(oceaniafootball.com) Friday, 15 May 09
The
Samoa Football Soccer Federation Normalisation Committee (SFSF-NC) has
successfully gathered feedback and support from Samoaâs football
community during a three-day workshop in Maluafou.
The consultation workshop took place at the SamoaTel Conference room
and was held in collaboration between the SFSF-NC, FIFA, and the
Oceania Football Confederation (OFC).
The workshop was officially opened by the Prime Minister, the
Honourable Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi and it was attended by
representatives from the affiliated football clubs throughout Samoa and
by partners of the sport around the region.
Co-ordinators included FIFA Development Officer Glenn Turner, OFC
Deputy General Secretary Greg Larsen, Win in Oceania Deputy Project
Manager Billy Vaitoare, International Relations Pacific Youth and
Sports Project Manager Frank Castillo, OFC Technical Director Jim Selby
and the Interim Chairman and CEO of SFSF-NC Colin Tuaa.
The workshop co-ordinators together with Samoa footballâs stakeholders
agreed on the following shared vision for the sportâs development in
the region:
âFor the SFSF-NC to be a well governed, structured and credible Member
Association that effectively and efficiently delivers football for all,
through youth development, health and well being, communities, family
support, ongoing education and partnerships.â
Another key objective emphasised at the workshop is to once again
establish trust amongst the local clubs in the new management and its
plans for the sportâs development in Samoa. The need for transparency
and accountability between Samoa Footballâs stakeholders and its new
management was strongly reaffirmed at the workshop.
Club representatives who attended were content with the plans laid out
for the future and were particularly happy with the fact that they will
have their say in some key areas of planning for the future of football
in Samoa.
Interim Chairman and CEO of SFSF-NC Colin Tuaa says these are exciting times for the sport.
âThere is a solid foundation to work from, funding is in place again,
and there is already a process to start recruiting people to fast-track
activity and set up a sustainable business for football in Samoa,â says
Tuaa.
Some of the new exciting activities for Samoa will include programmes
targeting grassroots football, with the introduction of the âJust Playâ
programme (funded by OFC) which will aim to cover the 21 districts
throughout Upolu and Savaii at a Primary School level.
There will be menâs, womenâs and youth competitions, a range of
technical development opportunities for coaches and referees and
funding to initiate specific programmes aimed at developing football as
a sport for women. The identification, selection and preparation of the
national menâs and womenâs representative teams will also get underway
way as soon as these local competitions begin.
Recruitment has already taken place in the media/marketing area of the
sport so that more awareness of football, and what the normalisation
committee is doing to upgrade the sport, is made known to the people.
Colin Tuaa says that this a sport for the people, and therefore the
people must know all there is to know about what soccer has to offer;
which would include exciting new events, more funding and more
opportunities for a new age in soccer for Samoa.
Last Modified on 21/05/2009 11:35