TTFA says Yorke salary request too high
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (CMC) — Trinidad and Tobago Football Association (TTFA) President Kieron Edwards says the asking price of former national men’s Head Coach Dwight Yorke was simply too high.
The TTFA announced on Thursday that it had parted with Yorke “by mutual agreement” after the two sides failed to reach a consensus on revised contractual terms and remuneration.
Yorke, 54, was hired by the TTFA in November 2024 and given a mandate to guide T&T to the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
However, he failed to do so, as T&T finished third in Group B behind Jamaica and eventual winners Curacao, who qualified for their first ever FIFA World Cup.
Speaking in an exclusive interview on
i95.5 FM on Thursday, Edwards admitted that the TTFA was not in a financial position to pay the salary Yorke had requested.
“I want to start off by saying that being the president of the executive coming off of normalisation, one of the things that we said was that never again is T&T to be put in a place where we are put under normalisation by FIFA based on finances,” Edwards said. “We need to run the organisation in a prudent way and we need to make sure our programmes are sustainable.
“During the World Cup campaign, we could have afforded to pay a bit more for coach Yorke. We know and everyone knows that during that period of final qualification sponsors are more on board. We know the culture of sponsors in T&T, it’s one that we are hoping to change over the next couple of years, but the sponsors were on for the World Cup campaign so we could afford to do it.
“Ensuring that the programme was sustainable, we had discussions with coach Yorke to look at revising his salary and the salary of his coaching staff and we couldn’t reach that conclusion in terms of keeping him on…We would have given him some offers, we would have countered, we would have given him some offers, and he would have countered and the numbers just weren’t adding up in terms of the sustainability of the programme.”
Edwards said Yorke’s staff was terminated in December having been fully paid. However, he said Yorke was owed around US$158,000 (roughly J$25 million) by the TTFA, including salary and outstanding bonuses, which he promised would soon be settled.