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Small island, but big names in Bermuda

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National service: William White, of Somerset Trojans, left, trains with Bermuda this week (Photgraph by Lawrence Trott)

With Bermuda facing Canada at the National Stadium on Sunday, The Home of Caribbean Football website provides its take on the sport on the island

Tucked away in the North Atlantic Ocean, Bermuda is home to just over 60,000 inhabitants.

To put that into perspective, 75,314 people attended Manchester United’s home match against Middlesbrough on New Year’s Eve. The whole of the British Overseas Territory’s population could have piled in and there still would have been excess seats.

Yet, despite their modest population, they have produced some terrific footballers down the years: Clyde Best, Shaun Goater, Kyle Lightbourne, Andrew Bascome, Khano Smith and more recently Nahki Wells, the present Bermuda captain, to name but a few.

These players played/play important roles at their clubs. Best was a pioneer for black players in British football during the 1960s and 1970s and he earned legendary status at West Ham United. Goater was a goal machine for Manchester City and the supporters loved him so much that they created a song in his honour: Feed The Goat And He Will Score to the tune Cwm Rhondda.

Lightbourne played over 100 times for Walsall and Stoke City respectively throughout the Nineties, enjoying the most success in the Black Country before securing a top-flight transfer to Coventry City for £500,000 which was good money at that time.

Bascome was arguably the most gifted Bermudian player in the Eighties and he would have gone on trial with Ajax at 18 had it not been for a serious knee injury. He is now the Bermuda coach.

Smith was a hit with the fans at New England Revolution, who he represented more than 80 times during his initial three-year spell before moving to rivals New York Red Bulls where he made less of an impact. Wells started his career at Dandy Town Hornets prior to moving to England, truly announcing himself at Bradford City, helping his team reach Capital One Cup final in 2013. He joined his present club, Huddersfield Town, a year later for a club-record fee on a 4½-year contract.

So what is the secret?

“There is no secret, really,” says Dexter Smith, editor of The Royal Gazette and a former Bermuda cricketer. “Bermuda have long had a history of producing individuals of real quality. Where we have struggled because of our size is in the conveyor belt of talent presenting itself in the same generation. Hence the limited success of our teams.”

The generational crossover point is a valid one. Best played with the national side in the Sixties, Bascome, Goater and Lightbourne were late Eighties (with the latter two playing until early 2000s), Smith finished in 2012 while Wells, at 26, very much represents the present. So the island’s star players have missed out on playing with each other through the decades which is the inevitable result of a small population.

But what is it that sets these names apart from the rest?

“I think they all had some inner drive to achieve their goals,” Khano Smith explains. “I think if you asked any of those players [Best, Goater, Lightbourne etc], they would probably tell you that at the time in Bermuda there were more talented players than them. I can speak for myself. I wasn’t the most skilful — there were others who had way more talent than me — but the overwhelming common factor shared by us would be inner drive.”

The former left winger actually feels that Bermuda should have exported more talented players in the past.

“We should have more players playing overseas, in England and the United States. Up to now there’s only been three Bermudians to have played a match in MLS: Freddy Hall, Reggie Lambe [both Toronto FC] and I [Revolution, Red Bulls]. We had two who were drafted but never played a match in MLS: Kevin Richards [Colorado Rapids, 2004] and John Barry Nusum [Columbus Crew, 2002].

Boston College’s Zeiko Lewis was selected by New York Red Bulls in the MLS SuperDraft last week. “I think he’ll have a good career,” Smith added.

Big fish in small pond mentality

Perhaps natural talent is not necessarily something which holds Bermudian players back from making a successful career abroad, then, but rather some lack the professional mentality needed to rise to the top. “Those who are locally based [Bermudian Premier Division] are talented to an extent but many lack the dedication required to be a lasting success,” insists Dexter Smith. “The big fish in small pond mentality looms large.”

Khano Smith agrees. “I had a coach who always used to say to me ‘OK, you guys have won trophies here in Bermuda, you can win every trophy available in Bermuda, but in the scheme of world football that means nothing. You’re good in 22 square miles of land but elsewhere around the world there are thousands of players just like you’. My mentality before I left Bermuda was that I’m a professional player. I treated myself professionally, through the way I ate, trained, studied. You have to already have that professional mentality before you leave Bermuda.”

An example from last summer springs to mind. A handful of players ruled themselves out of international duty for Bermuda’s rearranged Scotiabank Caribbean Cup qualifying fixture against French Guiana after the original match which they were leading 1-0 was cancelled because of a waterlogged pitch.

The Bermuda Heroes Weekend Carnival happened to coincide with the rearranged fixture and overseas-based goalkeeper Dale Eve, for example, did not travel but posted a picture of himself on social media at the Carnival. Eve received criticism from the management staff but responded a month later by calling the French Guiana trip a “fool’s errand”, insisting that he had been unfairly singled out.

Looking at the bigger picture, are too many Bermudian players too content playing domestically and earning plaudits against opponents who are not truly testing them to the maximum? The landscape seems to be shifting but there is progress to be made.

Former Trinidad and Tobago coach Stephen Hart said in an interview with T&T Warrior Fan Zone in August last year: “Talent is only 20 per cent of the formula. Talent will get you recognised, but you need more than just that. The question you have to ask is whether they [locally-based players] have it within themselves to understand what it takes to get to the top and the sacrifices that are necessary. In some instances they are too easily satisfied. I find that they are coming back home too quickly; they need to suffer a bit more.” Now this is in a Trinidadian football context, yet Hart’s comments might well apply to some parts of Bermudian football as well.

If you were to look at a map of the Caribbean, you would find Bermuda on the periphery, north of Turks and Caicos and Bahamas. The island is actually closer to the US than any island in the Caribbean — 700 miles off the coast of North Carolina.

Khano Smith, who is the assistant coach at Orlando City’s women’s team, Orlando Pride, believes Bermuda’s geographical position can often be a source of frustration.

“I definitely feel that it affects Bermuda in a negative way. Other Caribbean islands can fly to each other directly without visas, for example St Kitts and Nevis to Antigua and Barbuda, and play each other pretty frequently. We can’t do that. Anybody coming to Bermuda will most likely have to fly to the United States. Most Caribbean countries cannot get visas to fly through the United States.”

“I ask our administrators at the Bermuda Football Association all the time, ‘Why can’t we host tournaments?’ We have better facilities than all of these Caribbean countries: our training pitch at the National Stadium, our hotels, our infrastructure. Not all of our hotels are five star but none of them are under three and a half or four star. But because of the issues mentioned, it’s difficult for other Caribbean countries to reach us, so it’s easier for us to travel to them.

“We always end up travelling, playing on worse pitches than we have here, staying at worse hotels than we have here, eating worse food than we have here. We’re not set up to fail, but we’re certainly not helped by the circumstances. Bermuda is not a cheap place either (imports are subject to sometimes-hefty tariffs), so there are many factors that work against us.”

Bermuda will get the chance to test out their infrastructure when they host Canada in a friendly on Sunday. The game suits both parties. For Canada, they will use it as preparation for this summer’s Gold Cup. For Bermuda, just playing a match is so important given their next competitive fixtures will most likely come in 2018. There is no way of climbing up the Fifa world rankings, though, because the tie does not fall on a Fifa window date. The last time the two sides met was in March 2007 and Bermuda lost 3-0 at the National Stadium.

“Playing against Canada will be a good test for the national team,” Danté Leverock, the Bermuda defender, says. “We hope to give them a competitive match and hopefully represent our selves well against a top team in the region.”

Golden generation?

There is reason for excitement with a new generation of talented Bermudian youngsters coming through. From February to March, Bermuda will make their first appearance at the biennial Concacaf Under-20 Championship (last leg of Under-20 World Cup qualifiers) since 1988. A team mainly made up of overseas-based players and led by Kyle Lightbourne, they finished third at the Caribbean final round in October, behind Haiti and Antigua and Barbuda and ahead of Trinidad and Tobago and St Kitts and Nevis. The fact that many of the players are contracted to clubs outside of Bermuda has definitely contributed to their success.

The side’s captain and defensive midfield pivot Kacy Milan Butterfield joined Lightbourne’s former employers, League One’s Walsall, in June last year. Highly rated midfielder Osagi Bascome, nephew of senior manager Andrew, is with Bristol City’s Under-23 side. The two strikers David Jones, cousin of Chesterfield’s Rai Simons, and Tevahn Tyrell, who scored three group stage goals in October, both signed with English non-League outfit Ilkeston in April last year. Goalkeeper Jahquil Hill has experience in between the sticks for Mansfield Town and Ilkeston. It is worth pointing out that Bermuda have a partnership with Ilkeston which began in 2013.

“The Under-20 success is major for Bermuda and for those young men involved,” Leverock says. “To progress to the final round of qualifiers is a major credit to their ability and hard work as well as the coaching staff. They have to be considered the next golden generation. If the majority of that group can stick together and become full internationals, I believe they can be a real force in the region. I’m excited to see how they progress in Costa Rica.”

Dexter Smith is similarly full of praise. “The success of Kyle Lightbourne’s team has been impressive. They have worked very hard and deserve all the accolades coming their way. It may be too early to consider this a golden generation but the signs are good. The more we get our players off island and away from the many bad habits and influences, the better.”

They have been drawn into group C alongside Costa Rica, El Salvador and Trinidad and Tobago. The top two from each group (A-C) advance to the final round, from there the top two from both groups (A-B) qualify for the World Cup in South Korea. The last Caribbean country to play at the Under-20 World Cup? Cuba, in 2013.

Gold Cup not an impossible target

Bermuda have never qualified for the Gold Cup, let alone the World Cup. Only eight Caribbean nations have played at the Gold Cup since its inception in 1991. They are Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, Cuba, Haiti, Martinique, Guadeloupe, Grenada and St Vincent and the Grenadines. French Guiana and Curacao are set to appear for the first time this year.

In the latest Caribbean Cup qualifiers, Bascome’s men lost to Cuba away and beat French Guiana at home — coming from a goal down — in the first round to progress on goal difference. They were beaten by the Dominican Republic at home and French Guiana away in the rearranged fixture in the second round.

“I believe in the next Caribbean Cup we will prove to the region that despite our size we can compete against the best,” Leverock says. “Each year we have more players playing professionally and semi-professionally which can only help the national team. I’m confident we will make a statement if we have our best players available.”

Not having all their key players in camp together can sometimes be a drawback. For example, the talismanic Wells missed all the Caribbean Cup qualifiers from March and June because of a knee injury sustained with Huddersfield as the team registered just three goals across four outings. Simons missed the first round qualifiers before returning to the fold for the second round. North Village winger Keishen Bean was unavailable for the second round, too. Some of the Under-20 standouts such as Osagi Bascome, Butterfield and Hill were called up as replacements.

If the likes of Wells, Lambe, Leverock, Lewis, Simons, Hall, Bean, Tre Ming, Drewonde Bascome (Andrew’s son) and Roger Lee can come together for the next Caribbean Cup and World Cup cycles, then there is no reason in theory why Bermuda cannot make the Gold Cup in 2019. They showed against Guatemala in 2018 World Cup qualifiers, drawing 0-0 in Guatemala City with a tenacious performance, that they are capable of holding their own against the better teams within Concacaf.

What is more, Bascome is an experienced, progressive technician with coaching certification from Brazil’s D Licence, Concacaf, USSF and Uefa B. He is the founder of the ABC Football School, based in Bermuda’s capital Hamilton, which is “built on principles of a modern approach to football and youth development”.

“It takes a monumental effort for any country to qualify for the World Cup — especially a small Caribbean nation — but it’s not impossible,” concludes Khano Smith. “I think the next step for Bermuda is to make the Gold Cup which is a very realistic goal.

“Look at who qualified for 2017: Jamaica are Caribbean powers but the other three [French Guiana, Curaçao and Martinique] are not. Are we better than some of those on our day? Absolutely. We beat French Guiana. So the Gold Cup has to be the next goal — it’s feasible.”

Nathan Carr is founder of thehomeofcaribbeanfootball.com, Football Blogging Awards Finalist 2016 and Caribbean Football Weekly co-presenter

The Under-20 team will make their first appearance at the Concacaf Under-20 Championship next month in Costa Rica — a stunning achievement for a nation this size
Fan favourite: Goater, left, had his own chant at Manchester City (Photograph by Shoot)
Khano Smith was a hit with supporters of New England Revolution in MLS (Photograph by The Bent Musket)
Lightbourne, right, once of Stoke, is now coach of the Under-20 team (Photograph by Staffordshire Sentinel)
Man in charge: Bascome, arguably the most gifted Bermudian player in the Eighties who interested Dutch giants Ajax, is coach of the national team (Photo by Akil Simmons)