Home 2008-10; Prostar
Cricket is the national sport of Turks and Caicos, though
success on the oval has been hard to come by. Similarly, the islands’ national
football team has rarely registered any wins since joining the FIFA “family” in
1998 (the association was formed in 1996). In fact, they have won just four
times in their eighteen official football matches , and one of those was a
friendly against the Cayman u-21s (unlike European nations, CONCACAF teams
aren’t guaranteed a high number of games in each qualifying campaign; often as little as two). To date,
the side has only won one World Cup qualifier, at home to St. Lucia in 2008.
The second leg saw them fall to a 2-0 loss, and thus they were out of the
qualifiers on aggregate. The team would have to wait another three years to
play another game. And they lost that too. In this week's qualifier
I’m delighted to have this particular shirt, as it is the
one that was worn that famous night in Providenciales, when T & C put St Lucia to the sword. Thankfully a video exists of the night, albeit
poor quality, so I’ve included it below. Aside from that historical aspect of
the shirt, the colourway is also excellent. A very bold cyan and red number complete
with the quite interesting national coat of arms, rather than the
association's logo (see below). Looking through old pictures, it seems this crest and
association logo have been used interchangeably on shirts with no real rhyme or
reason. According to the internet, the
coat of arms consists of a conch shell, a lobster, and cactus, which are all
native to the islands. The cactus is a so-called ‘Turk's head’ cactus, after
which the islands are named. The cactus has a red top, which looks like a
Turkish fez (a kind of hat). Either side of this shield are flamingos, and atop
is a pelican between two sisal plants representing connection to the rope
industry. So now you know.
The archipelago (consisting of around forty islands, eight
of which are presently populated) was initially inhabited around 500AD, but
having seen a number of different settlers, it became depopulated in the 1500s.
The Turks islands were repopulated about a century later, and became a popular
pirate hideout. In the late 1700s, British loyalists from other Caribbean
colonies settled Caicos islands. In 1799, both Turks and Caicos island groups
were taken over by British authorities. Today, the islands remain British
Overseas Territory, with a government sitting in the islands. Interestingly,
Canadian politicians have in the past attempted to annex the islands for
Canada. First in the 1970s, and then as recently as 2014 when Turks and Caicos
president held a state visit to Canada. However, this remains unlikely to
occur.
Brilliant! I've never seen anyone else with one of these, I was starting to wonder if mine was the only one!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.theglobalobsession.com/2012/07/turks-and-caicos-islands.html
Yeah, I've been sitting on this for a while without posting it. Same goes for another 100 shirts or so! Trying to bring things up-to-date over next few months.
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