Derek King’s appointment as senior national football coach did not come as a surprise on Monday to the football community.
For many, it was a sign of stability for local football. Two coaches, Dexter Cyrus and Angus Eve, and a former national captain, David Nakhid, described the appointment as logical, as the coach has worked under many coaches in the past, among them Stephen Hart, who guided the country to quarterfinal placings at the Concacaf Gold Cup in 2013 and 2015, Angus Eve, and Dwight Yorke, whom he took over from as the country’s interim coach in March.
King, a replacement for former coach Dwight Yorke as an interim when Yorke and the parent T&T Football Association parted ways in March, was given a one-year contract with an option to renew. Yesterday, Eve, who was strangely replaced by King in an interim position, before Yorke was given the nod by the football association for the head coach job for the World Cup Qualifiers, told Guardian Media Sports that King was handed a Michael Carrick role to stabilise the football.
Eve said, “I think it’s at a time where the TTFA is right now, in a financial spot, so I think it’s a good decision now. Derek has been around for so long, being the assistant coach to several coaches, spanning over maybe more than a decade already. And, you know, putting him in to try to stabilise the team for a year, because I think I read there’s a one-year contract that he has gotten.”
“So in that case, it’s probably a Michael Carrick scenario where he goes in there, he tries to stabilise, and if he does well enough, maybe he gives himself an opportunity to get the job much longer. So, you know, I wish him all the best. I called him, I told him, I wish him all the best, because Trinidad football needs some positivity, and the TTFA believes that he is the person at this point in time.”
Similar sentiments were echoed by David Nakhid, a former national captain who is now Parliamentary Secretary in the Ministry of Sports and Youth Affairs. According to Nakhid, King’s appointment was the right choice. “I think he has a one-year contract, right? So let’s see what he can do in a year. I can’t tell if it’s the right choice. I mean, everybody thought Dwight and Russell were the right choices, but it didn’t turn out to be so. I remember the whole hoopla when Terry Fenwick was appointed. They thought that was the right choice, too. So you don’t know how these things turn out. For now, I’m going to wish him all the best,” said Nakhid.
Nakhid, who played professionally in Belgium, Switzerland, Greece, Lebanon, T&T, the United States, Sweden, and the United Arab Emirates for KSV Waregem, Grasshopper, PAOK, Al-Ansar, Joe Public, New England Revolution, Emirates Club, Al-Mabattah, and Caledonia AIA, said King entered the national team when he was the captain.
“He’s a nice young boy. I haven’t seen him change. He looks like he’s willing to work with the local players. He said he’s going to do that, from what I saw, so he’s going to work with the local players, which is important.”
Another player, Dexter Cyrus, once a striker for the red, white and black of T&T, said the length of time that King has been assistant coach to these head coaches, I don’t think most people would have a problem with him.
Meanwhile, Eve, who is hailed as having the best record among the coaches during his career with a record of 11 wins, five draws and seven losses in 23 matches, with 45 goals scored and 36 conceded, had some advice for King. “ Firstly, pick your own staff and be brave enough to stand up and get the people that you want to work with you. That’s the key.
The TTFA, seemingly, the president announced some games, so we know that he’s getting matches leading up to the Nations League in September, which is most important to have him have the team.”
“There’s not a lot of time for a national coach. I don’t know why people went in there thinking that it’s three or four days before you have a match. So you have to devise a plan, a way, so that you can win matches and get results. That is what his job is. His job is not to develop players. That has to happen in the younger teams. His job is to get results. I’m backing him, and hopefully, he can get those results to stabilise our football again,” Eve said.
King, since taking over the team, saw his charges lose 3-0 in a friendly against Bolivia, before going down to Venezuela 4-1 and later Gabon 3-2 from the penalty spot, after a 2-2 tie at the end of regulation time.
King’s will now shift his focus to a friendly against Russia in the USA on June 9.
