Parents/Guardians General Matters of Concern Matters of Confidentiality REP Player's Fee Receiving a Tex Credit from the Club Canadian Tire Foundation for Families - Jumpstart Kidsport - Financial Help Beyond High School Sports Don't Get Stressed Out General Matters of Concern SBA is interested in your opinions on how to improve the many programs that it makes available to the youth of the community. In addition, if you have a question and/or concern that you want addressed by the club, please send your question(s) or concern(s) to the Club at
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or
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All issues will be investigated. Please note that unless you state otherwise, all questions and/or concerns will be kept confidential. Frequently asked questions, [a] the SBA Screening Policy for club team officials [b] the SBA Criminal Checks Policy for club team officials [c] the SBA Communication and Grievance Procedures [d] the SBA Guidelines for Volunteers, Coaches and Players [e] the SBA Zero Tolerance Policy Against Abuse Return to Top Matters of Confidentiality If you have a matter of concern and want it to be dealt with confidentiality, contact the President of the SBA directly. Sam Moncada can be reached via
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or REP convenor, Ted Ferreira via
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.
Player's Fees (2010-2011) Base cost for playing with the Blues REP program is $395 per player. Receiving a Tax Credit from SBA Just a reminder that player payments received prior to January 1, 2010 are eligible for a tax credit. In order for the SBA to issue the receipts, the club needs the following information: [a] Players' name; [b] parent's name; and [c] the amount of money received in the year (2010) Please Note: [1] The maximum amount eligible is $ 325.00 which is the registration fee. Any excess amounts collected by teams are considered to be the equivalent of "fundraising" and are not eligible. Note also that any coupons, uniform credits or other reductions must be taken into account. [2] The player must be under the age of 16 at the beginning of the year (2009) thus born in 1993 or later. Please have your son's and/or daughter's coach send his/her list to the SBA Administrator by January 31, 2011. Any players that have made payments after December 31, 2010, the club will issue receipts for the 2011 taxation year. The Canadian Tire Foundation for Familys | Our Mission The Mission of the Canadian Tire Foundation for Families is to provide a helping hand to families in need by ensuring life’s basic needs are met. To us, keeping communities strong, especially in times of difficulty, makes all the difference. Since our launch in 1999, the Foundation for Families has donated more than $30 million to charitable organizations that help families in local communities by ensuring life’s basic needs are met. We also believe that strong communities include strong kids. That is why we created Canadian Tire JumpStart How We Help – The Foundation for Families’ Charitable Programs Together with our network of stores, gas bars and employees, the Foundation for Families provides financial support to charitable organizations that help families in need through the following program: Community Initiative Program This program runs in partnership with Canadian Tire Dealers and corporate employee teams to provide financial support to community organizations that fit with our mission, such as: The Community Crisis Program Together with Dealers and store staff, we help families rebuild their lives after a natural disaster in a local community that has deprived them of their basic needs. In operation since 1999, the Community Crisis Program has helped more than 300 families, including in this example: In early 2007, a fire left 1,000 students at the Pikangikum school near Kenora, Ont., without a school or supplies. Our local Kenora Dealer collaborated with the Foundation for Families to provide $7,706 in pens, pencils, erasers and backpacks to help get the children back on track. | Kidsport - Financial Help There Goals, Their Mission KidSport believes that no kid should be left on the sidelines and that all kids should be given the opportunity to experience organized sports with all the positive benefits that go along with being a young active athlete. KidSport provides support for children removing financial barriers that keep them from playing organized sports. Its About the Kids With the initiatives of KidSport, success can be measured by the number of children who have been helped to reach the opportunity of experiencing organized sports. Its About Fun The primary goal for KidSport is to ensure that each child participating in the sports programming, has so much fun that the can’t wait to play again in the next season! Its About the Future Not only does KidSport try to ensure fun all around, they also want to give the opportunity to kids to develop healthy lifestyles, no matter the financial, physical or language barriers that stand in their way. By staying physically active, children are encouraged to maintain healthy habits that will stay with them for their whole lives. Playing sports also provide challenges that teach kids valuable life lessons and skills like leadership, practice, hard work, dedication and self confidence. Providing a Support Structure KidSport has over 175 provincial and local chapters that help provide structured support for the organized sports. These chapters give an entity that can build knowledge and potential of supporting sport participation through a Registered Amateur Athletic Association selected from CRA. The chapters also create a positive legal and regulatory action to engage more Canadians and companies in understanding the worth of ensuring all kids experience a healthy lifestyle. Return to Top Beyond High School Sports August 11, 2005 by, Brian McCormick, CSCS Complaints litter prep Internet message boards, as parents, players and coaches rant about incompetent high school coaches, illegal recruiting, persistent transfers, the AAU battle, and illegal off-season practices. Just a cursory glance at the typical board leads one to believe the entire system needs cataclysmic changes, yet none occur, except minor modifications of the current, out-dated system. The 21st Century presents new high school athletic challenges and opportunities. With the sacred college scholarship, not the state championship, as the common goal, players constantly shop for the best opportunity, best training, and the most exposure. Increasingly, this combination requires a year-round commitment; not just to the sport, but to teams. High school teams, or their pseudo-club impersonators, play year-round, competing in the “off-season” with competitive club teams that play regional or national schedules. High school athletes, therefore, commit to two teams through much of the year, playing a pre-professional schedule. Rare is the athlete who excels in multiple sports, as the commitment level to participate at the elite level in multiple sports is daunting, not to mention the typical academic-load of a college hopeful. “Jen,” a player I train in the off-season, traveled constantly this summer, seeking exposure up and down the West Coast, chasing the elusive “Free Ride.” She fulfilled commitments to her high school team-a team with nobody close to her ability-wise-as well as her AAU Team, a constantly shuffling menagerie of coaches and players, depending upon the weekend and everyone’s other basketball commitments. Her games with her high school were largely a waste, playing with inferior players against mostly inferior players, while her AAU games offered little consistency or coaching, despite the more talented teammates and competition. This, unfortunately, is the state of 21st Century basketball for the elite player. Many play on high school teams where each player’s goal is not a “Free Ride,” but a good athletic experience; there is nothing wrong with that goal. Athletics, especially high school athletics, should provide this opportunity, as sports can mean a myriad of things to different people, from simple exercise to team camaraderie to a reason to stay in school to the opportunity to provide a college education. However, what happens to the elite athlete when his goals exceed his teammates to a tremendous degree? Coaches must organize a practice to improve their team, and this often means trying to elevate the level of the average players, with little time to really elevate the level of the elite player. Coaches teach and instruct to the bottom half of the group, leaving an elite player on his own to find ways to improve his game. He must search elsewhere to find a competitive experience in training and in games. This requires the second-season, or the AAU circuit. Unfortunately, this opportune time for player development is lost as teams travel constantly to games to seek exposure, almost completely neglecting practices. Jen’s adventures up and down the coast helped her get noticed by a few schools who have written letters, but did little to make her a better player. She played against some better competition, but her team was rarely prepared for these games, as the practice time was scarce. Her team was lucky to have the same ten players from one week to the next. But, this is the current system, where student-athletes spend their entire summer in search of exposure, traveling nearly every weekend from the spring until fall to play in front of college coaches or recruiting services in order to get a look or a little interest from a scout/coach who might offer a free college education. But, does this system do anything to develop the elite player’s skills? After all, a college-bound player must possess the ability to play at the next level. Players show incremental improvement because they spend the entire year in a gym, playing in some capacity almost every day, so they develop in some ways just from their comfort-level on the court and through hours of practice, regardless of how disorganized or ineffective it may be. Those who do play for good AAU or high school coaches are very fortunate and also develop new and advanced skills. However, is incremental improvement the goal? In school, when a student is an exceptional student, does he remain with peers, some needing remedial work, or is he accelerated into a different program in order to facilitate better learning and development opportunities? Why stand for a system designed to try and catch-up average players to the exceptional? Why not seek a solution to sustain development for the average player as well as the elite athlete? School spirit aside, elite players deserve a better player development system. Soccer players often forsake uncompetitive high school teams and leagues to compete year-round with competitive clubs who offer more talented, committed teammates, superior training and competitive matches. If soccer, a secondary sport, can offer its athletes greater opportunities beyond that which the high schools offer, why not basketball? The current AAU/club system fails to capitalize on its potential to create a competitive environment and enhance the elite player’s development. Instead, many clubs focus on exposure, not development, and coaches act like agents, not teachers, procuring the most talented players, not instructing and developing players. Players hop from team to team to find the best deal and playing time, and games amount to individual showcases and pick-up affairs, with little structure, coaching and/or resemblance to organized basketball. Instead of congesting a club “season” into three spring and summer months and focusing entirely on exposure, elite players should have the option to forsake their high school teams and play meaningful games against equal competition with good coaching in a year-round environment. Many complain about kids and their lost youth, or not being able to play two sports, but it is a result of a system where players must play two seasons in order to attract recruiting attention. Why not promote a system where the competitive basketball is played during the basketball season, allowing players the opportunity to pursue a second sport if they choose, playing football in the fall or baseball in the spring, while not worrying about exposure events they may miss by playing a second sport? A new system would allow more students to participate in athletics; recreational or average players who play sports for fun, camaraderie, school spirit and exercise would have a competitive playing experience competing for their high school teams, while the elite, gifted, driven and committed players who desire a more intense atmosphere and higher level training would challenge themselves with and against like-minded, skilled teammates and opponents, better preparing these players for the next level. And, it would force Internet pundits to complain about something else. Return to Top Don’t Get Stressed Out | In their recent article in the journal Current Opinion in Pediatrics, doctors from the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York wrote about lower extremity (leg) stress fractures in young athletes. These fractures occur when a young athlete's bones can't keep up with their increased activity level and stress. Here are some take-away messages from their article: -
1. Stress fractures are one of the most common overuse injuries in young athletes. -
2. As young athletes play more(more practices, games, tournaments, camps) of the same sport (stressing the same muscles and bones in the same way) with less time to rest and recover, stress fractures are more likely to occur. -
3. Stress fractures of the tibia (lower leg) and foot are more common in sports involving sudden stops (like basketball). -
4. The most well-established risk factor for stress fracture is a sudden increase in training intensity. -
5. Other risk factors include uneven leg length, abnormal knee alignment, stiff knee movements, and abnormal foot bones or alignment. Here are some general recommendations (in no particular order of importance) -
a. Wear well-padded and appropriately sized basketball shoes when you practice or play. -
b. When/if possible, get off the concrete and play on some well-supported wooden gym floors. -
c. Maintain a healthy body weight for your height (too-thin girls with low lean body mass and decreased bone mineral density are at increased risk for stress fractures). -
d. Avoid drinking diet sodas (the phosphoric acid can weaken your bones). -
e. REST! Give your bones (and body) enough time to recover from the microscopic injury they get when you play hard and long. -
f. Listen to your body! If your knees, shins or feet start to ache, decrease the amount and/or intensity of your schedule to prevent things from getting worse. -
g. If the pain does not go away with rest, see your doctor or sports medicine specialist. They may get an MRI to look for signs of early stress fracture(s). -
h. REST ! Did I say that before? Yes, but it needs to be emphasized that this is the best treatment for stress fractures. It's better to treat this condition with "aggressive rest" early on than to let it progress to something that's going to keep you off the court for months to come. This information is from the March 5, 2008 Youth Basketball Medicine blog at www.basketballmedicine.blogspot.com | Return to Top
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