As the Haitian national football team prepares to take the pitch for the World Cup, one of the country’s greatest living sports legends, Guy Sainvil—who played in the historic 1974 World Cup tournament—has been forced to flee his own home due to rampant insecurity. The news was shared by Joseph Marion Léandre, his former teammate from both Racing Club Haïtien and the national squad. Léandre revealed that Sainvil had to abandon his residence on Joseph Janvier Street in Port-au-Prince and was temporarily left homeless before managing to secure a rental property in Delmas.
Affectionately nicknamed “Tigi” by his teammates and once dubbed the “Pelé of the Caribbean,” Sainvil carved his name deeply into the history of Haitian football. He spent the core of his career with Racing Club Haïtien, winning two national championship titles in 1962 and 1969, and helping “Le Vieux Lion” secure a CONCACAF Champions’ Cup victory in 1963. He also played professionally in the United States within the North American Soccer League (NASL), featuring for the Baltimore Bays and the Baltimore Comets.
With the Grenadiers, Sainvil’s absolute moment of glory came in 1973, when the Haitian team was crowned champions of the CONCACAF zone, securing a historic qualification for the 1974 World Cup in West Germany. In the tournament’s final phase, the forward played against football powerhouses Italy and Argentina. Scoring 28 international goals during his career, Sainvil remains Haiti’s fourth all-time top scorer, trailing only the Sanon-Nazon-Pierrot trio. Seeing such an illustrious figure reduced to fleeing his home under gang pressure serves as a painful and revolting symbol of the current distress gripping Haiti.

















