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Legendary
former YMCA and Jamaica footballer Sydney 'Syd' Bartlett died in
the Intensive Care Unit of a New York hospital on Saturday
following a prolonged kidney-related ailment. He was 70.
Bartlett, regarded in some
circles as the finest footballer that Jamaica has produced, will
be buried today in Manhattan, New York after spending almost a
decade in a nursing home. He has often been compared to Allan
'Skill' Cole as Jamaica's best ever footballer.
"He was one of a kind,"
Bartlett's close friend and former Jamaica technical director
Winston Chung-Fah told the Observer from his Cayman Islands base
yesterday.
"He was not a man who talked a
lot, he did not boast and he was extremely private," Chung-Fah
said.
Bartlett, with his unique style
of dribbling, characterised by his two index fingers in the air
as he clinically carried the ball with precision, represented
Jamaica during the late 1950s into the 1960s and was a part of
Jamaica's first World Cup qualification squad of 1965 which went
down 2-3 to eventual qualifiers Mexico at the National Stadium.
Bartlett, who was instrumental in both of Jamaica's goals, had
his shorts ripped almost to shreds in that match, courtesy of
defenders who tried to hold onto him every time he headed toward
goal.
The top line forward, known
also as "The Worm", was a member of the feared YMCA five-man
frontline of the 1950s and 60s that also included fellow
Jamaican star Lascelles 'Dallas' Dunkley, Peter Lewin, Elvin
Schloss and George Davidson, with midfield support from national
representative Henry Largie, Hopeton Kenton, captain Milton
Taylor, among others.
"He was incredible as a
footballer," Bartlett's colleague and friend, New York-based
professor Basil 'Bagga' Wilson said from his Long Island home
yesterday.
Wilson, a former Kingston
College Manning Cup star from 1959 to 1961, is trying to
co-ordinate a memorial service in Jamaica early next year, which
he hopes will fully recognise the life and work of Bartlett.
"He was charismatic as a
player. Every time he picked the ball up, it was headache for
opponents. He was one of the best that we have ever produced and
I just hope that we can have a memorial service that would be
fitting for the contribution that he has made to Jamaica's
football," Wilson said.
A past student of Gaynstead
High School in St Andrew, Bartlett has lived in the United
States since the 1960s when he went there to play professionally
for the New York Generals, one of the first Jamaicans to do so.
He also suited up for Jamaica Bays, a Diaspora team comprising
several Jamaica players including Ruddy Pearce, Lloyd Walker,
Donald 'Billy' Perkins, Paul Thomas, among others.
With strong connections to the
East Kingston communities of Doncaster, Rollington Town and
Franklyn Town, Bartlett left an indelible mark on Jamaica's
football to the extent that the Kingston & St Andrew Football
Association named the Syd Bartlett League, involving teams in
the Corporate Area's third division, after him.
"There was never a man that I
saw who could carry the ball like Syddie," Chung-Fah said.
Bartlett, who leaves behind
five children, was also a competent wicketkeeper/batsman at
cricket. Many of his friends still believe that he could have
represented the West Indies had he opted for cricket over
football.
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