There
were lots of goals, mostly due to the nature of the forward kick and rush
coupled with equally bad goalkeeping. The fact that the attacks were
successfully finalised gave meaning to the special day.
Credit
must go to the organisers for the job well done. Besides the obvious young and
amateurish but technically mature of play, no coaches I managed to talk to, ever
attended courses or coaching clinics. They had played football at college under
unqualified coaches.
They
coached football on bad pitches that are hard and dry. Few players had boots
and the balls not adequate. Some felt they needed more time to coach the youth.
Others were eager to attend coaching courses and coaching clinics to cater for
the lack of capacity and skills to coach.
Local Football Association referees were
in charge of the matches but they worked without Assistant referees. These referees
need to upgrade themselves with the latest information regarding the amendments
in the Laws of the Game.
This made the LFA referees get more
experience, although most are retired referees after all. If assistant referees
employed to offer their expertise, young players experience professional
playing at an early stage.
With over 20 EMS personnel in
attendance, it proved the need for special Sports Medicine training. Both the Mpumalanga
EMS equipped with many medical kits and stretchers should be commended for
their presence, with more than two ambulances on stand-by.
The schools and organisers needed to
avail rehydration fluids. Water and juices could have been adequately supplied
together with oranges as a cheap source of energy.
There is much one could say about player
vetting, delegation of duties and handling of disputes. Prior to the commencement, each of
these and others needed designation to individuals to deal with and then the
President oversees whole process. These and issues regarding competition rules proved
to possess detrimental loopholes.
Many having alluded to one-day tournaments
being anti-development by their nature, a report to the organisers with
recommendation may improve the aspect of disqualification of offenders as that
denied schoolchildren to participate in their own tournament. As such, it is
against the rights of the children to deny them the opportunity, usually the
reasons unknown to them.
Other tools to correct the wrongs can
be utilised, but the youths’ experience to participate is never recovered once
lost. Most disputes emanate from the desire to win, an enemy of development. Coaches
cheat by using over-age players and players who are not scholars. Well-trained
people desist from such practises and work on player development which prioritises
participation at all cost.
The national team coach and the yet to
be appointed Technical Director together with the South Africa Football Coaches
Association need to set out a national football playing philosophy of the
country.
Coaching courses, clinics and
workshops must be urgently organised to capacitate school coaches with the skills
to coach the school teams in order to have highly qualified coaches at the
bottom as a development tool for regional, provincial and national teams.
A database for the available coaches
must be compiled in order to ascertain the level of the coaching qualification
and upgrade the standard of coaching in schools.
The affiliation to the South Africa
Football Coaches Association by school coaches benefit the development in many
ways, including utilising the available programs and resources for youth
training among others.