 This is it, ladies.
This is it, ladies.
After two near-misses, there’s no second, third  or fourth chance after tomorrow evening’s showdown with Ecuador. It’s  goalless from the first leg in Quito three weeks ago, so there’s  everything to play for, not just for Trinidad and Tobago, but also for  the Ecuadorians.
Make no mistake. The South Americans are here  believing that this will also be their moment of glory, their chance to  ruin the anticipated home celebrations and make it to next year’s  Women’s World Cup finals in Canada as first-time participants, much in  the same way that the hosts are seeking to become the first nation from  the English-speaking Caribbean to reach the pinnacle of the female game.
Whether  or not there is a full house at the Hasely Crawford Stadium, there will  be nerves in the home camp. But it’s up to Maylee Attin-Johnson and her  team to use that anxiety positively by staying focussed from first  minute to last, whatever the situation. Momentary relaxation after  taking the lead against Mexico in the third-place playoff of the  CONCACAF tournament last month in the United States proved costly.
Even  now, with a place in the finals so close, so many of us are still slow  to buy into the significance of the occasion, dismissing it as “only”  women’s football. We are bandwagonnists by nature though, so expect a  bit of fervour, a bit of passion from people who hardly knew anything  about the trials and tribulations of the team in getting to this stage  where they are in with a better-than-even chance of filling the 24th and  final spot for the finals.
Coach Randy Waldrum has acknowledged that  playing at home will be tricky. A home crowd in excess of 15,000 will  be unprecedented in women’s football in this country. Will the national  players feel the sudden weight of expectation from countrymen and women  who previously didn’t seem to even know that they existed? Will the roar  and groans of thousands of voices be a boost or a burden?
Obviously a  lot will depend on how the game unfolds. A win for either side clinches  qualification, full stop, but a scoring draw (1-1, 2-2, etc) will earn  the Ecuadorians a ticket to Canada by virtue of the scoreless stalemate  in the first leg. So will they go for the early strike, knowing that it  will put pressure on the hosts to score at least twice, or keep Trinidad  and Tobago goalless and frustrated deep into the game while looking for  the late item that will clinch the tie?
As we saw in the first game  where they came on as second half substitutes seeking to take advantage  of a tiring T&T team in the draining and disorienting altitude of  the Ecuadorean capital, the nippy striking pair of Monica Quinteros and  Elizabeth Caicedo are likely to pose the greatest threat to a defence  that has been heavily reliant on the excellent Kimika Forbes in goal  throughout this qualifying campaign.
There is talent and experience  up front for the home side as well in the personalities of Kennya  Cordner and Ahkeela Mollon, so an intriguing duel is in the offing. At  the end of the day though, the team that prevails will more than likely  be the one that is driven by the greatest desire from within.
In that  sense, Trinidad and Tobago may appear to have overcome more hurdles  (including being left stranded briefly in Dallas ahead of the CONCACAF  tournament) in reaching this far. But the Ecuadoreans have also shown  character on the pitch, rallying from a 1-2 halftime deficit to defeat  Argentina 3-2 in the critical third-place playoff of South American  qualifying to get to this decisive two-match duel with the red, white  and black.
I suppose for us ordinary citizens who will never be  called upon to deliver for an expectant nation, it is difficult to  understand how anyone can stay calm and focussed ahead of such a big  occasion. So maybe perspective is important at a time like this.
In a  tearful tribute to his fallen teammate Phillip Hughes, Australian Test  cricket captain Michael Clarke recalled on Friday how the ever-positive  left-handed batsman would often say to his teammates: “Where else would  you rather be boys, than playing cricket for your country?”
That’s a  much better way to approach the challenge instead of being bogged down  by supposed pressure and freezing up with anxiety and tension. It’s a  privilege, it’s an honour to wear the national colours...and to be on  the doorstep of history to boot.
So, where else would you rather be girls, than playing football for your country and taking us to the World Cup finals?
