Jamaica’s path to the 2026 FIFA World Cup has narrowed to a single do-or-die fixture after a draining 1-1 draw with Trinidad and Tobago on Thursday night.
The result, already damaging on its own, became even more consequential once news broke that Curacao had demolished Bermuda 7-0 to seize control of Group B on 11 points.
Jamaica now trail the new group leaders by a single point and must defeat Curacao on November 18 at the National Stadium to secure automatic qualification. Anything less, and the Boyz plunge into the uncertainty of second-place tiebreakers and potential play-off routes. Trinidad’s draw, meanwhile, eliminates them from contention.
McClaren sparks alarm with a bewildering starting XI
The evening began with Jamaica’s supporters asking uneasy questions rather than anticipating answers. Head coach Steve McClaren unveiled a startling starting XI—an untested combination that had never shared the field as a unit. The disjointed, hesitant football that followed felt almost inevitable.
For long stretches, Jamaica played without rhythm, without continuity, and too often without confidence. If the initial selection raised eyebrows, the second-half substitutions—timid and oddly conservative despite holding a precious lead—only amplified the sense that the visitors were inviting pressure rather than absorbing it on their own terms. For a team handed a fortuitous advantage, the Boyz never looked like hunting the kill.
T&T seize the early initiatives
Inside a charged Hasely Crawford Stadium pulsing with horns and drums, the hosts fed off the atmosphere from the opening whistle. Levi Garcia signaled their intent in the 25th when he dragged narrowly across goal from close range after leaving Richard King on the seat of his shorts.
King, who had been involved in a forceful 50-50 challenge with Tyrese Spicer minutes earlier, limped off just after the half-hour mark and was replaced by Damion Lowe in the heart of the Jamaican defence.
It hardly made any difference to the disjointed and lackluster play from the visitors, as goalkeeping captain Andre Blake came to his side’s aid when he parried a rasping drive from Spicer from inside the penalty area.
Jamaica nearly stole the lead against the run of play when Jonathan Russell rose to head home a cross from the right side in the 40th minute—but the assistant referee’s flag ruled out the strike for offside immediately, and VAR confirmed the infringement.
Cephas pounces—but Jamaica retreat instead of rising
The script momentarily flipped eight minutes into the second half. Renaldo Cephas, chasing a long punt, took control of the ball and dribbled into the danger area from his favoured left flank before neatly cutting inside his overmatched marker, then calmly slotting to the far corner well beyond Denzil Smith at the far post.
But instead of building on the momentum, McClaren’s side contracted. They ceded more possession, dropped deeper, and failed to threaten again—managing just one shot on target the entire night. Trinidad, in contrast and as expected, grew bolder, as they had to, unleashing wave after wave of attacks.
Spicer skied a good chance in the 60th minute and Justin Garcia powered a header just wide in the 73rd.
The equalizer Jamaica invited
The pressure finally cracked Jamaica in the 85th minute. A routine throw-in turned chaotic, and Kevin Molino—introduced for the last quarter of the game—benefited from a loose ball, steadied himself while dismissing Rico Henry, before slotting a low finish inside Blake’s near post.
McClaren, acknowledging the gravity of the moment, urged supporters to pack the National Stadium. “What we need on Tuesday is a great performance in front of 35,000 people… It is important for the Jamaicans to come and support us and make Tuesday a great occasion.”
The path is simple, if unforgiving: beat Curacao, or watch their World Cup dream grow perilously complicated.
Teams: Jamaica – Andre Blake, Ethan Pinnock, Richard King (Damion Lowe 31st), Mason Holgate, Gregory Leigh, Isaac Hayden, Bobby Reid, Jonathan Russell (Karoy Anderson 81st), Renaldo Cephas (Dujuan Richards 67th), Demarai Gray (Tyreece Campbell 67th), Rumarn Burrell (Rico Henry 81st’)
Booked: Holgate (63rd), Russell (81st), Henry (89th)
Subs not used: Tafari Chambers, Jahmali Waite, Dexter Lembikisa, Kaheim Dixon, Shamar Nicholson, Bailey Cadamarteri, Ian Fray
Trinidad & Tobago – Denzel Smith, Deron Payne, Kobi Henry, Jerrin Jackie, Andre Raymond (Noah Powder 90th+1), Daniel Phillips (Roald Mitchell 67th), Levi Garcia, Tyrese Spicer (Nathaniel James 74th), Dante Sealy (Kevin Molino 68th), Justin Garcia, Andre Rampersad
Booked: None
Subs not used: Marvin Phillip, Jaban Brice, Josiah Trimmingham, Steffen Yeates, Ryan Telfer, Wayne Frederick, Isaiah Garcia, Real Gill
Referee – Walter Lopez (Guatemala)
Assistant Referees – Keytzel Corrates (Nicaragua), Raymundo Feliz (Dominican Republic)
Fourth Official – Selvin Brown (Honduras)
VAR – Diana Perez (Mexico)
AVAR – Jesus Montero (Costa Rica)
Match Commissioner – Gabriel Ortiz (Puerto Rico)
GROUP B STANDINGS
| Team | P | W | D | L | GD | Pts |
| Curacao | 5 | 3 | 2 | 0 | +10 | 11 |
| Jamaica | 5 | 3 | 1 | 1 | +8 | 10 |
| T&T | 5 | 1 | 3 | 1 | +1 | 6 |
| Bermuda | 5 | 0 | 0 | 5 | −19 | 0 |













