Calabar High’s first-half blitz stumps KTHS

September 24, 2024
Ricardo Makyn/Chief Photo Editor 
Kingston Technical High School’s Phillip Shirley (left) is beaten by Calabar High School’s Anthony McDonald, who looks to get by Dante Gobern during the ISSA Manning Cup football match at Calabar High School yesterday. Calabar High won 8-1.
Ricardo Makyn/Chief Photo Editor Kingston Technical High School’s Phillip Shirley (left) is beaten by Calabar High School’s Anthony McDonald, who looks to get by Dante Gobern during the ISSA Manning Cup football match at Calabar High School yesterday. Calabar High won 8-1.

In a game which was already won by the time the whistle sounded at halftime, Calabar High School were in cruise control as they dispatched Kingston Technical High School 8-1 yesterday in the Inter-Secondary Schools Sports Association Manning Cup at Calabar High's playing field.

Calabar raced out of the blocks as they piled on the goals early in the contest, scoring thrice in the opening 15 minutes. By halftime, they held a commanding 7-0 lead.

Goals from Jayden Perry, Kimani Thompson, Ronaldinho Williams, O'Bryan Marks, Anthony McDonald, Sheldon Pusey and Miguel Logan led Calabar to an easy win.

Calabar High head coach Andrew Price said he was more than impressed with his team's first-half performance in front of the goal.

"I think we completely dominated the first half," he said. "It was excellent. We were very potent and very aggressive and very clinical in front of the goal," Price said.

"I have been asking for the team to be clinical when we're practising in front of the goal and practising our finishing. It is good to see them come up trumps today and get the goals in the first half."

In the second half, however, Calabar High seemed to have lost their goalscoring intent following a string of substitutions.

The boys from Red Hills Road had changed their tactics towards game management and maintained their hold of the game.

However, they would concede after a defensive mistake allowed Nicoy Walters through on goal.

Price said the second half was an opportunity for him to give minutes to younger players who would not have played much this season.

He had hoped they could have continued the goal scoring but chalked their dip in form to inexperience at the Manning Cup level.

"The second half, after we made some changes and gave some players playing time, I think we dropped our intensity and our aggressiveness. We weren't able to show the same dominance that we showed in the first half."

Calabar would add one more goal in the dying minutes of the game to complete the rout.

Kingston Technical head coach, Francis Murray, said the heavy defeat came from a slow start which his team failed to recover from.

He said the priority now is to move past the loss and recover for the remaining games in the zone.

"I think we exhibited some nervousness, and we didn't hit the ground running, to be honest, and as a result we fell behind quickly," he said.

"It will have a big impact on the team, but we just have to go back to our core values rather than being nervous and jittery and abandoning what we've practised."

This win sees Calabar moving atop Zone D with seven points while Kingston Technical remain at the bottom of the zone without a point.

gregory.bryce@gleanerjm.com

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