their feet as protests against Cupid and East Mucurapo Secondary defender Abdus Ramcharan—who had three CXC passes—saw points belatedly awarded to Queen’s Royal College and Fatima College.

QRC and Fatima both leapfrogged San Juan North to escape demotion while East Mucurapo dropped places to the foot of the 15-team table where they will also be relegated along with Pleasantville Secondary.

Presentation coach Shawn Cooper said he was never worried about the Shiva Boys protest.

“I think Shiva Boys have to know, just like us, that you win some and you lose some,” Cooper told Wired868. “They were a bit disturbed when they lost to us in the South Intercol final and the Big Four semifinal. So they decided to go that route…

“We only played the boy after he was granted permission by the Ministry and the Secondary Schools board. The boy was in school and we didn’t play him until he was cleared. He is a legal student of the school, so I don’t know what the protest was really about.”

The dust has finally cleared from the protest board and it does not look good for San Juan North. SSFL president William Wallace confirmed that there is no scheduled meeting to consider a special provision to keep the National Intercol champions up and play with an additional Premier Division school next season.

The only delay in the final decision for the boys from Bourg Mulatresse is due to the wait in getting signatures from the relevant arbitrators.

It will be the second time that the reigning Intercol champions were relegated, after East Mucurapo managed the dubious distinction in 2014. But the off-field circumstances make San Juan North’s fall much harder to swallow.

Cooper said he sympathised with San Juan North, although he felt Presentation had been unfairly castigated in certain quarters for an inadvertent error regarding Cupid.

“When you see talk about banning a school for information it doesn’t have, you know people are speaking on emotion,” said Cooper. “It is unfortunate for San Juan the way things spun out but it was just the luck of the draw… I wouldn’t have liked to be in San Juan’s position. It is very unfortunate.”

Wallace told Wired868, in a previous interview, that the SSFL has requested office space from the Ministry of Sport and hopes to have a full-time secretariat in place for the upcoming season, which should help to lessen the likelihood of similar post-season upheavals.

“We are now 50 years old and we have been operating out of a car trunk for that time,” said Wallace. “With $2 million annually coming into this league, it is about time we have a steady secretariat. Some of the problems we have been having in the past were probably because [we did not have] that.

“Also we want to have a computerised database [which will] eliminate some of the problems that happened last season… We already have somebody setting up the required databases for us.”

Cooper said he urged the SSFL to hire office staff for years and was happy to hear that it is finally a priority.

“Instead of allowing things to happen and then penalising, [the SSFL should be able to] call the school beforehand and warn about possible issues,” said Cooper. “San Juan didn’t do anything wrong and they got demoted because documents went in from another school that were not checked. I’m not blaming anyone but we have to get tighter in the running of the league.”

In 2016, Presentation was runner-up in the National Intercol and Big Four finals while they were second in the Premier Division before the Cupid protest. Cooper insisted it was a great season for the San Fernando school.

“We exceeded our expectations in getting into all the finals,” he said. “I don’t think trophies alone is the benchmark for success. If your child doesn’t come first in test, [you will tell them] they failed?”

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #217 on: May 05, 2017, 04:14:16 AM »
Grosvenor set for QRC job! Iconic St Anthony’s coach leaves “Westmoorings Tigers”
By Amiel Mohammed (Wired868).


After 33 years at the helm of St Anthony’s College, Nigel “Grovey” Grosvenor will be lining up on the bench of a North Zone rival in the 2017 Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) season.

Instead of giving orders to the red “Westmoorings Tigers”, the veteran coach looks set to be calling the shots for the blue and blue of Queen’s Royal College. Grosvenor suggested that his proposed move owed much to a falling out with St Anthony’s principal Maurice Inniss.

“The principal has his agenda and I’m not part of the plans,” Grosvenor told Wired868. “He has new plans and wants to take football in a new direction… So I went. I can’t work where I’m not wanted.”

The proposed move, which has not yet been confirmed by QRC principal David Simon, should be a bitter pill for past and present players and fans of the Westmoorings Tigers. Grosvenor is one of the SSFL’s most successful coaches and led his former school to six national titles along with a host of zonal accolades.

He also gave run-outs to numerous past and present Trinidad and Tobago international footballers including World Cup 2006 players Evans Wise, Carlos Edwards and Kenwyne Jones and current Soca Warriors custodian Jan-Michael Williams and defender Yohance Marshall.

Tension between Grosvenor and St Anthony’s principal, Inniss, appears to have been brewing for some time now and Grosvenor’s newly founded coaching academy was caught in the crosshairs.

Grosvenor contends that at the end of March—almost two months after his Tigers Football Coaching School started training at the college grounds—Inniss asked him for a proposal for the use of the premises.

The requested proposal was delivered but, according to the decorated coach, he still has not received approval to use the Westmoorings venue and he subsequently applied to use the Hasely Crawford Stadium training field for his coaching school. Wired868 tried unsuccessfully to reach Inniss for comment.

Grosvenor insisted that he was prepared to use the Queen’s Park Savannah if necessary rather than let his dream of a coaching academy die.

“One of my major dreams after I retired was to set up a coaching school,” he said. “I want to coach. It’s a major part of my life.”

When Grosvenor retired at the end of the 2016/17 academic year, Inniss allegedly told him that he could no longer be accommodated as a coach on the school’s payroll in the 2017/18 year. So, Grosvenor went about establishing his Coaching School with a view to making his dreams a reality and supplementing his pension income.

However, having called the Westmoorings school home for more than three decades, he did not anticipate the treatment that was meted out to him from that institution.

Still, Grosvenor might have been able to take a deep breath and soldier on. But when FIFA President Gianni Infantino visited Trinidad and Tobago last month and St Anthony’s College was among a handful of SSFL schools invited to meet him at a function, the retired teacher was stung to realise that he was not on the guests’ list.

That was the play that breached the coach’s defences and may yet prove—QRC supporters would hope—to be an own goal.

Grovesnor turned his attention instead to the Maraval Road Royalians who only avoided relegation from the SSFL top flight by the slenderest of margins last year. QRC, who were coached by Dexter Gill last season, finished in 13th position on the 14-team table but avoided demotion after benefiting from a rule violation by Presentation College (San Fernando).

Presentation were found to have illegally used Trinidad and Tobago National Under-20 Team player Kori Cupid and the resulting alteration to the points tally meant QRC climbed out of the relegation places with 2016 Coca Cola Intercol Champs San Juan North taking their place.

Wily and experienced, Grosvenor was cautiously optimistic about the task at hand although he preferred to focus on his long-term vision for QRC rather than simply targeting short-term success in his first season in charge.

“It’s a new chapter, a new experience, a new challenge and I’m excited,” he said. “QRC is QRC. [I’m going to do] whatever I can do for them in terms of gaining the sort of respect that they used to have where the football is concerned.

“Over the last few years, they have not been very successful. So whatever I can do to help. I’m just going there to work with whoever is there.”

As head coach, he would expect to have the full oversight of the school’s football program. But he made it clear that he did not intend to tamper with the College’s rich pre-history and legacy.

“Going to QRC is an honour. I am not going to change the culture,” he said. “[I’ll have] whole program oversight. We have to know what’s going on below when you are coaching on top.

“[…] I am going to work with who is there, like Clint Marcelle with the Under-16 and Wendell “Shaky” David, and we are going to work together.”

Still, Grosvenor admitted to a tinge of regret about leaving St Anthony’s after three decades.

“The people make St Anthony’s College, not the building,” said Grosvenor. “I am leaving the building but I will always be close to the people, the workers, teachers, fans. That’s what is giving me comfort.”

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

Offline Deeks

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #218 on: May 05, 2017, 10:30:51 AM »
Wow! That is a surprise. But once you retire some school don't want to pay you. The same thing happen to Mike Grayson at St. Augustine. He is at Trinity East now. He also mentioned some principals having issues with the "undue" influences of "popular" football or sport coaches. The popular line of these administrators is "we want to take the institution in a different  or new direction ". Good luck.
« Last Edit: May 05, 2017, 11:13:37 AM by Deeks »

Offline Flex

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #219 on: May 10, 2017, 01:52:47 AM »
SSFL ruling relegates Intercol champs San Juan North.
T&T Newsday Reports.


THE SECONDARY Schools Football League (SSFL) yesterday revealed their ruling on a pair of matters involving two footballers who played in the 2016 season - Abdus Ramcharan of East Mucurapo Secondary and fellow defender Kori Cupid of Presentation College in San Fernando - but were ineligible.

In a media release issued yesterday, the SSFL stated, “two matters (that) were raised by two schools, which after review by both the Credential and Disciplinary Committees resulted in the reversal of the final results.” Regarding the issue with Ramcharan, “the Committees, including the Appeals, upheld the decision that Abdus only having three subjects in Lower Six (contrary to League Rules) is not eligible to represent his school as a player in the League.” As a result, the October 6 encounter between East Mucurapo and St Benedict’s was reversed from 2-1 in East Mucurapo’s favour with St Benedict’s being handed the win 3-0.

Four subsequent matches involving East Mucurapo saw the scores switched to 3-0 in their opponents’ favour - October 8 against Fatima, October 12 against QRC, October 15 against Trinity and October 26 against Fyzabad.

Cupid’s status as a student, having wrote the Secondary Entrance Assessment (SEA) exam in 2008, was raised by Naparima College.

“Both the Credential and Disciplinary Committees ruled that Kori is not eligible to represent his school as a player in the League because he could have been in the system for more than eight years.” As a consequence, the scores in four matches involving Presentation San Fernando were reversed to 3-0 in their opponents’ favour - September 10 against Fatima, September 21 against East Mucurapo, September 24 against QRC and September 28 against Naparima.

The ruling by the SSFL Credential and Disciplinary Committees sees reigning Intercol champions San Juan North slip into the relegation zone despite not having done anything illegally as teams below them benefited from 3-0 default wins to leapfrog them in the standings.

Revised SSFL Standings

Teams.........................................................Points
Shiva Boys.........................................................37
Naparima............................................................32
St Anthony’s........................................................28
Presentation San Fernando.......................................................23
Fyzabad..............................................................23
Signal Hill...........................................................20
St Augustine.......................................................20
Trinity College.......................................................20
St Mary’s.............................................................20
QRC...................................................................15
Fatima................................................................15
St Benedict’s.......................................................15
San Juan North.......................................................11
Pleasantville.......................................................10
East Mucurapo.......................................................7

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: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #220 on: May 11, 2017, 01:55:45 AM »
San Juan North to question SSFL’s decision.
By Jelani Beckles (Newsday).


SAN Juan North Secondary plans to query the decision by the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) to change the final point standings of the 2016 Premier League competition, which saw the Intercol champions relegated.

San Juan North managed to survive relegation initially and, with renewed confidence, went on to win the Intercol title. However, a media release by the SSFL on Tuesday stated, “two matters (that) were raised by two schools, which after review by both the Credential and Disciplinary Committees resulted in the reversal of the final results.”

The SSFL revealed their ruling on a pair of matters involving two footballers who played in the 2016 season - Abdus Ramcharan of East Mucurapo Secondary and fellow defender Kori Cupid of Presentation College in San Fernando - but were ineligible.

Ramcharan, a Lower Six student, was not eligible to play in the 2016 season because he did pass enough subjects. Cupid, who wrote the Secondary Entrance Assessment (SEA) in 2008, is in Secondary School for more than eight years which makes him ineligible to play.

As a consequence, the results in a number of matches involving East Mucurapo and Presentation San Fernando were changed. The new standings saw San Juan North (13th), Pleasantville (14th) and East Mucurapo (15th) finish in the bottom three, which saw the teams relegated.

Vice principal of San Juan North, Joseph Taylor, said the school’s hierarchy are not accepting the decision, having already met with the SSFL two or three times.

Taylor said, “I am a person who never thinks anything is cast in stone.” Taylor said there were protests questioning the eligibilities of a few players during the season, but he believes the League did not deal with the situation quickly.

“If they had dealt with these things in an expeditious manner, in a timely manner, then we will not be in this position. My coach (Jerry Moe and) the players played their heart out down to the last game and we were not relegated.

Because of that their spirits were lifted and motivated by the coach and we went on to do what people might think was the impossible.

We won the Intercol because we know we have the talent, but only now to find ourselves in this position.” Taylor said the accomplishment of San Juan North has made the entire community of San Juan and Santa Cruz proud.

“It is a community school, we really lifted the feelings of people in San Juan and Santa Cruz. People were out (supporting) when we won the Intercol, the Zonal and the East. We were even successful in T10 cricket, we always doing good things in cricket.”

Taylor said sporting heroes have come from Santa Cruz and sometimes schools such as San Juan North may only be recognised through sport.

“These are the things that schools like mine are recognized by and communities are motivated. When we look at the Santa Cruz valley, we have Ato (Boldon), we have (Brian) Lara, we have (Arnold) Dwarika from Santa Cruz also. We look forward to these things. I am from Santa Cruz, everyday when I walk (in the area) people ask me what is the position (with the SSFL ruling).”

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

Offline asylumseeker

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #221 on: May 11, 2017, 05:18:08 AM »
Could this matter have been ventilated without baring the student's academic record? Has the right balance been struck?

Offline Deeks

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #222 on: May 11, 2017, 07:07:18 AM »
The principals, their staff, the coaches  and the ssfl  are culpable for these infractions. This first happened in 65 with Benedicts. All involved needs to clarify situation like these before the season start. The ssf needs to have precise rules.  I may be wrong, but is the ssfl rules online where the school have access?

Offline asylumseeker

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #223 on: May 18, 2017, 12:04:11 PM »
Quote
Taylor said “I am a person who never thinks anything is cast in stone.”

So said, so done.

Wow.

Offline palos

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #224 on: May 18, 2017, 01:17:28 PM »
Quote
Taylor said “I am a person who never thinks anything is cast in stone.”

So said, so done.

Wow.

Gi we de update nah



BTW...this eligibility ting in SSFL been going on for decades


Man in school over 8 years yes.....LOL!  :devil:

Carlos "The Rolls Royce" Edwards

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #225 on: May 18, 2017, 01:37:17 PM »
Quote
Taylor said “I am a person who never thinks anything is cast in stone.”

So said, so done.

Wow.

Gi we de update nah



BTW...this eligibility ting in SSFL been going on for decades


Man in school over 8 years yes.....LOL!  :devil:

"Somehow" a vote occurred. The stay-up vote won. With all respect to my friends in San Juan, one wonders how it is a vote could be held at all.

Offline palos

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #226 on: May 18, 2017, 01:52:17 PM »
Quote
Taylor said “I am a person who never thinks anything is cast in stone.”

So said, so done.

Wow.

Gi we de update nah



BTW...this eligibility ting in SSFL been going on for decades


Man in school over 8 years yes.....LOL!  :devil:

"Somehow" a vote occurred. The stay-up vote won. With all respect to my friends in San Juan, one wonders how it is a vote could be held at all.

Has St Benedict's filed their protest yet?  As next in line to be relegated....(assuming the standings posted are accurate)....surely they will cause another vote to be held.

Then it will be Fatima's turn....and then QRC's. 

By the time they done...Shiva Men....oops  :-[   will end up relegated.  Which may see justice served in a very round about manner... ;)
Carlos "The Rolls Royce" Edwards

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #227 on: May 18, 2017, 02:55:42 PM »
Palos. 16 teams next season as opposed to 15.

San Juan gets special dispensation to stay in the league.
THE BEATINGS WILL CONTINUE UNTIL MORALE IMPROVES

Offline palos

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #228 on: May 18, 2017, 04:40:52 PM »
Palos. 16 teams next season as opposed to 15.

San Juan gets special dispensation to stay in the league.

Thanks bro.  We is a real Vikey Vie, Ratcheefee society yes. 

Is like English FA saying dey go make de BPL a 21 team league next season so that Sunderland could stay up. 

Special assentation more like it

And San Juan have a decent case eh.   SSFL wait till NOW to investigate and penalize?  We does jes make up ting as we go.


Oh well
« Last Edit: May 18, 2017, 04:44:51 PM by palos »
Carlos "The Rolls Royce" Edwards

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #229 on: May 18, 2017, 09:20:22 PM »
Is sweet T&T. Blatant disregard for rules, law and order.
THE BEATINGS WILL CONTINUE UNTIL MORALE IMPROVES

Offline Flex

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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #230 on: May 19, 2017, 04:55:29 AM »
Demoted San Juan North challenges SSFL ruling.
By Walter Alibey (Guardian).


The executive of the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) is seeking legal advice to determine if a decision by the general council of the SSFL to include demoted San Juan North Secondary School in the top flight competition this season, is legal and can stand.

On Wednesday, Joseph Taylor, the school’s vice principal moved a motion at an extraordinary general council meeting for his school to be included in the league, due to the alleged inefficiencies and tardiness of members of the Credentials and Disciplinary Committees. When the vote was taken San Juan received 20 votes in favour, while 18 members voted against, which effectively means that the premier division will now comprise 16 teams instead of 15, when the league kicks-off in September. The division has never had more than 15 teams.

The SSFL sent out the final standing of the league’s for the 2016 season last week which followed the rulings by both committees after appeals and protests were lodged. The table showed San Juan North among three teams being relegated from the premier division. On Wednesday, Taylor challenged their position in regards to the final standing, saying it was due mainly to the members of the committees not doing their jobs properly. He is contending that players who were ineligible to represent their schools, should have been spotted and stopped from action within seven days of a protest being lodged.

“Instead what we had, was that the players were allowed to play for the entire season and then the credentials and disciplinary committees coming months after, when teams are preparing for the coming season, to say the school has been demoted. Well that is not right. We should not have to pay the consequences for the inefficiencies of the SSFL members,” Taylor explained.

He made it clear his stance was in no way, against the league’s constitution, saying, “We simply went to the general council, which has the power to decide how many teams should play in the league and we were granted a place. This clearly shows that no decision was overturned. Instead, what we did was to challenge the inefficiencies of the members of the committees.”

The credential committee of the SSFL was chaired by Azaad Khan and includes Gerald Elliot, Lawrence Seepersad, the SSFL’s assistant secretary of operations and a member from each zone when adjudicating on matters.

The disciplinary committee on the other hand comprised chairmen Seepersad and Elliot and other members Andre Moses, Brian Williams, Kirt Harry, Rudolph Hope, Wayne Caesar, Ezziel Seecharan, Trevor Bridgelalsingh and Leo Braithwaite.

Both committees acted on protests that East Mucurapo Secondary and Presentation College (San Fernando) used Abdus Ramcharan and Kori Cupid respectively during the league, but neither was stopped.

Taylor in his argument pointed out that the protests were made well into the season, but committee members allowed them to go on. “The credentials committee has a responsibility to look at the credentials of students and determine whether they can play or not and the disciplinary acts on concerns,” Taylor said.

He called on members to carry out their jobs with high standards, saying the league is an important one that is growing and officials must be held accountable.

Meanwhile, Elliot who was among the 18 who voted against Taylor’s argument at the Carapichaima Secondary School, confirmed that SSFL officials will definitely seek the advice of a legal counsel before they move forward.

He said Wednesday’s support for Taylor and his school is sending the wrong message to the public at large but more so the youngsters who the league represents. “It has placed the league in a bad light. It is telling any school that feels aggrieved that it can challenge key rules and laws. This was definitely a wrong decision which can pose more problems for the league in the future,” Elliot said.

The SSFL will now have to decide on how relegation of teams from the premier division as well as promotion of teams from the Championship Division will be done. It is scheduled to begin September 8.

« Last Edit: May 19, 2017, 05:13:49 AM by Flex »
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Re: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #231 on: May 20, 2017, 03:57:53 AM »
San Juan survive! SSFL members defy executive and standings to keep Bourg boys in top flight.
By Lasana Liburd (Wired868).


On the same day that the new Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) executive committee unveiled its fixtures for the 2017 season came a decision that will force a do-over.

San Juan North Secondary are back in the Premier Division, despite the drawn out process of their relegation from the top flight—seven months after the last ball was kicked in the 2016 season.

This afternoon, at an extraordinary meeting of the SSFL general council at the Carapichaima East Secondary school, the membership voted 20 to 18 in favour of a motion to keep San Juan in the Premier Division.

The motion was moved by San Juan North vice-principal Joseph Taylor, who is also the president of the Trinidad and Tobago Football Referees Association (TTRFA), and implied that the school suffered unjustly owing to the shortcomings of various SSFL committees.

East Mucurapo Secondary and Presentation College (San Fernando) used schoolboys Abdus Ramcharan and Kori Cupid respectively in violation of SSFL rules. Cupid played a handful of games for the “Pres Lions” while Ramcharan represented Mucurapo for much of their season.

The SSFL credentials committee failed to spot the wrongdoing, which eventually came to light after protests by St Benedict’s College and Naparima College.

The SSFL disciplinary committee’s sanctions to either school for the violations—which came after the end of the season—meant a late rejig of the standings. And Queen’s Royal College (QRC) and Fatima College climbed out of the demotion zone as a result while Mucurapo and San Juan went in the opposite direction.

The SSFL appeals committee and an independent tribunal rejected Mucurapo’s appeals.

Today, representatives from 20 schools voted to ignore the final standings and keep San Juan up anyway owing to the extenuating circumstances. No team will be demoted in their place and the competition now changes from 15 to 16 teams.

New SSFL president William Wallace confirmed the decision of the extraordinary meeting.

“The situation is we have to go with a 16-team Premier Division,” said Wallace. “At this point, this is what it looks like.”

Wired868 tried unsuccessfully to contact Taylor and San Juan coach Jerry Moe. Phillip Fraser, the San Juan North manager, said he did not wish to say much since he was also an SSFL vice-president. But he left little doubt about his feelings on the matter.

“I am elated,” said Fraser.

Wired868 understands that San Juan North’s survival owed much to political manoeuvring. There was, according to a source, an unusually high turnout of schools from east Trinidad who helped push Joseph’s motion through.

It created some unease within the ranks of the SSFL executive.

Was today’s decision for San Juan North a vote for morality and a sign that schools were prepared to take the initiative to save a member who was hard done by the law?

Or was it courting anarchy and disorder to retrospectively overturn the league standings and rule book? Could teams now ensure their survival by votes rather than points?

“My personal view is we have rules and are guided by the rules,” Wallace told Wired868. “You cannot change them after the fact. Going forward if you think you want to change rules then fine but not after the fact…

“However, the membership has spoken and therefore we have to abide by that.”

From a logistical standpoint, the impact of San Juan North’s reprieve is minimal. With 15 teams, one school had a bye on each SSFL match day. San Juan North will now be simply pencilled in to do away with the bye.

But what happens at the end of the season? Would four teams go down and three come up to create a 15-team competition once more? Or will the top flight remain at sweet 16?

Wallace said it is a matter that the SSFL General Council will need to consider.

“There were two meetings today: an extraordinary meeting and a General Council meeting,” said Wallace. “The General Council made the decision that the three teams at the bottom of the table would go down and three [other] teams come up. So that has not changed.

“What happened is that, regardless of that, the extraordinary meeting decided that San Juan North should not go down. So only two teams go down from last season.”

The SSFL 2017 season will kick off on Thursday 8 September 2017 with a double header at the Ato Boldon Stadium in Couva. Newly promoted Carapichaima East face Fatima in the curtain raiser while defending champions Shiva Boys Hindu College tackle Big Four winners Naparima College in the feature affair.

San Juan North, the 2016 Intercol champions, should be in action not too long afterwards.

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: 2016 SSFL Thread
« Reply #232 on: June 01, 2017, 01:41:22 AM »
SSFL seeks legal advice on San Juan’s 2017 inclusion.
T&T Guardian Reports.


By this week the line-up of schools in the Premier and Championship Division will be known, four months before the September 8 kick-off date of the 2017 Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) season.

Williams Wallace, president of the SSFL said executive has sought legal advice on whether the decision of the Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) on May 17, to include demoted San Juan North Secondary School from the premier division could stand.

He is also calling for a review of the league’s constitution to deal with other potential issues that will hamper the league’s operations in the future.

From the meeting, it was agreed to include San Juan after its vice principal Joseph Taylor convinced the gathering at the Carapichaima Secondary School, that his school was unjustly punished for no reason.

San Juan was among three schools relegated when the SSFL posted its final standing for the 2016 season a month ago.

Taylor, however, challenged the decision, blaming the inefficiencies of the SSFL officers of the disciplinary and credentials committees for not dealing with the issues in a timely manner.

Among the issues in particular for which the committees had to address were protests from other schools as it related to the illegal use of players by East Mucurapo Secondary and Presentation College, San Fernando.

In the end they were both found to be in violation of the SSFL rules and regulations according to a media release from the SSFL a few weeks ago.

According to Taylor the matter should have been dealt with immediately by informing the guilty schools and stopping the players from further participation but instead the SSFL waited until the end of the season to make their decision and then informed the schools.

Taylor also made it clear that his school never had any decision by the SSFL overturned, but rather got the approval by the general council to be included.

The general council, he said, has the power to decide on the teams that will play in all tournaments.

However, yesterday, Wallace said a file of all the necessary documents was presented to a sport’s attorney for advice at the weekend and it was followed that up with a meeting of the legal counsel on Monday.

The SSFL executives are seeking clarity on the process that resulted in that decision regarding San Juan’s inclusion for the 2017 season.

Wallace said he and his executives are seriously concerned about the consequences the May 17 decision may have in the future.

“This has opened up a can of worms and therefore, what we are seeking to do is have the constitution reviewed, and possibly take steps to amend it if necessary.

“Not only with this particular matter, but there are other issues that I feel would require the constitution to be scrutinised by a legal person,” Wallace explained.

He ruled out the need for having a legal representative on the Board of the SSFL, but said the SSFL need someone it can consult with regularly, is definitely needed.

Wallace disagreed with Taylor’s comments in a newspaper report that the decision to include San Juan North came from the general council, saying it did not come from the general council.

“The general council is made up of the premier and championship divisions schools as well as zonal representatives and officers.

“That decision came from an extraordinary general meeting which comprises of all the schools in the league, including schools that did not take part in the premier and championship divisions.”

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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