The Prince George Citizen

Touch football league for kids in works

- TED CLARKE

Football is a game in which kids of all sizes and varying degrees of athleticis­m can find their niche as individual­s and excel as essential parts of a team.

There are jobs for strong beefy linemen who can hold off blockers, fleet-footed receivers who can use their speed to get open on the field to make catches or lean placekicke­rs who can boot the ball through the uprights.

Craig Briere is convinced that the sooner kids start learning those skills, the better equipped they will be to advance to the high school levels and beyond into junior and university football, and that’s the motivation behind Prince George Kodiaks Football’s new spring 7 on 7 touch football league for kids in Grades 2-7.

“This is to get younger kids out and playing and it’s all focused on teaching fundamenta­l skills, having a lot of fun and getting to play games on Friday nights at Masich under the lights,” said Briere. “The whole Kodiaks organizati­on is all about player developmen­t and getting kids active in the sport and having fun teaching physical literacy.”

Practices are tentativel­y set to begin April 17 for the three-division league. The 10-week season which will run into late-June will include two evening practices (Mondays and Wednesdays, 6-7:30 p.m.) and weekly jamboree-style games on Friday nights at Masich Place Stadium. Each team will play three 20-minute games. Two games will be played at one time using half the field at Masich with scrimmages starting on the 40-yard line. Practice sites will depend on where in the city you live. Kids who live in the Hart will practice there, and College Heights and Bowl-area kids will stick close to their neighbourh­oods using school fields.

“No experience is necessary,” said Briere. “We actually like kids that have never played before, we can teach them all the skills. For equipment you just need a pair of cleats and a COVID mask. If you’re big, you’re small, you’re slow or you’re fast, there’s a spot for you, and that’s the cool thing about football is the inclusiven­ess.”

The Kodiaks are part of 7 on 7 Associatio­n of Canada, which is scheduled to host its first national championsh­ip in Calgary, June 26-27. If the pandemic diminishes enough to allow it, Briere says Prince George will enter one team in the three age divisions – Grades 7-8, Grades 9-10 and Grades 11-12.

Registrati­on fees are $125 for Football Fun, Grade 2 and 3 (available at teamsnap.com/forms/25982; $175 for Future Stars, Grade 4 and 5 (teamsnap.com/forms/259281), and $175 for Prospects, Grade 6 and 7 (teamsnap.com/forms/259279). There are already 100 kids registered and Briere expects double that number will be on the field once they start practicing later this month.

For more informatio­n email pgkodiaksf­ootball@gmail.com.

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