Soccer Start
Contact
the Soccer Start Chairman…
What is Soccer
Start?
Soccer Start is designed
to introduce the sport of soccer to youngsters living
in communities not yet served by existing clubs and
leagues. Focused on making soccer
available to lower-income children in underserved
communities, Soccer Start provides soccer training
and administrative guidance to players and organizations
who might otherwise not be exposed to the sport.
Soccer Start also
helps new programs find the funding and equipment
to begin and then to expand their activities. In
the past several years, US Youth Soccer has donated
hundreds of thousands of dollars in financial and
material support to programs across the United States
Why do we Need
a Soccer Start Program?
Soccer is the fastest
growing sport in the United States. It has reached
into communities from coast to coast and from north
to south. Yet, soccer has not always served inner
city and rural communities and all economic and ethnic
groups. In order to insure that every child has the
opportunity to play our beautiful game, US Youth
Soccer founded the Soccer Start program.
Goals of Soccer
Start
- To reach out
to children in under-served and socio-economically
disadvantaged places in order to offer them an
on-going program of positive sports activities
through soccer.
- To increase participants
self-esteem through participation in an organized
and supportive program of team activities.
- To build positive
social and life skills.
- To provide important
exercise and increase awareness of one's own health
through sports.
- To provide the
players with positive, cooperative and enjoyable
after school and spare time activities
Creating Your Own
Program
Soccer Start programs
are run locally by existing clubs and leagues, by
Boys and Girls Clubs and Y's, by neighborhood houses
and Parks and Recreation Departments. There is no "one
size fits all" model for Soccer Start.
Each program starts
differently and is created locally to meet the needs
and capabilities of the organization and of the players.
Programs in the nation's biggest cities may include
thousands of children, and yet there are hundreds
of small programs that focus on one or two teams,
one group of kids in a single neighborhood house
or one corner of a rural farming community.
Programs may last
as little as a few weeks in the fall to as much as
full seasons in more than one part of the year. Many
programs adopt traditional soccer rules with full-sized
fields and full length games while other choose to
introduce soccer through
"small-sided games" on smaller fields. The choices about how to begin are as
varied as the places in which they begin. Soccer Start can help your community
decide on how to get started by providing written information and hands-on
technical assistance.
The First Steps
- Create local
awareness of your efforts to begin a Soccer Start
program
- Talk to U S Youth
Soccer and your State Association for written and
programmatic support
- Seek out other
Soccer Start programs near you and try to learn
what worked for them. Often, Soccer Start sites
in the same state have a lot in common.
- Identify a local
coordinator, and if possible, a visible role model
(well-known soccer person such a professional player,
a college coach, even older players (high school
or college from your community or nearby communities)
- Find a coaching
instructor
- Identify all
the adult administrative functions you will need
and develop a volunteer base, as necessary, to
fill those functions
- Seek community
leadership support first from existing soccer organizations
and programs, but also from: Boys and Girls Clubs;
Neighborhood Centers; Police Athletic Leagues;
YMCA/YWCA; Housing Authorities; Park and Recreation
Departments; High School and College Service Organizations;
Churches
- Ask for help
from local and State soccer organizations: In setting
up basic organizational structures from legal formation
to functions needed on your start-up Board of Directors;
In finding coaches, especially youth coaches; In
finding a trainer for your new coaches; In setting
up equipment exchanges; In helping with scheduling
questions
- Seek community-based
financial support from: service organizations such
as Kiwanis and Rotary; Churches; Neighborhood small
business such as restaurants, record stores, clothing
outlets, sports stores; Service providers such
as neighborhood doctors; Any other business which
is active in the Soccer Start neighborhood-it is
in their interest to help
- Identify your
equipment and supply needs and look for sources
to get them donated or to acquire them at the lowest
cost to you. Ask existing organizations where they
get there equipment and see if you can set up a
way to acquire used equipment from them.
- Develop instruction
agendas and plans of action for: Administrators,
Coaches, Referees
Implementation
In order to promote
the Soccer Start program at the local levels and
gain community involvement and awareness, certain
equipment, services and financial support is needed.
Some of these needs are:
- Leadership, high-profile
spokespersons and role models
- Local organization,
implementation and administration through volunteer
coordinators
- Caring volunteers
willing to commit sufficient time to the program
as referees, coaches, managers, drivers and chaperons
- Equipment
- Fields or open
playing areas
- Transportation
- Corporate, private
and community financial support
Support Network
- Local leadership,
organizers and soccer clubs and leagues
- State association
Soccer Start Committee representative or coordinator
- State association
Soccer Start/Recreation Representative to the state
Board of Directors
- US Youth Soccer
/ Soccer Start Committee and regional representatives
- Distribution
of program materials and educational opportunities
- Soccer Start
website
- US Youth Soccer
national staff
Costs Involved
- The cost of participation
varies depending upon your registration fees, insurance
premiums and uniform and equipment costs.
- At all times,
cost should be kept to a minimum for all possible
participants.
- Grants are available
through US Youth Soccer and the US Soccer Federation
Foundation.
- There are other
philanthropic entities, such as the Shriners, which
offer assistance. Research other avenues of funding
such as local, state and federal government grants
and community groups such as the Lions Clubs, Rotary
Clubs, Chambers of Commerce, etc.
- Approach local
retailers, companies or corporations for cash or
in-kind donations.
US Youth Soccer National
Resources Center
US Youth Soccer,
in conjunction with State Soccer Associations across
the country, is developing a comprehensive set of
resource materials related to the inauguration of
Soccer Start programs. Basic information about how
to organize and train volunteers will be supplemented
by case studies drawn from a variety of Soccer Start
programs of all types.
Initially, the Resource
Center will rely on existing materials brought together
and organized so as to give a broad background of
support and advice to new programs. Later, with the
addition of case studies and with the development
of new materials, the Soccer Start Resource Center
will contain a complete set of reference materials
relating to the development and operation of new
soccer programs for socio-economically disadvantage
players.
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