KEEPING IT JAMAICAN

For more than two decades starting at the turn of the 21st century, the Jamaica Football Federation (JFF) has relied on foreign leadership to guide the country’s iconic men’s national team, the Reggae Boyz, appointing seven overseas head coaches in that stretch. But a crushing late failure to qualify for the 2026 FIFA World Cup has pushed the federation to turn a new page, with JFF President Michael Ricketts confirming the organisation will now prioritise homegrown coaching candidates, citing widespread mismanagement under the most recent foreign appointee, former England manager Steve McClaren.

Jamaica’s 22-year wait to return to the World Cup — a drought that dates back to their historic 1998 appearance — stretched on for at least another four years last week, when a narrow 0-1 defeat to African side DR Congo in the intercontinental play-off final held at Guadalajara’s Estadio Akron dashed the Reggae Boyz’ hopes of a spot in this summer’s tournament. This marked the second missed qualification opportunity in just months: the side already fell short of automatic booking during the final round of Concacaf qualifying in 2025.

McClaren’s tenure with the national team ended almost six months before the decisive play-off match, after a 0-0 draw with World Cup-bound Curacao at Kingston’s National Stadium in November 2025. The English manager stepped down after just 16 months in the role, having failed to secure a win in 12 of his 23 matches in charge. Following his exit, veteran Jamaican coach Rudolph Speid stepped into the role on an interim basis, with another local specialist, Miguel Coley, joining him as assistant coach.

From the earliest months of McClaren’s tenure, his leadership was dogged by controversy, as the Jamaica Observer first reported in November 2025. Sources within the federation cited persistent tension between the manager and JFF leadership, as well as widespread criticism of how he handled locally based Jamaican players. Most notably, McClaren chose to maintain his primary residence in England throughout his tenure, a decision that proved deeply unpopular with both federation officials and fans.

McClaren became the second consecutive foreign coach to exit the Reggae Boyz post early. Before him, Icelandic manager Heimir Hallgrímsson stepped down in June 2024, and less than two weeks later accepted the top job with the Republic of Ireland’s men’s national side.

To put the federation’s decades-long preference for foreign coaches in context, just four Jamaican-born coaches have led the Reggae Boyz over the past 26 years. Prior to the recent string of foreign appointments, Theodore Whitmore, a former Reggae Boyz star, led the national side from 2016 to 2021. After Whitmore’s exit, his former assistant and national teammate Paul Hall took over on an interim basis before the first of the back-to-back foreign appointments. Carl Brown and Wendel Downswell are the other two homegrown managers to hold the top job in recent decades.

Speid and Coley’s interim contracts expired immediately after the conclusion of the World Cup intercontinental play-off, leaving the top two technical positions on the national team staff vacant as the JFF begins its search for a permanent appointment. Ricketts, who now says he regrets entrusting the team’s World Cup campaign to a foreign manager, made clear that local candidates are the clear front-runners for the roles this time around.

“I tried again with overseas coaches and the rest is history. I don’t think the programme was managed very well,” Ricketts told the Jamaica Observer in an interview. “Now these local coaches are here, they see our local players, they watch games, they keep abreast of what is happening in domestic club football. They keep in contact with me, they keep in contact with the JFF directors, so we are always updated on the technical aspect of the team by these local coaches. They are rooted here, so you are bound to have consistent working relationships that you don’t get with overseas coaches who come and go at their own discretion, which sometimes is not ideal for our situation.”

The JFF board of directors is set to formalise its appointment before the end of April, with the Reggae Boyz scheduled to return to competitive action next month at the Unity Cup in England. Upcoming key fixtures for the side also include Concacaf Nations League matches later this year, followed by the 2027 CONCACAF Gold Cup, making a swift appointment a priority for the federation.

While the final decision rests with the full board, not Ricketts alone, the JFF president said he strongly favours retaining the current interim leadership team for the next two-year cycle. “I would certainly want to have Speid and Coley to continue with our programmes,” he said. “But if Speid and Coley are interested, then certainly they will be my choice to be head coach and assistant coach, at least for the next two years.”

For their part, Speid is expected to retain his current role as manager of defending Jamaica Premier League champions Cavalcer if he accepts the national position, while Coley is currently contracted to Iraqi top-flight side Zakho SC and will need to resolve his club commitments before taking the national job full-time.