THE
self-proclaimed guru of local football, Austin Jack Warner, the
Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation’s special advisor
and much-touted financier, has asked former Olympic 100-metre gold
medallist Hasely Crawford to pay for his (Crawford’s) ticket
to see the friendly international between TnT and Peru at the Hasely
Crawford Stadium on Wednesday, May 10.
This was revealed on a Wednesday morning radio programme featuring
Sports Minister Roger Boynes and Warner, discussing the issue of
Government funding for the Germany-bound Soca Warriors and other
relevant matters, including the exorbitant ticket prices being charged
to football fans, who would be seeing some of their football heroes
for the last time, including former national captain Russell Latapy.
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HASLEY
CRAWFORD
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Boynes told the listening
audience that Warner had written a letter to Crawford the 1976
Montreal Olympic Games champion requesting he pay for his ticket
for the Peru game, priced at $500 for the covered stand of the
stadium that carries his name.
“Hasely is very upset about it,” Boynes added.
Warner then admitted to the travesty, but defended his position
by saying “everyone got the letter”.
It was revealed that Crawford has four seats in the Minister’s
Box, which has 28 seats and is not under the control of the Trinidad
and Tobago Football Federation (TTFF) for the warm-up match.
The talk show was promoted like a heavyweight title boxing match
but Boynes and Warner were only shadow boxing in the early rounds,
and the intensity of the “fight” only increased when
former Sports Ministry advisor and talk show host, Anil Roberts
“stormed the ring” to get in some blows at Boynes.
Warner was reduced to “sitting on the ropes” as Roberts
repeatedly asked the Sports Minister to clarify the ministry’s
policy relating to the funding of athletes or sporting organisations
for grants or funding.
Boynes clearly showed signs of “ring rust” and was
obviously not well prepared for a head-to-head tussle with Warner,
who did not get in one decisive blow at his political adversary.
At one point, Warner accused the Minister of deliberately misleading
the nation, but then corrected himself by saying Boynes’
advisors were “misleading you”.
Warner was also critical of government’s tardy payment schedule
for Cabinet’s approved $45 million in funding for the Soca
Warriors and the team’s World Cup preparation and participation,
but Boynes quickly shot back that the $14.4 paid on Monday was
on the basis of “evidence of proof of payment” and
any further payments had to be accounted for by his ministry,
since it was taxpayers’ money.
“… I paid $3.5 million for accommodation,” Warner
interjected, “(but) if there is no Jack Warner, what would
happen?”
A fitter, quicker Boynes might have slipped the “body blow”,
but Roberts had entered the fray, and the Minister was now clearly
outnumbered and he was at his wits end to defend his position
with the swim coach “jamming hard”.
Boynes, however, did retain some of his ring savvy, and when the
heat went up, he scolded Warner for not providing proof of the
coaches’ salary and stipend in time, otherwise Warner would
not have received another $7 million.
“If you say you have paid the proof, we must have proof
of payment, because we could double-pay the coach,” Boynes
stated.
Boynes then added that government had arranged for Petrotrin to
donate $1 million, and National Gas Company to donate a further
$1.5 million to the team, and he knew of other sponsorship deals
from British Gas, BHP Billiton and Carib Brewery.
“They got $20 million when they asked for $13 (million),”
Boynes declared.
Boynes then added that Cabinet gave approval for the $45 million
sponsorship package on the basis of football fans paying $200
for the Covered Stand and $100 for the Uncovered Stand for the
Peru match, but ticket prices had been raised to $500 (Covered)
and $300 (Uncovered).
The Sports Minister thrashed Warner for complaining that the TTFF
lost on the Iceland game on Carnival Tuesday in London, when the
Cabinet financial allocation for the Soca Warriors took in the
away games in the team’s preparations.
He then stated that a company had donated $350,000 for that match.
Without being specific, Warner then responded by telling the Sports
Minister: “You must never lie to this nation, the nation’s
memory is not short.”
Boynes also claimed the budget addresses the Peru game.
Warner, however, insisted that “not a nickel” was
given but conceded that the rental for the Hasely Crawford Stadium
was waivered.
The topic eventually shifted to World Cup tickets, with Warner
revealing that Boynes had requested 900 World Cup tickets, but
only 150 were given with a further 50 granted at a later date.
Boynes said the tickets were for “Ministries” which
loosely translated to Government officials and their relatives.
Warner insisted that Boynes has never paid for the tickets, and
the Sports Minister said the World Cup match tickets were Category
4 (the TTFF received Category 2 tickets for sale to local fans)
and as such, the Government was not interested.
“To cut a long story short, I paid for the tickets for him
(Boynes),” Warner added.
Interestingly, Warner also disclosed that Prime Minister Patrick
Manning interceded on behalf of the Government by calling FIFA’s
Zurich office to request 500 tickets, and FIFA officials had a
good laugh about the PM’s breach of protocol.
Boynes admitted that this was done because many people could not
afford to pay for the World Cup packages that were on offer, and
they were only interested in purchasing tickets for the matches
involving the Soca Warriors.
Efforts to confirm whether Manning did call FIFA to request World
Cup tickets from President Sepp Blatter on behalf of the government
proved futile, as calls to his Whitehall office went unanswered.
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