Name: Keyeno Thomas.
Club: Joe Public (Trinidad, Mar-2007 to present).
Previous Clubs: Jabloteh (Trinidad, 2003 to Feb-2007), Colorado Rapids
(USA, 2000 to ?), Joe Public (Trinidad, ? to 2000).
Hometown: Guapo Gonzales, Point Fortin Trinidad.
Born: 29-Dec-1977.
Height: 6 ' 2".
Position: Defender.
NOTE: Played for Joe Public his first professional team, played for three
seasons as a central midfielder. Thomas was also a member of Trinidad's Under-23 National
Team and was a regular starter as a defensive midfielder during the 2000 Olympic
qualifying. He's now a regular member of the T&T senior team. Thomas
won the "Most Valuable Player" award while playing for Jabloteh in
2004 season.
Related | News: |
03-Nov-2006 | Jabloteh’s Thomas out of danger. |
Keyeno Thomas goes beach camping.
By: Shaun Fuentes.
02-Jan-2005 - Point Fortin-born defender Keyeno Thomas has made running on
mornings at the Clifton Hill beach part of his personal training regime, in
order to maintain a high fitness level.
The six-foot, two-inch former Joe Public player is coming off a hamstring
injury, but has worked his way back to shape and is in the squad for the
friendly matches against Haiti this week.
He is tipped to start on Ash Wednesday against the United States. Thomas, CL
Financial San Juan Jabloteh’s 2004 MVP, has also campaigned with American
MLS side Colorado Rapids, and has come up against current US players, Eddie
Johnson and DaMarcus Beasley.
“It’s going to be a real fight on the day because I have played in their
league and against most of their players, and back then I always thought about
what it would be like to face them in a match,” the 27-year-old Thomas said.
“Now I am getting that chance and I’m ready for the battle.
“Over the past few weeks I’ve been working with the physio (Zeph Nicholas)
to get fit again and I have been working out on mornings out on the beach in
Point.
“I believe now I am ready to take on any forward line.”
Nigel Pierre, Keyeno Thomas go to Jabloteh.
TnT Guardian Reports.
17-Aug-2003 - With the loss of Kerry Baptiste and Kerry Noray, champion CL
Financial San Juan Jabloteh is seeking to sign Joe Public players Nigel Pierre
and Keyeno Thomas.
Both Pierre and Thomas are training with the San Juan side at present, and
contracts are expected to be signed within the next couple of days.
The national senior striker and defenceman have not played for Joe Public for
the past month.
Joe Public’s technical director Sam Phillip explained yesterday he is not in
a position to release news on the two players.
“It is for Jabloteh to do that, and when they do, I will speak after,” he
stated.
Phillip added that the Ron la Forest-coached Joe Public is in the process of
building a young and vibrant squad, and losing Pierre and Thomas would not
affect his side.
“We are building a young team and it won’t affect us,” he said.
“(Arnold) Dwarika left us and we survived, so we could do without Pierre and
Thomas, too.”
Baptiste, Noray and Under-23 defender Serginho Sandy all left Trinidad two
weeks ago, to pursue scholarships at Lindsey Wilson College, Kentucky, USA.
While Baptiste and Noray were regular starters in the Jabloteh line-up, Sandy
played for Caledonia AIA in the Professional Football League. All three were
members of the national Under-23 squad. —GT.
Keyeno Thomas ready for Europe.
By Jamaal Shabazz.
16-Jan-2003 - Any student of the game watching Trinidad and Tobago play
against Chinese Club Beijing Guoan, would have singled out Keyeno Thomas as
the local player who stood head and shoulders above the rest.
That is, of course, if you were looking at players performing their roles
rather than just their flair. Having the spotlight stolen despite doing all
the hard work is not something that bothers the six foot-plus, Joe Public and
national team defender.
“I have grown accustomed to the contribution of defenders being
by-passed,” says Keyeno.
“When I was younger it would upset me but now it does not really affect me
when people hardly recognise the hard work put in by the defence.
“Sometimes we (the defenders) are the ones who saved the day, but the only
time you read about our contribution to the game is if we scored an own goal
or got dribbled,” he adds.
Hailing from deep South—Gonzales Village, Guapo—Thomas was brought to town
by coach Muhammed Isa, who discovered the robust defender while playing for
Uprising in the Semi Pro Football League. Having played all his football,
virtually unknown in Point Fortin, life was to change drastically for Thomas
after he signed his first contract with Joe Public, in the middle of the ‘97
season.
A season of tight marking and winning tough tackles earned Thomas a call-up
from Bertille St. Clair to the national senior team for the 1998 Copa Caribe
Tournament.
An injury to Marvin Andrews in the first game, saw Keyeno making his
international debut against Jamaica and performing creditable enough to start
in the other five matches of the tournament, which was held in Trinidad.
A Major League Soccer (MLS) trial in the USA arranged by Joe Public in 2000
saw Thomas, drafted into the Colorado Rapids.
“This move improved my game by leaps and bounds,” says Thomas.
“Playing alongside Marcello Balboa, the former USA defender at Colorado,
really improved my game. He taught me some tricks of the trade in defending.
“Marcello would invite me to his house and encourage me to read books. He
showed me tapes and documentaries of defenders and in training he would always
encourage me.
“Even when he shouted it was always constructive and helpful, “ said
Thomas, who spent a year and a half in the MLS.
Keyeno returned to Trinidad midway in 2001 when an injury forced him to sit
out the rest of the year.
“Playing for Colorado against Sporting Lisbon in Portugal, during the
preseason, I sufferred a broken wrist.
“Against the advice of the doctors I still tried to train, but it became too
painful and the club and I mutually agreed to a waiver, and I returned
home.”
He returned to the MLS for a brief period last year when injuries forced the
Rapids to send an SOS for him to play in five matches. But when given an
opportunity to sign back with the MLS club, he declined and opted to return to
Joe Public.
“I enjoyed my stay in Colorado, but I did not really enjoy the football
there. I think in the MLS a lot of players get unnecessary protection.
“I am a tough tackling defender. That is my game. In the MLS they would blow
against me so often that it had me uncomfortable.
“So I came home to make the national team and maybe get an opportunity to
play in Europe,” confesses Thomas.
Watching Marvin Andrews play in the Scottish League and seeing the brutal
duels between defenders and strikers would make some players cringe. However,
the hard tackling Keyeno confesses to “relishing this situation”.
“I would love to play in Scotland. The way they play over there from what I
have seen on TV more suits the way I play.
“I play very hard. The harder the game, the more at home I feel.”
Reflecting on his time in the MLS, Thomas believes the main differences with
the game in Trinidad and what he saw in the MLS was the attitude of coaches
and clubs to time and dealing with players.
“Everything in the club, while I was in the MLS, was centred around
punctuality. The entire programme was based on being on time. The planning was
very exact.
“Coaches at the Rapids dealt with players very straightforward even if it
was the star player. There were no special priveleges like what some top
players woud enjoy in a team in T&T.
“Some players would get more money than others, but when it came to towing
the line it was across the board...everyone had to tow the line.
“If you did nonsense, don’t care who you were, they took the necessary
action without fear or favour,” said Thomas.
Five years with Joe Public and the exodus of top senior players like Arnold
Dwarika, Angus Eve, Stokely Mason and Michael McComie has thrust Keyeno into a
leadership role as he is now a senior member of the club.
“I realise I now have to pass on to the younger players some of the things I
learnt from people like Balboa.
“Most of the Joe Publc team now are under 23 and a lot is expected of me. I
try to give of my best all the time because you want to win the big games
against the W-Connection and Jabloteh.
“Yet you do not want to lose the smaller games, like to North East Stars or
Starworld,” he points out.
There was a time when Keyeno would work very hard in preparation for a game
with the national team but come game time, he would be by-passed in favour of
a foreign-based player.
“I would be very, very disappointed when this happened. Because not only
were you working hard, but you are thinking about making the team and then a
player would be picked on the sole basis that he was a foreign-based.
“But that would make me work harder...because I love the game and I feel
that a player can play his way onto the team”.
And while in the past he would feel jittery for his pick when foreign-based
players were invited, today a confident Keyeno is not fazed.
“Not now! I do not even think of myself no other way than as a starter. I
only focus on making the team now, no matter who comes home,” he says.
If the Joe Public defender continues to play as he did against Beijing Guoan
his dream of playing in Europe may soon be realised.
Former Joe Public defender Keyeno Thomas is scheduled to return to the United States today for treatment on his fractured left wrist. Thomas, a member of MLS side Colorado Rapids, suffered the injury after being stepped on by an opposing player during a preseason match against Sporting Lisbon in Portugal in February and was ruled out of action for six months. Describing the incident last week, Thomas said it was a "scary" experience. "I didn't even realize that the injury had occurred. I fell awkwardly on the wrist and a player stepped directly on it. I got up and continued running before I saw my wrist bent backwards. I just began walking off the field before almost having a black out and my teammates had to then escort me off the pitch."Thomas, a former national senior and Olympic team player, said the pin inserted in the injured part of his hand may possibly be removed during his upcoming visit to the United States but he will still be unable to play any football until next season. He is being compensated by the MLS despite being out of action.