Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 71. Chapters: Jamaica international footballers, Jamaica national football team managers, Trevor Benjamin, John Barnes, Marlon King, Omar Daley, Jason Euell, Ricardo Fuller, Tyrone Mears, Barry Hayles, Deon Burton, Frank Sinclair, Michael Johnson, Donovan Ricketts, Craig Dobson, Darren Moore, Robbie Earle, Onandi Lowe, Jeff Cunningham, Paul Hall, Dane Richards, Theodore Whitmore, Claude Davis, Darren Byfield, Luton Shelton, Bora Milutinovic, Shavar Thomas, Marcus Gayle, Dwayne Miller, Jamie Lawrence, Kevin Lisbie, Jermaine Johnson, Barrington Gaynor, Ricardo Gardner, Jamaica national under-20 football team, Tyrone Marshall, Jobi McAnuff, O'Brian White, David Johnson, Damion Stewart, Ryan Johnson, Fabian Davis, Ian Goodison, Simon Ford, Jamal Campbell-Ryce, Narada Bernard, Hubert Busby, Jr., René Simões, Omar Cummings, Altimont Butler, Andy Williams, O'Brian Woodbine, Micah Hyde, Damani Ralph, Khari Stephenson, Winston Griffiths, Shaun Francis, Paul Young, Jason Morrison, Demar Phillips, Simone Forbes, Sean Fraser, Wolde Harris, Fitzroy Simpson, Richard Langley, O'Neil Thompson, Keammar Daley, Jamaica national under-17 football team, Damien Francis, Wolry Wolfe, Rodolph Austin, Keith Kelly, Dwight Marshall, Craig Ziadie, Linval Dixon, Danny Maddix, Aaron Lawrence, Fabian Dawkins, Peter Isaacs, Demar Stewart, Teafore Bennett, Jermaine Hue, Fabian Taylor, Winston Anglin, Jermaine Taylor, Lloyd Barker, Darryl Powell, Walter Boyd, Akeem Priestley, Peter Cargill, Orane Simpson, Evan Taylor, Rafe Wolfe, Lennie Dennis, Dennis Ziadie, Newton Sterling, Robert Scarlett, Kevon Harris, Kevin Wilson, Altamont McKenzie, Clifton Waugh, Garfield Reid, Marco McDonald, Shane Crawford, Shawn Sawyers, Ricardo Cousins, Xavean Virgo, Eric Vernan, Chris Dawes, Leon Strickland, Warren Barrett, Duwayne Kerr, Cornel Chin-Sue, Gerald Neil, Stephen Malcolm, Asher Welch, Gregory Messam, Kevin Lamey, Anthony Corbett, Dean Sewell, Hector Wright, Everton Bunsie, Durrant Brown. Excerpt: The Jamaica national football team is the national team of Jamaica and is controlled by the Jamaica Football Federation. After decades in CONCACAF obscurity, they gained many fans throughout the world after they qualified for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Jamaica has won the Caribbean Cup five times (1991, 1998, 2005, 2008, and 2010), finished second twice, and came third twice. Jamaica's first internaional appearance was against their Caribbean neighbors Haiti in 1925. They were invited to the French-speaking Caribbean island by Andre Chevalon, president of the then United Sporting Society and it was for a three-match series between the 2 countries. Jamaica won all three games by 1-0, 2-1 and 3-0. The following year Jamaica hosted their Haitians counterparts at Sabina Park and won by 6-0. The Haitians remained frequent opponents and it was not until 1932 that their run of defeats was broken with a 4-1 home win in Port-au-Prince. Between 1925 and when Jamaica gained its independence in 1962, Jamaica had regular games with Trinidad and Tobago, Haiti, Cuba and clubs like Racing and Violette from Haiti, Corinthians of Britain, the Tigers from Argentina, and even a series of matches with a Caribbean All Stars team in 1952. The Caribbean All Star team included such notables as Michael (The Ruin) Kruin from Suriname and also representing Jamaica were Lindy Delapenha and Gillie Heron. The four games were shared equally with Jamaica winning the second 2-1 and the fourth 1-0 ...