Last week at the TTFA Technical Centre, we hosted a FIFA Amateur Football Stakeholders Forum. It was one of those rooms where you could feel something trying to move: coaches, administrators, and people who care about the game, all in one space, listening, sharing, and questioning.
But when the room empties and the chairs go back in place with only historic wall photos left in place, the real question is simple. What do we actually do with it?
Because forums and workshops are not new to us. We’ve had them before. Good presentations, strong discussions, a few nods of agreement… and then, sometimes, life goes on as normal. That’s the part we have to confront honestly if we want football in Trinidad and Tobago to truly move forward.
What stood out this time, though, was the delivery
FIFA’s regional technical consultants, David Abdul and Ian Greenwood, didn’t come here to impress anyone with big words or theory. They were direct. Clear. At times, uncomfortable. And that’s exactly why it worked.
Greenwood, with his experience coming out of England and Guyana, has seen structured systems up close. There was a calm authority in how he spoke, no fluff, just clarity on what works and what doesn’t.
Abdul, a former Technical Director of Aruba and a player who came through the system at Sparta Rotterdam in the Netherlands, brought a different energy. Straightforward. Engaging. He challenged people in the room to think, not just listen. He wasn’t afraid to say the hard things, but he did it in a way that made you want to respond, not retreat.
Both men also made it clear that the forum was not going to be focused on the elite levels such as National Senior teams and the Pro League. But it was noted that strong history in these areas can play a big part.
And one of the hard truths that came through, whether said directly or felt between the lines, is something we as a football nation have to accept.
The idea that “we have talent” is no longer enough. That line has been used for years in Trinidad and Tobago. But the reality now is that almost every country has talented players. Some may have more, some less, but talent is no longer the separator.
What matters is what you do with that talent. Structure. Coaching. Environment. Opportunity. Consistency.
Those are the real differentiators now
Because here’s another reality we don’t always say out loud. Less than one per cent of players globally will ever play professional football.
Let that sit for a moment.
All the training sessions, the sacrifices, the dreams… and statistically, almost all of them won’t reach that level. So what are we building for the other 99 per cent?
That’s where amateur football stops being “secondary” and starts becoming central.
It’s not just about competition. It’s about structure. It’s about opportunity. It’s about creating environments where young players can grow not just as footballers but as people who can carry discipline, teamwork, and resilience into whatever path they take.
That message came through clearly during the forum. We cannot continue to treat amateur football as an afterthought.
It is the foundation. If that foundation is weak, everything above it will eventually feel it: national teams, leagues, even administration.
But again, awareness is not the issue.
We know this. The real issue is execution.
How many times have we sat in a room, heard good ideas, and then allowed them to fade because there was no follow-through? No ownership. No timeline. No accountability.
That is where we
have to be better
Because the truth is, opportunities like this don’t come every day. When FIFA sends experienced people into your environment, not just to talk but to engage, challenge, and guide, that’s not something to take lightly.
We have to squeeze value out of it.
That means going beyond the forum itself
It means asking, “What are we implementing this week?” What changes are we making at club level? How are we improving player pathways? Who is responsible for driving it?
Those are not big, glamorous questions. But they are the ones that matter.
If we are serious about development, then the work has to continue long after the presentations end.
One thing that also stood out was the level of engagement in the room. People weren’t there because they had to be. They were there because they wanted to be. And that’s important.
Because real change doesn’t come from obligation. It comes from belief.
When people start to feel that what they are doing matters, that it can actually impact lives, communities, and the future of the game then the energy shifts. Conversations become actions. And that’s what we need now. We need movement.
The kind where, months from now, we can look back and say that forum wasn’t just a day on the calendar, it was a turning point in how we approach amateur football in this country. Because if we get this part right, everything else has a chance.
