The Manica Post

ZIFA suspends coaching courses

- Ray Bande Senior Sports Reporter

ZIFA have suspended all Confederat­ion of African Football coaching courses to pave way for a process to align the domestic syllabus with internatio­nally acceptable standards as an associatio­n.

This is meant to implement some of the key resolution­s made at the internatio­nal symposium on African Football held in the Moroccan city of Skhirate in July.

Local coaches wishing to undertake CAF A, B and C coaching courses will have to wait a little longer before they can start their sessions after the suspension of the courses by the country’s football mother body.

The move to suspend the courses has derailed plans for a number of local coaches like former Warriors’ player, Shepherd Muradzikwa, a CAF C holder, who intended to undergo both CAF B and CAF A coaching courses this year.

Although ZIFA technical director Wilson Mutekede could not be reached for comment as his mobile phone went unanswered as he was said to be attending lectures in Bulawayo, the associatio­n’s publicist, Xolisani Gwesela, confirmed that they will wait until the alignment process is completed for them to facilitate CAF A, B and C coaching courses.

“Yes, we have suspended local coaching courses in a move that is aimed at implementi­ng some of the key resolution­s made at the continenta­l football governing body symposium held in Morocco in July.

“We want our CAF coaching courses to be in line with internatio­nally accepted standards, hence the move to suspend the courses until the process of alignment has been finalised.

“We are expecting a richer curriculum after the finalisati­on of the alignment process,” said Gwesela.

Early this year, CAF gave the green light on CAF coaching courses proposed by ZIFA for 2017.

A total of nine CAF badges coaching courses were approved to go ahead beginning in April up to just before the festive season.

The approved courses were set to be held in different venues across the country

While some have already been conducted, a fitness course for coaches was scheduled to be held between September 18 and 22.

Initially, at the beginning of this year, ZIFA placed the minimum coaching qualificat­ions that any Premier League coach need to hold in order to be eligible to be on the bench during the 2017 soccer season as part of a raft of measures meant to improve coaching standards even at lower levels of the game in the country.

Although ZIFA set CAF A as the minimum coaching qualificat­ion that any coach aspiring to sit as head coach on the technical bench of a Premiershi­p team should have, other countries still maintain CAF B as the only prerequisi­te.

For example, ahead of the 2016-17 campaign, the minimum requiremen­t for a coach and his assistant in the Uganda Premier League was CAF B Coaching Course.

CAF B is the second highest level coaching courses as per CAF rankings and is undertaken for two weeks under a certified CAF and FIFA instructor.

What is special about this is that each day out of the two weeks, participan­ts study for eight hours each day.

After successful completion, one is required to practise for at least a year before undertakin­g CAF A.

The CAF A Coaching Course is the highest level of coaching licence attainable on the continent.

It is the longest in terms of study and it is conducted over a month.

However, it is divided in two weeks known as Modules One (First Week) and Modules Two (Second Week).

In accordance with CAF, only “A” Licence holders are required to handle proceeding­s in CAF competitio­ns - CAF Confederat­ions Cup and CAF Champions League.

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