 NEWLY CROWNED  2014-2015 Super League champions Club Sando have been accepted as the  newest TT Pro League club and will compete at the 2015-2016 season,  which is set to begin in September.
NEWLY CROWNED  2014-2015 Super League champions Club Sando have been accepted as the  newest TT Pro League club and will compete at the 2015-2016 season,  which is set to begin in September.
Meanwhile  Club Sando’s youth teams at the Under-13, Under-15 and Under-17 levels  will have their taste at the 2015 Youth Pro League, which will run from  March to July. 
 
TT Pro League CEO Dexter Skeene unveiled Club Sando, represented by  owner Edison “Eddie” Dean and technical director Muhammad Isa, during a  press conference at the Pro League’s office in St Augustine yesterday. 
 
Skeene said that the TT Pro League’s board of directors had reviewed  the application of Club Sando, who have been campaigning in the Super  League for a number of years and had been successful, and saw it fit to  accept the San Fernando club into the TT Pro League fold. 
 
Buoyed by an ambitious owner/CEO Dean, a board of directors that  includes Isa, Steve Goopeesingh, Marlon Zoe and Derek Lange, and  dedicated players and fans, Club Sando’s arrival at the Pro League is  now a reality. 
 
Isa, who said it is a very proud moment, explained that while Club  Sando are very thankful for acceptance into the TT Pro League, it was  something the club had worked very hard to achieve. 
 
“Our organisation has worked very hard to achieve this,” Isa said.  “Three years ago Dean called a meeting with two of the key stakeholders,  which were Derek Lange and myself. Our club was approaching 25 years  (of existence in 2015), and we decided that at 25 years we want to play  at the highest level in the country, which is the TT Pro League. 
 
“We started to work on it two years ago. We didn’t just want to pay  our way into the TT Pro League. We wanted to come into the TT Pro League  as Super League champions. The management and staff worked very hard to  win the Super League and today we are very much honoured to be in the  TT Pro League as the Super League champions.” 
 
Club Sando enjoyed their best years at the Super League in the last  two seasons since the arrival of former St Ann’s Rangers coach Anthony  Streete. In 2013-2014 Club Sando finished runners-up in the both the  league and knockout competitions behind Guaya United – another Super  League outfit ambitious of entering the Pro League. 
 
One season later Club Sando celebrates the 2014-2015 Super League  title in the year of celebrating their 25th anniversary, and to top it  off, the club are now preparing for the highest tier of football in  Trinidad and Tobago—the TT Pro League. 
 
Club Sando, who also fields a team in the Southern FA, will have the  next eight months to prepare for life in professional football. 
 
“We will continue to play the high brand of football that we played  in the Super League and I will assure you that we will be competitive in  the TT Pro League,” Isa assured. “Our coach (Anthony Streete) cares  about the style of football that we play. 
 
“He always emphasised that he wants people to follow the team, so he  always emphasised a quality standard from the players. He wants to  bring back the fans to football and that’s why we have a (huge fan  support) right now because of the style of football that we produce.” 
 
In 2013 Club Sando, who boast of a number of former Pro League  players, etched themselves into history, becoming the first second tier  team of the Trinidad and Tobago football system to reach the Toyota  Classic Final but went under 2-0 against W Connection in the title  match. 
 
“We hope that Club Sando’s journey and their stay in professional  football is long and fruitful,” Skeene said. “They have a dynamic  organisation and now a vibrant brand, which is the TT Pro League. And I  want to tell them that they are joining a group of like-minded  individuals who have the growth of professional football at heart and  who continue to work daily to ensure the sustainability and viability of  professional football in Trinidad and Tobago.”
