In a dramatic title decider at the Wildey Technical Centre on Sunday, Paradise FC produced a stunning late comeback to overturn a one-goal deficit and secure a 2-1 victory over defending champions Weymouth Wales, lifting the Barbados Football Association Champions Cup in a memorable final. It was a performance that embodied the grit and fighting spirit head coach Mario Harte has instilled in his squad throughout a grueling, up-and-down season, he told reporters in the immediate aftermath of the triumph as his players celebrated their hard-won silverware.
The opening 45 minutes of the clash was defined by tight, cagey play from both sides, with neither outfit willing to cede ground to their opponent. It was not until first-half stoppage time that the deadlock was broken: a chaotic goalmouth scramble saw Mario Williams get the decisive final touch to put Weymouth Wales ahead heading into the halftime break. For most of the second half, the defending champions held onto their lead, and it appeared the fixture would end with Weymouth Wales retaining their title. That all changed in the 77th minute, when Jaron Oughterson found the back of the net to draw Paradise level. Just five minutes after the equalizer, Shamari Harewood curled a precision strike into the goal to score what would become the tournament-winning goal, sealing the 2-1 result for his side.
For Harte, the knockout title run holds extra meaning, acting as validation for his squad after a turbulent regular league campaign. Paradise spent the vast majority of that season topping the overall points table, only to slip from a projected second-place finish all the way to fifth on the final matchday. The underwhelming end to the league season left the side hungry to prove their quality in the Champions Cup knockout stage, a goal they achieved with Sunday’s final win.
“I always felt that we had a good start to the season, then we fell off, but anyone that was following Paradise from the time I was here would see that there was improvement. We finished third in this competition last year and now this year we won,” Harte said of the squad’s progress over the past 12 months.
Reflecting on the second-half comeback, the head coach emphasized his side never lost their composure even when trailing at the break. “The half time talk was very calm because honestly I believe in the guys. We put in the work so it is only a matter of desire and how much you want it. The simple things make a big difference, and the things that worked for us tonight were obviously our wingers and us pressing. Our attackers did a magnificent job,” the elated coach added.
Sunday’s title marks a career milestone for Harte, who just completed his second season as a head coach and his first campaign leading a side in the Premier League. He admitted that the disappointing end to the regular league season left him questioning his own performance, but he pushed through the self-doubt to lead his side to the title. “For me personally it is a real boost because coming out of the Premier League I honestly felt a little dejected and I was questioning myself. I started to reassess and doubt but then I snapped out of it and continued to knuckle down and it brought fruit,” Harte explained.
