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  • Pepe gone AWOL?

    Pepe's a no-show

    Sean Williams
    Saturday, May 30, 2009
    FALLS CHURCH, Virginia - Ian 'Pepe' Goodison, the "elder statesman" of the Reggae Boyz, did not travel with the team here for their friendly match against El Salvador this evening at the RFK Stadium in Washington.
    Goodison, who was on the list of players invited to train with the team for the match-up, did not show for two sessions at Winchester Park in Kingston prior to the team's departure here on Thursday and head coach John Barnes says he will investigate when he returns to Jamaica.
    "I don't know what the mix-up is in terms of when he actually came back to Jamaica because no one can actually find out where he is, so we will know more when we get back...," Barnes said.
    Goodison, who came on as a half-time substitute in Jamaica's 2-2 draw against Haiti in Fort Lauderdale, Florida last Saturday, is said to be in Jamaica, but Barnes said "we have not heard from him for a while".
    The 36-year-old central defender and France World Cup veteran, who plays for Tranmere Rovers in the English leagues, was never originally a part of Barnes's plan for the Haiti and El Salvador games.
    "First of all with 'Pepe' I didn't even expect him to originally be in Fort Lauderdale because he never played for a while and he was never going to play there... he hasn't been involved in the camp, but his flight got him there (Fort Lauderdale), but if Claude (Davis) hadn't got sent off we wouldn't have used him at all... I had no intention and I don't know if I was going to use him here (Washington)...," Barnes said from Virginia yesterday.
    A towering force who drives fear into strikers, Goodison made his debut for the Jamaica in March 1996 in a friendly match against Guatemala and immediately scored his first international goal. He has been capped 115 times for Jamaica and has scored nine goals.
    Goodison, who previously played for Hull City where he was voted Player of the Year in the 2000/01 season, was a standout for Jamaican clubs Olympic Gardens and Seba United.

  • #2
    Originally posted by Dunny View Post
    "First of all with 'Pepe' I didn't even expect him to originally be in Fort Lauderdale because he never played for a while and he was never going to play there... he hasn't been involved in the camp, but his flight got him there (Fort Lauderdale), but if Claude (Davis) hadn't got sent off we wouldn't have used him at all... I had no intention and I don't know if I was going to use him here (Washington)...," Barnes said from Virginia yesterday.
    this is not good... sounds like there is an issue between pepe and the coach... still, i cannot understand the coach... he needs to work on his communication skills...
    'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

    Comment


    • #3
      I like how Barnes speaks to the media. He just talks. A bit like Joe Biden, where he says what is on his mind, but in a world where everything is staged, processed and packaged, this is refreshing.


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

      Comment


      • #4
        Barnes have foot in mouth disease . didnt expect him to be in fort lauderdale ....his flight got him here ..so no invitation was sent ? ....if Claude was sent off I wouldnt have used him , no intention !!!!!!.....but I dont know if i am going to use him in washington.

        Media needs to press this issue .Why did he come to Florida in the 1st place ?
        THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

        "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


        "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

        Comment


        • #5
          The fact is Barnes is looking for players after Pepe. He knows that our defense is going to need a few good men after the Gold cup and he is looking at the youngster. Pepe maybe mad about that but a so the thing set.
          • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

          Comment


          • #6
            what exactly did barnes say that was so wrong?


            BLACK LIVES MATTER

            Comment


            • #7
              a nuh the first or second time Pepe a do that.
              If want know where Pepe is him just have fi ask Tappa .
              • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

              Comment


              • #8
                My issue is if the coach didnt expect the man in florida who , whom what JFF entity or individual invited him ?

                Barnes just opened it up to the world.Its good man and man caan just turn up fe a game .
                THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

                "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


                "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Peppe didnt do anything wrong , he wasnt invited according to Barnes he found himself in Florida and not in DC .

                  AWOL my foot.
                  THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

                  "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


                  "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    "Refreshing," is good - especially if it's a cold glass of lemonaide on a hot summer's day. But to the media in front of the world? That's something else!

                    Barnes needed to use more tact and diploma in what he relays to the media. Pepe could not have shown up in Florida without an invitation from someone. In fact, the game was promoted by Rush Promotions using names such as Marlon King, Bibi Gardner, Ricardo Fuller and Pepe Goodison et al as the stars on display. Somebody shegged up the thing, becuase ah no soh it set! Barnes need fi come better.

                    If he did not intend to use Pepe and was only forced to do so after Claude's red card, then that puts Barnes in a very bad light as far as his ability to select a squad goes. What would he have done had Pepe not been present? Somebody ain't telling the whole truth.
                    Last edited by Farmah; May 30, 2009, 03:11 PM.
                    "The contribution of forumites and others who visit shouldn’t be discounted, and offending people shouldn’t be the first thing on our minds. Most of us are educated and can do better." Mi bredrin Sass Jan. 29,2011

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Weeks before the game advertise Barnes said that most UK based players would be missing and he was primarily going to use a second team for the first two practise games.
                      • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Tough man 'Pepe' remains loyal to Ja

                        Published: Sunday | June 7, 2009


                        Gordon Williams, Gleaner Writer

                        Reggae Boy Ian Goodison (left) in action against The Bahamas at the National Stadium.
                        It's easy to see Ian Goodison's tough side.
                        'Pepe' has bared it over a dozen years in Jamaica's colours. Dishing out punishment. Taking it. Never backing down.
                        Now some are counting the days when the big central defender peels off his national football jersey for a final time.
                        Goodison's most recent inter-national was May 23 against Haiti. Days later, when he failed to show up for a training camp, speculation swirled that it could be his last.
                        He was not selected against El Salvador last weekend and will not play against Panama on June 7 either. It is still unclear if Goodison will be one of the Reggae Boyz at the CONCACAF Gold Cup, since those three games were earmarked as preparation for the July tournament.
                        Yet, during Jamaica's failed World Cup 2010 campaign just months ago, Goodison's ability remained intact at the game's highest level. The 36-year-old's desire eliminates all exit timetables.
                        "Once I'm alive, I could be like 75, and the country calls upon me, from me can do it, me a guh do it," Goodison said before the Haiti game. "I will never say never for my country."
                        After playing well over 100 times for Jamaica, he may be on to something. His English club, Tranmere Rovers, recently signed him to a new two-year deal. Once Goodison stays in competitive shape, Jamaica's coach John Barnes believes, [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]retirement[/COLOR][/COLOR] is still some distance away.
                        "Of [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]course[/COLOR][/COLOR], they may be getting on," the coach explained while discussing the senior Reggae Boy. "But they still have at least six months in them. So the Gold Cup you will still be seeing the Goodisons, the (Tyrone) Marshalls."
                        Yet Goodison's remark under-lines a passion for football that refuses to die, even when others threatened it. National coaches ignored him when he played for Olympic [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]Gardens[/COLOR][/COLOR] in Jamaica's second-tier Major League com-petition. That frustration almost pushed him to play for the Cayman Islands, before his brother convinced him to accept René Simoes's invitation in 1996.
                        Goodison hasn't totally shaken the 'outsider' feeling of his first call-up, when only a few teammates welcomed him. He doesn't hide the anger after being dropped from the national team a few years ago because he was considered "too old" by the last Jamaica Football Federation administration.
                        "I was like about 33 ... Me a play like professional football inna England," he said. "I know they want younger players, but ... how you can pick a team and nuh pick me at the time? ... Genuinely, genuinely upset me. Me nah tell nuh lie."
                        Then he manages a smile.
                        deflated
                        "Now I'm 36 and I'm still in the national team."
                        Other matters annoy him, like why his [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]friend[/COLOR][/COLOR] and long-time national teammate Ricardo 'Bibi' Gardner, who has played for English club Bolton Wanderers since he was a teenager, still has not been properly recognised by Jamaica. And Goodison was so deflated after Simoes was dismissed following Jamaica's loss to Honduras last year, he vowed never to play for Jamaica again. Family and friends persuaded him otherwise. His own passion, coupled with memories of another personal tragedy, helped change his mind as well. Goodison had once been forced to find a way back after Leon, the brother who was like his "bredda, mother, everything," died.
                        Simoes' abrupt departure meant he had to do it again.
                        "(We) hug up each other," said Goodison recalling his farewell to the Brazilian. "Proper emotional thing. That was tough [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]love[/COLOR][/COLOR]. Trust me ... Eye water fill mi eyes at the airport. Me take it very, very personal."
                        UNFINISHED BUSINESS
                        Despite the devastating loss to Honduras, there was still unfinished business, like helping Jamaica return to the World Cup, scene of Goodison's greatest football triumph in 1998. Pepe rallied for his teammates.
                        "I sit down and say, 'Yo, dem youth ya waan guh back a World Cup again'," he said. "So me woulda love fi inna di team a guh deh."
                        Yet, none of those reflective moments can dull the edge of Goodison's more famous - impulsive - side. Even without the captain's armband, which he wore during Jamaica's triumph over Japan at the World Cup, he is the Boyz's rock, a de facto enforcer who has unnerved international opponents for 13 years.
                        "Most are not very comfortable seeing him," said former national player and long-time team manager Howard Bell.
                        "What he brings to the team is belief," added Barnes.
                        LOAD
                        Goodison is willing to carry that load.
                        "I get the players them going, try to hype them up, make them know we're playing against man just like we," he said. "Not because they come from Brazil, the whole a we have the same blood. So that's my type of job."
                        He will accomplish the task by any means necessary. Goodison freely admits what rivals have long known, that he sometimes uses physical play that would make a kick-boxer blush. It's part of his make-up, and it's about winning.
                        The technical side of his game has refined over the years as well. Tactically, Goodison is much better than 1996 when he made his official debut against Guatemala and scored for Jamaica. Others have watched with admiration.
                        "Pepe was my idol as a youth a grow," said national teammate Damion 'Stew Peas' Stewart.
                        Stewart and others have waited patiently to take over from the ageing stalwart. But Goodison is not ready to budge.
                        "Whether Damion, Claude (Davis), Tyrone anyone of them, them affi work fi it," said Goodison, "to the end."
                        Surprisingly, even at this stage of his career, football games still make Goodison anxious. But he finds ways to focus.
                        "Sometimes in the tunnel, whether home or away, I'm nervous," he said. "I have to do something, just to get that fear out of my mind ... even something stupid .. Even fi try to buck somebody in dem head, just to just get something out of my head."
                        Simoes recognised his mental toughness. Goodison famously waved off concerns that he was seriously injured against Mexico in a World Cup qualifier at 'The Office'. He now believes the Brazilian never doubted he would continue.
                        "When I'm dying on the pitch, (Simoes) knows I prefer to dead out deh," Goodison said. "If me seh me a come off him still a tell me, me can do it, 'cause him know is a mind thing."
                        Experience counts, too. Goodison learned playing against world greats such as Brazil's Romario, the best player he has faced. But he also studied locals, picking up bits and pieces from ex-national players like the smooth Durrent 'Tatty' Brown and the intimidating Mark 'Hagler' Wilson and Desmond 'Gaddafi' Smith. While Goodison readily admits to losing a step, he can explain precisely how to reach a ball before a player who is years younger and yards faster.
                        Meanwhile, according to Goodi-son, none of it - football's wear and tear - is getting tedious. The atmosphere around the game is still fresh and he can't get enough. Friendships that football entrusted him with, like those with Gardner, Theodore Whitmore and others, is part of another never-ending match. So walking off the pitch will be hard.
                        "It come in like a family thing," Goodison said. "It's like you miss your family sometime when you know you can't do it again."
                        When he goes, the Boyz will miss him too.
                        "Well, there is no doubt that there will be a vacuum," said Bell. "How long it takes to be filled is left to be seen, but he has always been known to drive the team. Somebody has to do that."
                        NEXT
                        What's next for Goodison may not be what most expect. He says he's "too ignorant" to be a coach. He's already involved with Gardner in the music business. When his stint in England is done, Goodison will look for ways to help. The youth of Olympic Gardens may need him. He's always welcomed at Tivoli.
                        Yet, Goodison will remain in the hearts of Jamaican football fans everywhere. Last year, when Mexico's captain Rafa Marquez rattled into his ankle, causing an injury that bothers him today, the veteran battled on, again showing the side of Pepe fans know best. It's more than enough. "There are a lot of assumptions about him," Bell said, "but once he gets on to the field of play, then no one can fault his commitment or his performance."

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