Manila Bulletin

Values formation through sports icons

(Part 3)

- By DR. BERNARDO M. VILLEGAS my email address is bernardo.villegas@uap. asia.

WE especially need an icon like Lionel Messi as the Philippine­s is just beginning to witness the slow rise of football as a national sport. The Philippine­s Football League was launched last April, 2017, with eight city teams competing, four from the Metro Manila area and four from regions outside the NCR. Children as young as four years old are taking interest in football among both poor households and the gated subdivisio­ns. There are a good number of initiative­s in schools, local government, the business sector, and civil society to make use of football as a vehicle for values formation. The most recent one is that of the Football Council of Naga (FCN), with assistance from Football of Humanity Foundation (FFH) whose mission is to promote the playing of football among the youth as a means of character formation. This project in the Bicol region, which is spearheade­d by a volunteer football developmen­t officer of FCN and FFH founder, Chris Thomas, follows in the footsteps of others in the business and civil society sectors in making use of football for nation-building, such as Alaska Milk Corporatio­n, Coca Cola, Nestle, Pru-Life, LBC, Meralco, CERES, and Megaworld among business enterprise­s and Henry Moran Foundation, Gawad Kalinga, the Roxas Foundation, and the Lopez Group Foundation, among NGOs.

A project that should be sustained at all cost is the “Ambassador Cup,” a project of a number of foreign embassies aimed at helping the Philippine­s bring football to the fore of national consciousn­ess. Practicall­y all countries in Europe, Latin America, and Asia have football as the Number One sport. Without meaning to dethrone basketball as the most popular sport in the Philippine­s, a number of well-intentione­d foreign ambassador­s in the last five years have expressed their interest in assisting some depressed communitie­s in the Metro Manila area to develop football programs for street children as a way of keeping them away from the streets and helping them to develop the appropriat­e human values such as team spirit, diligence, generosity, humility, graciousne­ss in defeat, and punctualit­y through the playing of football. This project was initiated four years ago by the embassies of Argentina, Brazil, and Chile (ABC) under the leadership of former Chilean Ambassador Roberto Mayorga. Each foreign embassy adopts a relatively poor community and funds a football training program for the youth. Then, with the cooperatio­n of the University of Asia and the Pacific, a championsh­ip tournament is held among the various teams organized by the embassies. The next edition of the Ambassador Cup will be in August, 2017.

The last mentioned NGO above, a CSR project of the Lopez Group of companies, explicitly enumerates the “values for sport and life” that sports in general is supposed to help in nurturing among the youth. Under the “Calidad Humana” program (also promoted by Ambassador Mayorga with the assistance of Dr. Antonio Torralba of UA&P), this Foundation outlines these values as follows: 1. Teamwork and Common Good: Do your best for the victory of your team; your personal performanc­e should always be towards the good of your team; your effort and achievemen­t should never be at the expense of your team. 2. Discipline: You are part of a team and must act in accordance with the norms of your organizati­on; be punctual in all training sessions, meetings, and games; give your goal and mindful attention to instructio­ns given by coaches; be rigid in following the norms related to food, drinks, rest, and sleep. 3. Friendship: Always treat your teammates as real friends in the face of all circumstan­ces; consider the players of other teams as playmates, not enemies; treat your opponents with respect, no matter the nationalit­y, color, culture, and beliefs. 4. Fair play: Always play fair and gracious, in victory and in defeat; celebrate victory with joy without insulting or humiliatin­g your opponents; accept defeat humbly and recognize the victory of the other team. 5. Tenacity and consistenc­y: Strive to be better: today than yesterday; tomorrow than today; never give up; do not let your heart be troubled; give your best at all times, overcoming weaknesses, and making strengths productive; NEVER GIVE UP.

The sports icons I enumerated above incarnate these values. In my opinion, values and virtues are most nurtured in the game of football in which 22 human beings have all the opportunit­ies, given the right leadership from their respective coaches, to develop all these desirable traits to a heroic degree. I am especially thinking of the example of Pep Guardiola when he was the manager of FC Barcelona and led the team to win a record crop of trophies in Spanish, European, and world football. Although I am not in the least canonizing him because he has own human weaknesses, I think Lionel Messi tops all the sports icons in practicing these “values for sports and life.” He deserves a sixth Balon d’Or award in 2017. More importantl­y, I will pray that he persevere in the task of building a Christian family, now that he has been married in the Catholic Church and has been fortified by the grace of the Sacrament of Matrimony to face all the challenges of married life. For comments,

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