Footballers Gather for Prime Minister’s Cup 2024 Player Empowerment Workshops
August 14, 2024
Footballers gather for The Prime Minister’s Cup 2024 Player Empowerment Workshop series at Garfield Sobers Gymnasium. Sessions focus on holistic development, covering topics like citizenship, entrepreneurship, and mental health.
Over 300 footballers from across the island convened at the Garfield Sobers Gymnasium on Sunday, August 11. Competing players in The Prime Minister’s Cup 2024, they came to participate in the first session of the Player Empowerment Workshop series.
The sessions, which form part of the vision outlined by Prime Minister, Mia Amor Mottley, will continue throughout the tournament, which is scheduled to start on August 26, and which is in line with the holistic development of young Barbadians.
“It is the Prime Minister’s vision that this tournament is about more than football,” said Seth Carrington-Skeete of the Organizing Committee. “The idea of the tournament is to leave a legacy for growth, self-actualization, and individual empowerment with the hope that we are all better citizens at the end of the tournament.”
The workshops will cover a variety of topics including but not limited to: Citizenship, Conflict Resolution, Entrepreneurship, Mental Health, Physical Fitness, Setting and Achieving Goals, and Workplace Etiquette.
The facilitators for the inaugural session were Amanda James, Capacity Building Advisor; Dario Greenidge, General Manager of Shine Automotive; and Frank Parris, Managing Director of Gainzville Fitness.
Greenidge commented that he was impressed by the young audience and the attention they paid to him as he highlighted the challenges and successes of starting a business. “I think it went well. They were listening and I think it is going to be an interesting tournament with a good mixture of young people of different ages and stages of life,” he went on.
“It will be good to see them come together on the field of play and achieve that common goal. As a young person myself I know it’s tough out there just to exist; so, for me any opportunity I get to encourage people and help them do better I appreciate.”
James dealt with aspects of empowerment and self-motivation. “It was really nice and very interactive,” she admitted. “The players shared some really good views. The main message to them was to empower yourself as an individual. I have always said that footballers have a range of skillsets that often non-footballers may not have such as critical thinking, mathematical knowledge, collaboration, and teamwork just to highlight a few.”
The health of the body and importance of training properly was the focus of the sessions conducted by Parris, and left a lasting impression on the budding football stars.
“What I found was that a lot of them were not aware of what was required of them to be successful in the sport,” he explained. “I can see they have a passion for it, but they don’t understand that there is a lot more to what they do to make them the best.
“Nutrition plays a major role in how they perform, so the requirement of eating right changes their activity in a big way. I am hopeful they would have absorbed some of what I have said today and implement it into their regime.”
(PR)