Schoolboy football and the bigger picture
Saturday, September 11, 2010
One week into the new school year and the football fever is building.
Today is the start of Jamaica's schoolboy football competitions (Manning Cup and daCosta Cup) run by that most august of institutions, the 100-year-old Inter-Secondary Schools Sports Association (ISSA).
As we have found reason to say repeatedly in this space, Jamaicans owe much to ISSA for providing the nursery through its competitions for the nation's exceptional success in a range of sporting disciplines, including track and field, cricket, football and netball.
With very little help from government — which, to be fair, is never awash with cash — the ISSA, with a skeletal staff, has managed year after year to raise funds and provide some of the best organised sporting competitions on the Jamaican landscape.
We are told that for this year's ISSA/Pepsi/Digicel Schoolboy Football season 40 schools will contest the urban area Manning Cup, up from 31 last year, while 71 schools will vie for the rural area daCosta Cup, down from 80 last season.
For ISSA, the daCosta Cup and Manning Cup competitions are particularly important since football and track and field — through the annual Boys' and Girls' Athletic Championships — are the only disciplines with the potential to raise money through gate receipts. Indeed, as we understand it, such funds have been used by ISSA to subsidise other activities on its sporting calendar.
Organised sport as we know it would not exist without sponsorship and Jamaica's football is understandably grateful to Pepsi Cola Jamaica and telecommunications server Digicel for their support of the schoolboy competitions.
Jamaican sport remains mainly amateur. So most local football clubs, for example, lack the wherewithal to provide the sort of nurturing environment for very young players that is commonplace and taken for granted in the developed football world.
From a developmental point of view, therefore, the ISSA-run football competitions are priceless, contributing substantially to the growing export of players to professional clubs abroad — a business now worth millions of US dollars in fees and salaries.
Also, of course, a major beneficiary is the Jamaica Football Federation (JFF), which has overarching responsibility for all of the nation's football and national teams.
More than most, the JFF has a vested interest in the success of the schoolboy football programmes. Hence recent praise for ISSA from the JFF president Captain Horace Burrell, regarding the gradual improvement in the level of coaches in schools.
A major difficulty for ISSA relates to the affordability of suitable venues and the quality of the surfaces. Good football becomes impossible on bad fields and unfortunately there are far too many of the latter.
It seems to us that it is full time for the JFF, ISSA and all other stakeholders, including sponsors and government — no matter how cash-strapped — to knock heads in trying to deal with this problem. The Government should start the ball a-rolling by finally bringing to the table that long-awaited sports policy.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/edito...icture_7952396
Saturday, September 11, 2010
One week into the new school year and the football fever is building.
Today is the start of Jamaica's schoolboy football competitions (Manning Cup and daCosta Cup) run by that most august of institutions, the 100-year-old Inter-Secondary Schools Sports Association (ISSA).
As we have found reason to say repeatedly in this space, Jamaicans owe much to ISSA for providing the nursery through its competitions for the nation's exceptional success in a range of sporting disciplines, including track and field, cricket, football and netball.
With very little help from government — which, to be fair, is never awash with cash — the ISSA, with a skeletal staff, has managed year after year to raise funds and provide some of the best organised sporting competitions on the Jamaican landscape.
We are told that for this year's ISSA/Pepsi/Digicel Schoolboy Football season 40 schools will contest the urban area Manning Cup, up from 31 last year, while 71 schools will vie for the rural area daCosta Cup, down from 80 last season.
For ISSA, the daCosta Cup and Manning Cup competitions are particularly important since football and track and field — through the annual Boys' and Girls' Athletic Championships — are the only disciplines with the potential to raise money through gate receipts. Indeed, as we understand it, such funds have been used by ISSA to subsidise other activities on its sporting calendar.
Organised sport as we know it would not exist without sponsorship and Jamaica's football is understandably grateful to Pepsi Cola Jamaica and telecommunications server Digicel for their support of the schoolboy competitions.
Jamaican sport remains mainly amateur. So most local football clubs, for example, lack the wherewithal to provide the sort of nurturing environment for very young players that is commonplace and taken for granted in the developed football world.
From a developmental point of view, therefore, the ISSA-run football competitions are priceless, contributing substantially to the growing export of players to professional clubs abroad — a business now worth millions of US dollars in fees and salaries.
Also, of course, a major beneficiary is the Jamaica Football Federation (JFF), which has overarching responsibility for all of the nation's football and national teams.
More than most, the JFF has a vested interest in the success of the schoolboy football programmes. Hence recent praise for ISSA from the JFF president Captain Horace Burrell, regarding the gradual improvement in the level of coaches in schools.
A major difficulty for ISSA relates to the affordability of suitable venues and the quality of the surfaces. Good football becomes impossible on bad fields and unfortunately there are far too many of the latter.
It seems to us that it is full time for the JFF, ISSA and all other stakeholders, including sponsors and government — no matter how cash-strapped — to knock heads in trying to deal with this problem. The Government should start the ball a-rolling by finally bringing to the table that long-awaited sports policy.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/edito...icture_7952396
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