Tues. Mar. 30, 2021– I am a football player who was born and raised in Dangriga town. I come from an area called Logan Field which is situated right in front of my family home in the heart of Dangriga. This area produced several great football players for Dangriga selections and the Belize National Teams. In the 1960s the government made a bad decision when they constructed a reservoir on the field. Since then, football is no longer played there.
When I was growing up in Dangriga, every section of the town had their own football team, and there were ongoing competitions among ourselves. The Wyhima Boys from Burial Ground area were our biggest rivals, and we had regular tournaments against each other. We were self-sponsored, had no uniforms, boots, sometimes balls to play with, no sponsorships and no coach. In addition to playing for our community teams, some of us were selected also to play for our primary school and high school teams. I played with several players, but the four most prominent national players are: Anthony “Garrincha” Adderly, Philip “Buck” Palacio (deceased), Roy “Brazilian” Velasquez and Nolbert Moss.
The first time we had a coach in our lives was when we attended Sacred Heart School and Roy “Pele” Ellis became our first coach. In our first two years with Sacred Heart School, we won the Dangriga Primary School Competition championship two years consecutively. I also played football with Garrincha and Brazilian for Austin High School before I left.
In my honest opinion, Carl Ramos contributed significantly to the growth of football when he founded the Dangriga Primary School Competition (DPC). This competition was open to all the primary schools in Stann Creek District, but only Holy Angels Primary School and Saint Matthews Primary School participated in the competition. The three most famous players from the valley who attended Saint Matthews were: Wayne “Hogman” Olivera, Rudolph “Peru” Olivera (two brothers) and Dean “Sarge” Lewis. They all went on to become national players in the Inter-District competitions and in Dangriga and Belize City competitions.
Our games were played on Thursday evenings, and many times, we had more people watching our games than the Stann Creek District Competitions football games that were held on Sundays. Mr. Ramos used to write the games on the News Board he had in front of the Dangriga Police Station. He prepared the field, hired referees, solicited for trophies, and did everything by himself. I heard some people saying, look at “Kiwi” with his “One Man Football Committee.” When the stadium was built in Dangriga, they decided to name it after him. I left Dangriga many years ago so I was not there when it happened. I congratulate all those individuals who made this wise decision, to name the stadium after Mr. Carl Ramos, because he earned that respect and deserves this honor. Not only was he involved in primary school football, but with the adult football competition as well.
I am giving all this history because in my honest opinion, these were the things that contributed to Belize having talented, skilled and experienced football players in Belize up until the mid-1980s. Over the years in Belize, they have gotten rid of regular Primary School, High School and Inter-District Football competitions, and this is why the quality of football play and players has diminished in our country. The Belize Football League has and is spending millions of dollars to improve the quality of play and players, and it has not happened.
The question that we must all ask ourselves is: Why, when we had less money and resources invested in football, we produced better football players, and they were playing better football? I know, love, played, coached and have a deep passion for this sport. Plus, I lived, played and coached football while I was in the US Army in Germany. I found out why they have won several World Cups, and that is because they have a system to develop players from childhood to adulthood in all their schools up to the college and university level. They also have two leagues, one like our Inter-District League and the other a Professional League. All the things I discussed help to sustain their football system.
Belize needs to establish Children Tournaments, Primary School, High School, Inter-District, College, University and Professional Football Competitions. Then set up a system to monitor the training, development and selection of players to build a National Youth Football team with 16-year-old boys and girls. Every four years we have a World Cup competition. These players will be our future International Olympic and World Cup players, so we must prepare them from they are young. Once our national teams are established, we must always monitor the selected players’ performances.
If they are not performing to our standards, they must be replaced by a player from the 16+ yrs. pool. We should not keep any player on our National Team who is not performing to our national standards. Selection and Retention are the two biggest problems we historically have with our national teams in most sports. We must never select players on any team based on favoritism, but by his or her performance only. All players must meet the standards we set before he or she can qualify to be on all of our national teams. I have experienced favoritism in Belize football, and I know how painful it feels.
The worse feeling for any national player, is to be rejected from his country’s national team and to see his team lose because he or she was not given the opportunity to help his country’s team win. I believe that, if our people and government come together and demand these things from the Belize Football League, we will have a better chance of reaching the World Cup within ten years. Many years have gone by without these needed items in our system. If not, we can just keep on dreaming and hoping, but our dreams will not come true. I prefer winning over dreaming because when you win, everybody is happy; but when you lose, everybody is angry.
[AMANDALA Sports Ed. Note: We apologize for the late publication of the above article, which was sent to our sports desk on the same day that Belize played Turks and Caicos Islands in the Dominican Republic in the second of our FIFA World Cup 2022 Qatar Qualifiers. Belize had lost 2-0 to Haiti on March 25, and won 5-0 over Turks and Caicos; but our next opponent in June, Nicaragua had already defeated Turks and Caicos by a 7-0 score.
The “Belize Football League” mentioned in the sixth and tenth paragraph above is likely referring to the Football Federation of Belize (FFB).
The gentleman referred to as “Nolbert Moss” in the second paragraph above, now goes by the name of Idemuei Moss, the former Competitions Director and Club Licensing Manager of the FFB, and currently the Executive Secretary of the newly formed Belize Football Players Association (BFPA).]