JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Friday, May 23, 2025

Grovey's legacy will live on

by

Shaun Fuentes
1700 days ago
20200926
Nigel Grosvenor, right, the head coach of QRC gives instruction to his players during their SSFL Premiership Division match with Malick Secondary last Wednesday at QRC Grounds, St Clair. Malick won 2-0 in 2019.

Nigel Grosvenor, right, the head coach of QRC gives instruction to his players during their SSFL Premiership Division match with Malick Secondary last Wednesday at QRC Grounds, St Clair. Malick won 2-0 in 2019.

ANTHONY HARRIS

It is said that a good coach and good coach­ing can build will, skill, knowl­edge and ca­pac­i­ty be­cause it can go where no oth­er pro­fes­sion­al de­vel­op­ment has gone be­fore: in­to the in­tel­lect, be­hav­iours, prac­tices, be­liefs, val­ues and feel­ings of an ed­u­ca­tor and his or her stu­dents. You think I’m mak­ing this up? Ask any young stu­dent or foot­baller who passed through St An­tho­ny’s Col­lege un­der the guid­ance of Nigel Grosvenor for just over the past two decades and they’ll tell you.

It was Oc­to­ber 1997 and I had just set­tled in­to my first year of sports re­port­ing for this news­pa­per. For­mer sports ed­i­tor Valenti­no Singh took a chance with me. A youth­ful 16-year-old just out of CXC from the south­land. It was my first Sec­ondary School’s Foot­ball League (SS­FL) and In­ter­col sea­son. A few months lat­er, I was al­so thrown deep­er in­to the fire, cov­er­ing the Craven A Se­mi-Pro League and the Caribbean Cup which was host­ed by T&T in 1998. But one par­tic­u­lar ex­pe­ri­ence stood out for me from that pe­ri­od. The Queen’s Park Oval was near ca­pac­i­ty filled for the 1997 Na­tion­al In­ter­col Fi­nal be­tween un­der­dogs St An­tho­ny’s Col­lege and St Bene­dict’s Col­lege. Be­ing a south boy I was nat­u­ral­ly hop­ing for a win for the La Ro­maine Li­ons who had been fly­ing all sea­son un­der the coach­ing of Muham­mad Isa and play­mak­er Kester “Blacks” Corn­wall. But the boys from West­moor­ings had oth­er plans on the day and Grosvenor was the main ar­chi­tect be­hind it.

Young Car­los Ed­wards was in the squad that won the fi­nal 2-1 and the fol­low­ing day Singh sent me on an as­sign­ment to cov­er the cel­e­bra­tions at St An­tho­ny’s. I was ner­vous not know­ing what to ex­pect plus in­ex­pe­ri­ence at the time made it dif­fi­cult for me to un­der­stand how it is the “un­der­dogs” could tri­umph on the big stage. My first ad­vice from Singh was to head di­rect­ly to the Prin­ci­pal’s of­fice, ex­plain why I was there and fig­ure out the rest on my own. So imag­ine me strut­ting in­to un­known ter­ri­to­ry with my Guardian note­book and a voice recorder. Mo­bile Phones weren’t yet pop­u­lar. And up came the big fig­ure of “Grovey” to meet me in the Prin­ci­pal’s of­fice. From that mo­ment, I was made to feel like I had been part of the “Tigers” camp all sea­son. It was maybe one of the coolest ex­pe­ri­ences I’ve had in the com­pa­ny of a cham­pi­onship-win­ning side as “Grovey” made sure I ob­tained all the ma­te­r­i­al that I had been in search of to put to­geth­er my biggest sto­ry of the sea­son.

From then on it was al­ways pure joy every time we crossed paths. “Aye Shauny how thing’s man” was a greet­ing I had grown ac­cus­tomed to and most times it would be a case of Grovey call­ing me out be­fore I even saw him. We would lat­er work on the same team when he was ap­point­ed head coach of the Na­tion­al Un­der-17 Youth Team and though the re­sults were not favourable, it was far from an un­pleas­ant ex­pe­ri­ence with him at the helm.

Rough­ly two weeks ago, my­self and Car­los Ed­wards start­ed a Zoom in­ter­view rem­i­nisc­ing about his days un­der Grovey. He re­called that his col­lege head coach was the rea­son he end­ed up in the De­fence Force both as an of­fi­cer and a play­er be­fore join­ing Wrex­ham in Wales. “It was the week that we won the In­ter­col in ’97 and one morn­ing I heard horns blar­ing out­side around 5:30 and when I look out it was Grovey call­ing out and telling me to get my bags packed ... we head­ing down Tetron. He had men­tioned it be­fore but he was se­ri­ous now and on­ly Grovey could have got­ten me to en­ter the Army. The rest is his­to­ry be­cause when I look back now I could un­der­stand what he saw in me and why he pushed me to go that route which even­tu­al­ly led to my break in the UK,” Ed­wards told me.

Mal­colm Glad­well, the au­thor of Out­liers: The Sto­ry of Suc­cess (2008), cal­cu­lates that it takes 10,000 hours of de­lib­er­ate prac­tice—a prac­tice that pro­motes con­tin­u­ous im­prove­ment—to mas­ter a com­plex skill. This trans­lates in­to about sev­en years for those work­ing in schools. The ma­jor­i­ty of teach­ers and prin­ci­pals want pro­fes­sion­al de­vel­op­ment; they want to im­prove their craft, be more ef­fec­tive, im­ple­ment new skills, and see stu­dents learn more. St An­tho­ny’s Col­lege got that from Grosvenor.

A coach can fos­ter con­di­tions in which deep re­flec­tion and learn­ing can take place, where a teacher can take risks to change his prac­tice, where pow­er­ful con­ver­sa­tions can take place and where growth is rec­og­nized and cel­e­brat­ed. Grovey per­formed both roles. He was in charge of a space where heal­ing took place and where a re­silient, joy­ful com­mu­ni­ty was built in the west.

Coach­es im­pact their play­ers by teach­ing life skills in hopes of de­vel­op­ing pos­i­tive re­la­tion­ships. Grovey did that. Just ask any of his play­ers from the likes of Ken­wyne Jones, Jan Michael Williams, Brent Rahim, Julius James, Ed­wards and oth­ers. He es­tab­lished a pos­i­tive ath­lete-coach re­la­tion­ship where it was un­der­stood that no re­la­tion­ship, whether on or off the play­ing field would blos­som with­out com­mu­ni­ca­tion and the re­la­tion­ship be­tween the play­er and coach. The play­ers of St An­tho­ny's felt that their coach cared about them as a per­son and not just as a tool to win games and ti­tles. Play­ers are peo­ple first and ef­fec­tive coach­es take the time for the young stu­dent as well as the play­er. And as a pos­i­tive ath­lete-coach re­la­tion­ship de­vel­ops, many ath­letes be­gin con­sid­er­ing their coach­es as role mod­els. Grovey was that! Your time on this earth would be cher­ished for years to come. It was a plea­sure shar­ing these mo­ments with you Nigel Grosvenor.

Ed­i­tor's Note:

Shaun Fuentes is the head of TTFA Me­dia. He is a for­mer FI­FA Me­dia Of­fi­cer at the 2010 FI­FA World Cup in South Africa and 2013 FI­FA U-20 World Cup in Turkey The views ex­pressed are sole­ly his and not a rep­re­sen­ta­tion of any or­gan­i­sa­tion.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored