Caribbean National Weekly

‘We are living with regret’ McClaren’s stark verdict frames Jamaica’s Gold Cup debacle

By Ian Burnett··3 min read
‘We are living with regret’  McClaren’s stark verdict frames Jamaica’s Gold Cup debacle
Key Points(4)
  • <p style="font-weight: 400;">“We’ve talked about every game and not living with regret and at the moment we are living with regret for what we have done in this tournament.
  • The forward twisted the knife on 17 minutes, gliding past Richard King and Dexter Lembikisa tackles before beating Blake at the near post.
  • It was a save Blake should have made.</p> <p style="font-weight: 400;">A glimmer of hope arrived on 27 minutes: Lembikisa, on the right, received a ball from Gray and whipped in a precise cross for the onrushing Amari’i Bell at the back post to power home a header.
  • In the 89th minute a swift counter saw Tomas Rodríguez roll the ball into an unguarded net after rounding a stranded Blake well outside his goal area, and sealing Panama’s perfect nine-point group and the Boyz’ early exit.</p> <h2 style="font-weight: 400;">McClaren on talent vs.

“We’ve talked about every game and not living with regret and at the moment we are living with regret for what we have done in this tournament. It is not good enough – individually and collectively.”

With that haunting admission, head coach Steve McClaren set the tone for a night that ended Jamaica’s CONCACAF Gold Cup journey and may yet reshape the national program.

The 4-1 defeat to Panama at the Q2 Stadium in Austin, Texas on Tuesday ensured a first group-stage exit in six editions and, in McClaren’s words, delivered “the wake-up call we probably needed.”

Consistency lost, World-Cup dream threatened

“These three games have been a wake-up call for all of us… We’ve had no consistency and that will not get us to the World Cup.”

McClaren made it clear that reputations now count for little. From star wingers Leon Bailey and Demarai Gray to Premier League stalwart Ethan Pinnock, every player must “show it from now until September within their clubs” to keep a place for the 2026 qualifiers.

Panama struck inside four minutes when Ismael Diaz’ 25-yard, left-footed drive clipped Bailey and wrong-footed Andre Blake. The forward twisted the knife on 17 minutes, gliding past Richard King and Dexter Lembikisa tackles before beating Blake at the near post. It was a save Blake should have made.

A glimmer of hope arrived on 27 minutes: Lembikisa, on the right, received a ball from Gray and whipped in a precise cross for the onrushing Amari’i Bell at the back post to power home a header. Yet momentum seeped away moments before halftime.

ON 42 minutes, Kasey Palmer pulled down Azarias Londono just inside the penalty area and Diaz completed a perfect hat-trick when he converted the penalty for 3-1 lead on 45 minutes.

And four minutes into added time Warner Brown appeared to have been fouled in the Panamanian penalty box and although VAR asked Honduran referee Selvin Brown to take a second look at the incident, the Central American official decided against awarding the Reggae Boyz a penalty after seven minutes of stoppage time.

McClaren deemed that non-call the game’s “defining moment.”

Second-half flickers and the inevitable fourth

Jamaica pressed after the interval – Kaheim Dixon rattled the post, Renaldo Cephas was twice denied – but could not pierce Orlando Mosquera again. In the 89th minute a swift counter saw Tomas Rodríguez roll the ball into an unguarded net after rounding a stranded Blake well outside his goal area, and sealing Panama’s perfect nine-point group and the Boyz’ early exit.

McClaren on talent vs. team

“Everybody talks about our talent, but talent is nothing without hard work… Teams will win, not individuals.” Quoting Panama boss Thomas Christiansen, McClaren underscored Jamaica’s task: blending marquee names into a cohesive unit before September’s qualifiers.

In the group’s other match, Guatemala defeated Guadeloupe 3-2 to book their place in the quarter-final round with six points, followed by Jamaica on three and Guadeloupe pointless at the foot of Group C.

The sting of Austin may linger, but McClaren has set a clear ultimatum: only hard-earned club form and unwavering commitment will book a ticket to the World Cup qualifiers.

Teams: 

Jamaica – Andre Blake; Dexter Lembikisa, Ethan Pinnock, Richard King (Gregory Leigh 46′), Amari’i Bell; Jonathan Russell (Bobby Reid 64’), Kasey Palmer; Leon Bailey (Michail Antonio 72’), Demarai Gray (Kaheim Dixon 64’), Joel Latibeaudiere; Warner Brown (Renaldo Cephas 46’) Booked: Latibeaudiere 61′ Subs not used: Shaquan Davis, Jahmali Waite, Karoy Anderson, Dwayne Atkinson, Kyle Ming, Romario Williams, Tyreece Campbell

Panama (4-3-3) – Orlando Mosquera; César Blackman, José Córdoba, Fidel Escobar, Cristian Martínez (Carlos Harvey 46’); Víctor Griffith ( Édward Cedeño 84’), Aníbal Godoy (Edgardo Fariña 72’), Jorge Gutiérrez; Ismael Diaz (César Yanis 66’), Azarías Londono (José Rodríguez 46’), Tomás Rodríguez Booked: Córdoba 49′ Subs not used: Luis Mejía, John Gunn, Eduardo Guerrero, Janpol Morales, Eric Davis, Andrés Andrade, Iván Anderson

Referee: Selvin Brown (Honduras) Assistant Referees: Gerson Orellana, Ronay Salinas (both Honduras) Fourth Official: Adons Carrasco (Dominican Republic) VAR: Jesús Montero (Costa Rica) AVAR: Shirley Perelló (Honduras) Match Commissioner: Sergio Hidalgo (Costa Rica)

Related Stories

Jamaica’s Blaise Bicknell eyes historic home breakthrough at Kingston Open

Jamaica’s Blaise Bicknell eyes historic home breakthrough at Kingston Open

Sabina Park restoration drive powers National Labour Day activities

Sabina Park restoration drive powers National Labour Day activities

Joseph eyes Sri Lanka series as recovery journey nears finish line

Joseph eyes Sri Lanka series as recovery journey nears finish line

Bunny Shaw commits future to Manchester City with landmark four-year deal

Bunny Shaw commits future to Manchester City with landmark four-year deal