Caribbean Football Union
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The CFU emblem
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Abbreviation | CFU |
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Formation | 28 January 1978 |
Type | Sports organisation |
Headquarters | ![]() |
Membership
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29 Member Associations |
Secretary General
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President
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Website | http://www.cfufootball.org |
The Caribbean Football Union, often referred to by its initials CFU, is the nominal governing body for association football in the Caribbean as well as Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana. It represents 23 FIFA member nations, as well as 6 territories that are not affiliated to FIFA. The Union was established in January 1978 and its Member Associations compete in the CONCACAF region.
CFU also runs the CFU Club Championship, a competition to determine the Caribbean club representative for the CONCACAF Champions League.
The union made international headlines in 2011 when it was revealed that Mohammed bin Hammam, a candidate for the FIFA Presidency, had offered US$40,000 to each national association representative present at a CFU meeting on 10 May 2011. Several had accepted the offer. CFU president Jack Warner was to be investigated by FIFA, but upon his resignation the investigation was terminated. The resignation resulted in several of the most influential members of the CFU being suspended from football and delays of the CFU congress.[1]
Contents
Union members
Current members
Potential future members
Saint-Barthélemy became an overseas collectivity of France in February 2007, the same political status as Saint-Martin.
Following the dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles in 2010, the public bodies of Saba and Sint Eustatius could become eligible to compete as separate entities within the Caribbean Football Union, the same political status as Bonaire (CONCACAF associate member since April 2013). Each of these areas is an integral part of the Netherlands.
Competitions
The Caribbean Football Union holds two cups:
The CFU Championship was a tournament for national teams in the region active between 1978 and 1988. It was sometimes referred to as the CFU Nations Cup. The Caribbean Cup is the current international cup for the Caribbean: the top 4 teams in the tournament qualify for the CONCACAF Gold Cup.
The CFU Club Championship is the championship for Caribbean club teams. The winner qualified for the CONCACAF Champions' Cup from 1997 and until 2008. Since 2008-09, the top 3 clubs qualify for a preliminary round of the CONCACAF Champions League.
Previously the CFU had organised a pan-Caribbean league, the Caribbean Professional Football League, it was active between 1992 and 1994.
Representative team
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A Caribbean national team has played several exhibition fixtures. In 1987 a Caribbean XI entertained Brazilian São Paulo FC and a year later a 'Caribbean Selection' played against the national team of Trinidad and Tobago. Since the formation of the CFU, games have typically taken place in Port-of-Spain.
In August 1993, CFU President Jack Warner ruled out the possibility of merging the Caribbean nations into one national football team, similar to the West Indies cricket team. He said: "There seems to be some myth outside there that a Caribbean team is the answer to football in the region. I have never heard anything so ludicrous," said Warner, "If to reach a World Cup have to be considered by size, why haven't China ever made it. The simple fact is, we must take whatever seems to be our liabilities and make them our assets. Being small is never a liability in this sport".[3]
History
The formation of the Caribbean Football Union is credited to former Trinidad and Tobago national footballer Patrick Raymond. In 1976, he approached Phil Woosnam, the Commissioner of the North American Soccer League (NASL), about ownership of a Caribbean franchise within the NASL, and instead, Woosnam proposed the formation of a Caribbean Professional League. Acting on Woosnam advise, and with assistance from former England player-turned businessman Jimmy Hill and his company World Sports Academy, plus the recommendation of former FIFA President Sir Stan Rous, that a Caribbean regional governing body as a sub-group within CONCACAF be the first order of business, Raymond introduced the initiative in August 1977 in Port of Spain, Trinidad, that eventually led to the formation of the Caribbean Football Union (CFU). The CFU was inaugurated on January 28, 1978, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, as the Caribbean region's governing football body and a sub-group within CONCACAF.
A previous effort to establish a Caribbean regional governing body was the British Caribbean Football Association (BCFA) in January 1957, with the Trinidad & Tobago FA's President Ken Galt as the BCFA's President, and the TTFA's Secretary Eric James as General Secretary, and in 1959, a representative BCFA team toured the UK.
In May 2013, under the direction of Damien E. Hughes, the CFU relocated their offices from Port-of-Spain, Trinidad to Kingston, Jamaica.[4] In August 2015, Hughes was replaced by Antiguan Neil Cochrane. Cochrane announced that several jobs would be moved from Jamaica to Antigua and a smaller headquarters would be rented.[5]
Presidents
There have been three presidents (and two acting presidents) of the CFU since its foundation:
André Kamperveen (1978-1982)
Jack Warner (1983-2011)
Lisle Austin (2011) (acting president)[Note 1]
Yves Jean-Bart (2011–12) (acting president)
Gordon Derrick (2012-)
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General secretaries
There have been six general secretaries of the CFU since its foundation:
Jack Warner (1978–82)
Ivan Barrow (1983-1993)
Harold Taylor (1993-2011)
Angenie Kanhai (2011)
Damien Hughes (2011-2015)
Neil Cochrane (2015-)
Staff
As of 15 August 2015[update]
Federation nation | Member | Position |
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Gordon Derrick | President |
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Cheney Joseph | 1st Vice-President |
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Rignaal Francisca | 2nd Vice-President |
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Lyndon Cooper | 3rd Vice-President |
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Eric Labrador | 4th Vice-President |
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Sonia Bien-Aime | Executive Member |
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Hillaren Frederick | Executive Member |
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Maurice Victoire | Executive Member |
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Anthony Johnson | Executive Member |
Corruption scandal
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The union was embroiled in a scandal in May 2011 after several representatives of Caribbean Football Associations had been given brown paper envelopes containing US$40,000. The incident was reported to the CONCACAF general secretary Chuck Blazer. The next day, footage from a private meeting between CFU officials was leaked to the public. This footage showed President Jack Warner informing the delegates who had received envelopes that the funds within were for their personal use, stating,"If you're pious, you should go to church."[7] An investigation initiated by FIFA examined the actions of over 30 CFU representatives and resulted in the resignation of the CFU president, the suspension of the organization's vice-presidents and staff, and the resignation of several national football association staff.
See also
- CONCACAF
- UNCAF
- North American Football Union (NAFU)
- North American Football Confederation (NAFC)
- Confederacion Centroamericana y del Caribe de Futbol (CCCF)
References
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External links
- ↑ http://www.insideworldfootball.biz/worldfootball/centralandnorthamerica/10227-jamaicas-burrell-wont-come-clean-about-facts-behind-his-fifa-suspension
- ↑ http://www.cfufootball.org/index.php/member-associations
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