As Jamaican women’s national football team the senior Reggae Girlz prepares for the make-or-break Concacaf Women’s Championship clash against Costa Rica on November 27, head coach Hubert Busby has voiced strong confidence that all of the squad’s overseas-based players — including star striker and team leader Khadija “Bunny” Shaw — will be available for selection for the high-stakes fixture.
The upcoming match, hosted in Texas, is a winner-takes-all showdown: the victorious side will secure an automatic qualification spot for the 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup, leaving no room for error for either side. Questions have circulated around player availability in recent weeks, as November does not fall within an official FIFA international window, leading to concerns that European and North American clubs may refuse to release their contracted Jamaican players. But Busby says these concerns are unfounded.
Speaking in an interview with the Jamaica Observer, Busby noted that the November qualification matches carry official FIFA status, meaning clubs are required to release eligible players for international duty barring injury. He pointed to the recently concluded Asian Football Confederation Women’s Asian Cup as a clear precedent, where clubs released players despite the tournament falling outside a standard FIFA window, adding that he fully expects every called-up player to join the Reggae Girlz camp ahead of the qualifier.
When asked about the teams’ last meeting in 2022, where Costa Rica claimed a 2-1 win over Jamaica, Busby pushed back on the idea that that result can offer a blueprint for the upcoming clash. “There is very little we can draw from that 2022 fixture beyond the knowledge that Costa Rica is a formidable opponent and one of the top sides in the Concacaf region,” Busby explained. “Our focus right now is not on past results, it is on preparation for November 27. That is the only result that matters.”
With a World Cup spot hanging in the balance, Busby says his guiding message to the squad is simple: focus only on what the team can control. “The squad already knows exactly what our objective is, and we are so close to achieving it. There is no need for extra rhetoric. Right now, the key is to stay present, put in the work, prepare thoroughly, keep our focus, and maintain belief in ourselves,” he said.
Busby also opened up about the longstanding lack of recognition the Reggae Girlz program has received, something he acknowledged has been frustrating for the team and its players. But he noted that public support for the squad has grown steadily in recent qualifying matches. “The turnout and energy we saw from fans at our last two home qualifiers was fantastic, and the entire team felt that support on match day. We hope that this momentum and backing continues as we head into this biggest match of the cycle,” he added.
The head coach emphasized that the squad’s current approach prioritizes incremental improvement over hype and media attention. Even after the Costa Rica matchup was confirmed as the decisive qualifier, the team remained focused on the preceding fixtures rather than looking ahead, Busby said. Further strategic planning will take place once the full squad gathers, but the core focus will remain on identifying and addressing areas for improvement ahead of kickoff.
While Busby fully recognizes the magnitude of the upcoming fixture, he stressed that the team must stay focused on the 90 minutes of play rather than getting wrapped up in the occasion’s pressure. “This is without a doubt one of the biggest matches most of these players will ever play in, and we understand exactly what is at stake. But we can’t let the occasion overwhelm us. We know that six million Jamaicans around the world are behind us, and that support gives us a huge boost,” he said.
Despite the high pressure of a winner-takes-all qualification match, Busby confirmed that belief within the Reggae Girlz camp remains extremely high. “We are a confident, unified, and fully focused group,” he said. “We are ready to compete for our spot in the 207 World Cup.”
The comments come months after the Reggae Girlz’s most recent Group B qualifying fixture against Guyana in April 2026 at Kingston’s National Stadium, where Shaw scored the opening goal for Jamaica in a victory that kept the team on track for the decisive November qualifier.
