The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Academies unite for Young Warriors

- Sports Reporter

STUNG by Zimbabwe’s poor performanc­e in the last two editions of the COSAFA Under-20 tournament, a group of local academies and coaches have resolved to assist ZIFA with a talent identifica­tion programme they hope will reap rewards for Bhekithemb­a Ndlovu’s Young Warriors at next month’s competitio­n in Zambia.

The academies first staged a tournament of their own dubbed the “Legends of Tomorrow”, which was sanctioned by ZIFA.

Since then they have picked an Under-18 Select side that has been training in Harare every Tuesday and Thursday at Hellenic Sports Club. Those training sessions have drawn a mix of coaches from registered academies who attended the Legends of Tomorrow Football Tournament.

The initiative also has the backing of ZIFA technical director Wilson Mutekede and is being primed to become the flagship concept that will be reciprocat­ed throughout the country’s 10 provinces.

It is aimed at helping cast the selection net wider for the Young Warriors, which will ensure that those picked get to train with the best talent throughout the year.

One of the brains behind the move and Legends Academy director and coach Farai Dhliwayo said their move was aimed at augmenting ZIFA’s developmen­t efforts.

“The result should be improved performanc­es in internatio­nal junior tournament­s year on year and production of much more experience­d and better-trained players through continuity. We are coaches from different football academies with different philosophi­es, however, we are combining resources, sharing ideas and working successful­ly together with a nation-first mentality. As developmen­t coaches, we are aware that junior players are not finished products. We are working closely with ZIFA and have assembled this Under-18 Select team to ensure young players gain experience and are better prepared for future tournament­s,” Dhliwayo said.

Mutekede, who has been on a crusade of encouragin­g continuous education among the coaches, also hailed the organised manner in which the schools of excellence have gone about trying to help ZIFA.

“We will be in Zambia for the COSAFA Under-20 tournament to be held from December 2-14. In order to assist the national team coach in selecting a provisiona­l squad, we have asked organised entities in all provinces to assemble the best young players suitable for the tournament. The ongoing Under-18 Select training in Harare is one such example.

“COSAFA Under-20 is a yearly event and we aim to return to winning ways in this tournament, while having time to develop and improve our young players. In terms of our forward planning, we are looking to have a significan­t number of the players in the team to be of 18 years, which means that they will remain eligible for the next two tournament­s as we improve,” Mutekede said.

Former Zimbabwe and Darryn T defender Dickson Choto, now the Harare Province board member developmen­t, also weighed in and said there was need to afford junior teams more time to prepare for competitio­ns. “In Zimbabwe we often have a short period to prepare our junior national teams and I think this initiative is a noble idea. If all provinces commence the same programme, it will help the national team coaches reduce their workload.

“I have attended all the Harare Under-18 Select training sessions so far.

“From a developmen­t perspectiv­e, including Under-18 players as part of the team helps with continuity and regardless of results, this year the players will gain experience and we will have a year to develop them further in anticipati­on of next year’s tournament,” Choto said.

Choto played his profession­al football in Poland and knows all too well how much the European game invests in juniors.

Aces Youth Academy, the institutio­n that has produced a host of the current Warriors stars including skipper Knowledge Musona, big goalkeeper George Chigova and poster boy Khama Billiat, believe the involvemen­t of more academies in the talent search will stand Zimbabwe in good stead.

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