Johannesburg - The Institute of Sport has launched a new initiative to revive sports in schools. PlayerNation, developed in partnership with Exxaro as the first founder partner through its renewable energy business Cennergi, aims to revitalise sports in schools, with the first rollout taking place in the Karoo and eventually the whole of the Eastern Cape.
Both founding organisations, working in collaboration with the Department of Sports and the Department of Basic Education, are intentional about fostering sports participation and promoting whole-school development and youth nurturing, where academic performance and participation of the school in extra-mural activities are equally important.
Hundreds of youngsters from the communities of Blue Crane Route municipality and the neighbouring Bedford and Adelaide towns had an opportunity to showcase their love for physical activity and sporting talent at a winter holiday sports programme for schools hosted recently to launch the programme.
Speaking at the launch of the programme, Yolanda Rachebedi, Project Manager at the Institute of Sport, said PlayerNation was designed to become the ultimate school sport programme for 28 000 schools in South Africa.
“Our passion is to bring children back to sports. We want to have more passion and more sport, because we know that people who are passionate about what they do, tend to be people who have a more positive outlook on life, have greater self-esteem and can overcome difficulty through problem-solving. It is for this reason that we have partnered with Exxaro’s Cennergi and the schools in the Karoo to give schools a sense of pride and belonging. We also love that youngsters have a place to belong on and off the sports fields”.
PlayerNation kicked off with a winter festival in Somerset-East and Bedford, which attracted an overwhelming number of more than 1000 young people, boys and girls from various communities in Somerset-East, Cookhouse, Bedford and Adelaide, as well as hundreds of community members who came to watch.
Organisers at WG Olivier Primary School in Somerset-East said they planned to host just 90 youngsters and were taken by surprise when more than 500 young people showed up. The youngsters from Bedford and Adelaide kept the momentum when they also pitched up in their hundreds for their festival at Templeton High School in Bedford.
Cennergi’s Economic Development and Community Programmes Coordinator in Amakhala Emoyeni Windfarm, Mr Simphiwe Mbenya, said the objective has always been to see a positive future for the youth through our economic development initiatives.
“Supporting these communities in sports development has always been expressed strongly, when we are having stakeholder engagements. With the support from our shareholders and other potential partners, we can really do more to close the gap, and thereby we can see harmony and economically vibrant communities.
“Seeing PlayerNation come to life is exciting, particularly so because this is a long-term project that will not only revitalise sports in schools but also have a positive impact on communities. For us to see hundreds of young people filling the sports facilities to compete with one another and their family members coming to give them support affirms the objectives of this programme to revive sports in schools while also investing in communities,” he adds.
A local ward councillor, Lorraine Smith-Johnson, said an event of this nature is crucial in bringing young people together.
“I am very passionate about sports because it brings people together. Our youth is falling into drugs and into all sorts of crimes, because crime in our communities is horrible, but we can bring them to play together through sports.”
The winter holiday sports programme is just the beginning of what’s to come in the region. PlayerNation will roll out in phases, which will include the development of a sport-promoting culture in schools, training of coaches, and sports organisers, the development of leagues, and inter-and-intra school festivals, competitions and championships.
On the fields, the youngsters wasted no time in tackling each other. Some of the boys got down and dirty in the wet and muddy rugby field at Somerset-East, while others showed their soccer skills by dribbling, passing the ball to each other, marking and defending on the soccer pitch.
The girls played competitive netball, while indigenous games attracted mixed participants.
An indigenous game coordinator Sibulele Magwa said these types of games are very important as they don’t require practice but quick learning. They also help young people to bond with each other”.
Netball player Lisakhanya Lawrence, who was representing the netball team from Somerset-East, said activities like sports keep the youth from the streets and mixing with the wrong crowds. “Drugs among the youth are very high in Somerset East, but when we play games like these, we stay out of drugs and become active in sports. My team has played against three different teams, we have been struggling, but we are not giving up on netball because we love it.’’
The Cookhouse team coordinator Lucky Kwatsha said these games had laid a platform that would take the youngsters out of the streets and onto the playing fields.
“We want to see the sports back in the schools and communities. We grew up playing competitive sports after school, and we had tournaments on weekends. These games are showing us that this is still possible if we put more effort into it. We don’t need a lot of effort because these youngsters are eager to participate,” said Kwatsha.
All participants were winners, and overall champs were awarded medals.