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Athletes Coach in Ugandan Soccer Program

Junior co-captain Peyton Johnson spent last summer working with Coaches Across Continents in Uganda. Along with sophomore teammate Lauren Urke, Johnson worked with soccer coaches as part of the program, which aims to use soccer as a vehicle for social change.
Junior co-captain Peyton Johnson spent last summer working with Coaches Across Continents in Uganda. Along with sophomore teammate Lauren Urke, Johnson worked with soccer coaches as part of the program, which aims to use soccer as a vehicle for social change.
By Brenna R. Nelsen and Alex L. Saich, Contributing Writers

For most Harvard students, the end of the spring term marks the triumphant conclusion of another year of college, with four months of shirked responsibilities and lazy summer days to look forward to. Some students travelled abroad, others took the opportunity to get internships and network for the future. But for a small group of varsity soccer players, the start of summer meant the opportunity to travel halfway around the world to the backwaters of Africa in the hopes of uplifting the local populace through as simple a gesture as teaching them the game of soccer.

This past summer, Crimson soccer players sophomore Lauren Urke and junior co-captain Peyton Johnson spent two weeks near the capital city of Kampala, Uganda, in the sweltering African summer heat working with Coaches Across Continents. The program, which aims to improve the quality of life in third-world countries using soccer as a tool for social development, partnered the Harvard athletes with local soccer coaches, teaching them skills and drills that they could in turn instill in youth players. Over the course of two weeks, Urke and Johnson instructed approximately 20 coaches, who then coached teams of around 20 players of their own. In total, around 400 Ugandan children of differing skills and ages were impacted by the program.

“As the week progressed, it mostly started with us coaching them through drills and running the sessions,” Johnson said. “As the week went forward, the aim was obviously that when we left they would be able to coach their own teams with things that they’d managed to learn.”

The Crimson players would instruct the coaches through drills for a few hours in the morning, and got the chance to work with the various individual teams in the afternoon. In addition to teaching the coaches soccer techniques, the main point of the program was to teach the community leaders and youth important social development skills, such as conflict resolution, problem solving, confidence, and finding one’s voice. These important social ideas were framed in the context of soccer drills and games to spark the interest of young players who would otherwise have no access to this sort of knowledge.

“A game would be very competitive,” Urke said. “We would wait for disagreements to occur, then talk to them about how they can approach those [issues].”

Urke and Johnson were not the first Crimson athletes to be involved in Coaches Across Continents. The organization was founded by Harvard graduate and former soccer player Nick Gates ’91.  Gates spent years travelling the world and quickly realized that soccer could serve as a vehicle for social change.

"What is needed is not another NGO doing the same things as some of the wonderful existing groups,” Gates said in 2006, two years before Coaches Across Continents launched its pilot program. “What is needed is a group who can educate and train teachers, coaches and volunteers so that they can use soccer to change lives.”

In 2008, Coaches Across Continents began running a single clinic in Tanzania. Now, less than five years later, the company has expanded to its present scope of 40 programs in 15 different countries.

Each year, members of both the men’s and women’s teams participate in the program. Both Johnson and Urke were recruited to join Coaches Across Continents by senior teammate Alicia Johnson, who had travelled to Africa the previous summer with the program. Alicia Johnson, in turn, had been intrigued by the program after hearing the experiences of former teammate Sophie Legros, who had travelled with the program two summers before and was among its first volunteers. Legros and Gates spoke to team members about the organization and encouraged the Crimson to participate in the venture.

“What I really took away was how much they embraced us being there,” Alicia Johnson said.  “Despite the diversity, they were so welcoming and we felt like we really made an impact in the community. They really accepted us but also our message and our mission.”

The senior was so moved by her work with the program that she now remains very involved in the company, promoting Coaches Across Continents and garnering financial and personnel support for its ventures. Last year, Alicia Johnson helped organize an athlete formal and ran a silent auction at a home game, with all proceeds from both events going towards the organization.

Each year, Coaches Across Continents looks for more participants to travel on future ventures, and not necessarily varsity athletes. Even volunteers with little competitive soccer experience have travelled with the program and made an impact. The organization also holds fundraisers to raise money for its programs and supplies. When Urke and Johnson travelled this past summer, they brought soccer balls to give to the locals at the completion of the program.

Despite their compact schedule, Urke and Peyton Johnson were able to get a lot of instruction in in the two short weeks that they were there. After learning new drills in the morning, the coaches would run more and more of the sessions each day by themselves, gradually implementing what the Crimson players were able to teach them. By the last day, the Ugandan coaches were running entire practices by themselves.

“I think that our impact was most visibly felt on the last day of the program,” Peyton Johnson said. “The coaches gave us some small form of gratitude from their family farm; avocados were a popular gift. They made us bracelets or soccer balls out of twine.”

The two players were also immensely grateful of the lessons that they in turn were able to learn from the African community.

“I think one thing I left with was a greater appreciation for the sport that I play and love,” Peyton Johnson reflected. “It’s obvious that soccer crosses cultures…but I don’t think I really appreciated until I went over there how soccer can do more than just entertain and foster a competitive message. It’s also a really great means for grabbing people’s attention and spreading messages to people that might otherwise turn a deaf ear.”

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