"In a world filled with so much bad news, so much sad news, what a relief to find this glad news." (Kareen Johnston Tucker, Irish poet)
Futsal. Say the word and the response is a blank stare because the average person either does not know what it means or what is happening with local futsal. This branch of the football family is in its infancy locally and comes to public attention once every four years when Trinidad and Tobago participates in World Cup qualifying. Well, Futsal868 (called the Futsal Association of Trinidad and Tobago until this year and a member of TTFA only since 2015) recently announced two groundbreaking initiatives, which are flying below the public radar: a Ministry of Education-approved futsal coaching workshop for secondary school physical education teachers, and the Trinbago Futsal Intercol - the nation's first ever secondary school futsal championship.
<Carribean champion>
In 2004 I was a member of the Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation's Technical Committee under the Chairmanship of Vice President Raymond Tim Kee. I was also FIFA Development Officer for CONCACAF. Between us we discussed and agreed that Trinidad and Tobago should host the Caribbean Football Union (CFU) Futsal Championship - this in a sport we had never previously played. CFU President Jack Warner immediately agreed to our tournament proposal and we kicked it into gear. The proposed event presented a golden opportunity to launch the game here at home. I mobilized FIFA resources for the project, including FIFA futsal courses for coaches and referees, and specialized equipment. We staged a national tournament involving football clubs and "block" teams across the country to identify talent. And we appointed Clayton Morris and Hutson Charles as head and assistant coach respectively. "Small goal" football is ingrained in our football culture and the national competition, using futsal rules, was a huge success. The 2004 CFU Futsal Championship absolutely imposed itself on the local public as our boys dominated from the outset. Their inventive, attacking play fired the public imagination. The final was played between Trinidad and Tobago and our eternal rivals in everything, Guyana, at UWI SPEC, a facility seating just over two thousand spectators. On final night it was filled to the rafters, with a crowd of equal number outside clamouring for entry. Our first ever national futsal team romped to a 5:0 win, providing huge entertainment for the vociferous, partisan crowd and qualifying for our first CONCACAF Futsal Championship. That night I would have bet anything that futsal had arrived in Trinidad and Tobago. Post-tournament, Clayton Morris became Vice Chairman of newborn FATT. Trinidad and Tobago successfully defended its CFU title in 2008 under his excellent leadership, defeating Haiti 6:3 in the final at the Centre of Excellence, where FIFA built two top quality futsal courts with associated infrastructure in 2005. However, events in the years following our initial success would prove my 2004 optimism misplaced. TTFF/TTFA failed to seize the initiative and build on the successes of 2004 and 2008. Local competitions were never meaningfully established at any level, our "small goal" culture was never harnessed into the service of futsal, we disappeared from the CONCACAF stage and the fledgling game faded from public consciousness into years of political anonymity and competition drought. In 2015 FATT gained formal membership in TTFA after a decade in official limbo.
(Futsal 868>
I remember well the argument regarding membership and democracy in Futsal868 from my time in TTFA politics and as a member of its Board of Directors under David John-Williams. Simply put, the central issue was the legitimacy of FATT's leadership if the association had no registered members and no elections. While doubt concerning its legitimacy apparently lingers among football followers, Futsal868 has gained credibility at the level of civil society and government. In 2022 the association won the Youth Proiect Impact award of the Ministry of Youth Development and National Service. Moreover, in the aftermath of COVID it has conducted a low intensity activity programme guided by two Strategic Plans (2018-2023 and 2024-2029), for which the association must be lauded, the central plank being a grassroots programme for communities, primary and secondary schools - its "Let's Play Futsal Caravan". Within this it has made coaching education available to school teachers and other interested persons via a FIFA portal. This initiative is aimed at "massification" of the player and coach pools and is Ministry of Education-approved. The secondary schools Intercol (for Form 1 students) announced last week is an example of strategic thinking to be admired as it is follow-up on the work of the Caravan and aims to grow schools futsal from below. The association also launched a corporate tournament last year (with twelve participating companies), expanded to twenty-four in 2026. In 2027 it plans to start a franchise league of eight teams. The grassroots/schools programme and the corporate tournament are particularly important, not only because these initiatives spread the game, but also due to their potential sustainability by schools and businesses using their own resources. This is critical because, remarkably, Futsal868 receives no support from TTFA, which severely limits its capacity for effective follow up due to lack of finance and personnel. Indeed, the last futsal coaching course hosted by TTFA dates back to 2019 despite repeated requests for such support from Futsal868, according to association officials.
In an earlier article ("Mo' money, mo' problems") I highlighted the fact that futsal received the grand budgetary allocation of TTD .01 million (0.5% of total 2026 budget) although Futsal868 has never received an annual allocation, according to its President, Geoffrey Edwards. TTFA, instead of investing in the growth and development of the game, continues to treat it like an orphan but will attempt, undoubtedly without success, to qualify for the 2028 Futsal World Cup.
(International stage>
Since 2004, Trinidad and Tobago has participated in four CONCACAF Futsal Championships - 2004, 2008, 2021 and 2024, winning one of eleven matches (7:4 v Suriname in 2004). Between World Cups popularization of the domestic game has always been grossly ineffective. Yet one could reasonably argue that, if we grow the game properly, it may be easier for us to qualify for the futsal World Cup than for the football version. After the 2021 CONCACAF Championship, Constantine Konstin, FIFA and CONCACAF futsal instructor and former Trinidad and Tobago national coach said, “Futsal can be a big time future for the country, for the communities, especially in the schools, getting the kids playing futsal. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to put this on. I highly recommend that TTFA start building futsal courts (and) leagues so that, one day, T&T can win a World Cup in futsal.” The 2028 Futsal World Cup will roll around in October 2028. Four teams will qualify and we are already late in preparation, the biggest problem being the lack of a proper league. The "weekend warriors" of Futsal868's corporate competition will not get the job done. Paul Decle, former national coach said after 2024 CONCACAF Championship, "The sport of futsal suits the type of players we have in TT. We know what it's like to play small-sided games. Having a league where the players have to play under the rules of futsal, things like that will bring us into tournaments like this better prepared. All things considered, we don't have futsal leagues and obviously it's footballers who are coming to play futsal."
Futsal868 is a sexier name than Futsal Association TT to be sure and, conceivably, easier to sell. The change of name reveals strategic and commercial vision. But while the association's effort to spread the game at grassroots/schools and competition levels is indeed good news, the scale and speed of progress are too limited and too slow. Now we must get on with marrying the discipline of organized futsal to the spontaneity and inventiveness of "small goal" on a mass scale. We already have the model provided by the 2004 team, which comprised overwhelmingly "small goal", not league football players This requires the commitment of increased human and financial resources. Futsal868's current model of autonomy under TTFA (like SSFL) will remain inadequate to the task unless it could secure additional financing from TTFA, the Ministry of Sport and the private sector. Futsal868 is the national organization responsible for the sport, not a private event management company staging an annual tournament. While it is on the right track, if futsal is to have a meaningful future in Trinidad and Tobago its leadership must hit warp speed and transcend its current self-imposed parochial limits. If it cannot do this the sport will remain a niche activity and the World Cup will remain a distant pipe dream.
Editor’s note: The views expressed in the preceding article are solely those of the author and do not reflect the views of any organisation in which he is a stakeholder.
