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 3 Comments- Add comment | Back to Blog Written on 05-May-2009 by malcylon

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  The MCFC Babies in Ghana

We've been quiet on this blog for a while now but there's been a good reason!

Many readers of MCFCfans, MCIVTA, and  other City forums will be aware of the Manchester City Babies in Ghana.  The club is a youth football club run by Peter Amoabil, who is also the Representative of the Ghana branch of the Manchester City Centenary Supporters Association (MCCSA). 

Alex Channon, Chairman of the MCCSA, launched a kit and funding appeal for the MCFC Babies in Ghana that many of you kindly donated to.  That appeal began an association for me with the MCFC Babies that was to become the inspiration for setting up a charity to support youth football teams in Africa and beyond.

Well, after months of preparation, over a hundred e-mails back and  forth to Ghana, gathering Manchester City kit and footballs from far and  wide, missing flights and buses, finally here I am writing to you from Tamale in Ghana.  What a huge relief to be here!

Peter met me at the airport this morning and it was an exciting moment.  It feels like the beginning of a great journey.  But it is one that I need help with and so I am starting the process of spreading awareness now.

The long-term vision of the charity project is to combine the desire of English Premier League clubs to raise their global profile with the genuine needs of less developed areas and communities. Supporting the creation and development of grassroots football is merely the vehicle through which we’ll try and address some of those needs.  Clubs tend to have quite good charitable links within their local catchment areas.   But many seem to be missing a way of helping communities further afield. 

The fundraising concept is to create an umbrella fund of individual sub-funds for each Premiership club. Clubs and fans donate into their own club pot and once the pot reaches certain levels so grants and sponsorship can be awarded to genuine youth football club projects.  The system would enable clubs and fans to follow the progress of the club they have sponsored, in much the same way as you can follow the MCFC Babies progress in Ghana on the web page we created for them on MCFCfans: www.mcfcfans.co.uk/mcfc_babies.

The medium-term aim might be to arrange an exclusive partnership with a Premiership club, and being biased Manchester City is obviously preferred.  The timing, credit crunch aside, couldn’t be better with the 2010 World Cup in South Africa and City announcing their pre-season tour there.  The club is deluged with chairtable requests every week and such a charity would provide a means of centrally co-ordinating charitable efforts related to youth football outside the UK. But we need to make more progress in setting  up first.

I have been researching this project now for several months.  I have contacted many other organisations (The Craig Bellamy Foundation, Footballs4Fun, Streetfootball, FIFA’s Football for Hope)  with a view to collaboration and exchange of knowledge.  There is no point starting from scratch when partnering can deliver immediate results. 

The research continues and the short-term objective is to learn as much as possible and establish track record by supporting the development of the MCFC Babies in Ghana.  I will be sitting down with Peter, coaches and local football administrators tomorrow to work through our respective plans. The Babies will also  play a match in the morning wearing their newly donated Manchester City kits.

So what can you do to help? Continuing to donate kit is very much welcome and there is an address on the MCFC Babies page for this purpose. But what is really needed is the time, dedication and commitment of willing volunteers.  I’d be most grateful if anyone with charitable experience, administration, youth football experience, trustee experience, or just a general willingness to give up some time could get in touch.  

I will continue to post articles to various outlets but you can also follow progress at this Soccer Babies (provisional name...better suggestions welcome!) website, which is currently being developed: www.webjam.com/soccer_babies

In all of the trials and tribulations of supporting City, it’s easy to forget there are ways we can help those less fortunate than us through a mutual love of football.

Keep the faith.

Malcy

em:sm@mcfcfans.com

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Comments

  • written on 05-May-2009

    sweet_gal says:

    Major achievement there. Can imagine the hard work and efforts input by everyone involved.
    Every step counts Peter / Malcy. A scale as big as this, our ordinary selves, at times, do not really
    know how we can be of use. I have interest - so do let me know of any little help I can lend.

    http://www.webjam/shooters (Q. is there an age restriction for "youth")
    http://www.webjam/kickstart (giving this great opportunities to outside UK)
    http://www.webjam/thirdtalent (as in third places?)
    http://www.webjam/worldleague (Q. how broad is the long term goal.. create your own league...)
    http://www.webjam/streetsoccer (where everyone starts to play at a young age)
    http://www.webjam/ballskills (aspiration point of view?)
    http://www.webjam/soccerclub (or something club, something people want to be part of)
    http://www.webjam/footballfoundation (says what it does)

    Here are some initial thoughts....?
    Maybe you would like to name it after someone (Peter?) like it's founder?
    Advise against naming after its first location (as you would aim for other areas as well, no?)

  • written on 05-May-2009

    malcylon says:

    Thanks for the suggestions! The naming is going to depend a bit on the final solution, which is not fully clear yet. By that I mean that ideally we will try and slot things into existing charitable organisations. If that's the case then the name may actually be representative of more of a network than the actual delivery if that makes sense.

    Just completed day one. A really great day. Watched various training sessions and I'm truly impressed by the standard of football. The Under 12s in particular really stood out. Looking forward to the matches tomorrow morning.

  • written on 05-May-2009

    sweet_gal says:

    No worries M. The more information received, the more precise suggestions can be offered. Yep that's why the suggestions were from varied angles. It gets everyone involved thinking which is a positive thing. Cool.

    Aww. would love to see these boys in action. Any chance of putting the training footage on as clips. It would be inspiring to those you need awareness with. People tend to connect with visualization and imagery. The more realistic, the better of understanding and appreciation of what MCFC Babies is all about.

    Although I have not met any of the young lads M, when you describe it, it makes what football is all about. Playing from their hearts and I don't doubt their skills and how impressive they would be.
    True talent and potential. Real energy at that age.

    I shall definitely tune in tomorrow for good commentary and overall play. Brilliant. Love to them all.

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