The final score from last Tuesday’s international friendly will tell you Russia defeated Trinidad and Tobago 3-0 in Kaliningrad. History books will record the result.
But they will not fully capture what it meant for Trinidad and Tobago to be there.
Over the last week, as I moved around Kaliningrad with the national team, I was again reminded that international football is about far more than ninety minutes on a pitch. Of course, memories don’t leave like people do, and they always stay with you, whether they’ve been good or bad. What happens next is of utmost importance.
But sports and international appearances are about visibility. It is about relationships.
It is about putting your country in places where it would not ordinarily appear.
For several days, Trinidad and Tobago was impossible to miss in this western Russian city.
Match posters were displayed around the city center. Digital advertisements appeared on screens. Restaurants, coffee shops around, and public spaces around the city carried promotional material for the international friendly. The red, white, and black colors of our nation were part of the landscape leading up to match day.
<Then came the game itself.
More than 27,000 spectators filled the Kaliningrad Arena, a FIFA World Cup venue from 2018. Every mention of the fixture carried the name Trinidad and Tobago. Every graphic, television introduction, and social media post carried our flag.
And the audience stretched well beyond the stadium.
The match was shown nationwide across Russia on Match TV and Match Premier, reaching audiences in a country of more than 140 million people.
Local audiences followed coverage through Scorch TV’s digital platforms. In the United States, the match was available on FOX Soccer Plus and FuboTV. Canadian audiences watched through OneSoccer. FIFA+ also carried the fixture to selected territories around the world.
<Think about that for a moment>
For a few hours, Trinidad and Tobago football was being discussed simultaneously across Europe, North America, the Caribbean, and parts of Asia and Latin America.
That exposure has value. Surely local fans would argue that there are risks with all of this exposure because we lost 3-0 and did not perhaps put on a favorable display. But there were positives and some individual bright spots. The Russian media asked more about goalkeepers Denzil Smith, Molik Khan, and Ryan Telfer after the match and a couple scouts have already been in touch.
Two days before the match, I accompanied midfielder Daniel Phillips on a media engagement through the streets of Kaliningrad with a production crew from Russian streaming giant Okko.
For many back home, Okko may not be a familiar name. In Russia, however, it is one of the country’s largest streaming and entertainment platforms, attracting tens of millions of users every month and serving as a major broadcaster of premium sports content.
As Daniel walked through the city center discussing his career, T&T football, and life in England, it struck me that these moments matter.
That interview was not really about one footballer. It was about introducing Trinidad and Tobago to a new audience. It was another opportunity for our country to be seen.
That is something small nations should never underestimate. Football remains one of the most powerful forms of soft diplomacy available to any country.
Throughout our stay, young Russian supporters waited outside the team hotel hoping for autographs and photographs. Players exchanged jerseys after the match. Local fans proudly posed with Trinidad and Tobago shirts and training tops.
Those moments may never appear on a scoresheet. Yet they help shape perceptions.
<They build goodwill and create connections.
Every international trip is effectively an opportunity to market our country. People form opinions based on what they see.
The professionalism of a delegation. The conduct of its players. The friendliness and efficiency of its staff. The image was projected through social media and television.
<All of it contributes to a country’s reputation>
Of course, nobody travels halfway around the world hoping to lose. Results and performances matter. So does development.
However, there is another aspect of the equation that is frequently neglected.
When scouts, agents, clubs, and football officials see Trinidad and Tobago competing internationally, doors can open.
Players gain exposure. Relationships are formed and future opportunities emerge.
And that is why matches like these still matter. Because long after the final whistle, the images remain. The flag remains.
For a few days in Kaliningrad, Trinidad and Tobago was not just participating in an international football match. It was being seen. And for a nation such as ours competing in a vast world, there is value in that.
Editor’s note: Shaun Fuentes is the head of TTFA Communications. He was a FIFA media officer at the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa and the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Turkey. He has traveled to over 90 countries during his journey in sport. “Pro Look” is his weekly column on football, sports, culture, and the human side of the game. The views expressed are solely his and not a representation of any organization. shaunfuentes@yahoo.com
