Former national player Robbie Earle says that he is pleased with the work national senior men’s football team head coach Theodore ‘Tappa’ Whitmore has done with the Reggae Boyz recently.
Earle was speaking on CBS’s Que Golazo podcast on Thursday, where he discussed his own experience suiting up for the Reggae Boyz during their 1998 World Cup campaign as well as the England-based talent being recruited for the team.
Whitmore’s first game of 2021 ended in a 4-1 defeat to the United States on Thursday in Austria with a squad comprising England-based debutants and local players who have not played competitively for a year because of the local Premier League hiatus.
Earle said that it was important that the programme be led by a native Jamaican and that there not be a dependence on getting overseas-based coaches. He commended Whitmore for improving the nation’s competitive standard.
“It’s nice to see a Jamaican manager managing the team and that we don’t have to feel that there always has to be a European or somebody from outside of the country who can do that,” Earle said. “And Tappa has done a great job. He has helped developed the system underneath. The team’s now competitive.”
While Carl Brown and Wendell Downswell have had stints as head coaches in the past, the majority of head coaches have come from either Brazil or Europe. This includes René Simões, who guided Jamaica to the FIFA World Cup in France in 1998. Other foreign coaches were Clovis de Oliveira, Velibor Milutinović, Sebastião Lazaroni, and John Barnes, who, while being English, was born in Jamaica.
Jamaica are ranked 47th in the world according to the latest FIFA/Coca Cola World Rankings, and under Whitmore, have been to the Concacaf Gold Cup final in 2017 and a Gold Cup semi-final in 2017.
Earle says that Whitmore’s work in the role will inspire other local coaches to work towards the goal of leading the national team.
“There are young coaches in Jamaica that should be able to see Tappa in that position and have the ambition that one day, they can lead the nation,” he said. “It’s not always going to be a German or a Brazilian or somebody from South America who, maybe, got a bigger CV (résumé) but might not know the country, might not know the intricacies, the nuances of Jamaican football in the same way.”
Whitmore has managed 101 games for the Reggae Boyz over his career, with 52 wins, 16 draws, and 33 losses, with an overall win rate of 51.48 per cent, higher than Brown’s (42 per cent over 100 games). Downswell has a higher win rate of 57.1 per cent but has coached fewer games.