Latest news with #Lloyd Owers


BBC News
6 days ago
- Sport
- BBC News
Marshall Islands football team 'proud' of first ever match
A football team has said they "made history" of playing its first ever international match for its Marshall Islands' first faced off the US Virgin Islands on Thursday in Springdale, a 4-0 loss to the recognised FIFA nation, the Marshall Islands Soccer Federation posted on Facebook to say it was "so proud of what was accomplished". Head coach Lloyd Owers, from Banbury in Oxfordshire, previously said it was "definitely surreal" and that even the team "thought it wouldn't happen". The Pacific Island nation is home to about 40,000 people and had previously been the self-proclaimed "last country on Earth without a football team".Its first match formed part of the 2025 Outrigger Challenge Cup - the Marshall Islands Soccer Federation annual competition to create more opportunities for nations in our region to play competitive soccer and raise awareness of the team's group shot after the game has an inscription "Whatever the score, so proud of what was accomplished. Tonight, we made history".They will also be playing against Turks and Caicos. The four team tournament in the US was organised by the Marshall Islands Soccer Federation, and is seen as first step towards the team joining FIFA and competing in World Cup qualifying matches."We've got players that are coming from all different parts of the world, we've got a lot of US-based players that are experienced but we're also combining them with players from the Marshall Islands," Mr Owers said of the playing squad. You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.


BBC News
11-08-2025
- Sport
- BBC News
Marshall Islands coach 'nervous but excited' for first match
"It's definitely surreal that we've got to this point - I don't think even we thought it would happen."Three years ago, Lloyd Owers was tasked with the biggest challenge of his football coaching career - building the Marshall Island's first international Pacific Island nation, which is home to about 40,000 people, had previously been the self-proclaimed "last country on Earth without a football team".Fast forward to 2025, and Thursday will see the country play in its first ever 11v11 match against a recognised FIFA nation - with Mr Owers leading the team as its head coach. The match is part of a tournament in Arkansas - where they'll also be playing against Turks and arrived in the US on Wednesday, Mr Owers said he was "nervous, but excited at the same time". The Marshall Islands is made up of a chain of volcanic islands and coral-based atolls in the middle of the ocean, and is best known as a former US nuclear testing site used during the Cold Owers joined the nation's football federation as technical director in 2022, after blog posts he had written led to "random conversations" with the association's president."Honestly, it's been eye opening in the sense of where we started, with no football, and nothing in the country - to the extent that basic equipment just wasn't there," he said."Fast forward on to where we are now, we've got all these weekly sessions, this coach education structure and worldwide recruitment for players and it's going in the right direction.""It's unbelievable to be at this point now." The four team tournament in the US was organised by the Marshall Islands Soccer Federation, and is seen as first step towards the team joining FIFA and competing in World Cup qualifying matches."We've got players that are coming from all different parts of the world, we've got a lot of US-based players that are experienced but we're also combining them with players from the Marshall Islands," Mr Owers said of the playing said it would be "an eye-opener to combine everyone into one squad", with players undergoing eight days of "intensive" training before their first game."Everyone's ready for it, everyone's excited, raring to go and we feel as prepared as we can be at this stage, so we're hoping we can do something with it," he added. You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.