Caribbean National Weekly

Agony in Kingston! Woodwork, VAR, and chaos doom Jamaica’s World Cup hopes

By Ian Burnett··4 min read
Agony in Kingston! Woodwork, VAR, and chaos doom Jamaica’s World Cup hopes
Key Points(5)
  • <div dir="ltr"> There are nights when football wounds a nation, when the contest on the field somehow becomes a mirror reflecting every misstep, every misplaced hope, every squandered opportunity.
  • Tuesday at the National Stadium in Kingston was one of those nights.
  • Before more than 35,000 anguished supporters, Jamaica’s Reggae Boyz failed to find the one moment of quality they desperately needed, stumbling to a goalless draw that surrendered automatic qualification to the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
  • The result sealed a monumental national disappointment.
  • Jamaica, seeded and heavily favored in Group B, finished with 11 points—one shy of the total required to win the group.

There are nights when football wounds a nation, when the contest on the field somehow becomes a mirror reflecting every misstep, every misplaced hope, every squandered opportunity.

Tuesday at the National Stadium in Kingston was one of those nights. Before more than 35,000 anguished supporters, Jamaica’s Reggae Boyz failed to find the one moment of quality they desperately needed, stumbling to a goalless draw that surrendered automatic qualification to the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

The result sealed a monumental national disappointment. Jamaica, seeded and heavily favored in Group B, finished with 11 points—one shy of the total required to win the group. Curaçao, steely and disciplined, claimed top spot with 12 and, in doing so, became the smallest nation ever to reach the FIFA World Cup Finals. History was theirs; heartbreak was Jamaica’s.

A performance that never rose to the moment


Jamaica entered the night knowing that only victory would send them directly to the World Cup. But nothing in their rhythm, urgency, or structure hinted at a team prepared to seize destiny. Instead, they were hesitant in possession, disjointed in attack, and reliant on hopeful long balls that were easily dismantled by their composed opponents.

The opening warnings came early. Curaçao, quicker to settle, produced the first shot on target when Juninho Bacuna drove a tame effort into Andre Blake’s grateful arms. Jamaica’s few early half-chances were improvised rather than engineered, with Shamar Nicholson’s deflected effort falling kindly to Bobby Reid, whose follow-up was smothered, and a through-ball from Demarai Gray that Nicholson could not convert.

As the minutes ticked by, unease tightened its grip on the stadium. The Reggae Boyz lacked fluency and ideas, and the longer the match dragged, the clearer it became that only a set play or a moment of individual brilliance might rescue them. Neither arrived.

The woodwork becomes the villain


Three times, Jamaica struck metal, each moment twisting the knife deeper.

Greg Leigh’s back-post header from an Ethan Pinnock long throw rattled the base of the upright. Nicholson rose majestically to thunder a header off the crossbar. Then, in the 87th minute, substitute Bailey Cadamarteri guided a glancing header off the post, prompting groans that felt like grief.

Even these chances, however, did little to disguise a larger truth: Jamaica never played with the cohesion, bravery, or tactical clarity expected in a winner-takes-all finale.

Disappointment in the dying embers


Desperation produced chaos. Jonathan Russell, introduced in the 64th minute, picked up two yellow cards in six frantic minutes and was expelled before stoppage time.

Still, hope flickered briefly. Deep into added time, Dujuan Richards went down in the box and Salvadoran referee Ivan Barton pointed to the penalty spot. The stadium erupted in raw, delirious relief. But VAR intervened. American official Allen Chapman summoned Barton to the monitor, and the penalty, Jamaica’s lifeline, was overturned. A stadium that had soared moments earlier collapsed into disbelief.

Curaçao seals history as Jamaica faces the void


When Barton blew the final whistle, Curaçao’s bench and travelling supporters poured onto the field. The Blue Wave had crested at the perfect moment. Even without veteran Dutch coach Dick Advocaat, who departed days earlier for personal reasons, they held firm, defended bravely, and earned the point that delivered their first-ever World Cup Finals berth.

For Jamaica, the final scene felt like a requiem. The dream had dissolved, the performance had wilted, and the enormity of the failure was impossible to escape. Minutes later, Jamaica Football Federation President Michael Ricketts confirmed that Head Coach Steve McClaren had tendered his resignation, which he delivered from a written statement at what should have been a post-game presser. The outgoing coach did not take questions.

A chasm between expectations and reality


That resignation captured the night’s tone. Jamaica, drawn alongside Curaçao, Trinidad and Tobago, and Bermuda, had been labeled overwhelming favorites. But early inconsistencies, especially the costly draw against Trinidad, gifted advantage to Curaçao, who needed only a point in Kingston and managed the occasion with authority.

Jamaica now faces the harsh road of the intercontinental playoffs in March 2026. Their path will run through Bolivia or New Caledonia before a possible final against one of the seeded teams, DR Congo or Iraq. A place at the World Cup is still possible, but now burdened with doubt, tension, and a haunting sense of what should have already been secured.

Elsewhere in the group


Trinidad and Tobago defeated Bermuda 2-1 to finish on nine points. Bermuda ended bottom of the group without a single point. Curaçao, Haiti, and Panama claimed the region’s automatic berths.

The night Jamaica will not forget


In the end, it was not only a draw, it was a symbolic unraveling. A night when courage faltered, luck fled, and a smaller nation seized its moment while Jamaica let theirs slip away. The sorrow that swept the National Stadium will linger, not merely because Jamaica failed, but because Curaçao succeeded with the discipline, hunger, and clarity of play Jamaica could not summon.

The Reggae Boyz will play on. But the shadow of this night will follow them.

Teams: Jamaica - Andre Blake, Ethan Pinnock, Richard King, Dexter Lembikisa (Dujuan Richards 78th), Gregory Leigh, Isaac Hayden, Ian Fray (Jonathan Russell 64th), Bobby Reid (Bailey Cadamarteri 78th), Renaldo Cephas, Demarai Gray (Kaheim Dixon 58th), Shamar Nicholson
Booked: Fray (61st), Russell (83rd, 89th – ejected), King (90+2)
Subs not used: Jahmali Waite, Tafari Chambers, Damion Lowe, Mason Holgate, Rico Henry, Jahshawn Anglin, Karoy Anderson, Tyreece Campbell

Curaçao - Eloy Room, Shurandy Sambo, Roshon Van Eijma, Sherel Floranus, Juninho Bacuna, Livano Comenencia, Jurgen Locadia (Jordi Paulina 90+2), Leandro Bacuna, Sontje Hansen (Julien Gaari 81st), Kenji Gorré (Jeremy Antonisse 69th), Armando Obispo
Booked: Antonisse (83rd), Roemeratoe (90+7)
Subs not used: Tyrick Bodak, Trevor Doombusch, Godfried Roemeratoe, Deveron Fonville, Ar’jany Martha, Jearl Margaritha, Tyrese Noslin, Joshua Brenet, Kevin Felicia

Match Officials

Referee: Ivan Barton (El Salvador)
Assistant Referee 1: David Moran (El Salvador)
Assistant Referee 2: Juan Zumba (El Salvador)
Fourth Official: Keylor Herrera (Costa Rica)
VAR: Allen Chapman (USA)
AVAR: Ekaterina Koroleva (USA)
Match Commissioner: Egbert Lacle (Aruba)

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