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The Trinidad and Tobago Football Association (TTFA) is the governing body of football in Trinidad and Tobago. It is based in Port of Spain, Trinidad . It is a member of FIFA and is responsible for governing amateur and professional football and including the men's and women's national teams.
In recent years, the TTFA have hosted matches at the smaller 10,000 seat Ato Boldon Stadium in Couva, citing a problem with the lighting system at Hasely Crawford Stadium, lower expenses for matches at Ato Boldon, and fans being seated closer to the pitch. [16] Trinidad and Tobago hosted two games during "The Hex" in late 2017.
Since the early 1990s, many Trinidad and Tobago men have found opportunities playing football at the highest levels of foreign leagues. Among the first players from Trinidad and Tobago to become regulars in foreign leagues were Dwight Yorke at Aston Villa and later Manchester United in England, Leonson Lewis at Académica de Coimbra in Portugal, and Brian Haynes at FC Dallas in the United States.
TTFA may refer to: Thenoyltrifluoroacetone, a chemical compound used pharmacologically as a chelating agent; Thallium(III) trifluoroacetate; Trinidad and Tobago Football Association, the governing body of association football in Trinidad and Tobago
Thenoyltrifluoroacetone (TTFA) is a chemical compound with the molecular formula C 8 H 5 F 3 O 2 S. It is used pharmacologically as a chelating agent. It is an inhibitor of cellular respiration by blocking the respiratory chain at complex II. The first report of TTFA as an inhibitor of respiration was by A. L. Tappel in 1960. [2]
The eventual league champions, Police, received US$100,000 – the largest amount ever awarded during the league's history. Consequently, the 1994 season was the start of a professional trend in the country where large amounts of money were introduced on the domestic football scene.
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Boldon is the eighth person to win a medal for Trinidad and Tobago at the Olympics and currently has the third most wind-legal sub-10 second 100 m performances in history with 28, behind former training partner Maurice Greene, who has 52, and Jamaica's former 100 m World Record holder Asafa Powell, who leads with 97.