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Theodore Whitmore
Jamaican footballer

Theodore Whitmore

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Jamaican footballer
Work field
Gender
Male
Birth
5 August 1972, Montego Bay, Cornwall County, Jamaica
Age
51 years
Stats
Height:
188
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Theodore Whitmore (born 5 August 1972) is a football midfielder from Jamaica. He is the current interim manager of the Jamaica national football team.

Club career

Whitmore attended St. James High School in Montego Bay, Jamaica. During his late teens, he worked as a Baked Goods delivery assistant with National Continental Foods in Montego Bay before moving on to play soccer in the Jamaica National Premiere League. As a very skillful and creative for a player despite his tall frame, he started his club career at Montego Bay Boys Club, and has since played for Violet Kickers and Seba United in his native Jamaica. He was signed on a free by English league side Hull City following a one-week trial with the club, where he played together with compatriot Ian Goodison, until an accident in Jamaica cut short his Hull career. Whitmore made his debut in an F.A. Cup tie against Macclesfield. On his league debut, away at Rochdale, Whitmore scored a league debut goal. During his 77 games for Hull, he became something of a fan favourite during a relatively unhappy time for the club; who were lurking in the basement of the English Football League, struggling with financial insecurities. Scottish team Livingston acquired his services in 2003, and in June 2004 he signed for Tranmere Rovers. He had his contract terminated in January 2006 by mutual consent. He returned to Jamaica to become player/coach for his former team Seba United.

International career

Whitmore made his debut for Jamaica in a November 1993 friendly match against the United States, coming on as a late substitute for Hector Wright. Whitmore earned 105 official international caps and scored 24 goals for the Jamaican national team. He was a key member of the Reggae Boyz' squad during the second half of the 1990s, playing as a major catalyst for the Jamaicans as they advanced to their first and only World Cup in 1998. Although Jamaica was eliminated in the first round, Whitmore scored two goals in Jamaica's only win of the competition, a 2-1 victory against Japan. In that same year he was named Caribbean Footballer of the Year. His last international match was also against the United States, a 1-1 away draw on 17 November 2004 during 2006 World Cup qualification in which he was substituted for Jason Euell in the 72nd minute.

International goals

Management

When Whitmore returned to Seba United in 2006 he returned as both a player and a coach. He was then brought on as interim manager of the Jamaica national team after the firing of former manager Bora Milutinović in November 2007; Jamaica won both games, friendlies against El Salvador and Guatemala, under his watch. He was then retained as an assistant under new coach Renê Simões. Simões lasted nine months as manager due to poor play in the third round of CONCACAF World Cup qualifiers, and upon his release on 11 September 2008, Whitmore was again appointed interim manager until newly appointed manager John Barnes would be available in November. As interim manager in October 2008, Whitmore guided the Reggae Boyz to back-to-back 1–0 wins against Mexico and Honduras that gained him tremendous support as a manager and put the Jamaicans into range for advancement with one game remaining in semifinal round group play. He again took the reins of the national team when John Barnes left the position in June 2009, to take up a management job at Whitmore's former club Tranmere Rovers in the English League. Whitmore's team struggled during the 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup and were eliminated in the first round. As a part of the national team rebuilding efforts which started in August 2009, Whitmore led the squad to three draws and one win to end 2009. In December 2010, Whitmore led Jamaica to the 2010 Digicel Cup title. After qualifying Jamaica for the CONCACAF Hexagonal final round in 2012, Whitmore resign as Jamaica head coach in June 2013. From December 2014 through February 2015, Whitmore served as Jamaica national u20 coach. In September 2016, Whitmore was named interim head coach of Jamaica

As a manager

TeamFromToMatchesWonDrawnLostWin %
Seba United16 August 200616 June 2008?????
Jamaica11 November 200731 December 20072200100.00
Jamaica11 September 200820 November 20083300100.00
Jamaica9 June 200912 June 2013532392143.40
Jamaica u2026 February 201431 December 201510136?
Jamaica26 September 2016Present2200100
Career Total6829122748.28

Achievements

  • Caribbean Cup: 4
  • JFF Champions Cup: 1
  • Western Confederation Super League: 1

Personal

He was injured in the car accident that led to the death of Reggae Boyz' teammate Stephen Malcolm. After the accident he was charged with manslaughter, of which he was later acquitted. In November 2013, Whitmore's 14-year-old son, Jouvhaine, died after being struck by a vehicle while riding his bicycle.

Whitmore's second son Gianni is said to be his twin because they look exactly alike and he is as skilful and talented as his father in his prime. Whitmore is currently the record holder of the most world cup goals for Jamaica with that being the two he scored against Japan in France 98'

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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