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Author Topic: Football Academy Thread  (Read 9665 times)

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Offline maxg

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Re: Former AC Milan manager to set up academy in Tobago
« Reply #30 on: July 12, 2012, 09:54:00 AM »
here is an example of a program..it is not a seperate academy as such. More affordable this way. Not much major high end professional teams in canada, as in europe.

http://www.montrealfamilies.ca/Montreal-Families/March-2009/Sports-study-program-gives-kids-a-head-start/

http://johnrennie.lbpsb.qc.ca/sportetudes.htm

http://www.mels.gouv.qc.ca/loisirSport/sportEtudes/

nb: My son is in this program, and is an Honour role student & a jnr. National swimmer. All students must maintain a above average passing grade. I have found him to be more organized, more focused, but yes it is a lot of work, requires proper organization, a dedicated teaching staff, approval of both Ministries of Sport & Education, dedicated & organized individual sport adminstrators with proper coaches/educators, corruption has to be omitted. Core materials covered, very few social classes...Check it out.
Already discussed drawing up proposals with Swima,however due to time contraints on both our paths, and specifically distance issue on mine, unable to properly pursue, maybe other interested parties can PM him
« Last Edit: April 18, 2017, 04:24:51 PM by maxg »

Offline maxg

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Re: Former AC Milan manager to set up academy in Tobago
« Reply #31 on: July 14, 2012, 11:58:03 AM »
What no comments ? No interest? No Yeas, Nays..or "everybody dun know that"

Or I go sell this and see wha ah go make,

Or lemme call Anil as me and he go wuk it...for praise

Or this might work, let meh call Swima

Say something here still, cause the program has some limitations, we should discuss..

Doh hide, Doh fraid, no experts here

Offline Flex

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Football Academy Thread
« Reply #32 on: September 29, 2012, 05:35:57 AM »
Certificates for football academy students.
By Jonathan Ramnanansingh (Newsday).


THE San Fernando Football Academy recently distributed 75 certificates to students who participated in a compact season of training and development programmes over the May to August period.

These training sessions were held on Thursdays and Saturdays. At the presentation ceremony over the weekend, Sport Company of Trinidad and Tobago (SPORTT) representative Rixon Power delivered the feature address.

He congratulated the youngsters on their athletic growth but paid particular mention to sport discipline. The SPORTT rep also commended the club and its staff for providing a consistent flow of young footballers coming through their camps.

The south-based club has proven to be one of the more successful youth football clubs in the San Fernando area, since its inception in 2009. Also presented to numerous Under-10 players were a total of 50 football training shoes.

The Academy also chose to celebrate their Under-15 team that made it into the semi-finals of the Republic Youth Cup Semi Final in July.

This club will soon begin its third term of football training with children training in the five and Under, seven and Under, nine and Under, 12 and under and Under-17 age categories.

The Academy will also be hosting their annual football tournament entitled “San Fernando Future Football Stars 2012”, with friendly matches in the five and Under and seven and Under divisions.

At this meet, competitive matches will be played in the Under-nine, Under-13 and Under-16 categories. Trophies and medals will be presented to the top-three finishers while footballs will be distributed to outstanding players.

For more information on this event, contact Preston Nanan at 754-7205.

The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

Offline Tiresais

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Re: Former AC Milan manager to set up academy in Tobago
« Reply #33 on: December 08, 2013, 09:38:58 AM »
Whatever happened to this academy? Was it set up? Stefano Monti is now at W Connection since September so I guess it never got off the ground?

Offline amwood

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Football Academy Thread
« Reply #34 on: February 25, 2014, 11:22:03 AM »
The Academy (One Year In Existence)

Well fellas it's been a year since we began this project, slowly accomplishing much of what we set out to achieve. Infrastructure is 100% better, equipment has been purchased to ensure facility will be tops and we are at the point where we are being approached by some corporate entities who are generously supporting…I am committed to producing some players who will achieving some big things - it is an everyday obsession. As always any feedback appreciated - good, bad, or indifferent. A little video charting when we started to where we are at the moment…Respect.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypLtWJSQipU
« Last Edit: November 17, 2020, 10:15:18 AM by Flex »

Offline Football supporter

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Re: The Academy (One Year In Existence)
« Reply #35 on: February 25, 2014, 01:01:55 PM »
Congrats on your first anniversary! Things seem to be coming along nicely. I admire your commitment and focus!  :applause: :applause:

Offline maxg

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Re: The Academy (One Year In Existence)
« Reply #36 on: February 25, 2014, 01:33:17 PM »
nothing beats doing something you love, and passing it on to kids who are willing to learn...great job.and congratulations on your anniversary.

Offline Mad Scorpion a/k/a Big Bo$$

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Re: The Academy (One Year In Existence)
« Reply #37 on: February 25, 2014, 01:34:36 PM »
We need more like you Amwood  :salute:

Offline Tiresais

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Re: The Academy (One Year In Existence)
« Reply #38 on: February 25, 2014, 02:33:54 PM »
Seconded, great work.

Offline amwood

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Re: The Academy (One Year In Existence)
« Reply #39 on: February 25, 2014, 06:07:39 PM »
Appreciate the feedback fellas...being in it for about a year now gives me a sense for where some of the breakdowns are occurring regarding youth development. We are too small are nation to leave the development of players to chance. Bless!

Offline Flex

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Re: The Academy (One Year In Existence)
« Reply #40 on: November 17, 2020, 10:14:55 AM »
Coach Cox continues to nurture aspiring youth footballers
By Sean Taylor (T&T Express).


The term “give up” doesn’t exist in the vocabulary of Dennis Cox.

Throughout Trinidad and Tobago, Coach Cox (as he is endearingly referred to) is now a legend and a brand associated with local and international youth football. His academy continues to produce footballers, soldiering on in a climate of economic uncertainty in the 868.

The Cox Coaching School and Football Academy has been nurturing young football talent for decades from their Palo Seco base. The coaching school, with its close ties to the oilfield community, utilises the Beach Camp, Palo Seco, as its main hub of operations. They continue to push on in spite of the closure of the state company Petrotrin, and from the looks of it, will continue pushing ahead against the backdrop of the current Covid-19 crisis which has ravaged so many globally.

The pandemic may have all but stopped sports in the country, but it hasn’t slowed the Cox Coaching School and Football Academy in their quest to make an impact in the community through football.

“Undaunted by the closure of Petrotrin, which for many signalled the death of the oilfield community after over 100 years, Coach Cox remained steadfast in his promotion among the youth, of the values of a strong oilfield community and great nation,” explained Michele Celestine, an attorney at law, and the chairperson for the Beach Camp School where coach Cox is the physical education teacher.

“He instills in the children of the oilfield community, the national watchwords of Discipline, Tolerance and Production. His results on and off the football pitch speak for themselves. This country needs more people like Coach Cox,” she added. The Beach Camp School made history in 2019 by winning the Under-15 and Under-12 Atlantic National Football Primary Schools Championships.

The school, which has made a habit of churning out talent at the youth level, had an eventful 2019, and in spite of the doom and gloom outlook this year, added another reason to celebrate and feel proud of their achievements when Cox — founder and head coach at the academy — won Coach of the Year at the Atlantic Yes Awards in September.

The latest piece of silverware for the club may not have come on the pitch as members of the academy may be accustomed, but it symbolises the work that Cox put into his charges, which not only includes helping them win on the field, but to win in life as well.

“He had a big role to play in my development as a young player to where I am now,” Judah Garcia said of the coach in 2019. “I stayed with him for a very long period…I still come back to play for him because I want to be around the club that I came from.”

Garcia is the younger brother of Levi Garcia — who recently signed to play with Greek club AEK Athens — and was also called up to Dennis Lawrence’s provisional squad last year. The former SSFL star was a league winner with Shiva Boys’ Hindu College and has been with the coaching academy since he was five, and even travelled on a few occasions with them.

“Mr Cox is a very serious, dedicated person who is known for bringing in the discipline in every aspect of the game, and he was the man to teach me those things. So, I just took it on and carried on. I went to Mississippi twice with him…I would say that Mr Cox has a very good programme,” stated the younger Garcia.

School not all about trophies and medals

The coaching school isn’t all about awards, trophies, and medals either with constant emphasis being put on developing the character of the youngsters involved with the programme. In a lot of ways, it’s an extension of the oilfield community which Cox comes from, having worked at Petrotrin for decades, which helped shape his desire to not only give back to his community but in a manner that instills the values he learnt while at the company.

“The Academy offers more than a rigorous training in the sport of football; it offers the children a launching pad for becoming model citizens,” explained Cox. “I place great emphasis on academic performance at school, as a criterion for being a member of my academy as well as good manners and the social graces that go beyond teamwork on the field and discipline in training.

“The children here are taught to understand that they are representatives of their family, their community, the academy and ultimately youth ambassadors for Trinidad and Tobago.” And representing the 868 they have on a number of occasions.

Last year, the team travelled to Barcelona, after winning the local leg of Milo U-12 League Cup, where they finished second in the knockout competition in Spain. That was a portion of an eventful year as four players; Jeremiah Kesar, Jabari Graham, Shivaughn Best and Vincent Clement, were sent to Mississippi University for try-outs which proved fruitful.

Brazilian Coach Cesar Lemos arrived on our shores twice at the invitation of the Cox Coaching School and Football Academy, first to lend his expertise to local youth coaches, and on his second visit, to interact directly with the youngsters who were able to get exposure to an elite foreign coach.

After the first visit he was impressed with the natural ability of the youngsters. “I see a Trinidadian player with the ball, it reminds me of a Brazilian player. He just wants to have fun, he just wants to have his own moment,” Lemos had said.

Martin James, a businessman, could not stop praising the impact the school has had on his ten-year-old son, Sebastian. James said that at every opportunity he speaks to this country’s decision makers, be them politicians or other business people, “I tell them we have to invest in this programme since it is having a positive effect on over 200 children”.

James recognises that duplication may be difficult because there is only one Coach Cox, but he feels the programme needs to get serious recognition, funding, and the attention it deserves, beyond just awards, since its role in positive nation-building should not be underestimated.

With no schools’ football on the horizon for the foreseeable future, and with athletes in general having to wait out the duration of the most uncertain period of their respective careers, and as well the current impasse between the TTFA and the FIFA, one would be forgiven for thinking that football has taken a prolonged intermission.

Regardless of the goings-on as a result of the “new normal”, the community of Palo Seco, their Beach Camp, and football in general in T&T can at least count on Coach Cox continuing his mission — the development of the sport of football at the grassroots level.

The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

 

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