The 345 FC under-9 and U10 teams recently competed at the Adidas Summer Festival in Miami, and the Rood-Wit International Soccer Tournament in the Netherlands, respectively.

The 345 FC’s U9 team finished their competition in Miami as the runner-up in its group.

“This was an excellent opportunity for these young players to have a meaningful and competitive international experience,” 345 FC coach Peter Reijn said.

345 FC earned a pair of wins and lost one match at the tournament. The Cayman side rattled off back-to-win wins over Miami Strike Force U9 and Homestead Supa Strikas FC after dropping a tightly contested tournament opener to Southern Homestead Soccer Academy. 345 FC finished second in its group, one point shy of earning a spot in the tournament finals.

“Player development is the priority at this age level and these trips will go a long way in helping our athletes improve,” Reijn said. “We talk about the importance of sleep, proper nutrition, good training habits and how these things translate into success on the pitch. I was pleased with how these children approached the tournament and how they performed.”

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The trip was the second of the year for the U-9 team. It competed in February in the Weston Cup, which is one of the biggest youth soccer tournaments in the United States.

Rood-Wit International

Over in the Netherlands, the U10 dropped a single match in a field that featured some of the best academy teams in the world. Cayman finished 17th overall at the tournament, taking four wins, six draws and one loss.

“Competing and earning wins in a tournament of this magnitude — where we face professional club academies — is a significant achievement,” Reijn said. “Coming from a grassroots environment on a relatively small island in which we cannot select from a larger pool of children, we showed again to be very competitive with the European top academies, not just defending but also playing dominant and showing our skills. It was an invaluable experience for our players.”

Cayman opened group stage play with a 2-2 draw with Club Brugge, where the first team are Belgium champions. Other notable group stage matches included a scoreless draw with PSV Eindhoven — whose first team are Dutch champions — as well as 1-1 draws with Scottish power Aberdeen FC and perennial Dutch contender FC Nordsjælland.

Following the group stage, 345FC picked up wins against United States-based EastSide FC, South African side Hola Skoko and FC Utrecht before beating Royal Antwerp FC — where the first team competed in the UEFA Champions League this season — 4-0 to claim 17th place.

“At this age group, this is one of the best tournaments in the world,” Reijn said. “Individually, we are looking forward to seeing some of these boys developing on and following in the pathways of our players currently playing in the European Academy set up.”

This marked 345 FC’s fourth time at the tournament. In 2019, the team finished 21st before taking eighth in 2022 and fifth place last year.

“Our expectations have risen so much, a 17th-place finish feels like we could have done better, which is a testament to how far we’ve come,” Reijn said.

The 345FC players played a handful of international friendlies prior to the tournament, beating academy teams from historic Eredivisie club Sparta Rotterdam, NAC Breda and Hola Skoko and falling to the academy team from Dutch KNVB Cup winners Feyenoord Rotterdam.